MP3 and Napster and Kazaa

SamSpade

Well-Known Member
PREMO Member
I used to use Kazaa Lite (Kazaa without the spyware) to go out and find free MP3's out there. Whatever you may think of the idea of getting these things for free - one of the best things about them is the selection of music was incredibly vast. I found EXTREMELY obscure stuff on Kazaa that I've barely been able to find on Google.

Now it seems that Kazaa's server's aren't available anymore.

What do you use for getting MP3s?
 

smoothmarine187

Well-Known Member
It's all free........just make sure you click on this........ I will not use LimeWire BASIC for copyright infringement. lol
 
Music industry sues Augusta man over 5 downloads

In its running legal battle against unauthorized downloaders, five recording companies have sued an Augusta man in federal court claiming he illegally pirated and shared copyrighted music.

Scott Hinds, 23, is a defendant in one of a number of lawsuits by Recording Industry of America affiliates seeking to halt illegal sharing of copyrighted songs -- a once-widespread practice some maintain was "fair use," encouraged by certain computer software.

As artists attempt to regain control of their music -- and reap profits from sales -- recording industry spokeswoman Amanda Hunter said 18,000 individuals have been sued in similar lawsuits since September 2003, but Hinds is one of only six defendants in Maine.

Hinds said he is not yet represented by a lawyer.

Monday, he wondered: "Why choose me?"

"Every single person has done this," he said, saying he doesn't listen to music online presently.

The lawsuit, filed last week in U.S. District Court for the District of Maine, alleges Hinds illegally downloaded:

n "Automobile" by NWA, Priority Records, LLC;

n "All Over You" by LIve, UMG Recordings Inc.;

n "Fast Car" by Tracy Chapman, Elektra Entertainment Group;

n "Don't Know Why" by Norah Jones, Capitol Records Inc.; and

n "What Would You Say" by Dave Matthews Band, BMG Music.

The allegation is that Hinds used an "online media distribution system" to download tunes, then distributed the copyrighted material to others.

The lawsuit doesn't identify the download service Hinds allegedly used, nor does it identify individual users who allegedly obtained the copyrighted music from Hinds.

According to the association, "online investigators searched for copyrighted recordings made available by individuals on peer-to-peer networks."

They then filed a lawsuit against Internet service providers prompting them to identify individuals who allegedly shared music files.

Hinds faces a minimum civil penalty of $750 per song. There can be criminal penalties as well.

If guilty, Hinds would hardly be the first person found downloading music on the Internet; the Internet has been chockablock with sites offering free music almost since there have been browsers and bandwidth.

The most well-known site -- Napster, founded in 1999 by 18-year-old college dropout Shawn Fanning -- signed up 25 million users in its first year.

In 2000, the Recording Industry Association of America sued Napster, charging "tributary copyright infringement" -- an allegation that Napster was not violating copyright itself, but was contributing to and facilitating other people's infringement.

The premise of the civil lawsuit against Hinds is a December 2005 decision in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit, and the U.S. Supreme Court's 2004 opinion in MGM Studios, Inc., v. Grokster Ltd.

In the latter case, the court found "that a distributed file-sharing system is engaged in contributory copyright infringement when its principal object is the dissemination of copyrighted material.

"The foundation of this holding is a belief that people who post or download music files are primary infringers."
 

vraiblonde

Board Mommy
PREMO Member
Patron
I use iTunes :shrug:

I made a pact with myself that once large music libraries became available for download, I wouldn't steal anymore.
 

LexiGirl75

100% Goapele Head!
SamSpade said:
Now it seems that Kazaa's server's aren't available anymore.

What do you use for getting MP3s?

This is interesting news because I have Kazaa Gold (lifetime membership w/o spyware). I haven't downloaded it onto my new pc yet but I was planning to. I agree Kazaa is impressive to me inspite of the bad rep it gets which might be warranted to the free Kazaa and it's spyware trauma.

When I first started to download music back in 2000 I used Winamp and Napster. I miss the good ol' days. :sigh:
 
R

RadioPatrol

Guest
Torrents ....

Mandingo said:


:yeahthat:

We have all heard the arguments - download / don't download ..... with that said ........

:poke: I used to use Limewire, and was a paid supporter for a # or year's but I have not used it in a while .... lately I have Discovered Bittorrent - you can get music by the entire artist collection - Seriously torrents seem to be about moving larger file collections, whole DVD's Applications and Movies ... I was able to even find TV shows - some sites specialize in only TV and somebody out there in cyberspace records it and posts it .....

like most P2P it has gotten decentralized ... there are " Tracker" servers where one searches for a paticular song, app, book - in PDF .... etc then your software downloads from individual computers ....

be really careful when downloading Adobe Products they are really :smack: ANAL :buttkick: when it comes to DRM

a buddy of mine was still downloading the last version of photoshop - when he got this letter from comcast -

Comcast has been notified by Adobe Inc. that some @ your IP address / Home has been downloading Adobe Applications in Violation of the Digital Rights Management Act of 1996 ? needless to say he was freaked enough to stop right there .....

of course he was downloading the Mac OSX Version of Adobe CS2 - a smaller pond to dip from than say stuff for windows .....

So they are watching ..........

I am unemployed and have lots of time right now ........ the Moral Choice is of Course yours ......

99% of the time I'll DL something to check it out because it sounds interesting - and it turns out to be crap and it gets un installed .... the other 1% it is something really nice and I'll buy it when the price drops :razz:


And of course it should be said ..... Gov IT Dept's love to watch for this stuff now, not a good way to earn a promotion ...... :buttkick:
 
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