Print This Article Post Comment Add To Favorites Email to Friends Ezine Ready

File Sharing, The Controversy.

By: Screagle.com Home | Internet-and-Business


File sharing, the practice of distributing or providing access to digitally stored information, such as software, multi-media and documents. File sharing can be implemented through a variety of techniques, common methods include sharing removable media, purposely built distribution networks such as Apples 'iTunes' and the more popular method, peer-to-peer (P2P) networking. Peer-to-peer networks allow users to digitally distribute anything and everything, sounds simple, right?

Whilst in practice it is extremely straight forward and completely harmless, we can't hide from the fact that file sharing (aided by P2P networks) engineered a vast illegal network which is currently thriving. The increasing popularity of the mp3 music format in the late 1990's led to the release and growth of Napster. Napster is still highly regarded as the godfather of P2P file sharing, essentially paving the way for decentralized and semi-decentralised peer-to-peer file sharing networks such as Gnutella, Gnutella2, eDonkey2000 and the Kazaa network. Today, users are more familiar with the term "torrent downloads". Torrents are specialized files utilized in P2P network environments allowing users to download files at a faster rate. Whilst currently not considered illegal, torrents are extremely controversial largely due to the fact they are mainly used to distribute pirated data such as the latest films, music and computer games.

I can see what you're thinking, why not just close down the "networks"? To put it simply, it's impossible. To understand this claim, you have to understand how torrents actually work. Torrents use a toolkit called a "tracker", it's the trackers job to coordinate the P2P transfer of files among users, tracker applications typically run on websites. When initiating the download of a torrent, a user clicks on a link pointing to a torrent meta-data file. These meta-data files are not stored on the torrent trackers server, but are distributed among a number of torrent file servers. Each torrent file points to a tracker, which keeps a global registry of all the downloaders and seeds of the file in question. The tracker then responds to a download request with a list of peers who have (or a part of) the requested file, the user can then establish a direct connection and basically asks for chunks of the download.
To put it simply you are downloading from other users who possess the requested file, also known as peers. The "network" is essentially the entire world, how is one supposed to moderate what the planet is sharing? Putting an end to illegal file sharing and preventing piracy would take something exceptionally groundbreaking and somewhat drastic.

Todays news is littered with short films produced by the media designed to belittle illegal downloaders and "educate" joe public on the damage being caused by such actions. Bold claims are often outlined, "up to 800,000 jobs in the creative industries out of 1.8 million in total are threatened...", "billions has been lost due to piracy...", "record companies forced into liquidation...". More recently the media has been focusing on fines directed towards illegal downloaders, fines ranging anywhere from $1000 to $250,00000, all abit over the top isn't it? Well, according to the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) it's only the beginning.

In 2003 the RIAA began legal proceedings againts Jammie Thomas-Rasset for infringing the copyrights of two dozen major-label songs on the popular P2P network Kazaa. The punishment? A cringeworthy fine of $80,000, per song. For the lables themselves, that's roughly equivalent to selling 114,000 songs at Apple's iTunes Store. Thomas-Rasset's was the first trial in the campaign against individual file-sharers that the RIAA began in 2003 and ended late last year. As such, it was one of the few tests of the legal underpinnings of that campaign, including the argument that making tracks available to others online (by keeping them in a folder that was available for sharing) was a form of infringement. Is Jammie's excessive penalty enough to deter you from downloading pirated data?

So, legal action is been presented and taken againts illegal downloaders, but is it enough? Various procedures have been put into place to help combat piracy. Internet service providers (ISPs) for example have been forced to crack down on repeat offenders who insist on constantly downloading pirated data by implementing a "three strikes and your gone" type system. Not exactly $80,000 is it? Whilst we could spend a lifetime discussing possible solutions to preventing piracy, we can't hide from the fact that file sharing in it's most basic terms is here to stay for some time to come.

The economic turmoil throughout our world is financially damaging and hitting familys hard, the solution to this is to spend as little money as possible. Think of it this way, you have had a tough month, scrimped and scraped to pay the bills, you're working six days a week but for what? Survival? To top it off this years most anticipated game has just been released and you can't afford it, but wait, it's available for FREE online, you could be playing it within the hour! We've all been there, whether it's a game, a film, maybe some software.. it's convenient for us to sit on our backsides and wait for said download to reach 100%.

It's all very well ISPs threatening to cut their customers off from the world wide web and large record labels taking legal action, the world in it's entirety is to blame, filesharing is an extremely lucrative market and it's here to stay.

Article Authored by: http://www.screagle.com - The best of file sharing and movie streaming...




Article Source: http://www.eArticlesOnline.com

About the Author:


Tags: , , , , , ,

Please Rate this Article

 

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Internet-and-Business Articles Via RSS!

Recent Related Articles From Internet-and-Business

  • File Extension Torrent
    By: Roderic Blum | Jan 18th 2010
    A TORRENT file basically allows you to download large files within a matter of a few seconds. This can be done because what a TORRENT file does is that it distributes the data over a large number of servers so that it does not put too much of a burden on one single server. This makes downloading faster and easier. Read

  • What Is A Torrent File And How Does It Work?
    By: Roberto Bell | Jul 4th 2008
    A torrent file is the file that is transferred among users using the torrent technology. The file extension used by torrent files is .torrent. Torrent files, when added into a torrent application, can be distributed among numerous amounts of people without the need of any major hardware costs and server fees on a particular ... Read

  • Oversize Pst File Makes Microsoft Office Outlook 2007 Unusable
    By: Mohit Mathur | Jul 8th 2010
    Does Microsoft Office Outlook 2007 crashes on your Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium operating system-based computer? Are you unable to perform typical Outlook operations like sending an email, receiving an email, and moving any item? This behavior generally occurs due to oversized Outlook PST file. However, Microsoft Office ... Read

  • Why Trimming A Pst File Is Necessary In Microsoft Outlook?
    By: Mohit Mathur | Aug 6th 2010
    Microsoft Outlook is a very popular & highly used email application program which saves the email items such as messages, calenders, contacts etc in .pst file format. PST stands for Personal Storage Table file and has the function for storing the data in Microsoft Outlook. In many cases continuous use of Outlook leads to in ... Read

  • Open Damage Zip Files Using Zip Recovery Software
    By: outlook | Jan 28th 2011
    If you are experiencing problem of data inaccessibility due to corrupted Zip files, then there is a way to get back your data, you can get a third-party Zip file repair tool to Repair Damage Zip File and ZIP recovery. SysTools ZIP File repair tool is an efficient tool to ZIP repair and open damage ZIP file.
    Read

  • How To Manage Outlook Data Files Size?
    By: Mohit Mathur | Feb 8th 2010
    Microsoft Outlook is one of the dynamically used e-mail clients and usually processes various incoming and outgoing e-mails. Since its data file (.pst) is bounded to a specific file size, 2 GB in Outlook 2002 and earlier versions, user needs to give special care to maintain the file size. Even when one deletes the file item ... Read

  • Recovering Lotus Notes When You Are Unable To Delete A Document In Lotus Notes 7.0
    By: Mohit Mathur | Jul 3rd 2010
    Lotus Notes is an emailing application developed and marketed by IBM. In Lotus Notes architecture, all the data is stored in a standard file that is the NSF (Notes Storage File) file. Apart from emailing, it is also used for other features such as contacts, calendar items, to-do lists, etc. At times, these NSF files get cor ... Read

  • Why You Shouldn't Download Illegal Movies
    By: Peter Nisbet | Mar 12th 2011
    You cannot download illegal movies or music that are copyright-protected, but not all movie downloads from memberships sites are illegal. There are websites available that enable you to pay a membership fee to download free movies whose copyright has been released in advance. Read

  • About Pst Formats, Use, And File Size Limit
    By: Mohit Mathur | Feb 15th 2010
    All versions of Microsoft Outlook use PST (Personal Folder) file to hold e-mails, contacts, calendar entries, and other data. Though all these versions seem to use same kind of PSTs, but as the fact Outlook uses two different formats in PST: ANSI (American National Standards Institute) and Unicode (the standard format that ... Read

  • Split Pst File When Archiving Can Not Solve The Problem
    By: Mohit Mathur | Jun 15th 2010
    All versions of Microsoft Outlook, a popular email client and personal information manager, use PST (Personal Storage Table) files for storing all your valuable emails, tasks, notes, contacts, calendar entries, journal, attachments, appointments, and more. Over time, the size of PST file becomes too large and it decreases t ... Read


Copyright © 2005-2011 eArticlesOnline, LLC - All Rights Reserved
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy