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Unfortunately, it seems that Freenet is rarely mentioned without an 
immediate mention of "illegal content." ...

-- Ed Huff

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Crackdown May Send Music Traders Into Software Underground

September 15, 2003
 By SAUL HANSELL 




 

Some people may well be intimidated by the 261 lawsuits
that the music industry has filed against Internet users it
says are illegally sharing songs. 

But hundreds of software developers are racing to create
new systems, or modify existing ones, to let people
continue to swap music - hidden from the prying eyes of the
Recording Industry Association of America, or from any
other investigators. 

"With the R.I.A.A. trying to scare users around the world,
the developer community is pumping up to create networks
which are safer and more anonymous," said Pablo Soto, a
developer in Madrid who designed the software for two
file-sharing systems, Blubster and Piolet. 

Some experts wonder if the industry's efforts will create
more trouble for it than ever. "The R.I.A.A. is breeding
antibiotic-resistant bacteria," said Clay Shirky, a
software developer who teaches new media at New York
University. 

Blubster, which has an estimated quarter-million users,
already uses technology to make eavesdropping more
difficult, Mr. Soto said. Its next version will encrypt
files so they can be decoded only by their intended user. 

Other systems are sending files on more circuitous Internet
routes instead of, or in addition to, using encryption. And
some developers hope to replace the current systems, which
connect millions of users, with private file-sharing
networks - speakeasies that may be too small for the
industry to find. 

The developers of the new systems say there is nothing
illegal about writing software that helps people keep
secrets. United States courts have held that file-sharing
software may not be banned if it has both legitimate and
illegal uses. 

The Recording Industry Association of America has said that
it is unconcerned about the increasing anonymity of file
sharing. The stated purpose of its lawsuits is not to catch
every hard core music pirate, but to show millions of
casual file sharers that what they are doing is illegal. 

In addition, none of the new methods offer perfect
anonymity, experts say. Yet many of the new systems are
likely to make the recording industry work harder to find
file traders. 

Private file sharing stems from academic work on encryption
and data security over the last decade. One system is
Freenet, introduced in 1999 by Ian Clarke. It allows people
to publish files to be used by others, with technology
meant to keep the source anonymous. 

"Everyone said the Internet was an anarchistic thing
through which anyone could say anything," Mr. Clarke said.
"But in reality it is incredibly easy to monitor what is
going on on the Internet. I was interested in creating a
system that would preserve anonymity." 

Freenet is similar to other file-sharing services in that
users make part of their hard drives available to hold
content to be downloaded by other users. But all the files
are encrypted so no one knows what files are on a given
machine. Requests to download a file are also encrypted. 

Freenet has been a way to disseminate banned political
tracts and has been used by people who want to share
illegal content like child pornography. Mr. Clarke says he
is willing to help people send files illegally if he can
also prevent political censorship. "I am an absolutist on
free speech," he said. 

Freenet, however, is slow and hard to use, and it requires
knowing a specific file name. As a result, it has not been
a viable alternative to music-sharing services like KaZaA.
Developers in Germany are creating a program called Frost
meant to make Freenet easier to use. 

Another file-sharing model is for business users who want
to collaborate while protecting secrets from competitors.
"The needs of businesses and the needs of file traders are
the same," Mr. Shirky said. "I want a secure way to send
you a three megabyte PowerPoint file with no way for anyone
else to see it. That is not different from an MP3 file." 

Software by companies like Groove Networks creates private
file networks for specified users. Groove, which can cost
$69 or more per user, is not widely employed by music
sharers. But a program called Waste is attracting the
interest of music traders who want to create "darknets," as
private file-sharing communities are known. 

Waste was written by Justin Frankel, who works for the
Nullsoft unit of America Online. It was posted on
Nullsoft's site one day last May and removed the next ,
although not fast enough to keep copies from circulating on
the Web. (AOL's corporate cousin, Warner Music, is a backer
of the R.I.A.A.'s campaign against file sharing.) Frankel
and AOL did not return calls seeking comment. 

Investigators for the music industry acknowledge that some
of these technologies may make their jobs more difficult,
but they suggest that users may not want to take advantage
of them. 

"The thing about darknets is that the users show more
culpability than people who simply use peer-to-peer," said
Randy Saaf, referring to peer-to-peer sharing systems like
KaZaA. Mr. Saaf is chief executive of MediaDefender Inc., a
music technology company that does work for the record
industry. "When people are found to be using them, they
will face stiffer penalties." 

Meanwhile, older file-sharing services do not want to lose
users to darknets or other newcomers. Many of them are
trying to add features they say will protect privacy.
Streamcast networks, the creator of Morpheus, introduced a
feature this summer that lets users relay files by way of
intermediary computers known as proxy servers - a technique
that can help obscure the path between the source of the
file and the person who downloads it. 

Proxy servers and similar methods can be an effective way
to hide, said Stuart Schechter, a Harvard security
researcher. But, he said, there is nothing to stop the
recording industry from creating proxy servers as so-called
honey pots to serve as decoys and gather information on
users. "The problem with any of these systems is how do you
decide who to trust," he said. 

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/09/15/technology/15DARK.html?ex=1064632294&ei=1&en=a402d10bb2c67239


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