MPAA seeks Internet2 tests, P2P monitor role
By John Borland
http://news.com.com/2102-1026_3-5458537.html?tag=st.util.print

Story last modified November 18, 2004, 12:47 PM PST

The Motion Picture Association of America is in talks with the Internet2
research consortium, hoping both to test next-generation video delivery
projects and to monitor peer-to-peer piracy on the ultrahigh-speed network.

Internet2 is essentially a vastly faster version of the Internet run by
universities and technology companies, aimed at facilitating research into
high-bandwidth hardware and applications, and helping researchers who
exchange huge amounts of data. Student file-swapping traffic also has found
its way onto the network, however.

The MPAA has been talking with the research consortium for several months,
with an eye toward possibly joining the Internet2 group as a member, or
simply opening up a collaborative relationship.

"We've been working with Internet2 for a while to explore ways we can take
advantage of delivering content at these extremely high speeds, and
basically manage illegitimate content distribution at the same time," said
Chris Russell, the MPAA's vice president of Internet standards and
technology. "Those would go hand in hand."

The Internet2 project has shown Hollywood the commercial potential--and the
dangers--of a network powerful enough to allow a full DVD to be transferred
even faster than an ordinary MP3 might be today.

Recently, researchers successfully sent data from Switzerland to Tokyo at
speeds of 7.21 gigabits per second. That was enough speed to transfer a
full-length DVD anywhere in the world in less than five seconds, researchers
said.

Talks between Internet2 and the Hollywood group have been ongoing for almost
a year, following a speech that former MPAA chief Jack Valenti gave to
university officials focusing on the problems of piracy and the possibility
of having any movie ever made available at a moment's notice.
Digital agenda

That vision resonated with Internet2 researchers, who are already exploring
new models of content delivery. At least one studio, Warner Bros., is
already a member of the group, as is the Napster online music service. The
two groups have been discussing potential collaboration since.

"This wraps together the broad interest we have in working with our members
and potential members on advanced content delivery," said Internet2 Vice
President Gary Bachula. "Obviously we're interested in making sure that's
legal and safe."

Researchers have themselves been watching the growth of file-swapping
traffic on the next-generation networks with some concern for several years.

University of Oregon researcher Joe St. Sauver presented a paper in early
2002 showing that on many spans of the network, file trades related to the
Kazaa and Morpheus software accounted for as much as 30 percent of network
traffic while school was in session.

The share of Internet2 bandwidth taken up by file-sharing traffic is today
much lower, typically under 7 percent, although a large amount of network
measurement traffic has been added to the total mix since 2002, pushing the
percentage of all other applications down. St. Sauver said many universities
also have added network control tools that can block or slow file-swapping
traffic.

The rise of supercharged file-swapping services like i2Hub has caught
copyright holders' eyes in recent months, however. Cary Sherman, president
of the Recording Industry Association of America, testified to Congress
early last month that the fast university networks posed their own special
risk to copyright holders.

"The speed of these networks--up to thousands of times faster than ordinary
Internet networks�-allows users to obtain copyrighted movies in minutes and
music in seconds," Sherman told legislators. "Further, the closed nature of
these networks, being available only to those engaged in academia, makes it
more difficult for copyright owners to protect their works and to notify
responsible parties of their infringement."

The studios launched their first set of lawsuits against file-swappers
earlier this week. However, any relationship with Internet2 would go beyond
simply finding and cracking down on copyright offenses, the MPAA's Russell
said.

Hollywood executives are interested in part in figuring out how
file-swappers' behavior might change when extremely fast connections are
available, he said. This could help studios guard against future piracy, as
well as control today's swappers.

The trade association also is interested in testing new video technologies,
although no specific projects are under way. The MPAA is already working
with the Cooperation for Education Network Initiatives in California group,
which is seeking gigabit-speed connections for California communities by
2010, Russell said.

Some projects are already under way on Internet2 that show promise of
expanding the role of networked entertainment with this power available.
Researchers at the University of Southern California have demonstrated a
high-definition video connection with 10 separate surround-sound channels of
audio, streamed flawlessly from Georgia to California, for example. 



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