http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2005/05/27/bittorrent/print.html

Same as it ever was
George Lucas can sleep easy tonight. The FBI saved "Star Wars" from the evil
rebels of the Internet file-sharing alliance.

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By Andrew Leonard

May 27, 2005  |  Haven't we seen this rerun before? A particular version of
file-sharing software becomes popular. The entertainment industry starts
paying attention. Lawsuits begin to fly. A few people get their fingers
burned, and then we do it all over again. Napster, Kazaa, Grokster and now
BitTorrent -- the names change but the story doesn't. The software will get
better and the busts will get bigger. Same as it ever was.

The latest news in the file-sharing wars was delivered via a press release
from the Department of Justice with all the solemn portentousness of an
announcement that a major terrorist had been captured. "This morning, agents
of the FBI and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) executed 10
search warrants across the United States against leading members of a
technologically sophisticated P2P network known as Elite Torrents."

Ho-hum. It's not as if we didn't see this coming. Yesterday's big bust was
inevitable from the moment the first geek gave BitTorrent a test drive,
painlessly shared a huge file, and thought, wow, this works pretty well.
BitTorrent is a fantastic way for Internet users to share the job of
transferring huge files back and forth. But it's also a tool that, so far,
has made little pretense at offering privacy. Those who upload and download
files -- and given the way BitTorrent works, pretty much everyone who uses
the service is doing both at the same time -- can be tracked. But naturally,
every bust like yesterday's only encourages more programmers to try to
figure out how to make it less easy to trace who's using the software.

What precisely prompted this most recent crackdown? Given the suspicious
timing, it appears to be the horrifying news that "Star Wars: Revenge of the
Sith" was being made available six hours before it started appearing in
theaters, and that all told, some 10,000 copies were transferred before the
authorities quashed the rebels. As of Tuesday, "Sith" had only raked in some
$339 million worldwide, so something clearly had to be done. After all,
"Internet pirates cost U.S. industry hundreds of billions of dollars in lost
revenue every year from the illegal sale of copyrighted goods and new online
file-sharing technologies make their job even easier," said Michael J.
Garcia, Homeland Security assistant secretary for immigration and customs
enforcement.

Hundreds of billions! Wow! It's amazing anything gets produced at all in
Hollywood or Silicon Valley with those kind of losses! But hang on a sec.
Come on. Please. The very idea that the people downloading "Star Wars" to
watch on their computers might somehow be dissuaded from shelling out for
the movie in theaters is so ludicrous that any movie studio executive who
even hints at believing it should be locked up in a stockade and forced to
watch nothing but Anakin Skywalker/Queen Padme love scenes in a permanent
loop. OK, I confess, I don't have quantitative evidence to back this up, but
I'll lay good odds that the Sith-stealing fanboys at EliteTorrents are the
exact same people who will see the movie multiple times on the big screen,
buy the DVD, own at least one light saber already, and otherwise will work
all their lives to ensure that George Lucas' descendents live on easy street
throughout the 22nd century.

Here's a news flash, folks. Call it the First Law of Piracy. The most
popular albums, movies and TV shows are precisely the ones most likely to be
shared on the Internet. It is a sign of success, not failure, that the
demand for "Sith" was so high. And while we're at it, how about a Second
Law: The First Law will be true for all time and there is nothing that
entertainment industry executives can do about it, no matter how many
lawyers they throw at the problem, no matter how many fines are assessed, no
matter how annoying the digital rights management schemes they come up with,
or how many times Congress and the judiciary kowtow to their bleating. Any
phenomenon that hits big in the culture-at-large will be copied and shared
online. Which leads us to the Third Law: This isn't about right or wrong,
legality or illegality. It just is.

I'll tell you who the most bummed-out people are today, excluding those
whose doors were knocked upon by FBI agents. It's not the would-be movie
stealer, desperate to avoid paying $10 at the theater. It's the person who
missed "American Idol" last night, or the season finale of "Lost," or the
second part of a two-part "West Wing" rerun, and is now freaking out because
he or she is terrified that plugging the words "Lost" and "BitTorrent" into
Google will be laying out the welcome carpet for a posse of federal
officers.

It should go without saying that these are the same people who'd likely be
happy to cough up a few bucks if they had the ability to head over to some
iTunes-like service and dial up the show they missed. If iTunes has proven
anything, it is that the existence of widespread piracy points directly at a
marketing opportunity. Where there is desire, there is money to be made.

Well, to all those bummed-out TV fans, all I can say is, have patience. Your
day will come. Soon. Our future will be one in which everything we want will
be available to us at a low enough price to seem worth paying. Because
that's the only way the entertainment industry is going to survive.

This may mean that there is less money to be made overall by the big studios
and the mega movie stars and the platinum pop artists. Tough noogies.
Average real wages are falling in the United States, most likely as a result
of intense global competition. Share the pain, folks! The same factors that
make it possible for an Indian programmer in Bangalore to compete with one
in Silicon Valley -- the Internet, high-bandwidth telecom lines, the easy
ability to share digital information -- make it possible for entertainment
consumers to gain access to whatever pleases them, quickly, cheaply and
unstoppably.

It's that kind of world now. And the most stupefying part of it all is that
with every bust, the entertainment industry makes it less and less likely
that it will have the upper hand in how it all plays out. I asked Cory
Doctorow, an up-and-coming science fiction writer who has pondered and
predicted the impact of file sharing as much as anyone on the planet, how he
was reacting to the most recent news. Here is his response, in full:

"The long-term solution to file-sharing must be a negotiated peace with
peer-to-peer (P2P) services. ITunes is nice, but it is dwarfed by Kazaa and
Grokster, et al, and it lives alongside of these services, without
cannibalizing their users (in the same way that Evian co-exists with
tap-water without hurting tap-water consumption).

"A P2P peace would collect money from file-sharers and disburse it to
artists, based on what is being shared. The original Napster was perfect for
this task, since every download went through a central server. But the
studios sued Napster out of existence.

"Each successive generation of P2P since has placed a greater emphasis on
attack-resistance and anonymity. The music and movie industry ultimately
require a trackable, countable P2P-verse. But their lawsuits are breeding
just the reverse.

"The lawsuits against BitTorrent Web sites will beget trackerless versions
of BitTorrent, already in production. These are the antibiotic-resistant
bacteria of P2P: the outcome of heavyhanded, ill-advised attacks on the most
popular technology ever.

"There isn't any quantity of lawsuits that will convince users to give up
P2P. But if the studios keep it up, they will permanently alienate their
customers and drive them to seek out successively less controllable versions
of P2P systems.

"It's slow, spectacular suicide."

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About the writer
Andrew Leonard is a staff writer at Salon. 



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