Apple's "Rendezvous" bites "Itunes"

Major Variola (ret.) mv at cdc.gov
Thu May 29 07:33:56 PDT 2003


[DRM, Utility vs. Infocontrol]

Apple is clamping down on piracy by imposing restrictions on the way
that music downloaded from its iTunes service can be shared.

Changes to the service stop people listening across the internet to
playlists of songs created by others.

The change was included in an iTunes software update that also fixed
some bugs in the service.

ITunes users are divided over the changes, but some people have been
heavily critical.

Stop sharing

Apple's iTunes music store has become hugely popular since it was
launched in May of this year and recorded about a million downloads in
its first week.

Part of the reason for its popularity was the fact that it placed few
restrictions on what people could do with the music they downloaded.

The iTunes service allowed people to listen to almost any music
collection that was sharing the same local computer network as they
were.

But clever iTunes users found a way to extend this local sharing across
the internet using Apple's own Rendezvous software.

Details of how to tweak iTunes to make it share playlists over the
internet, and allow people to record the songs being streamed, were
published online.

The update for iTunes is intended to close this loophole and limit who
can listen to a playlist.

"Rendezvous music sharing..., has been used by some in ways that have
surprised and disappointed us," said Apple in a statement.

"Some people are taking advantage of it to stream music over the
internet to people they do not even know," it added. "This was never the
intent."

The change has been widely debated on discussion boards online as well
as on sites such as Mac Central and Slashdot.

Many people have said the restrictions mean they will not upgrade to the
latest version and that the change stops many legitimate uses of iTunes.

One angry user wrote on Slashdot: "The digital lifestyle is all about
the fluidity of bits, the fact that all computers on the internet are,
in some sense, in the same place, no matter where they're physically
located."

Others were less outraged and said that, even with the change, the
iTunes service imposed far fewer conditions on its users than many other
online music services.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/2946180.stm





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