Napster puts music on pause

NEWS Struggling to make new song-blocking software work, Napster on Monday temporarily stopped all file trading on its once-popular service. The hiatus comes shortly after Napster disabled old versions of its software. It pushed its members to a new version that rendered the service all but unusable, blocking even the most obscure, uncopyrighted works from being traded. But people logging on Monday morning were unable to trade even the few songs left. The company posted a message on its Web page saying that "file transfers have been temporarily suspended while Napster upgrades its databases". The closed doors represent the latest setback for a service that has become all but irrelevant in the day-to-day world of online consumer music. Most of the millions of people that once flocked to Napster on a daily basis have fled for alternative services. Like Napster, many of these rivals are operating on legally tenuous ground, but they increasingly offer the breadth of music that has vanished from the former leader's service. A representative said that database glitches in conjunction with the new software for blocking songs prompted the temporary shutdown. Napster aims to comply with a court order banning the trade of most copyrighted works over its service. Leery of further court action, the company is acting conservatively to ensure that none of the music identified by the record industry is getting though its services. "There was music that should have been filtered out that was getting through," the Napster representative said, adding that the service would be restored "as soon as possible" after the database problems are fixed. The company did not give a timetable, however. The last month has seen an exodus of music lovers from Napster, as efforts to filter out songs identified by the record industry as copyrighted have dried up the once-free flow of music. At the beginning of May, Napster said that more than 1.3 million people a day were visiting its file-swapping service -- even though filters were eating into the number of files available. By late last week and early Monday morning, the company said the number of members online was fluctuating in the 130,000 to 150,000 range -- lower than competing services such as MusicCity and iMesh. Nevertheless, Napster's actions remain closely watched, both from a legal and a market perspective. "Napster still matters to consumers," said Gartner analyst P.J. McNealy. "The Napster name still has some resonance." From a legal viewpoint, the record industry's ongoing lawsuit against the company still appears to be the best bet for determining consumers' rights to swap music and other copyrighted digital files, a question to which the courts have not yet given a final verdict. The company's effort to make its file-swapping service squeaky-clean from a legal standpoint largely has been a desperate attempt to win its way into the good graces of the major record labels. Napster is still planning to launch a paid subscription service this summer and hopes to offer subscribers works from the same labels that have spent the last year and a half suing the company. It has won a tentative thumbs-up from EMI Recorded Music, Warner Music Group and BMG Entertainment, all of which are part of the MusicNet subscription plan. But Napster will only win rights to the MusicNet catalog if it can prove that its days of unauthorised file swapping are behind it, a condition that prompted its recent actions. Monday's shutdown was not related to the paid service, which Napster partner Bertelsmann originally said would launch at the beginning of July, a spokeswoman said. Napster executives have been more cautious with their promises, saying only that the subscription service will launch sometime this summer. The temporary shutdown isn't drawing much of a reaction from file-traders, who have already seen the service dwindle into a shadow of its former self. "To get actual, real use out of Napster now is more trouble than it's worth," said Wayne Chang, a onetime heavy Napster user. "It is just like pre-Napster days now, except I know what the (Recording Industry Association of America) is and why I hate them." The Internet is changing the face of the music industry forever. Find out more in ZDNet UK's MP3 News Section. Have your say instantly, and see what others have said. Click on the TalkBack button and go to the Napster Debate. Let the editors know what you think in the Mailroom. And read other letters.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in

Log in or create your ZDNet UK account below

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy. Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Membership FAQ

ZDNet UK Live

pbreddit

[programming] H.264 - a sting in the tail http://reddit.com/bfu4q [zdnet.co.uk]

reddit

H.264 - a sting in the tail [programming] 13 points, submitted by zigzag [zdnet.co.uk] http://reddit.com/bfu4q

cybfor

Malware infects second Vodafone HTC phone: [zdnet.co.uk] A second Android-based HTC Magic from Vodafone has been... http://dlvr.it/KhKx

miyabi81

Chatter preview http://www.zdnet.co.uk/news/application-development/2010/03/17/salesforce-opens-up-chatter-developer-preview-40088348/

cybfor

US gov t considers undercover social networking: [zdnet.co.uk] The Obama administration has considered sending... http://dlvr.it/Kh3L

sudipta_vodafone

Please give me chance in the vodafone essar Ltd as back office executive

7 hours ago by sudipta_vodafone on Vodafone culls 375 'mainly back-office' jobs
sudipta_vodafone

I want to get a back office job in vodafone direct payroll

7 hours ago by sudipta_vodafone on Vodafone culls 375 'mainly back-office' jobs
Xwindowsjunkie

I also find it harder to use. It used to scale properly in Firefox. Text would size up and down without dragging all the right edge debris with it....

10 hours ago by Xwindowsjunkie on ZDNet UK: faster, smarter, still IT all the way
dava4444

that comment bot is a nutter, it just referred me to the moderator on my own blog. shocked look. please help thank you Dava I'm afriad to...

14 hours ago by dava4444 on Welcome to the new ZDNet UK community!
dava4444

Hi Rupert! Don't think I could fill the above shoes... but if your ever looking for a consumer rights Tech blogger..tip me the wink lol peace Dava

15 hours ago by dava4444 on Fancy working for ZDNet UK?
dava4444

Hi Rupert My photo is gone from my profile and I just got told i was a spammer by the comment bot. the navigation is gone for my profile. :O on...

15 hours ago by dava4444 on Welcome to the new ZDNet UK community!
ator1940

With windows it is always more bloat, and a lot of that seems to be duplicated in various places. I've noticed that you will have freed space on...

21 hours ago by ator1940 on Can you believe it - 2765 kB will be freed?
BuzzMyStat

Buzz My Stat : New search for http://www.zdnet.co.uk Take a look: http://www.buzzmystat.com/site/zdnet.co.uk

Karen Friar

Hi Jamie, I'm sorry your comment got caught in the spam filter. We use an industry standard blacklist for this. I suspect that the comment may...

1 day ago by Karen Friar on Spam? Filter Changed?
J.A. Watson

Pop - Neither have I. Ever, under any circumstances. I'm much more accustomed to Windows slowly, but inexorably, consuming more and more disk...

1 day ago by J.A. Watson on Can you believe it - 2765 kB will be freed?
John Molloy

Apple are currently pushing to get tv content on the iPad by April 3rd. This could possibly be seen as a spoiler for that announcement I suppose....

2 days ago by John Molloy
Andrew Donoghue

Hey - presume you mean something that builds on Apple's existing TV device? Apple have already had a couple of runs at building Apple TV and it's...

2 days ago by Andrew Donoghue on Google's TV timing may reveal more to come
BVE2011

Google, Sony, Intel may build TV project www.zdnet.co.uk/news/emerging-tech/2010/03/18/google-sony-intel-may-build-tv-project-40088359/

ator1940

70,0000 to 90,0000 computers? A very small number considering some of these botnets are in the millions, and there are so many of them operating,...

2 days ago by ator1940 on Microsoft says it decimated Waledac botnet
ator1940

I agree Roger, and why can't they write secure code? What will happen when they find stolen code in windows? They have a track record of...

2 days ago by ator1940 on Microsoft lashing out at Linux, open source

Featured white papers

Achieving PCI Compliance for:Privileged Password Management & Remote Vendor Access

For multi-store outlets, including retail, banking, grocery, gas, hospitality, convenience stores and others, reducing (or avoiding) the cost of in-store system support and maintenance while maintaining compliance with PCI and other requirements has become a strategic challenge.

Download now

Web 2.0 Security Threats: How to Protect Your Enterprise Network

Speaker: Dr. Chenxi Wang, Principal Analyst, Security and Risk Management, Forrester Research, Inc. As Enterprises are increasingly connected to the Internet and as hard organizational boundaries are fast disappearing, security professionals are facing fresh challenges in Enterprise computing.

Download now

MindManager - Tutorial for New Users - Short

This tutorial is for new MindManager users and teaches you how to get started, by creating maps, reading maps and organizing your information.

Download now