John Klima on Thu, 25 Apr 2002 21:14:01 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: RHIZOME_RAW: Really Viral Marketing |
this is an intriguing idea, and i'm gonna play devil's advocate and not reject the notion off hand. you rightfully say that our machines are our souls, but personally i own more than one (soul?). if say, i made one of my old (as in a year) clunkers just a net media machine, what do i care if some spare cycles are used for a render farm, as long as my tunes don't get interupted, this could actually be a really "sound" idea. i have any number of old machines that are more than capable of playing mp3's, if offering my spare cpu cycles, on a machine i only use for media playback, solves the whole payment problem, i'm down with it. j "Christopher Fahey [askrom]" wrote: > > This is a fascinating article about the new owner of Kazaa, Nikki > Hemming, who has turned the notorious file-sharing application into what > could be a very disturbing yet influential chapter in the history of > file-sharing and, hence, copyright law. She's a daring businessperson, > I'll give her that: > http://news.com.com/2100-1023-890197.html > > She seems to be quietly gearing up her company for a long legal battle. > She also seems to have a "get rich while you can" scheme just in case it > all fails: > http://news.com.com/2100-1023-873181.html > > This article says that when you install Kazaa you also install a little > hidden app called "Altnet" that allows the app's maker (Brilliant > Digital) to use your computer to do all kinds of stuff at any time, in > theory without asking you. They claim they would never do it, but they > acknowledge that they could. If you don't figure out how to uninstall it > after installing Kazaa, the app just sits there on your machine like > little secret back door. They could use your PC as a 'network farm' for > complex 3D animation rendering. They could tell your machine to play you > a slideshow of targeted ads. They could monitor your surfing activities. > I think it is specifically designed to install other apps on your > computer. They have not yet "turned it on", however. > > This got me thinking that Kazaa probably got paid a lot of money to put > this app into their installation package. Kazaa's biggest asset was > their ability to sell (to business partners) space in the Kazaa > installation package to third parties, a common practice among popular > shareware apps. Unlike other businesses who do this, however, Brilliant > Digital's product is able to, in turn, re-sell their newly-purchased > hidden-installation channel to their own customers. > > Both Kazaa and Brilliant offer their business partners/customers the > opportunity to secretly "have their way" with the end user. What we get > is a file sharing app, and in return they get the ability to market to > us, use our CPU cycles, spy on us, or otherwise fuck us. Kazaa is a > primary provider and Brilliant is a kind of "re-seller" of what might be > called of "Pay Up The Ass" (or as they say in Spanish, "PUTA") marketing > channels. > > This gets more complex when you remember (from the first article) that > Brilliant was one of of Nikki Hemming's business associates even before > she bought Kazaa. > > It is my theory that these people have come up with what might be an > early prototype for the answer to the RIAA's prayers: turn the > predominant distribution channel for online file sharing into something > that has a way to extract some kind of payment from the end users, even > if it's not money. In other words, make people pay for music by > controlling the most popular way of getting to the music. PUTA may be > the currency that we, as consumers, use to 'purchase' media when it is > possible to get it for free - we use our souls instead of our money to > buy digital media. By redefining the word "free" and by gaining control > over the predominant distribution channels in file sharing, somebody > (Kazaa? RIAA?) might achieve the goal of actually making people "pay" > for what would be traditionally "pirated" content. > > We put our personal time and the resources of our own computers (which > are in 2002 effectively extensions of our own bodies, symbiotically > indespensible) up as payment for media. Kazaa and Brilliant are selling > us media which essentially comes with a built-in virus, and we accept it > just like we've always accepted advertising on everything else we own > and use. It's a brave new world. > > It may well be doomed to fail, however, since somebody is always going > to figure out a way to piggyback onto the Kazaa network and pirate the > files, anyway. > > -Cf > > [christopher eli fahey] > art: http://www.graphpaper.com > sci: http://www.askrom.com > biz: http://www.behaviordesign.com > > + "soon, i will rise from the dead" viewerat > -> Rhizome.org > -> post: list@rhizome.org > -> questions: info@rhizome.org > -> subscribe/unsubscribe: http://rhizome.org/subscribe.rhiz > -> give: http://rhizome.org/support > + > Subscribers to Rhizome are subject to the terms set out in the > Membership Agreement available online at http://rhizome.org/info/29.php3 _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold