Interview With Lucas Gonze of Webjay 62
Richard MacManus writes "I've published an interview with Lucas Gonze, creator of the P2P music-sharing web app Webjay. Lucas was an early developer of peer-to-peer applications and back in 2000 he created a P2P start-up called World OS (the product was called Goa). In this interview we discuss World OS / Goa, how it compared to other P2P apps such as Gnutella, the 'Internet as Platform' concept, how Webjay works, some P2P History and Decentralization Theory, and ways around the legal hassles of P2P."
Re:Bit Torrent! (Score:1, Informative)
How in the world... (Score:5, Insightful)
Joe
Re:How in the world... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:How in the world... (Score:3, Interesting)
Granted, the LDM is geared more towards providing data in "near real-time," as opposed to delivering static content. .
Re:This isn't that kind of interview (Score:1)
Re:How in the world... (Score:3)
I don't think that companies will ever use this for getting mp3s over the web. On the other hand, companies could use this to disseminate their own internal stuff. Search for ``joes spreadsheet'' on the internal p2p network, and if you don't find it, Joe is in trouble. Aca
Re:How in the world... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:How in the world... (Score:5, Informative)
Yeah, man, the basic principles of decentralization are still quite sound. I mean, how'd you get here? typing "66.35.250.150"?
The thing is, Webjay [webjay.org] (Gonze's current project, for those who skipped the article) isn't a decentralized service. It's a centralized index of audio from all over the net. It provides tools to aggregate disparate and far-flung audio into a single playlist, and lets users judge. It's pretty cool, actually, because it solves (or tries to solve) a big problem with online free music, which is that nobody wants to weed through the crap to find the good stuff.
Re:How in the world... (Score:1)
Can this ever work? Everyone I know listens to different kinds of music. I like "obscure" rock bands, my best friend is into classical and new age, another good friend listens to folk, King Tubby and such, my wife like arti
Re:How in the world... (Score:2)
WebJay isn't "p2p" (as in Napster, Kazaa, etc.) (Score:3, Informative)
Instead, it lets you build and publish playlists that point to content served by other boxes -- it doesn't "share" anything as much as it shares pointers to those things (a big difference from conventional "p2p" apps).
Also, I believe Lucas' intent is that it only share authorized work (another big difference from conventional "p2p")
Re:How in the world... (Score:1)
Re:How in the world... (Score:1)
So, let's say you want to download a file from some random FTP site. It's down. How do you propose you get the file?
Now, picture this. You're on a P2P network like this. Th
p2p is dying. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:p2p is dying. (Score:1)
Re:p2p is dying. (Score:2)
As long as joe user can get his free MP3s, he doesn't give a shit about the propoganda.
I'm almost suprised the parent didn't read "netcraft confirms it will still die."
Re:p2p is dying. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:p2p is dying. (Score:1)
Re:p2p is dying. (Score:2)
It's an awesome way to quickly disseminate updates and patches, I am surprised that some of the bigger game companies haven't started using it to release the often large patches they put out.
And I think Joe User *does* know his rights, RIAA just needs to piss off a few more before they get stomped...
Lucas gone Gonzo (Score:3, Funny)
"Interview with Lucas gone Gonzo"
Re:Lucas gone Gonzo (Score:2)
Re:A side thought (Score:5, Informative)
Re:A side thought (Score:2)
Re:A side thought (Score:2)
Re:A side thought (Score:1)
Re:A side thought (Score:2)
music industry revolution (Score:2, Insightful)
why don't artists just give away their music, and charge for concerts?
the cost of distributing used to be the promotion of a cd, the making of the cds, yadda. but with p2p those costs go to nothing.
artists don't make much on cd sales anyways
they make most of their money on concerts as it is.
(from what i've heard)
Re:music industry revolution (Score:5, Insightful)
why don't artists just give away their music, and charge for concerts?
the cost of distributing used to be the promotion of a cd, the making of the cds, yadda. but with p2p those costs go to nothing.
the cost of a CD is more than just distributing: it is also the manufacture of the cd (ok, this again goes to $0 when you just go via P2P), cost of recording, administrative overhead,
Recording music is not cheap. While yes, it is possible to setup a home recording studio fairly inexpensivly that sounds decent, to get really good quality sound you're paying lots of money (for example, a good studio mic can run thousands of dollars). Building a studio is expensive, and thus renting one is expensive. Not to mention, you have to pay your sound engineer, support staff, etc.
Also, someone's gotta figure out how you're doing with fans (which is much harder to do with P2P than CD sales). Are you popular enough in Toronto that it's worth looking into playing a concert there?
You've also got to pre-pay for a lot of the production - renting a stage if required, sound gear, lights, trucks (if touring), paying security, roadies, hotels, food..
Now, here's the big problem. Where do you get that money? Do you go to the bank and say "hey look, I need $80,000 to put on this concert.."? Perhaps mortgage your house or sell your car.. what happens if you only sell 20% of the tickets you expected, because 5 other bands that are bigger than you are playing the same city the same night (since that's the only way they can make money now)?
While I disagree a lot with the way record companies work, there's not many places that will spend $1-million on you, and if you don't "make it", just let it go..
Re:music industry revolution (Score:2, Insightful)
they provide the best p2p network with the highest quality files and broadest range
in return you lose privacy. they want to know who you listen to, where you physically are, other stuff that helps them determine which artist is the best investment
music execs invest the money for concerts on artists they think are worth it. if the concert is a success, the artist gets paid.
everything shifts from promotion of cd to pro
Is webjay really p2p? (Score:1)
P2P as the larger Internet (Score:1)
Then, it was "You can't trust anyone on the internet. You can't depend on a web server being there when you need it. And you can't really get people to buy anything from you!"
I think those criticisms answered themselves with time. The Net changed business and dating forever, and now seems to be leading the U.S.A. into a great standoff between the intelligen
Don't Steal Music (Score:4, Interesting)
Sounds to me like it's worth a try.
Re:Don't Steal Music (Score:1)
Lucas Gonze (Score:1)
But when I read this from his interview
" Webjay will be history the instant somebody sues, no matter how stupid and wrong the suit is. Obviously. "
Well, that's not serious in any way... I mean how can he go on with this project, under this kind of threat ?
Isn't there a foundation like the FSF, but for P2P, which could help with at least obviously "wrong" suits ?
Re:Lucas Gonze (Score:1)
Isn't there a foundation like the FSF, but for P2P, which could help with at least obviously "wrong" suits ?
Until the U.S. has a system like Britain's, where the loser pays the legal fees, there will be stupid lawsuits.
Still, the quote reads:
" Webjay will be history the instant somebody sues, no matter how stupid and wrong the suit is. Obviously. "
It's a potential problem, sure, but it's not like a suit has been filed.
off: blink (Score:2)
I was wrong : http://webjay.org/about [webjay.org]