Former AOLers Bet on Private P2P App 169
buhatkj writes "Some former AOL staffers have come up with something interesting. Namely, a P2P/instant messaging/groupware tool called
Grouper.
Sounds to me a bit like the GAIM plugin suggested by downhill battle..."
Too late in the game... (Score:3, Informative)
The reason that P2P networks are useful is because the speeds are fast and there is a TON of material out there. I'm sorry but a private network that is invite only just won't cut it.
Running Grouper through university networks can save Internet bandwidth costs because file transfers are done between machines on the local network (unlike other P2P networks).
Most Universities probably don't want ANY filesharing. A lot of them have limited bandwith for P2P applications as it is. Do you think that really want it going on at all? Probably not. Too many problems w/the RIAA and the MPAA.
However, Felser said Grouper's emphasis on being a small, private, encrypted network minimizes the risk. "We're a heck of a lot safer to the business because we target very small groups of people who already know and trust each other. And we have a very firm anti-spyware policy. We'll never add spyware or adware of any kind."
However, to outsiders (RIAA/MPAA) encryption means hiding data that doesn't belong to you. They will counter any argument with that statement.
P2P is fine with the free alternatives. I'm sorry but I just don't think this program is going anywhere. Maybe if it was created 5 or 6 years ago.
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:1)
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Let's see the entire quote as that isn't fully correct:
Currently in beta, Grouper limits private networks to 30 members. While file sharing is a key feature in the application, there is no uploading/downloading of music, Felser explained, citing the legal issues associated with sharing of copyrighted works.
By limiting music sharing to streams in small groups, Felser said
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2)
I also doubt that keeping performances "private" would hold up as a legitimate defense.
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:5, Interesting)
As far as the "private" performance, it should hold up in that only your invited/allowed "friends" (at this point up to 30) can listen to any given song at any given time. It's not offered to the general public. This would be like me having some friends over and playing music from my personal MP3 library. It's not a public performance because only my friends are listening to it, and they are only there because I invited them to the private gathering.
But the tricksy lawyerses will probably take away the precious anyway they like because they hates the precious and would rather see us dead than have it.
Wait a minute. (Score:2)
Earth to Harry Potter...
By limiting music sharing to streams in small groups, Felser said Grouper simply enables "private performances," which is protected by U.S. Copyright Law.
"We're not a public file-sharing network. What we offer is a way to connect to hard drives within a group in a safe, encrypted environment."
I will believe that this doubletalk will fly with the RIAA's and MPAA's lawyers when I see gas stations star
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:4, Informative)
It will NOT share files with MP3 or WMA extensions. Who knows that filetypes they'll decide to block next.
If they get rid of those restrictions (and the 30 person maximum) I'll bite. Until then, it's simple an interesting bit of software that I'll pass on.
N.
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:5, Interesting)
It would be great to have a "trickle-sync" directory designation, so you could automatically share amongst group members. It would work like this:
One person would drop files into a directory designated as "trickle-sync", and it would be slowly passed-along to everyone else in the group automatically without any prompting (assuming they enabled that feature on their machines). Rather than using full available bandwidth, it might be set to, say, a 5kb/sec maximum or something (or dynamically adjust the bandwidth depending on what else is happening on the network at the time).
The idea being that if you found a new song, program, video file etc. that you think other people in your group might be interested in, you'd just drop it in that folder and eventually everyone else would get it automatically and save them the trouble of having to go look for it and download it.
The trickle-sync folder could have a maximum size limit on it, so if new files arrived and the folder was over-size, it would delete the oldest files first to make room for the new stuff.
N.
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2)
DING! next 'marketable product service' please.
stop wasting our f-cking time.
Cheers.
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2)
What's to keep somebody from putting "n3kk3dfoto.jpg.exe" in the push folder?
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:1)
Yes, yes, they charge for features like filediff support, but the free version still works pretty well.
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2)
BackWeb tried this (Score:2)
It really worked. You could transfer hundreds of megabytes over slow, unreliable connections - so long as you didn't really mind how long it took to transfer. Hours... Days... Weeks...
The protocol was highly optimized. Everything was encrypted. They used differential downloading technology (similar to that used in revision control systems)
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2)
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:1)
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2)
It will NOT share files with MP3 or WMA extensions. Who knows that filetypes they'll decide to block next.
That's stupid. One thing that I have found my computer extrememly useful for is voice dictation. I'm currently using the Olympus proprietary ".dss" format, but I'm considering switching to an iPod with a voice recorder, because you're not stuck with the proprietary codec. If you use a really low bitrate, you can store an incredible amount of audio on your hard drive. Not being able to share audio f
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2)
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2)
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2)
Most universities couldn't give a f*ck as long as it doesn't take up too much bandwidth. And with something like this most of your peers will probably be other students on the same campus, bringing down the BW cost to the uni since the traffic would mostly be internal.
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2)
Thank god CD-RW and DVD-RW are easily available these days. And wireless lan helps alot with your neighbors too.
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:1)
Never too late to be legal and change bad laws. (Score:4, Interesting)
Ah, but sharing through a regular p2p or http server is essentially a republication and a direct copyright violation as copyright laws are written. Sharing files with your friends may not be and should not be any more than sharing a book or tape is. Five or six coppies does not make a republication.
The copyright warriors may claim otherwise, but they are clearly in the wrong and will be seen as the extremists that they are on this one. The current wave of lawsuits are that strip 12 year olds and grandparents out of their life savings are bad, but the asswipes can say, "they made tens of thousands thousands of coppies and cost us lots of money." Imagine how that would sound if it were, "he gave his mom a copy of his favorite song and derived us of income! We demand compensation!" The jerks already have egg on their face for placing huge burdens on people who did not know better, have nothing or did not even know what was going on in their house. This, we can hope, will finally kill them off and let the rest of us do what we want to do, share things we enjoy with our friends and family.
However, to outsiders (RIAA/MPAA) encryption means hiding data that doesn't belong to you. They will counter any argument with that statement.
Fuck them. I already share things with myself and friends via Openssh. What I have password protected on my machines is none of their business. Those things I created and own are shared by a http server on the same machine and anyone, including the RIAA is welcome to it.
I'm sorry but I just don't think this program is going anywhere. Maybe if it was created 5 or 6 years ago.
Ha! My windoze using peers would love to do the things I do with Konqueror. You know, drag and drop encrypted file transfer so that I can get at, use and edit my stuff from anywhere in the world. This is a step in that direction for those too timid to leave winblows. Such thoughts populate the reviews the Grouper people are displaying from such mainstream sources as PCMagazine and the Wall Street Journal. I'd rather these people stepped up to free software, but this kind of program is going to take off big time.
When that happens, it will change the way people think of publication in general. That will spell the end for the copyright warriors.
I don't think so. (Score:2)
Your interpretation is recent and radical. Copying has always been tolerated and encouraged, even with books.
Copyright laws were made to govern printing presses and nothing more. Their intent is clear even through the most superficial historical review. T
Re:I don't think so. (Score:2)
That may be true, but unfortunately it is very clear written in the law and there is just about zero wiggle room:
subject to 107-122 (Score:2)
Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 106 and 106A, the fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright.
It's not enough, but it's a start. It certainly allows copy. The other exemptions, in theory, are rather liberal.
The
Re:I don't think so. (Score:2)
passages (Score:2)
So, isn't a song just a favorite passage of an album? Aren't I rendering a critical judgement by telling my mom, "this is excellent and typical of this band's work"? Don't I make a copy of any copyrighted work everytime I play it anyway?
Re:passages (Score:2)
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2)
So, it's an FTP server?
That's been done...
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2)
Sure, but you could say the same thing about the Web. Just because technology exists it doesn't necessarily mean it's the best, easiest way to do what it does.
Take your example:
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2)
And, just for the record, Gnutella has always supported semi-private networks. That was part of the problem early on. It doesn't have password authentication, but you aren't obliged to sign onto the main network.
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2, Interesting)
Hate to break it to you but there's already private networks dealing in the latest files/video/audio that are secure mainly because they are private. You never hear about them but I'm sure they can have all the software they want. All it takes is one guy, let's call him a "courier" for a purely hypothetical example, to tap in
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2)
Dialup sources don't reduce YOUR bandwith any at all, each connection has a tiny overhead, but it's not often time dependant but rather amount of data dependant. So dialup so
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2)
I said"So dialup sources shouldn't have any significant effect on your download speed unless there are a LOT of them." wich is completely screwed up.
What I meant is the that overhead from dialup sources shouldn't effect download speeds much unless there are a LOT of them, but then you'll be getting the data itself faster (wich is one of the intended strengths of p2p) and w
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:1)
Not that I RTFA, but you never used ho
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2)
Actually, it cuts it quite well. I belong to 2 separate and distinct groups, one music only, one everything, both about 20 members strong. Granted, you can't find everything (although the second group is practically 0-day), but it's rare now that I have to fire up Bearshare to get something I really want.
Re:Too late in the game... (Score:2)
File sharing as in P2P file sharing? (I guess a pedant might remark that HTTP is just another way of sharing files.) If so, that's odd. I'm certain the vast majority of universities distribute content via HTTP and email. Or paper, obviously - that's probably the number one distribution mechanism for the things you mention at the moment.
The just announced the name: (Score:5, Funny)
Squeeze the Charmin. (Score:4, Funny)
Damn! I read that as Groper. Reach out. Reach out, and grope someone today.
Re:Squeeze the Charmin. (Score:2)
login sound (Score:5, Funny)
like clevercactus? (Score:5, Informative)
Groovy (Score:2, Interesting)
New name, same product? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:New name, same product? (Score:1)
Re:New name, same product? (Score:1)
Re:New name, same product? (Score:2, Interesting)
http://waste.sf.net/ [sf.net]
Moreover, the Grouper CEO has the temerity claim to its his original idea:
"The idea for Grouper was born out of personal frustration after Josh came back from Burning Man with loads of photos and video clips taken with his digital camera." http://www.grouper.com/about/presskit.htm [grouper.com]
This doesn't much surpise me as I have experience working with these Grouper people. I'd never work with them again.
Re:New name, same product? (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:New name, same product? (Score:2)
gnutella was aken down for legal reasons plain and simple. the RIAA was frying napster and looking to fry anyone else doing similar things. you may not agree with the RIAA's practices, but you can't excuse a company for trying to avoid lawsuits.
Re:New name, same product? (Score:3, Informative)
well (Score:1)
i guess the desire to leave AOL, and create something good go hand in hand
Old news? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Old news? (Score:2)
Because this eliminates any RIAA argument. It's just like radio now. I think it's a great happy medium, I just wish Apple hadn't taken this function out of iTunes (no internet sharing anymore).
30 node limit....... (Score:2)
KDrive (Score:5, Informative)
Re:KDrive (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Konqueror + Openssh. (Score:2)
Why bother renting someone else's "virtual" hard drive when you can own one? Sure, it might be nice to have someone help, but it's really easy to set this up for yourself.
Every modern linux distribution has this ability. For less than $200, anyone can hang 200 GB of content off a cable modem connected computer and share whatever they want with their friends and f
Re:KDrive (Score:2)
Like unix (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Like unix (Score:2)
Private encrypted P2P? (Score:2)
File sharing is the suxx0rz. (Score:3, Funny)
By leveraging innovative technologies, content providers streamline compelling enterprise solutions.
The RIAA, MPAA, and Microsoft should get together to put a stop to this before it becomes a larger problem than it already is. That is, unless the FBI, CIA, the Justice Department, and the NSA figure out a way to keep track of which files are being shared, and then administer the death penalty without a trial.
What's this? (Score:2, Troll)
>> content providers streamline compelling
>> enterprise solutions.
Sheeeeit, that's a good one. My bullshitometer EXPLODED.
Done before? (Score:2, Informative)
we have that already (Score:4, Interesting)
True, but what about families? (Score:2)
Uh... this is news? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Hell, I was seeding a torrent for it on the release date, 23rd September - still running now lol...
Re:Uh... this is news? (Score:1)
People/media stations (Score:2)
Kinda like Aimster (Score:4, Interesting)
Kinda like Aimster (Oops!) (Score:2)
The whole concept sounds a lot like Aimster [howstuffworks.com]. I never used Aimster (because i havent used the AIM application since Trillian became available), but as I remember it, it was an application that "piggybacked" on AIM and allowed you to have filesharing circle with anyone on your buddy list. This "Grouper" thing just seems to run with that idea to me. Aimster ran into legal trouble [slashdot.org] and became Madster [madster.com].
The future of P2P.... (Score:5, Interesting)
The principle would end up working kind of like how terrorist cells work, such that the RIAA managing to bust one overly-trusting user wouldn't immediately jeopardize the rest of the users on the network.
It seems like that's kinda where we're headed with a lot of the new P2P apps coming out: Grouper, WASTE, etc. Now, we just need a system where we can actually *get* files from people we don't immediately trust by having the peers that we *do* trust act as relay stations or something. Granted, it increases traffic, but it cuts the risk *way* down.... and I don't really mind having to leave my P2P app running all night provided I can do it with impunity.
Re:The future of P2P.... (Score:1)
It's called newsgroups or IRC. Both relatively easy to use (once you learn to tell the difference between the "good" stuff and the crap) and not targeted by the RIAA or MPAA. At least not yet.
Re:The future of P2P.... (Score:2)
Awesome! (Score:1)
Cheers,
_GP_
Innovative? (Score:2, Insightful)
Not that this doesn't have legit uses, but I hope these dudes are better marketers than they are innovators.
Re:Innovative? (Score:2)
Re:Innovative? (Score:1)
Groupware? (Score:3, Interesting)
Open question for Justin Frankel.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Justin...
Just what is it about working for AOL that makes people want to design and distribute software that ' sticks it to the MAN '?
Is it the bad coffee, doyathink?
Re:Open question for Justin Frankel.... (Score:2)
Either the mods are crack-smoking, stock-owning sympathizers of "The Man" and "The System", or, the mods are... just on crack. :)
(Anyway, don't assume that everyone who's over 30 and working for some soulless corporation has been assimilated into the boring status quo. Rocking the boat is great fun (especially if you can afford to, like Justin can))
--
A Bloated WASTE (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:A Bloated WASTE (Score:2)
shoot (Score:1, Interesting)
well thought out! (Score:3, Funny)
so no real business plan here then.
1. e-commerce tie-ins with online music stores and photo printing services
2. ???
3. profit
Prediction for next generation file sharing (Score:5, Insightful)
I felt that way about programs too. I had to download them to my computer. I burned them out and archived them, just in case I would need them for a reinstall or for a friend.
Nowadays I seldom keep the installation program of applications. Why? Because I know they're out there. I can get them at a moments notice. How come? I've got a broadband connection now.
This is how I feel the next generation file sharing will become. Currently everyone is downloading everything. To have it handy. To use it. It doesn't need to be like that. I don't yet know how the technical solutions will be (if they ever will).
Imagine: A world wide archive of music at your fingertips. You don't have (much) of it at your hard drive, because it's accessible through the net. You have your favorite music "bookmarked" to make your collection. Music playback is instantly - because of the evolution of the speed of the net, and the evolution of the file sharing technology.
You won't have to think about "the files" as files. You think of them as entities. Always accessible.
You'll (as mentioned) probably have to keep a part of the world wide collection at your hard drive. (If it can't be stored at the net, always flowing).
Well, some of my thoughts.
Re:Prediction for next generation file sharing (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Prediction for next generation file sharing (Score:1, Insightful)
I can imagine that world. And I can imagine the lawyers destroying that world because it threatens their clients' business model.
I'd like to live in that worl
Re:Prediction for next generation file sharing (Score:2, Interesting)
It's not what you have, but the knowledge of how to get it - coupled with the technology to access it seamlessly.
Yesterday it was a Ramdisk, now its a hard-drive, tomorrow you'll use a SAN at home, in six years your SAN will be a Wide-Area-SAN.
You'll share the pointers to the files, not the data itself, that makes as much sense as zipping up a website and e-mailing it instead of sending the URL.
As far as music is concerned, the technology is not just there..
iTunes on crack. (Score:2, Interesting)
If any of the rest of you are interested in joining my new grouper group, drop me a line (check my profile)
Crack? (Score:2)
grouper don't like mozilla (Score:3, Informative)
Grouper was unable to automatically verify your email address. This could be caused by one of the following:
* Your default browser is not Internet Explorer.
* Internet Explorer is not configured to run signed, trusted ActiveX controls.
Re:grouper don't like mozilla (Score:2)
K:drive (Score:2)
Re:The reason they left? (Score:3, Funny)
No problem. We'll just pay a soccer mom to visit AOL headquarters and dance around on the table demanding P2P and warez, and we got it.
Re:The reason they left? (Score:1, Funny)
And I dunno, soccer moms dancing on tables isn't exactly the wholesome content AOL would've liked.
MOD PARENT UP! (Score:5, Insightful)
But either way, it's closed source -- so what's the point? It's not as if it had a head start or anything; you might as well just use the Free version.
Re:ugh (Score:1)
http://apache.org/