: ''For Napster, LLC (formerly
Roxio), and the paid Napster music service see
Napster (pay service).''
'Napster' was a file sharing service that paved the way for decentralized
P2P file-sharing programs such as
Kazaa,
Limewire,
iMesh,
Morpheus (computer program), and
BearShare, which are now used for many of the same reasons and can download music, pictures, and other files. The popularity and repercussions of the first Napster have made it a legendary icon in the computer and entertainment fields.
Napster's brand and logo continue to be used by a
pay service, having been acquired by
Roxio.
Origins

Napster 2.0 Beta 7's file transfer screen during Napster's heyday. Note the Search, Library and Transfer buttons, prototypical of the many peer-to-peer systems to follow.
'
'
Shawn Fanning ( a 18-year-old college student whose school nickname was "Napster") along with his friend
Sean Parker first released the original Napster on
June 1 1999 while Fanning was attending
Northeastern University in Boston. Fanning wanted an easier method of finding music than by searching
IRC or
Lycos.
John Fanning of
Hull, Massachusetts, who is Shawn's uncle, struck an agreement which gave Shawn 30% control of the company, with the rest going to his uncle. Napster began to build an office and executive team in San Mateo, California, in September of 1999. Napster was the first of the massively popular peer-to-peer file sharing systems, although it was not fully peer-to-peer since it used central servers to maintain lists of connected systems and the files they provided—directories, effectively—while actual transactions were conducted directly between machines. Although there were already media which facilitated the sharing of files across the Internet, such as IRC,
Hotline, and
USENET, Napster specialized exclusively in music in the form of MP3 files and presented a user-friendly interface. The result was a system whose popularity generated an enormous selection of music to download.
With the files obtained through Napster, people frequently made their own compilation albums on
recordable CDs, without paying any royalties to the copyright holder. High-speed networks in college dormitories became overloaded, with as much as 80% of external network traffic consisting of MP3 file transfers. Many colleges blocked its use for this reason, even before concerns about liability for facilitating copyright violations on campus. As a partial solution to this issue, Napster was used as a test case for the
Abilene Network, the educational Internet backbone.
Legal challenges

Napster peaked in February 2001
Heavy metal band
Metallica discovered that a demo of their song ‘
I Disappear’ had been circulating across the Napster network, even before it was released. This eventually led to the song being played on several radio stations across America and brought to Metallica’s attention that their entire back catalogue of studio material was also available. The band responded in 2000 by filing a lawsuit against the service offered by Napster. A month later, rapper
Dr. Dre shared a litigator and legal firm with Metallica, and filed a similar lawsuit after Napster wouldn't remove his works from their service, even after he issued a written request. Separately, both Metallica and Dr. Dre later delivered thousands of usernames to Napster who they believed were pirating their songs. Metallica asked their group of users to be banned from the service, while Dr. Dre again asked for his songs to be removed from the service. All users who were on the list of either artist were banned, but a file began circulating soon after the ban took effect that edited the
Windows registry and reversed the changes implemented by the ban. Napster complied with Metallica's request, but not Dr. Dre's, and both the suits continued. A whole year had passed since the lawsuits began, Napster settled them both, but this came after being shut down by the Ninth Circuit Court in a separate lawsuit from several major record labels (see below).
Also in 2000,
Madonna, who had previously met with Napster executives to discuss a possible partnership, became irate when her
single "
Music" leaked out on to the web and Napster prior to its commercial release, causing widespread media coverage.
[1] Verified Napster use peaked with 26.4 million users worldwide in
February 2001.
[2]
Also, in 2001, A&M records was granted a preliminary injunction against Napster for engaging in, or facilitating others in copying, downloading, uploading, transmitting, or distributing plaintiffs' copyrighted musical compositions and sound recordings. Napster appealed this ruling by the district court on the grounds of fair use. The appellate court found that the district court did not budge in denying the fair use defense, but the appellate court found that there was an error in how the court said Napster should police access to its system. The court's opinion had the result of making the plaintiff notify Napster of potential copyright infringement on their system before Napster had a duty to remove the material.
Promotional power
Along with the accusations that Napster was hurting the sales of the record industry, there were those who felt just the opposite, that file trading on Napster actually stimulated, rather than hurt, sales. Proof may have come in July 2000 when tracks from
English rock band
Radiohead's album ''
Kid A'' found their way to Napster three months before the CD's release. Unlike Madonna, Dr. Dre or Metallica, Radiohead had never hit the top 20 in the US. Furthermore, ''Kid A'' was an experimental album without any
singles, and received relatively little radio airplay. By the time of the record's release, the album was estimated to have been downloaded for free by millions of people worldwide, and in October 2000 ''Kid A'' captured the number one spot on the
Billboard 200 sales chart in its debut week. According to Richard Menta of
MP3 Newswire,
[3] the effect of Napster in this instance was isolated from other elements that could be credited for driving sales, and the album's unexpected success was proof that Napster was a good promotional tool for music (however, according to other sources, the album was very highly marketed, albeit in an unconventional manner, making use of "legitimate" online methods in addition to file sharing).
Since 2000, many musical artists, particularly those not signed to major labels and without access to traditional mass media outlets such as radio and television, have said that Napster and successive Internet file-sharing networks have helped get their music heard, spread word of mouth, and may have improved their sales in the long term. Although some
underground musicians and
independent labels have expressed support for Napster and the p2p model it popularized, others have criticized the unregulated and extra-legal nature of these networks, and some seek to implement models of Internet promotion in which they can control the distribution of their own music, such as providing free tracks for download or streaming from their official websites, or co-operating with pay services such as
Insound,
Rhapsody and
Apple's
iTunes Store.
Radiohead themselves provide an example of both reactions. While expressing enthusiasm for Napster in 2000, when Radiohead songs freely available on the network helped familiarize their live audiences with their new material in advance of the album's release, the band expressed disapproval in 2003 when their album ''Hail to the Thief'' was
leaked to internet filesharing networks several months in advance of its release. This was a different situation than the ''Kid A'' leak, however, as the copy of ''Hail To The Thief'' that leaked was a copy stolen from their studio before they could put finishing touches on the album, while the ''Kid A'' leaks were finished tracks.
Shutdown
Napster's facilitation of transfer of copyrighted material raised the ire of the
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), which almost immediately — in December
1999 — filed a
lawsuit against the popular service.
[4][5] The service would only get bigger as the trial, meant to shut down Napster, also gave it a great deal of publicity. Soon millions of users, many of them college students, flocked to it.
After a failed appeal to the
Ninth Circuit Court, an injunction was issued on
March 5,
2001 ordering Napster to prevent the trading of copyrighted music on its network.
[6] In
July 2001, Napster shut down its entire network in order to comply with the injunction. On
September 24,
2001, the case was partially settled. Napster agreed to pay music creators and copyright owners a $26 million settlement for past, unauthorized uses of music, as well as an advance against future licensing royalties of $10 million. In order to pay those fees, Napster attempted to convert their free service to a subscription system. A prototype solution was tested in the spring of 2002: the Napster 3.0 Alpha, using audio fingerprinting technology licensed from
Relatable. Napster 3.0 was, according to many former Napster employees, ready to deploy, but it had significant trouble obtaining licenses to distribute major-label music.
On
May 17,
2002, Napster announced that its assets would be acquired by German media firm
Bertelsmann for $85 million. Pursuant to terms of that agreement, on
June 3 Napster filed for
Chapter 11 protection under
United States bankruptcy laws. On
September 3,
2002, an American bankruptcy judge blocked the sale to Bertelsmann and forced Napster to liquidate its assets according to
Chapter 7 of the U.S. bankruptcy laws.
[7]
Current status
Main articles: Napster (pay service)
After a $2.43 million takeover offer by the
Private Media Group, an adult entertainment company,
[8] Napster's brand and logos were acquired at bankruptcy auction by the company
Roxio, Inc. which used them to rebrand the
pressplay music service as
Napster 2.0.
Although the central servers used by Napster made it a convenient legal target, the record industry failed to capitalize on the power vacuum left in its wake. The years between Napster's demise and the emergence of the
iTunes Music Store as the first popular pay-service were squandered as the five major labels failed to agree on a single service or standard for online distribution, launching several mutually incompatible subscription services such as pressplay and
MusicNet.
[9]
In the meantime, the
peer-to-peer filesharing trend Napster started soon resumed, with new programs and networks picking up the torch. Unofficial Napster servers proliferated, aided by a program known as "
Napigator", and a second generation of P2P protocols (including
FastTrack and
Gnutella) were quickly developed. Designed as decentralized networks, these have been much more challenging for copyright owners to pursue in the courts (see
MGM v. Grokster).
The ever-widening availability of
broadband has made file sharing even more prevalent, since increasing download speeds mean the distribution of entire movies and other large files is possible. In addition, as early as 2000 public sentiment seemed to support the file sharing phenomenon. Thus, it is little wonder that some experts believe that the trend of for-profit file sharing will continue. An emerging and
cryptographically strong third generation of P2P protocols will be nearly impossible to interdict.
Napster in popular culture
In the 2003 remake of ''
The Italian Job'', a flashback depicts Shawn Fanning (playing himself) stealing the program from a computer expert played by
Seth Green while the latter is napping, providing a humorous
folk etymology for the name.
The suffix "-ster" has become a popular component of the brand names of many Internet products, suggesting a peer-to-peer model, such as
Grokster,
Aimster (later
Madster), and
Blubster. This has also been extended to
Friendster, a site which vaguely recalls Napster's community-building features.
[10],[11]
An episode of animated television series ''
Futurama'', ''
I Dated a Robot'', centres on the illegal distribution of robotic celebrity clones over the Internet. The organization responsible for this was thought to be named "Nappster," a reference to Napster. It was later revealed, however, that the full name was "Kidnappster" with a piece of tapestry covering "Kid" from the logo.
In the
South Park episode
Christian Rock Hard, Stan, Kyle, and Kenny illegally download music from Napster for inspiration for their band 'Moop.' They are then caught by police and shown the horrors music pirating does to musicians. After seeing this, they start a strike and famous musicians/bands join them, among them are
Rancid,
Master P,
Ozzy Osbourne,
Meat Loaf (all four also playing in Chef Aid),
Blink-182,
Horny Toad,
Metallica,
Britney Spears,
Missy Elliott,
Alanis Morissette and
The Lords of the Underworld (minus Timmy).
In a
2001 episode of the animated Disney series,
The Proud Family, Penny becomes addicted to a site named Ez Jackster, a parody of Napster that allows music to be downloaded illegally.
A tribute song to file sharing "Napster and Gnutella" was written to the tune of "
Puff the Magic Dragon" and distributed via
OpenNap servers during the lawsuit. Also
Weird Al created a parody of the
Metallica song
Enter Sandman called
Enter Napster.
See also
★
Kazaa
★
LimeWire
★
Morpheus (computer program)
★
WinMX
★
Napster Bad!
★
Emule
★
Gnutella
★
FastTrack
References
★ Carlsson, Bengt and Gustavsson, Rune. 2001. "The Rise and Fall of Napster - An Evolutionary Approach." ''Proceedings of the 6th International Computer Science Conference on Active Media Technology''.
★ Geisler, Markus and Pohlmann, Mali. 2003. "The Social Form of Napster: Cultivating the Paradox of Consumer Emancipation." ''Advances in Consumer Research''.
★ Geisler, Markus and Pohlmann, Mali. 2003. "The Anthropology of File Sharing: Consuming Napster as a Gift." ''Advances in Consumer Research''.
★ Green, Matthew. 2002. "Napster Opens Pandora’s Box: Examining How File-Sharing Services Threaten the Enforcement of Copyright on the Internet." ''Ohio State Law Journal''. 63: 799.
★ InsightExpress. 2000. Napster and its Users Not violating Copyright Infringement Laws, According to a Survey of the Online Community.
★ Ku, Raymond Shih Ray, "The Creative Destruction of Copyright: Napster and the New Economics of Digital Technology" . University of Chicago Law Review, Forthcoming Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=266964. or DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.266964
★ McCourt, Tom and Burkart, Patrick. 2003. "When Creators, Corporations and Consumers Collide: Napster and the Development of On-line Music Distribution." ''Media, Culture, & Society''. 25 (3): 333-350.
Notes
1. Unreleased Madonna Single Slips On To Net John Borland
2. Jupiter Media Metrix (July 20, 2001). Global Napster Usage Plummets, But New File-Sharing Alternatives Gaining Ground. Press Release.
3. Did Napster Take Radiohead's New Album to Number 1? Richard Menta
4. ''A & M Records, Inc. v. Napster, Inc.'', 114 F. Supp. 2d 896 (N.D. Cal. 2000), aff'd in part, rev'd in part, 239 F.3d 1004 (9th Cir. 2001)
5. RIAA Sues Music Startup Napster for Billion Richard Menta
6. 2001 US Dist. LEXIS 2186 (N.D. Cal. Mar. 5, 2001), aff’d, 284 F. 3d 1091 (9th Cir. 2002).
7. Napster runs out of lives – judge rules against sale Benny Evangelista
8. Porn company offers to buy Napster
9. Dube, Ric. (February 2002). MusicNet, PressPlay Fall Short. Ice Magazine, (179).
10. Blogster James Grimmelmann
11. Abrams, Jonathan. SXSW Interactive Keynote Speech. South by Southwest festival. Austin, TX. March 16, 2004.
External links
★
Napster, Inc. Website - Formerly
Roxio, Inc.
★
The Napster Experience - netnographic research on file-sharing as a form of gift giving
★
Judge criticises both parties in Napster case
★
Music Downloads: Pirates- or Customers?