MP3: making sweet music on the net

The music industry has been shaken up by the emergence of MP3-based music websites such as Napster. Critics accuse them of facilitating piracy while advocates say they make it easier for unsigned musicians to have their music heard. We look at what all the fuss is about.

Cath Everett

MP3 is an audio compression technology that enables consumers to record music at CD quality levels using their PC and reduce it to about one tenth of the size normally associated with such files. They can then either store the tracks on their machine's hard disk to listen to at a later date or send them to friends over the internet with no degradation in quality.

But critics have argued that enabling users to record music in this way encourages piracy and is harming not only the music industry, but also the musicians themselves.

Advocates, on the other hand, say that the technology itself does not promote copyright infringement, which has already been going on for years anyway. They also claim that MP3 websites such as Napster make it easier for unknown musicians to gain exposure as anyone logging onto the site can listen to their material.

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Further reading

Napster goes to Congress as MSN enters fray

The battle over how music will be distributed online saw Napster, record bosses and stars meet with US lawmakers yesterday, while MSN said it would today launch its own service, MSN Music.

Music giants unveil Napster rival

Music giants EMI Group, Bertelsmann, and AOL Time Warner together with RealNetworks launched their own rival to Napster this week in the shape of the MusicNet online music subscription service.

Porky pies spoof Napster spies

As record companies start scouring Napster for copyrighted songs that they want removed from the internet, users have been offered a tool that hides their song files.

Napster safe, but only just

Napster must halt the trading of copyrighted songs on its site, although it will be allowed to stay in operation until a US court modifies an injunction against the company.

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