As i said a few posts up.. P2P is here to stay...
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MARINA DEL REY, Calif. --(Business Wire)-- Digicorp, Inc. (OTCBB:DGCO) announced today that it is launching a new advertising service for online music to be delivered via its web portal Beat9.com. The new service will utilize Digicorp's ViraCast technology to dynamically insert advertising into music files wherever and however they travel across the Internet. Digicorp offers both music labels and advertisers an immediate opportunity to tap into the power of peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing, which accounts for 60% of all web traffic.
1720 Entertainment, whose conventional CD distribution is handled by Vivendi's (VIVEF) Universal Music Group, has signed an ad revenue sharing deal with Digicorp for viral, P2P distribution of songs and music videos. The first 1720 tracks to be launched will be from ELVIS WHITE with Akon, Alison Hinds, and Rissi Palmer, whose "Country Girl" is in the Top Ten on MySpace. The ad-supported music will be available free on Apple's (AAPL) iTunes and on file sharing sites like LimeWire and BitTorrent. The downloaded ViraCast music files will be locked, preventing transfer onto mp3 players and encouraging legal music sales for portability.
"We are very excited about our partnership with Beat9," stated 1720 President/CEO, Terry K. Johnson. "Their P2P technology is superior to anything we've seen, and the advertising component is the real icing on the cake. The 1720 new media model aligns perfectly with the viral marketing solutions of Digicorp."
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With illegal music downloads still dwarfing legal online purchases, Digicorp gives music labels the ability to harness the power of P2P, instead of fighting it. Each music file is constantly served ads, so the more it is shared and viewed, the more revenue is generated.
"Consumers can now be encouraged to download and share music videos with as many people as possible," commented Digicorp CEO, Jay Rifkin. "Music companies can now exchange costly litigation for revenue generation."
http://www.tmcnet.com/usubmit/2007/05/24/2656416.htm
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Tribler is a BitTorrent client that attempts to combine the social aspects of online communities with the traditional components of the torrent app. Tribler uses an Amazon-style recommendations engine to offer suggestions and also allows users to get recommendations from trusted friends.
Tribler is the first torrent client I’ve seen that attempts to take torrent searching beyond the basic search engine model. In some respects Tribler reminds me of old school P2P apps like Napster or even Limewire, but with a web 2.0-like twist.
The social aspects of Tribler won’t appeal to everyone, but for those who find the task of searching and finding torrent files daunting, Tribler does indeed make it easier to find what you want.
Tribler also aggregates content from sources most torrent clients don’t, like YouTube videos. And, according the Holland-based company behind Tribler, the app will include more content from other web sources in the future.
Some people might worry about a torrent client that tracks what they download and uses that information to make suggestions, but according to the normally quite paranoid folks at TorrentFreak, Tribler “is the first P2P system which has merged online friends and a sense of community without using any central server.”
In other words there is no central repository of data for the RIAA to subpoena. Of course, from what I could tell, Tribler doesn’t seem to support encryption which is too bad.
Tribler is available for Mac, Windows and Linux.
Tribler is nice, though a bit bulky. The Mac OS X version I tested weighed in at a hefty 257 MBs and even without any running downloads it grabbed nearly a 100 MBs of RAM.
If you’re looking for a more social way to find torrents, or you just miss the community aspects of the old style P2P networks, you’ll probably enjoy Tribler.
http://blog.wired.com/monkeybites/20...r_bittorr.html
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Hollywood execs reportedly got all giddy when they heard about the P2P-powered Vudu box. The jury is still out on Vudu’s actual chances in the market place, but the device is a good example for a growing trend of P2P leaving the safe and boring world of the desktop P2P.
There are tons of non-PC devices out there that offer media swapping and P2P streaming capabilities. Some of these features are part of a commercial offering, others are the result of some good old tinkering. Some of this stuff is still in early development, other solutions have been in use for years. Some implementations are pretty obvious, others might surprise you.
The P2P set top box. Santa Clara-based Vudu Inc. is working on a device that utilizes P2P streaming to deliver video rentals on demand directly to your TV. The service has been dubbed “instant NetFlix.” But will people really pay 300 bucks just to be able to pay more for each movie they watch?
The BitTorrent cell phone. Hungarian researchers have developed a BitTorrent application for Symbian-based smart phones, complete with an integrated tracker and the ability to use private torrent sites. Too bad the constant data transfer is likely to eat up your battery life in no time.
The Emule cell phone. Developers of the open source eDonkey offspring eMule have found a solution to these battery problems years ago. MobileMule remotely controls downloads from your phone while your PC does the heavy lifting. The Java-based application even offers previews for downloaded video clips by sending single video frames as pictures to your phone.
The P2P PS3. Rumor has it Sony is working on integrating P2P video sharing into its new Second Life-like PS3 community called Home. The service is supposed to allow commercial video downloads as well as the exchange of user-generated content. Sony does have the technology to do something like this after buying P2P video-sharing community Grouper in August 2006. But they also know it ain’t easy: Grouper got sued by Universal Music in October.
The BitTorrent router. You got a device that’s connected to the internet 24/7, featuring a strong-enough processor do run some basic apps, plus direct access to network attached storage? Why don’t you just install BitTorrent on it? That’s exactly what Asus did.
Speaking of storage: QNAP’s network attached storage servers also feature an embedded version of the official BitTorrent client.
Apple Torrent TV. It was only a question of time before someone tried this. There’s no solution available for the masses yet, but it looks like people are working on it.
Apple Joost. Also inevitable: A hack that brings you P2P-powered TV streaming in your living room and makes for lots of silly puns. Tutorial Ninjas have a detailed step by step guide.
The Lamabox. A Dutch company is selling this P2P set top box that downloads content via BitTorrent and the eDonkey network. It’s basically a glorified media center PC, and it’s costing at least as much: The top-end model, featuring a DVD burner and 500 GB hard disk space, sets you back $785.
The Xtorrentbox. Don’t want to spend that much? Then just get a used Xbox for 100 bucks on eBay and make use of the Xbox Media Center. There are some great tutorials for using the Xbox together with your PC for BitTorrent downloads, and there are even some experimental scripts that allow direct torrent downloading straight to the box.
http://newteevee.com/2007/05/06/ten-...er-saw-coming/
So, when companies such as Apple, Sony, Microsoft, CBS, etc are embracing P2P and filesharing, why arent we as an industry?
There used to be a time that the adult industry led the way in all this new 'web' technology, instead it appears we have become stagnant in a pond that is quickly growing in to an ocean when it comes to the web.
Those coule of stories are just a small selection of what is showing to be an emerging business practice in the non-adult world...
http://news.google.com/news?um=1&tab...nG=Search+News
So again, i just dont understand, if companies like Sony and Apple can profit from these types of networks, why cant we?
Regards,
Lee