Skip to main content /TECH with IDG.net
CNN.com /TECH

CNN TV
EDITIONS
SERVICES
CNN TV
EDITIONS

German CD makers push anti-piracy system

Industry Standard
graphic

(IDG) -- Germany's record-manufacturing companies want to use sniffing and blocking technology to tackle illegal music downloads from the Internet. The Bundesverband der Phonographischen Wirtschaft (Association of the German Phonographic Industry) is proposing a system to detect illegal content on Web sites and block access to those sites via German Internet service providers.

"We have developed a technical model called Rights Protection System (RPS)," association spokesman Hartmut Spiesecke said Friday. "The next step is that we want to start a dialogue with ISPs. ISPs have a duty to block illegal material."

MESSAGE BOARD
 

RPS searches for sites that offer illegal music downloads, and develops a "negative list" of Web addresses, he said. The system would be installed at key Internet junctions, blocking users in Germany from accessing such sites, whether domestic or foreign. It would not, however, have any effect on file-sharing exchanges such as Napster or Gnutella.

In a hypothetical scenario, if a user tried to click on such a Web site, a dialogue box would appear with a message such as, "You have just attempted to reach a URL that contains illegal material; access has been refused," Spiesecke said.

IDG.net INFOCENTER
IDG.net
Related IDG.net Stories

Internet users rejected the system as unworkable and without a legal basis. "There are no ISPs that want to install it," said Andy Müller-Maguhn, spokesman for the hackers' group Chaos Computer Club. "It's entirely absurd. Anyway, the Internet is supposed to operate on the basis of free movement of information."

He added, "The legal situation is not at all clear ... private copies are legal under German law."

But Spiesecke said he "massively rejects" arguments based on freedom of information. Downloading music without paying, he said, is "no different than going into a CD shop and taking 10 CDs without paying; it's not freedom of expression, it's theft."



RELATED STORIES:
Book industry takes lessons from Napster
February 8, 2001
Software piracy Microsoft's big threat
February 7, 2001
BSA calls truce with software pirates
January 31, 2001
New online software piracy emerges
January 29, 2001
Music chiefs warned of piracy threat
January 21, 2001

RELATED IDG.net STORIES:
IBM to unveil new version of anti-piracy technology
(IDG.net)
Why Secure Digital Music Initiative is falling apart
(IDG.net)
German court: AOL responsible for pirated music
(IDG.net)
Police suspect child porn on Napster, Gnutella
(IDG.net)
Music piracy can be controlled
(PCWorld.com)
Music industry campaigns against Net pirates
(IDG.net)
Pay the fiddlers
(The Industry Standard)
Hollywood prepares to fight file-swappers
(The Industry Standard)

RELATED SITES:
Bundesverband der Phonographischen Wirtschaft

Note: Pages will open in a new browser window
External sites are not endorsed by CNN Interactive.


 Search   


Back to the top