By John P. Mello Jr. TechNewsWorld
11/16/04 8:45 AM PT
Programs like Kazaa emphasize searching: You want a file and you search everyone's computer on the P2P network to find it. "There's no searching involved with Wirehog," co-creator Mark Zuckerberg told TechNewsWorld. "It's about sharing
interesting personal files with your friends."
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Two rapidly growing Internet technologies in recent months have been social
networks and peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing. Now three whiz kids have
coupled those technologies together with a program released this week called
Wirehog.
Wirehog is a P2P application that works in conjunction with thefacebook.com,
a social networking Web site for more than 250 colleges and universities.
Both Wirehog and thefacebook.com are the cerebral offspring of three undergrads: Mark Zuckerberg and Andrew K. McCollum of Harvard and Adam D'Angelo of Caltech.
File Sharing with a Twist
Wirehog, now in beta, allows facebook members to trade files with each
other, as users trade files with P2P programs such as Kazaa, LimeWire and
Grokster, but with a twist.
Programs like Kazaa emphasize searching. You want a file and you search
everyone's computer on the P2P network to find it. "There's no searching
involved with Wirehog," Zuckerberg told TechNewsWorld. "It's about sharing
interesting personal files with your friends."
"A lot of people have tried to do social networking with file-sharing
applications," he said. "One reason why ours is perhaps more exciting is
because our users don't need to develop their own social networks around
this. You don't need to add people as friends when you get on to Wirehog
because of the integration with facebook."
Friendship Trumps File-Sharing
Wirehog is meant to emphasize friendships, not file-sharing, Zuckerberg
maintained. With other P2P applications that have social functions,
there's a barrier created by the necessity to add people as friends once you
install the program, he explained.
"That creates a different kind of network," he said, "because the people
you're adding as friends isn't based on anything social but on who has the
most files. But if you base the file-sharing application on an existing
social network, then that social connection already exists."
Echos of Aimster
According to Greg Bildson, COO of LimeWire, a P2P software maker based in
New York City, the blending of P2P and social networks has been a hot
subject recently.
"Social networks are a special type of group with useful trust and taste
relationships," he told TechNewsWorld via e-mail. "You will tend to trust
your friends and share various tastes."
"People in your social network will tend to help you develop your taste and
introduce you to new ideas," he explained. "It is very natural to want to
share information and files with these people."
He asserted that getting the interaction of social networks and P2P right is
going to take a lot of work and experimentation. "WireHog sounds like a
preliminary step in this direction," he said.
"I would expect this area to evolve slowly over the next 5 years," he added,
"but it has a lot of potential for blockbuster applications."
Jarad Carleton, an IT Industry Analyst with Frost & Sullivan in Palo Alto,
California, likened Wirehog to Aimster, a P2P application that piggybacked
on AOL's instant messaging software.
"The theory was that you could more safely trade copyrighted material if you
were only trading within a trusted community of friends that you choose to
include in your contact list," he told TechNewsWorld via e-mail .
Avoiding Prosecution
"It's a good concept for avoiding prosecution by the RIAA [Recording
Industry Association of America] or the MPAA [Motion Picture Association of
America]," he contended. "However, I would expect both trade organizations
to take a close look at this software and work to find a way to possibly tap
into some of the activity on the network to see what is being traded."
He sees Wirehog as a great way to collaborate on projects without leaving
home.
For some of those projects, he explained, there will be a need for an easy
way to transfer large files to classmates without running into file size
restrictions with programs such as Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO) Instant Messenger.
"This would be a useful and very legitimate reason to use this type of
software on campus and is in fact what corporations have wanted from P2P
software in the corporate environment," he observed.
"Regardless of the original intentions," he added, "I'd have to say that the
RIAA and the MPAA will view this software as a potential threat, and if the
creators are not careful, they could find themselves facing lawsuits from
the RIAA just as Aimster did."
Although the RIAA hadn't scrutinized Wirehog in depth yet spokesperson Jonathan Levy told
TechNewsWorld via e-mail that "the laws
remain the same whether it's 'sharing' copyrighted works without permission
to one person or to a million people."
"It's a violation of federal law and subjects a person to potential civil
and criminal liability," he declared. "Not only is it illegal, it deprives
those who produce the music the ability to benefit from their creative
efforts."
Beyond File Sharing: P2P Radio Arrives September 18, 2004
Mercora's Atri Chatterjee is confident that P2P radio will avoid legal entanglements with the RIAA because his network will closely regulate the actions of subscribers and will ensure that all required usage fees are paid to the recording industry. "We enable people to webcast music to each other in a P2P-style environment," Chatterjee told TechNewsWorld.
Related Stories
High Court Rejects Recording Industry's P2P Appeal October 12, 2004
"The Internet in and of itself is based on peer-to-peer technology, and
copyright infringement goes on all day on the Web," said P2P insider Wayne Rosso regarding the Supreme Court appeal. "What should we do -- filter the Internet?"
IMlogic Releases Free IM and P2P Blocking Software September 14, 2004
"Many corporate executives are in denial, which quickly turns to anger when they discover unauthorized IM and P2P use in their companies and realize the increased security and legal risk and lost productivity," said Matt Cain, senior analyst at market research company Meta Group.
Feds Raid P2P Users, RIAA Pushes Lawsuits August 26, 2004
U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft said the crackdown sent a message to "those who steal over the Internet," with Assistant Attorney General Christopher Wray adding the crackdown represented the first federal law enforcement action against "criminal copyright infringement using peer-to-peer networks."
P2P Operators Get Warning From US States August 06, 2004
Governments will have minimal success in regulating the industry because it has spread across the globe. "Attorneys general and legislation are all irrelevant because the Internet is an international body," according to Yankee Group analyst Mike Goodman. He also pointed out that by the state officials' standards, Xerox might be held responsible for photocopies of child porn.
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