WinMX Suspends Operations 192
An anonymous reader writes "Slyck.com is reporting that it appears the WinMX network has shut down its operations in response to the RIAA's letters threating legal action. Although the WinMX network is currently down, this may only be temporary as developers seem to have relocated from Canada to Port Villa, Vanuatu."
Pertinent Links: (Score:5, Informative)
Some information about Vanuatu, as well as its capital, Port Vila (misspelled in TFA) can be found here [wikipedia.org] and here [cia.gov].
As for why WinMX might want to relocate there, this link [vanuatugovernment.gov.vu] should shed a little light on the issue...
Re:Pertinent Links: (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Pertinent Links: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Pertinent Links: (Score:2)
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Re:Pertinent Links: (Score:4, Insightful)
"It should be especially hilighted that Kazaa has already moved to Vanuatu, so the island clearly has decent internet connectivity in place already."
Just to be clear... that's where Sharman Networks is headquartered for tax purposes. They don't have servers there. There are probably a dozen outfits on Vanuatu that'll set up a PO box for you and forward your mail.
Running afoul of the Berne Convention or local copyright laws was probably never a reason for Sharman's setting up in Vanuatu -- you can generally be nailed in any country in which you do business, regardless of the address printed on your articles of incorporation.
Re:Pertinent Links: (Score:2)
Tax haven? Not for long..... (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure it is very interesting. But I wonder what will happen if every p2p company takes refuge in Vanuatu. The laws specifically prohibit pornography and don't even think about applying if you've got money laundering on your mind. U.S. can easily pressurize a country of the size of Republic of Vanuatu to extend their laws to prohibit sharing copyright work!
Re:Tax haven? Not for long..... (Score:5, Funny)
Might come in useful if the tectonic plates ever get a bit slippery...
Re:Tax haven? Not for long..... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Tax haven? Not for long..... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Tax haven? Not for long..... (Score:2)
Just how might they do that? (Score:2, Interesting)
Australia and NZ, on the other hand, are in a position to be really annoying to Vanauatu.
ps. They don't have static electricity there (way to humid). The natives have never experienced it. When they leave the island and do ex
Re:Tax haven? Not for long..... (Score:3, Funny)
sounds like they need to have democracy brought to them.
oh wait...
Re:Tax haven? Not for long..... (Score:4, Insightful)
extend their laws to prohibit sharing copyright work!
First of all you are making the FALSE assumption that P2P companies are sharing copyrighted works. P2P software companies no more "share copyrighted works" than E-mail software companies "share copyrighted works". In fact e-mail software is one of the original forms of P2P software.
Secondly, aside from the extensive body of copyright free materials, you are making a blanket assumption that sharing copyrighted works is inherently improper. There is also an extensive body of copyrighted works that are authorized for unrestricted or conditional distribution. If you want to complain about people who commit copyright infringment, well ok fine. However these companies are not commiting copyright infringment.
P2P software - including EMAIL - can be used to send or receive anything. E-mail and FTP and webserver software are all explicitly designed to distribute files. Software authors and software publishers should not be under assault.
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Re:Tax haven? Not for long..... (Score:2)
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Re:Tax haven? Not for long..... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Pertinent Links: (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Pertinent Links: (Score:2)
No, India is not where stolen movies and kiddie porn go when laws get in the way.
That'd be Russia.
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There's something very amusing about that.
Re:Pertinent Links: (Score:3, Informative)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berne_Convention_for
Re:Pertinent Links: (Score:2)
That will only protect them if they're doing business only in Vanuatu -- only trying to sell ad space to Vanuatu businesses, taking steps to ensure that only Vanuatu residents can use their network, and so on. Sharman Networks, who run Kazaa, also print a Vanuatu address on their articles of incorporation, but this is for tax purposes only. As we all know, Kazaa was recently nailed in Australia, as they do business there and many of their executives live there.
Re:Pertinent Links: (Score:5, Funny)
As for why WinMX might want to relocate there from Canada, this link [lonelyplanet.com] should also shed a little light on the issue...
Re:Pertinent Links: (Score:2)
RIAA is putting pressure on winmx and music buyers. Why don't they put pressure on the mainstream artists where they are banking their $$$ to make something
Welcome to Fantasy Island! (Score:5, Funny)
Tattoo: Bozz, bozz, ze plane, ze plane!
Mr. Roarke: Yes, Tattoo. Let us go meet our guests.
Tattoo: Who are zey, bozz?
Mr. Roarke: They are wanted criminals and nihilists. They have come here to set up an illicit P2P network.
Tattoo [rubbing hands together]: Ooh, I cannot wait see what you have in store for them, bozz. And who are those people, bozz?
Mr. Roarke: They from the Recording Industry Association of America.
Tattoo: Why zem, bozz?
Mr. Roarke: Let's just say, Tattoo, that I enjoy putting spiders and flies in small jars together. [arms out to guests] Welcome to Fantasy Island!
Re:Welcome to Fantasy Island! (Score:2)
Re:Pertinent Links: (Score:2)
WOAH (Score:5, Funny)
Re:WOAH (Score:2)
Are they planning to live there too? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Are they planning to live there too? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Are they planning to live there too? (Score:2, Interesting)
I was under the impression that the people that were technically breaking the law and being sued were those distributing pirated material.
Of course its probably a moot point considering most P2P programs are designed to do both.
Re:Are they planning to live there too? (Score:2)
Re:Are they planning to live there too? (Score:2)
Re:You have to catch them first. (Score:4, Insightful)
"We have every reason to believe that this tiny island country is harboring terrorist agents of Al-qaeda, and is developing weapons of mass destruction to threaten its neighbors with."
Re:You have to catch them first. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:You have to catch them first. (Score:2, Insightful)
And regardless, what grantparent post said points at a problem that is real and very serious, and that a substantial part of the US population is refusing/unable to see. Should I just conclude from your post that you are among that group?
Re:You have to catch them first. (Score:2)
Reminiscence (Score:2, Interesting)
Survival of the fittest, I guess!
Re:Reminiscence (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Reminiscence (Score:2)
Does anyone consider WinMX safe anyway? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Does anyone consider WinMX safe anyway? (Score:5, Informative)
I remember it too (Score:2)
Re:Does anyone consider WinMX safe anyway? (Score:2)
Re:Does anyone consider WinMX safe anyway? (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.docsdownloads.com/Tier1/winmx.htm [docsdownloads.com]
From winmx.com cache:
"WinMX from winmx.com does not contain ANYTHING besides WinMX.
No spyware or other parasite programs will ever be in our software. We respect your privacy and security."
Re:Does anyone consider WinMX safe anyway? (Score:2, Informative)
They had Internet Explorer, right? Look, the kind of person who uses P2P software is also likely to be the kind of person who browses the dodgier side of the web, and if they didn't have the sense to use a secure browser, ownage is incredibly likely to ensue.
I can assure you that if WinMX ever contained spyware, then it
ScuttleMonkey == Michael? (Score:2, Interesting)
Doubt it... (Score:5, Informative)
No, the address on their domain name registration has been been relocated to Vanuatu. I very much doubt that developers themselves would move to Vanuatu over a barely-operational P2P scheme. If you're going to do make a move like that, there are much nicer places in the South Pacific.
Run away... (Score:2, Funny)
Google Maps (Score:5, Informative)
Someone update wiki for Vanuatu (Score:3, Funny)
The economy is based primarily on subsistence or small-scale agriculture, which provides a living for 65% of the population, and online advertising thanks to sweaty nerds downloading free mp3s with WinMX and visiting the WinMX website which provides tribalfusion popups.
United Nations of RIAA (Score:4, Insightful)
Furthermore, WinMX is freeware. I presume the author made no money from it. Regardless, why is the RIAA challenging this poor guy on the grounds that he has broken another country's laws?
Re:United Nations of RIAA (Score:2)
seems the RIAA(MPAA) selectively choose the most "profitable" "clients" to go after.
Well that's it.. (Score:4, Funny)
Dear RIAA,
I officially give up. This is the straw the finally broke the camel's back (it always seems to be the LAST straw that does this - hrmph). I will officially renounce my intent on pirating media, software, pr0n, and the like. I am currently burning my PC to stop enabling me to do bad things (did you guys patent the phrase "If thy eye offends, pluck it out; if they hand does wrong chop it off"?). Additionally, I will re-buy all my purchased media again - just in case some where along the line it was pirated. I can not take the pressure anymore - too many people have been hurt because of my negligence. Please oh please just call off the dogs before more people are hurt. With this latest action you have successfully reached critical mass of the "Piracy == Bad" meme, and people will understand. Thank you for your service in showing humanity where it went wrong, and that the red pill is not for us. To make it up to you, I will pay double for my CDs, send you a dozen roses every week, and mow your lawn. Please, take me back! I want to be loved again. I really didn't know I was hurting you like that baby. Sugar, you got to believe me!
xoxoxo
- modi
I wish to extend a welcome to the new media overlords. May they use their infinite wisdom to safe guard freedom and the natural order of things.
A new nation (Score:2)
Im sure that countries like China wouldnt care about US sanctions against this new country, so if secured near the mainland it would be easy to get supplies and keep things running smoothly.
Not to say that filesharing is shady business, but I am surprised that this sort of thing hasnt happened already by some criminal organizations or large-scale pirating rings. Perhaps there is an obvious answer to
Taiwan? (Score:2)
Oh, wait, they're not on good terms with China.
Never mind.
Re:A new nation (Score:2)
Re:A new nation - China NOT! (Score:2)
Uh, China just successfully sued their own local Google for enabling locating and faciliting the downloading of .MP3 files. I don't think China is where a P2P company should be considering going.
New Government? (Score:4, Funny)
Vanatu seems like a really nice place to live. I found this on their government's news site [vanuatugovernment.gov.vu]:
Vanuatu has a new Government. Please revisit this site next week
Re:New Government? (Score:2)
Lucky bastards.
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Survivor: Return to Vanuatu.. (Score:5, Funny)
Its Still Legal in Canada (Score:5, Interesting)
Its strange that the RIAA would bother sending a letter to a Canadian company.
Music is quite legal (until the government changes the law) to download in Canada. It is most likely legal to have it available for download too, provided that you are not "distributing", which seems to require active promotion.
I would think software developers would be one step further removed from that. Good luck to the RIAA pressing their case in Canada under the current law. CRIA was already stupid enough to take it to the Federal Court http://www.cippic.ca/en/projects-cases/file-sharin g-lawsuits/ [cippic.ca] and lose.
Re:Its Still Legal in Canada (Score:2)
"Its strange that the RIAA would bother sending a letter to a Canadian company."
Because the company does business in the US. Generally speaking, if you're soliciting business in the US (including selling ad space), you're liable to run afoul of US laws.
It's this same principle which allowed Kazaa to be sued in Australia, even though they're headquartered in Vanuatu. While many folks are of the understanding that Kazaa located in Vanuatu to avoid violating the Berne Convention, the real reason is li
Re:Its Still Legal in Canada (Score:2)
Your example isn't quite correct. Kazaa did have an office in Australia http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/02/06/music_ind u stry_raids_kazaas_australia/ [theregister.co.uk]. As far as I know WinMS didn't have a personel or permanent establishment or assets in the US.
Without any nexus to the US, a good lot a USjudgement would do. It won't be enforced by Canadian courts, and there are no US assets to collect on.
Re:Its Still Legal in Canada (Score:2)
You're correct that Sharman has an office in Australia; their address in Vanuatu is likely a PO box run by a mail forwarder.
Let's keep in mind that it's only conjecture that the WinMX shutdown is due to threatening letters from the RIAA. While my guess is that setting up an office in a particular country is liable to make things worse, one can still be subject to another country's laws if one is, as I mentioned in the GP, doing business in that country. In the case of WinMX (perhaps in some future incar
Re:Its Still Legal in Canada (Score:2)
Its not criminal - therefore there is no extradition.
Its not a judgement by a Canadian court - so judgement isn't enforceable in Canada.
If its not illegal in Canada - no judgement is issued.
As a Vanuatu-based geek... (Score:5, Informative)
...Perhaps I can offer a little bit of background.
I've been living and working in Vanuatu for the last two years, and have some experience in the IT sector here. So let me try and provide a little perspective.
First, the vanuatugovernment.vu website is NOT the official government website. It was put together by some less-than-reputable individuals who took advantage of their connections with certain politicians to try to sell 'honorary consulships' to 'independant businessmen'. Basically, this is a way of making money from the sale of diplomatic passports. Among the people found to be using Vanuatu diplomatic passports are a Northern Irish 'contractor' working in Sierra Leone and a convicted member of a Chinese triad.
Second, the information on wikipedia.org is far from complete - and in some cases, inaccurate. And yes, as another poster has mentioned, The capital is Port Vila (one 'l'), so the summary is mis-spelled.
Third, Vanuatu has for quite a long time been associated with businesses who need a more flexible set of business rules than they might find in the US. Kazaa, for example, is incorporated in Vanuatu. As a gesture of appreciation, we now have the Kazaa Cricket field, which will be hosting international competition in the next couple of weeks.
There are some seriously large online betting operations interested in setting up shop in Vanuatu. Without telling tales out of school, I can confirm that one operation recently received approval to install one 7m and one 4m satellite dish, giving it total bandwidth capacity of about 40 Mbps. This in a country that currently has a national total about about 4 Mbps for voice and data combined!
Shades of Cryptonomicon, there actually is a 'bunker' here - a hardened server room with independant everything that is being used to manage data more or less along the same lines that Neal Stephenson suggested in his book.
Vanuatu has some of the most expensive Internet services in the world. I'm composing this message on a 56k dial-up line shared with 6 others computers. Unlimited dial-up costs a paltry USD 200/month, and dedicated access typically runs about USD 1000/month when bandwidth is factored in.
Vanuatu was once a site of significant money-laundering activity. Since 2001, the regulatory regime has been strengthened significantly. And yes, it was because the US 'pressurized' the government to act. They simply informed Vanuatu that if they didn't conform to certain minimum standards, they wouldn't be able to buy US dollars. Very persuasive.
Vanuatu is still a major tax haven, and is increasingly of interest to Australian investors. As I write, the private yacht of the richest man in Australia (Kerry Packer) is anchored in Port Vila Bay.
There are over 100 native languages in Vanuatu, but the language of commerce here is Bislama, a pidgin English that is really interesting to learn. Here is a quick and amusing sampler [moodindigo.ca].
As far as WinMX is concerned, I've heard nothing about their arrival in Vanuatu, but some people are fairly secretive about the business they do here, so maybe I shouldn't be skeptical....
Re:As a Vanuatu-based geek...THEN HELP US (Score:5, Insightful)
Then help us out and update the Wikipedia. That's what the whole thing is all about!
Re:As a Vanuatu-based geek...$$$$$ (Score:2)
Uh, other people in the world have USDollars to sell as well. Doesn't sound like the biggest threat I've heard this afternoon.
Re:As a Vanuatu-based geek... (Score:2)
Hey, you noticed that too?
A whole network of PNP (Score:2, Funny)
WinMX PNP Network Mysteriously Ends Operations
WinMX was a plug-n-pray network? Who knew?
By the time you read this, it will probably have been corrected to 'P2P'.
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Public service astroturf warning:
http://hardware.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1627
WinMX replaced .... (Score:2, Informative)
that WinMX was replaced by the more secure WinNY.
Trouble is, WinNY isn't to easy to find, especially the latest version transalated from japaneese (i.e. into english menus).
Re: (Score:2)
Re:WinMX replaced .... (Score:2)
Centralized Servers (Score:4, Informative)
Even if the *AA's didnt exist, the risk of a single failure point should scream at you.
Slashdot Needs Something Besides Rejected (Score:2)
From the It Would Be Nice department, it would be nice if Slashdot could say something nicer like Duplicate Submission in a case like this. After all, you don't know if it's a duplicate until another version of it goes up, then you feel ripped a bit.
Comment removed (Score:3, Funny)
Seems to be running right now? (Score:2)
The Danger to WinMX (Score:2)
Would be funny if it was found out that this all happened because, during the confusion over at PeerGuardian, someone slipped an update into PG that blocked out all the WinMX Peer Caches, so nobody could connect.
If I remember correctly... (Score:3, Interesting)
At the time, BeOS popularity was waning, and as web sites supporting it started shutting down, the BeShare network quickly became -the- place to get freeware and shareware applications that no longer had download mirrors available, and were unsupported by the original developer.
If memory serves, there was quite a bit of porn on it, too, but not a lot of music -- applications, drivers, config files and BeOS demos were definitely the overwhelming offering.
Of course, once WinMX came out and Windows people started using the network, it became overwhelmed with music trades. Still, for once, you can safely claim that this particular P2P "network" was created not to trade in pirated goods (which was frowned upon in the BeShare days) but in fact as a technical proof-of-concept that was quickly leveraged as a legal software distribution tool, much like BitTorrent is trying to be.
Open Source It (Score:2)
Leak it out on Freent, if nothing else.
Btw, how does Freenet avoid the problem of needing PeerCaches?
I agree... (Score:2)
For starters, why not make a trackerless bittorrent-like network? Oh well, back to the land of unicorns and castles in the air.
Re:I agree... (Score:3, Insightful)
Trackerless torrents are already supported [bittorrent.com], even in the official client.
If you're asking for a eDonkey-like thing with BitTorrent as the underlying protocol instead of the FastTrack network, that already exist too in the form of eXeem [exeem.com].
However, from my experiences, it's about as good as eDonkey in efficiency. That's the problem with less centralized networks. Since it's so easy to
Re:There is NOTHING the RIAA or the USA can do (Score:2)
6) Get every other country we have economic ties to do the same
7) ???
8) RIAA profits!
Re:There is NOTHING the RIAA or the USA can do (Score:2)
10) West loses; profit irrelevant.
Typo. (Score:2)
Should read: "....and ship them to the United States for persecution."
Re:There is NOTHING the RIAA or the USA can do (Score:2)
Re:There is NOTHING the RIAA or the USA can do (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:There is NOTHING the RIAA or the USA can do (Score:5, Informative)
"If the cables just happened to "break" somewhere, would Vanuatu even have the resources to fix them?"
No, but it's okay. Vanuatu doesn't have undersea cables. Nor does it have the USD 20 million to have one laid. As I mentioned in a previous post, total national bandwidth - for both voice and data - is somewhere around 4Mbps, all through satellite.
Businesses who want to work online typically install their own satellite equipment. Typically, only the cash transactions occur in Vanuatu itself. That means that if you make a bet online, for example, you've placed your bet on a server somewhere in the US (or wherever), but your card actually gets debited through a transaction queued through a server sitting in a air-conditioned room in Vanuatu.
Re:There is NOTHING the RIAA or the USA can do (Score:2)
Bah... these fools would have to swim to the shore, and to do that they'll have to get by the sharks with laser beams on their heads. Bwahahaha!!!!
ip block (Score:2)
Re:CATASTROPHY!!!! (Score:2)
Re:On my way now... (Score:3, Funny)
Were going streaking to Vanatu! Who will join me!?
...Good luck crossing most of the Pacific naked. Guess I'll take a ship.
Re:I'll Miss It (Score:2)
Re:I'll Miss It (Score:2)
Re:Just now suspended? (Score:2)
Actually, WinMX uses hashes to determine unique files. One byte off will change the hash. However, WinMX handles renamed files with ease.
Re:WinX's one BIG flaw. (Score:2)