Napster, judgments and platforms.

Here it is finally the long-awaited judgment. As an episode of Beutiful, does not solve anything, but only opens new narrative strands. The injunction in fact says that every time the recording industry reports a song protected by copyright, Napster has three days to remove it from its servers. Approval of the RIAA, which perhaps pretend not to understand that we now can begin a 'name game' to the death, where files can be called SantaVergine instead of Madonna and DucaBianco instead of Bowie. Meanwhile, on the front of the 'other', finally someone has dusted off an idea that we launched last summer. Matt Goyer of Fairtunes.com (the site that collected voluntary donations for the artists on Napster) has launched the idea of ​​moving servers for swapping music on Sealand, the platform independent of the jurisdiction (which declared principality) in international waters. It would have $ 10 a year by 1500 to support people with their eyes closed expenses …