“In 1999, Fanning, a 19-year-old Boston-area hacker from a broken home, stumbled on the idea for making digital MP3 files easy to find on the Net. Teaming up with fellow geeks he knew only through online chat rooms, he crafted a simple technology that allowed millions to swap music collections free of charge. The operation moved to Silicon Valley that same year, where MTV and other media outlets converted the hackers into heroes, until the music industry squashed the company in court.” Brad Stone reviews Joseph Menn
‘s All the Rave: The Rise and Fall of Shawn Fanning‘s Napster. Menn argues that it was actually the greed and thuggery of young Shawn’s shady uncle and buisiness partner John Fanning who doomed millions of teenagers to (sometimes) have to fork over money for their music. —Napster’s Autopsy: Tracing a Music Rebel’s Rise and FallM$NBC)
Napster's Autopsy: Tracing a Music Rebel's Rise and Fall
So I'm trying to edit a Facebook status,...
Business
Number of times one of my $9.99 headphon...
Business
Culture
50 years ago today, three humans were on...
Culture
In theory, technology lets people make a...
Aesthetics
The enÂterÂtainÂment inÂdusÂtry seem...
Culture


