Grouper Twists P2P Debate
"Jennifer Urban, a law professor at USC, wanted to watch home movies of her 7-month-old nephew Peter in England, but nothing seemed to work. The videotapes and DVDs were in the wrong format, and the digital movie files were too big to e-mail. Then Urban hit on a software program called Grouper. And in addition to movies of her nephew, Grouper offers Urban, who specializes in copyright law, insight into how technology is testing the boundaries of copyright in a digital age.
"Grouper allows Urban to copy movies and pictures of young Peter directly from her brother and sister-in-law’s computer without worrying about formats or oversized e-mail attachments. Unlike those global networks with millions of users, though, Grouper also lets Urban pick and choose with whom she shares online — and sets a strict limit of 30 people per group.
"What makes Grouper troubling to some entertainment industry executives are the other things people can do with it."
Jon Healey. Testing Copyright Limits. LATimes.com. April 12, 2005.
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