Skype, Founders Charged With Racketeering
from the fun-with-lawsuits dept
It's fairly well known that Skype's founders won't come to the US for fear of lawsuits arising out of their part in building Kazaa... but it looks like they may now have another lawsuit on their hands as well. Andy Abramson gets credit for the big scoop of the weekend, discovering that Morpheus maker Streamcast has now sued Skype and its founders Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis under RICO laws, which are more commonly used against organized crime groups. It's not all that common for RICO violations to be charged between companies, but it does happen (recently a few times against the recording industry, for example). Abramson has all the details, which Om Malik summarizes as being all about the money -- basically saying that Streamcast is pissed off that Zennstrom didn't sell them the Kazaa technology, before spinning it off to Sharman Networks. Streamcast says that the their own deal included a "right of first refusal" should Zennstrom sell the technology to anyone else. Streamcast also claims that the basic Kazaa technology is part of Skype.For some background on this, it helps to go back a few years. In early 2002, there were two major file sharing tools that had taken the crown away from the shut down Napster: Kazaa and Morpheus. However, both used the same basic technology, called FastTrack, and files on one system were found on the other. The team behind Kazaa had created FastTrack as well, but just before the recording industry lawsuits started piling up, Zennstrom and his team sold the basic technology, creating quite the mess -- where no one quite knew who owned what or who owned what. This "mess" is part of what Streamcast is focusing on, saying that it was all an elaborate shell game, used for fraud. Just as all of this was happening, the folks who owned FastTrack suddenly shut Morpheus users out of their system -- which seemed quite odd. After all, the whole pitch of the "decentralized, peer-to-peer" file sharing system was that it couldn't be shut down once launched. Streamcast, the company behind Morpheus, lashed out at the folks behind Kazaa, accusing them of setting up an "attack script" that basically updated their client to make it unusable on the FastTrack network. Kazaa responded by saying that Morpheus hadn't paid its bills -- but the new lawsuit says that it was all a plan to steal away Streamcast's users to the shell corporation set up to run Kazaa. The battle between the two organizations has continued over the years, and in early 2004, Streamcast accused Kazaa of really being a centralized, not decentralized system -- which (if true) would punch a huge hole in Kazaa's defense in various lawsuits that they had no say in what people did with their software.
Anyway, it appears that none of these past tactics did much damage, so now Streamcast is trying once again, but this time focusing on Zennstrom, Friis and Skype/eBay. Why? Well, there are a few billion reasons why, and they have some dead American Presidents on them. Specifically, they claim that as part of the shell game, the actual FastTrack P2P software remained in Zennstrom's control, and he used it as the core piece of Skype's P2P engine. Streamcast claims that, given their original deal, it should own that technology, as Zennstrom had no right to sell it to a third party without first giving Streamcast a shot to buy it. It seems hard to believe that this lawsuit will actually get very far, but it will be quite a distraction. It's certainly yet another reason (if there weren't enough already) to question why eBay spent so much on Skype.
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interesting...
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Is there a case?
They are suing Zennstrom & Friis for selling FastTrack to Sharman without giving Morpheus right of first refusal. But, as part of their case they are claiming control of FastTrack was never actually sold and still resides with Zennstrom & Friis.
Maybe there are some detail I didn't catch?
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Soap Opera
*retch*
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Re: Soap Opera
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Ahhhh! Don't hurt my precious!
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fashion victims
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Skype rocks
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Proprietary platforms
Ownership over things such as a "technology", which in many cases is simply a network protocol, and a way to communicate, will always end up in this kind of debate, which in turns slows down technical advance in many ways.
Keep your software commercial, and do what you want with it. But the internet, and how you let your software interact with it, is and should remain free.
I claim ownership over Esperanto.
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$$$
Marty
Lehigh Valley Internet
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Skype is greedy
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Re: Skype is greedy
I suggest you re-think your thoughts.
Also, does anyone understand that Skype is not a P2P? How can such a software be used for P2P? Because it has a "send file" feature? Then we need to sue yahoo, aol, google and everyone else who has a "send file" button.
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Greed, software rights, Voice-over-IP
Granted, Skype did more or less "pioneer" the technology - but didn't Gates "pioneer" Windows from his old Apple buddy?
Who owns what these days? I concur with Ulrick.
I can use GoogleTalk, MSN, and Yahoo to "call" people on my contact list. Who really needs to pay extra for VoIP/Skype/etc.
Keep your paid services - I pay my ISP for Internet access - content on the web should stay free.
BTW - Support the software developers and film/music industry. Read the .NFO file on your torrent downloads!!! If you like it - buy it.
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Doh
I would agree with the above statement about using non proprietary protocols and such, but the problem is that nobody is providing the same services as far as I know. Telco's are doing voip but I don't ever want to deal with a telco directly again.
MSN and others are fine for p2p, but for landline in and out, Skype was a perfect mesh.
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But i guess that within 10 years 90% or more software companies will have moved to open scorce. so i just hope it happens. i use skype for my house phone...so i hope they dont go under.
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With Inovation comes pointless lawsuits
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unbelievable
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I need information as soon as possible
"Skype Founders Charged with Racketeering"
1. Why were the founders being charged with RICO violations? Are the reasons legitimate? Why or why not?
Alguna persona que me ayude en la respuesta de estas preguntas se lo agradecería y Dios le bendecirá.
DRV
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Great Post
-Solutionsbylee
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