Oxford University Bans Spotify, Apparently Prefers Students To Get Music Secretly, Rather Than Legally
from the that-doesn't-seem-helpful dept
For years, the recording industry has pushed universities to block file sharing apps and promote legal alternatives. In the US, the industry even pushed legislation that would require universities to support legal music services. Apparently, the folks over in Oxford are going in the other direction. IT folks at the prestigious university have banned Spotify, one of the most well-known legal music services out there, claiming that any P2P technology is not allowed, and then also claiming that it's a bandwidth hog. Finally, when confronted about it, the University noted that the service "cannot be justified as educational." There are lots of things online that cannot necessarily be justified as educational, but are totally allowed.Given the multiple explanations, you get the feeling this may have been an overreaction on the part of the University by someone unfamiliar with Spotify. I would doubt that the application is really that much of a bandwidth hog -- and even if it is, you would think that there are better ways to deal with it than an outright ban. Either way, it's not like it will actually stop students from using it or some other means of accessing music they want to hear -- it's just that they'll do so in more secretive ways.
Still, a bigger question is why such an esteemed university seems to think that all P2P applications are somehow bad. You would think that an educational institution would recognize that P2P is just a way of using the internet -- often in a more efficient manner -- and it's been used in all sorts of beneficial and educational settings for years.
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Filed Under: bandwidth, oxford university, p2p
Companies: oxford university, spotify
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qwet
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There are ways of dealing with this of course, but then you get students complaining that their uploads are throttled.
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DNA databases
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Re:
Senior management!
They also like to listen to music at work....
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Re: DNA databases
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iTunes
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Protocol Discrimination.
And that is why Net Neutrality started to be discussed and got serious in the U.S..
Content providers saw the possible ramifications of such behavior and took action to rectify the situation the best way they know how and that is using legislation and to be frank I don't think there would be any other way, it goes against the nature of companies not to discriminate so there has to be a rule saying that.
People remember comcast? that what kickstarted the whole thing.
Don't put a rule saying you can't discriminate and people will discriminate never mind that one could easily shape the traffic based on volume of the traffic and not the protocol meaning there are agnostic ways to do it but people choose to discriminate services why?
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HMmm..
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Re: HMmm..
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Re: Re: HMmm..
Seems some are based on priorities, some on bandwidth caps, some on dropping packets, some on delaying packets. But they all seem to do mostly the same thing, prioritize and/or limit.
In the case of a large Uni paying for data transfered, they may want to actually cut back on data used rather than just apply priorities.
If I bought a 100+mbit line not because I need 100mbit all the time, but because *some times* I need it; I would be pissed to have a few users pegging the line 24/7 and costing me $$$.
But really, the Uni can't use education as an excuse because they could easily prioritize lab/Faculty computers over dorms. They could also reduce priority on long running heavy data streams.
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educational justification?
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Oxford is not the only one...
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Confusion?
They don't know enough to tell when P2P users are infringing on copyrights, fear being sued, so just ban it outright.
If you've ever read any cease-and-desist letters from ISP's (you know, when someone catches you downloading content and threatens your ISP), they tell you to make sure you don't have the offending file, and also to uninstall ANY P2P software on your computer. You know, "just to be safe."
Probably this case is something along those same lines. They don't know that Spotify is legal, so they block it, "just to be safe."
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Tradition?
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P2P is against OUCS policy...
OUCS are aware of the potential bandwidth-saving benefits of P2P, but they'll only change policy if they can prove that those benefits do exist within their network.
(I'm an IT guy at the University, but not in OUCS.)
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