Here is another article from the
NYTimes.com
Penn State Will Pay to Allow Students to Download Music
By AMY HARMON
Published: November 7, 2003
ennsylvania State University has agreed to cover the cost of providing its students with a legal method to download music from a catalog of half a million songs, in a departure from punitive efforts to curtail music swapping on college campuses.
The deal between Penn State and the newly revised Napster online service is expected to serve as a model for other universities. It comes as the music industry applies pressure on students and colleges in its antipiracy campaign.
Graham Spanier, the president of Penn State, said it was the first time a college had taken it upon itself to provide music to its students.
"It is unusual," Dr. Spanier said. "But today's college students have told us how important this is to them and with the record industry's new enforcement efforts, we think they'll be very excited to participate."
For some students, the deal may seem as though Prohibition has ended, and drinks are on the house.
The service will allow students to listen to an unlimited number of songs as often as they want. They will be able to download the music to use on three personal computers as long as students are at Penn State. If they want to keep the songs permanently or burn them to a CD, though, they will have to pay 99 cents each.
Dr. Spanier said the university will pay for the Napster service out of the $160 information technology fee students pay each year. The cost to the university is "substantially less" than the $9.95 fee that individual subscribers pay for the Napster service, he said, though he declined to disclose the precise terms.
About 18,000 students in the university's residence halls will be the first to get the service in January, university officials said. By next fall, it is to be made available to all 83,000 undergraduate and graduate students on campuses across the state, as well as faculty and staff.
As huge consumers of music, students have driven the file-sharing epidemic begun in 1999 by Napster, the brainchild of Shawn Fanning, then a college student himself.
Napster went bankrupt after a federal judge ruled in 2001 it had violated copyright laws. It was relaunched last month offering individual songs for 99 cents, albums for $9.95 or monthly subscriptions — for listening only, not copying — for $9.95.
Ian Rosenberger, president of the undergraduate student government at Penn State, said one student he had shown the service thought it was great. But Mr. Rosenberger added that other students were more skeptical of the university's service.
"There's been a lot of attention paid to students as criminals," he said, "and people who download don't see themselves that way."
In the last year the industry has sued several students suspected of illegally trading music over the Internet. Like many colleges, Penn State has used a variety of measures, from mandatory copyright tutorials to suspending Internet access, to try to clamp down. Several colleges use software programs that monitor file-swapping among students, sending e-mail messages warning them they are breaking the law as a first step in imposing penalties.
But university and industry officials hope the Napster carrot will succeed where various sticks have failed in undermining the campus culture of unauthorized copying.
"We have to try every mechanism to see what will be effective," said Sheldon Steinbach, general counsel of the American Council on Education, which represents colleges and universities. "I fully anticipate many institutions will follow suit, whether with Napster or other services."
Facing demands from the music industry to remove copyrighted files from their networks, several universities began meeting with entertainment industry officials this year to consider how to provide alternatives to making unauthorized copies of music with software like Kazaa.
Dr. Spanier of Penn State and Cary Sherman, president of the Recording Industry Association of America, led the committee. The industry blames file-sharing services for a sharp decline in sales in the past three years.
"The impact of training the habits of future generations cannot be underestimated," Mr. Sherman said. "If people get into the habit of downloading music for free in their college years, they're likely to retain that mentality and be lost as customers."
For Napster's parent, the software company Roxio, the deal represents a chance to capture clients it might keep after graduation. Investors were not necessarily persuaded it would see new profits soon. Shares of Roxio fell 94 cents, or 10 percent, to $8.88 in Nasdaq trading on Thursday.
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Some students criticized the Napster service, which uses copy-protection software to prevent files from being copied to more than three computers or burned to a CD without paying the 99-cent fee.
Why, asked Penn State's student newspaper, The Collegian, in an editorial last month, "must the proposed program be so limited?"
The editorial predicted that students would still copy music without paying for it over services like Kazaa, adding that the Napster service wasn't "truly free," because student funds would be diverted from other services to pay for it.
The new, administration-sponsored Napster may also lack the subversive appeal of peer-to-peer services like the original Napster or Kazaa, which work by allowing individuals using the software to copy music directly from each other.
Robert Haber, chief executive of CMJ Network, which tracks music trends among college-age consumers, said he expected deals like Penn State's to shift downloading into an increasingly legal arena.
"I don't want to say it's the death of file-sharing services," he said, "but I think it will put a significant dent in them because it's easy to use and it's really a viable alternative."
He said he hoped deals with universities would spur the online services to include music from unsigned artists and independent labels, too.
"They may think it's very cool," he said of students using the service, "but if it doesn't appeal to them content-wise, it's not going to work."