All The Rave - The Rise and Fall of Shawn Fanning's Napster
All The Rave - The Rise and Fall of Shawn Fanning's Napster
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JOSEPH MENN
         CROWN
         BUSINESS
 Copyright      © 2003 by Joseph Menn
The version of Napster's          logo on the cover was modified for the                   company by
artist    Tom   Dolan from the more widely                  distributed original   by Sam Hanks.
ISBN 0-609-61093-7
10   987654321
First Edition
FOR SAMANTHA,   MY   LOVELY WIFE
Observe       my   uncle. If his occulted guilt
                                                —Hamlet
                       Contents
Author's Note 1
1 the rebels 13
2 a big idea 29
3 birth of a business 41
4 getting money 57
5 going west 85
6 fame 119
8 competition 169
11 bertelsmann 261
Notes 325
Bibliography 341
Index 343
                              (   ix)
all the rave
                          Author's Note
and magazine coverage was                   plenty. It          was only    in late     2000 that     I   met
some of the             talented people      who worked             at the       company and     realized
how wrong I had been. Not long after, I came to the conclusion that
Napster's real story could be told only in an investigative book, for three
reasons.
was the unseen role of the man who incorporated Napster and essentially
controlled     it       through    its   crucial first year, before the professionals                     took
over.   That man            is   not the enigmatic               Shawn Fanning,           the Time and
Fortune magazine cover boy and the world's best-known hacker, whose
message of       free      music eventually attracted               as   many      as   70 million    regis-
tered users. That man is Shawn's uncle John Fanning, who kept 70 percent
                                                    (   1   )
just the beginning.           Other key employees brought                   in   under       his leadership
were   also well familiar           with angry investors, the courts, and the cops long
before Napster's landmark fight with the record industry. Their roles too
have never been examined. All told, the undisclosed chaos, betrayal, and
dissension within Napster                   made          the record-industry lawsuit look like a
friendly    game of chess. And                  it is   somehow      fitting that the rapid          develop-
ment of      this      weapon     for allowing             consumers to take control away from
the entertainment-industry giants also illustrates                               so    dramatically the
wasn't selling pet food or baby products online.                         The   fastest-growing busi-
ness of     all   time, Napster            had an innovative technology,               true to the Net's
roots, that fired         up not only the computers of the music-craving masses
but also the imaginations of                    CEOs        at   some of the biggest companies on
the planet.        And     driven by leaders                who    kept doubling Napster's bet,                  it
pushed the edge           until   it   defined where the lines would be drawn on                           some
of the most important political and economic issues of the day, including
digital piracy,        consumer        rights,      freedom of speech, and the             fiiture   shape of
the   Net    itself     As   I write,       the leaders of          Hollywood and           Silicon Valley,
two of the most powerfiil                   industries anywhere, are jousting                  on Capitol
Hill over whether widespread anticopying                            mechanisms        will be   mandated
in the     computers of the             fiature.        All that from the      mind of an            idealistic
seventeen-year-old from                Cape Cod who got some very bad                       advice.
      The    third reason nearly contradicts the second.                          While Napster was
different,    it   also   epitomized what went wrong                    at the hottest spot in capi-
talism in the historic boom at the turn of the century. It was exactly like
everything else that was happening, only much,                            much more           so.    In    Nap-
ster's case, billionaire          venture capitalists were willing to put millions of
dollars    behind something that was not just fooHsh,                            as so     many      start-ups
were, but something that they had already concluded was illegal If the
investment philosophy that powered Napster was badly overcharged, so
were the characters that led                        it.    But they too were archetypes of a
remarkable         era.   A httle      rougher around the edges and a Uttle more reck-
less, to    be sure, but the sort of people                       who seemed       almost genetically
                                        (   2   )       JOSEPH MENN
designed to take advantage of the mass mania that surrounded them.
Read     correctly, the story                  of Napster proves that the influx of investment
money      credited with spreading technology faster and wider than ever
tal backlash.
mann      also    owns the publisher of                         this book.)          My     dealings with         John
Fanning were more                  limited.       They included          authorized interviews with his
company's lawyer and                     publicist, his         hanging up the phone and shutting a
door in      my    face,          and    his response to            an e-mailed            list    of questions, an
answer that consisted chiefly of his claim that the questions alone were
grounds for a lawsuit.
       My work          is    supported by police and court records from the states of
California, Massachusetts, Delaware, Pennsylvania,                                          and Washington.           I
been confirmed by the other                        parties,      and any       conflicts     have been resolved
by the elimination of the material or by noting the discrepancy.
       Because nearly              all   my reporting required             substantial help           from others,
I   owe almost everyone named                         in   it   a debt   of gratitude.        I    would   especially
like to thank those who spent many days with me, some of them painfiil,
to    make   sure I          had the          facts right,      knowing        that they themselves           would
not emerge unscathed. For exceptional bravery,                                   I   commend         Napster's    first
thank editor John Carroll, managing editor Dean Baquet, business editor
Bill Sing,    and senior technology editor Russ Stanton,                         who   helped    me     in
more ways than         I   can   say.      Thanks     also to digital-music writer       Jon Healey
and the talented colleagues                 who And I am gratefiil to the
                                                    filled in for   me.
readers of my early drafts, Anthony Effinger, Mark Saylor, and Samantha
Zee; my editor, Doug Pepper, and others at Crown; my agent and friend
Elizabeth Kaplan,   who strides from mountaintop to mountaintop; jour-
nalist    Dan Goodin, who raised the first questions about John Fanning;
Celia Francis, for crucial introductions; and the queen of hospitality dur-
                                       (    4   )   JOSEPH MENN
                  Prologue                                                  :
Shawn kept drinking water and trying not to grind his teeth. Normally
shy,   he was beaming           at perfect strangers.           Drugs   aside, there       was no reason
not    to:   Shawn was surrounded by                   things that he loved.               Good     friends,
youth culture at its antiestablishment best, and the music that was his
passion.     And    it   was   for the right cause          —   his cause.      Napster was a cospon-
sor of the festivities,         and the new company's banner and                         stickers   were on
display.     In the haze of that evening in October 1999,                            it   didn't    seem   to
matter that most of the other people there had never heard of his brain-
child. It didn't      matter that Napster's booth was slipshod and the                          last to    go
up.    And   it   didn't matter that Napster's              new chief executive was on              Ecstasy
too.   That was      sort   of nice.   "It   was   stupid.       But   it   was   a lot   of fun," Shawn
said later.
       What       did matter was that          Shawn was            a long        way from     his   rough
Massachusetts childhood              —some of          it   spent on welfare, part of it spent in
a foster     home   —and        that he   would never again            face days like that.         He was
riding the Internet explosion that                     had transformed             his    new home,       the
San Francisco Bay              area, into a pulsating           mass of parties, easy money, and
                                                   (   5)
unlimited opportunities for hackers and hucksters                                        alike.    After months
ten employees,            some of them                      Silicon Valley pros.        And       the    number of
Napster's users          was snowballing by                      as   much   as    50 percent     in a single day.
history.
        It   had been a blur            to       Shawn.        Two     years before, he      was    just      one of a
hundred seniors               at   Harwich High School on Cape Cod, where he was
well liked but best                known          for the purple            BMW Z3        that his uncle gave
with ways to find             digital        music          files faster,   Napster had sprung to               life   and
spread rapidly by             word of mouth well before Shawn could                               get   all   the bugs
out. Shawn had moved to California the previous month at the insistence
employee had rented for them, Shawn had looked over                                          at Parker.         "What
are   we doing        in California?"                 he asked.
        The    rave    was a major break from                          their hectic routine,        and the two
teenagers       would remember                    it   as   one of the high points of their breakneck
adventure. Sponsoring                   it   was a          characteristically Parker idea.             A hyperen-
ergetic       and business-oriented programmer from Herndon, Virginia, the
severely asthmatic Parker                     had met Shawn on a chat channel                           for aspiring
hackers while both were in high school.                                 "He was one of the few people
that    would     talk to          me   about stuff that wasn't technical                  —the meaning of
life,   consciousness," Parker said. Later, Parker                                was one of the        first   Shawn
told about Napster. Parker used every business connection he                                             had     to get
the project funded. It was an insane process, filled with double crosses
and a        sort of high-speed              poker with investors, but Parker                 set the events in
motion that        finally         brought the company                  its first,   magical quarter-miUion
dollars.       Now     most of           Parker's time                was spent      strategizing, predicting
what Napster needed                     to   do next           to keep      growing and taking            in    money
from     investors.      But while Shawn was busy writing code, Parker was more
interested in         making time                for fun,      and he was         a longtime fan    of electronic
                                             (    6    )      JOSEPH MENN
dance music.    The Oakland               party gave         him something                  to be excited about
in tow. Like a reigning rock star at an exclusive club, Parker let his aco-
lytes in.
The third member of the original Napster troupe was in his element
hesitated, reluctant to leave Boston and his job at BindView Corp. After
Richardson loved a good party and loud music, and she was surprisingly
easy to persuade. She wanted the Napster kids to have flm.                           And     it   made   a
best thing about Napster was that music fans could discover songs that
they couldn't find in stores, and electronica was particularly hard to                              come
by.   "A rave   is     perfect,"   Richardson thought. "The kids there love                          this
music, and      it's    impossible to get."            Now   she was beside Parker in the
booth, her pupils dilated.          Adorned with temporary                 tattoos in the spirit of
Napster was giving away Rio portable                      MPS        players: Just   put   down your
e-mail address to get in the drawing.
      Richardson was thirty-eight, the grown-up in the                         outfit.   But she was
the sort of elder a teenager might pick for himself: "a den mother," said
working the        line   between Shawn and               his   young      collaborators      and the
world of big-time SiHcon Valley wheeler-dealers, the                          billionaires   who had
bankrolled Netscape and Yahoo!,                 Amazon and            eBay.
      Richardson loved her job. Instead of just investing in companies and
coaching them from a distance, she was building a firm herself For once,
her teenage son understood what she did for a living.                             The      kids at the
                                    (   8   )   JOSEPH MENN
company were             inspired.   And     Richardson believed she could turn their
invention into something the record industry                    would           love   —   a   way   to   mar-
ket   new music          to potential fans, based         on what they            liked, for virtually
nothing.
      As    the    good feehng           built   up under the canopy behind Napster's
booth,     it   was easy     to forget that like the rave scene                   itself,       the Napster
movement was based on                the unstable allure of illegal behavior.                    And it was
easy for    Shawn       to forget    what bothered him more than                  that: his       blowhard
uncle John. John Fanning had served as a surrogate father during                                     much of
Shawn's      difficult    childhood.       He    had hired Shawn to work                   at the online-
games firm he ran            in Hull, Massachusetts,         and Fanning had even bought
Shawn       his first    computer and that sports car in high school. But                                 their
relationship       was    far     from   perfect.   A   dropout from Boston College, the
thirty-five-year-old            Fanning fancied himself a successful businessman,
destined to        make      the cover of Fortune magazine. His track record sug-
gested that was unlikely, and the games firm was struggling                                    when Shawn
told his uncle about Napster.                    Fanning realized          it   could be huge and
moved      quickly to incorporate Napster Inc. with the Massachusetts secre-
tary of state.         And   he took one more           step, laying a minefield that                 would
dictate every          major direction that Napster would take in the crucial next
year:   Fanning awarded himself 70 percent of the company, leaving just 30
percent for his nephew.             Shawn was       stunned, but Fanning said that no one
Napster's destiny. Fanning's chief virtue, he told Shawn, was his business
with too        much ego and         too   much     equity—but not both. After months of
effort     by Parker and Fanning, Silicon Valley investor                         Amram           agreed to
would be          a three-person board: Fanning,              Amram, and         the    new CEO. For
the top job,        Amram named         Richardson, an old friend                who had    never met
      At   the time of the rave,         John Fanning was thousands of miles away.
Officially,       he wasn't in charge, and he wisely kept himself out of the
media      circus that    would surround Napster. But soon he would                         start   med-
dling in every significant decision the                  company made.            It    was John Fan-
ning,     still   the biggest shareholder,           who     decided that legal victory was a
virtual certainty        and that the company                didn't   need to negotiate with the
record industry. It was John Fanning                     who         vetoed venture-capital deals
that   might have transformed Napster into a                         legally   sound business.      And
it   was John Fanning, more than anyone                      else,   who     profited   from Napster's
meteoric but unsustainable              rise.     He   kept a significant chunk of Amram's
initial    investment for claimed expenses back East, and he sold hundreds
of thousands of dollars worth of his shares as more investors poured                                in.
       Soon       after the rave,   power        struggles   would erupt        as users   of the Nap-
ster service        soared into the tens of millions and                 made     it   the best-known
brand on the Internet. Shawn would emerge                             as a   household name and a
generational icon, gracing the cover of Time magazine and testifying
before Congress.          He would       also      be crushed by court rulings that closed
the door      on the biggest        theft of intellectual property in history.               Much         of
Napster's wild trajectory can be traced to that early division of power,
ing problem and an uncle                who       recklessly aspired to riches. Yet the              two
depended on each            other, personifications             of the twin forces behind the
dot-com explosion. For before even such                        a brilliant innovation could rise
Napster into a legal distributor of authorized music, only to see the com-
                                    (   10   )      JOSEPH MENN
pany    slide into   bankruptcy. Yet the legacy of Napster's original technology
is   hard to overstate.   The   firm's pirate successors       now combine       for a bigger
reach than Napster had at         its   peak.   The   record industry suffers from both
declining sales and judicial scrutiny of whether                   its   members conspired
to suppress online distribution.           Movie companies and             others fear with
good reason that they wiU be the next              to be "Napsterized."       And   aU man-
ner of academics, start-ups, and giant firms are embracing what's                      known
as peer-to-peer file sharing, hailed            by Netscape Communications Corp.
founder    Marc Andreessen       as a "once-in-a-generation idea."
For Shawn and his friends, it would be an incredible trip. But it cer-
another, far different party twenty years earlier,                     on the other   side   of the
country. It   was in a ramshackle old house                in the hard-luck        town of Rock-
land, Massachusetts, south of Boston.                  The   sprawling     home was    barely big
enough     to contain the eight brothers and                 sisters   of the Fanning brood, a
diverse    and struggling       Irish family that this night invited half the neigh-
known Boston rockers Aerosmith and sang its own material, even record-
                                              (   13   )
the band and with eighteen-year-old Attleboro guitarist Joe                                   Rando      in
Fanning, passed a hat and collected thousands of doUars to pay for the
bash, his    first   entrepreneurial experience.
The band became part of the Fannings' social circle, and in time
Coleen began dating Rando, who was smart, good-looking, and from a
wealthier family.       A   couple of years        later, after    Coleen told Rando that she
was pregnant,         their   romance ended. She kept the baby, and the young
Shawn Fanning joined              the already-overstuffed household in 1980, before
The first few years "were heU," according to Coleen, a small, freckled,
blue-eyed     woman who           laughs a lot and speaks with a pronounced Boston
accent.   She moved from one tough area                      to another, then married            an ex-
Marine and truck            driver       named Raymond         Verrier.The couple had four
more     children,    and   it   wasn't the happiest         of homes. "Money was always a
pretty big issue,"      Shawn      said.      "There was a    lot   of tension around          that."
They lived near Brockton's projects for a time, and Coleen could see
this.' Even though it meant losing him a little bit, it's what I wanted for
him," said Coleen, who was working then as a nurse's aide. During a split
between the Verriers, when Shawn was about twelve, he and his siblings
had to move for several months into a foster home until the couple recon-
ciled.   Always a strong student, Shawn                tried to escape           by concentrating on
school and by playing guitar, basketball, and baseball.                            When       the family
was through the worst of the hardship, the Verriers moved                                 to the small
middle-class town of Harwich Port,                   on the elbow of Cape Cod. The new
house was nice enough,             if still   crowded, and the neighborhood was                   full   of
pine trees and songbirds.
      As Shawn kept           playing sports, his mother encouraged him, thinking
the whole time about scholarships to coUege.                       Shawn was        especially strong
at baseball,     even though fear gripped him at each                       trip to the plate.        He
batted over .650 one year at                  Harwich High School,               a small school     with
some very good           teachers.       As Shawn      grew, Coleen wanted to give                  him
more than she had had, more than she could                         give   him     directly.   "We   don't
                                     (   14   )    JOSEPH MENN
have much," she             said.    "He   didn't get a lot          of things that people get          who
come from money."
      She saw that Shawn was motivated, and she turned                                to the person she
John. John Fanning gave                 Shawn money for each              A he brought home, and
there were many.             And        he bought Shawn his              first   computer, an Apple
Macintosh the Verriers could never have afforded. Shawn took                                            to    it
chatting over the Internet through the evening. Every hour he typed,
the radio blared. "I always knew from an early age he was going to
accomplish things," Coleen said. Given her son's way of working, "it
Shawn made an impression at Harwich High. "He was a nice kid. Every-
body    liked him," said             Tim Jamoulis, who           played on the tennis team with
Shawn. History teacher Richard Besciak taught Shawn                                   in   homeroom          for
all four years and remembered Shawn's unusual ability to focus intently
on the task        at   hand. "A lot of kids can tune out, but he was right on
track," Besciak said.           "He was an        A student without trying. He was a nice,
generous, levelheaded young man."                     Harwich High had only about                   a   hun-
dred students in each grade, but around Shawn's time, there were several
promising computer students. After Shawn became one of them, every-
thing else      fell   by the wayside. "Once            I started       getting into programming,
I pretty much quit all sports," Shawn said. A fellow hacker at the school
said that Shawn's            work on       the machines "really seemed to                   consume him.
There were those who were doing                         it   just as a hobby, for games, or to
cheat in school. Shawn went through that phase, but it was just a starting
things."
      When Shawn was                  seventeen,    John Fanning located Joe Rando on the
Internet and asked his sister Coleen if she wanted                          Shawn      to   meet   his bio-
logical father, who still Uved in the area. Coleen had no hard feelings
about Rando and had told                    Shawn      the truth       when he was seven, so she
agreed immediately.             "I    knew Shawn had             to   get to know him. He was at
self   "But he gets a     lot   from the other           side too." Still,        when    she    first   saw
the two of       them   together, she couldn't get out of the car, she                               was so
shocked.    It   was   just that they looked so             much        aHke, right       down        to the
lopingway they walked. Shawn and Rando hit it off, and they stayed in
touch during all the craziness that Shawn was about                                  to       go through.
Rando had done          well for himself, earning a degree in physics and an
M.B.A. He worked           in fiber optics          and    tried his      hand      at   running small
software firms before settling in as a real-estate developer specializing in
shopping malls. Rando discovered that he preferred working for himself
to laboring at big       companies or under the control of powerful investors.
An     Internet skeptic,    Rando gave             his    son one major piece of business
advice about Napster: to take the                 money      as   soon     as     he could.     "I    always
told him, 'If you can cash out, cash out,' because the valuations I was see-
like   Shawn     in a different way," she said.           "He wanted out of that situation
he started    in. It   was the motivation to              succeed that I wanted Shawn to
pick up on."
       John Fanning      lived an     hour away          in blue-collar Hull, a 350-year-old
fishing   town halfway back            to    Boston from the Cape that was trying to
survive    on the   tourist trade      without offering            much     in return.         Shawn saw
his uncle's office, the     home of his           latest venture, Internet firm Chess.net,
serious habit with a computer video game called StarCraft. His favorite
opponent was Shawn. Even when Shawn's hacking hobby started to look
like a serious business.         Fanning wanted             to play.      More than           once,     when
Shawn's friends and collaborators needed him to work, he told them he
couldn't:   His uncle wanted to keep playing StarCraft. If he                                  didn't    keep
playing with him,        Shawn        told them,         Fanning wouldn't give him money
for dinner. Shawn's friends believed that                   Shawn        wasn't kidding, and that
if his uncle was kidding, the humor was much darker than what they were
                                  (   16     )    JOSEPH MENN
used      to.   "I'm sure if he hadn't played StarCraft, he would have gotten
fed,"     Napster cofounder Sean Parker                   said.   "But John Fanning has a way
of being really stubborn."
       Shawn      shared his family's love of a good time. But where Fanning
could be boisterous, his                nephew was inward-looking and                     serious. It      was
while he was working at Fanning's company that                                Shawn expanded on             his
early taste for computing. "I was just getting into programming, so I spent
a lot of my time just fiddling with projects and hanging out. I have a really
fond      memory of that time, but I think I could have taken better advantage
of   it   in terms of learning," Shawn said. "Eventually I transitioned into
doing some programming for the Web back end. I built the Web store. I
       It   was       also     then that Shawn discovered what would make him
famous:         MP3         digital   music   files   he found through Internet Relay Chat,
the hangout of choice for budding Internet programmers, hackers, and
wanna-bes. Invented in Finland in 1988,                         IRC      is   a    form of mass instant-
messaging. In a channel, members type and send messages in real time to
anyone          who    is    monitoring that channel, and they can switch to private
interactions. In the late 1990s, the                     IRC system spawned thousands of
channels on every topic conceivable.                     Some were devoted to MP3s, where
users traded music. Others focused                      on    free software or pirated           programs.
Some of the           channels were closed, while others were open to anyone                               who
stumbled onto them.
hackers and others interested in security issues who knew what they were
doing, having already cut their teeth elsewhere. It wasn't                               full   of kids    who
puUed       off hacking attacks               by running       scripts    of code they had down-
loaded elsewhere. But                  it   also wasn't for the established old-school                    hack-
ers,   who      kept to themselves for fear of exposure. (The term hacker has two
in the esteem of others. Once too many people joined, the hip crowd
young hacker whose nickname                         in the channel            was Shok. Shok had gained
some notoriety         for releasing detailed "exploits"                       —code      that could be used
argue that the threat of the release of such code is the only thing that
forces companies to admit they have a problem and fix it. At present,
dialer" that      bombards Unix computer systems looking                                    for     open        modem
Hues, a key hacker technique.                      Another        is   a   program   to fake an          IP address,
a computer's location                  on the    Internet. Shawn's             nickname         in the    group was
Napster, which he had picked up on the basketball court for the short,
nappy hair he sported before shaving                             it off.     Another mainstay was Dug-
song,    who was        in reality a University of                         Michigan student named                  Dug
Song. "The whole point of wOOwOO was to have an environment that was
open     to   all,"   Song       said.    "People could talk about the computer universe
from both       sides.      I'm a white            hat.' I'd    never actually done anything crimi-
nal.   But there      are definitely people interested in other things."                                 He paused,
searching for the right phrase: "Applied uses of the technology."
       WOOwOO         drew from            several other groups, including a black-hat outfit
experts. Brewer was a little darker than average on wOOwOO, and at one
                                          (   18    )        JOSEPH MENN
point in a channel chat he defended the                             man who was      facing prison for
writing and releasing the wildly destructive Melissa virus. "I don't see
what's so bad about writing viral code," Brewer wrote under his nickname
"dmessOr," short for "digital messiah."                        Shok gave         a balanced rejoinder,
       Another member was Seth McGann, who was brought into                                    wOOwOO
while a computer-science freshman at Worcester Polytechnic in Massa-
chusetts. Pale     and    shy,    McGann           was    a stereotypical         computer nerd from
Hamden,       Connecticut. "I was a hard-core Unix geek," he said.                            McGann
had been playing around with                      vulnerabilities in instant-messaging sys-
tems, coming up with a              way      to   make messages appear              to have   been sent
by someone        else.   After he posted some additional exploits, including
detailed instructions for cracking the Solaris operating system                               from Sun
Microsystems Inc. with a                 common           technique called a buffer overflow,
McGann        got an e-mail message from Brewer. Brewer praised his work,
but suggested that          it   might be better               to   keep   it   out of the public eye.
Toward the end of 1998, Brewer brought                              McGann into wOOwOO.
       McGann      wasn't        much of          a positive thinker, taking the              nickname
"Minus." But he was in awe of some of the people in                                      wOOwOO and
ADM. He          also appreciated the collaborative culture.                          Unlike seasoned
engineers,      who   have solid grounding in theory and                          many   different parts
ects, with leadership determined by charisma, the amount of work put in,
        For most, the unifying interest was computer                            security, or the lack   of
it.    Searching for open ports on computers was one of the key areas of the
trade.    Not   coincidentally,         it   would    also      be a crucial part of the Napster
service,   which could attach            itself to       company systems           in unfamiliar ways,
worked, for the purpose of making them more secure, was something I
was interested in. I kind of found people along the way that were both
and send a little bit of data there, so basically I did everything you could
possibly do with those functions until I had really learned them inside
and     out,"      he    said.       "None of        that   stuff" really   did anything interesting at
all   —   it's   just    silly,   really a test           program.   It   was      really just   my     version of
'Hello, world.'"              It's   true that       Shawn     wasn't big time, and           it's    unclear   how
many        hackers used the programs he put his nickname on. But they were
good enough              to get      him   into      wOOwOO.
       WOOwOO members                      would go on               to populate Napster,               BindView
Corp., and several other well-known Internet security firms, and the                                             ties
among            the group prompted                  some     to joke     about an Internet mafia and
world domination. Before the dot-com                              boom      pulled      many of the         collabo-
rators away to more profitable uses of their energy, though, it was less like
                                           (    20    )     JOSEPH MENN
from high school.        He      badly wanted to go to Carnegie Mellon University,
the superior computer-science school that was                         home    to    CERT     and the
alma mater of several of the young programmers                         at his uncle's Chess.net.
But Shawn didn't get in, and in the fall of 1998 he enrolled at Northeast-
his level, so he partied, had a good time, and didn't learn much. It was far
RiTTER WAS BORN IN 1978                   in Northridge, near              Los Angeles, the only
child of a heavy-drinking            mother and           a drug-addicted father.         Two    years
later, as his    parents divorced and his father disappeared, he                       moved with
his   mother near Dallas. She ran           a jewelry business             and dated   affluent   men
in the     hunting-and-horse-jumping               set,    including one she would marry.
Ritter played baseball and soon placed into advanced programs in school.
His natural father reappeared when Ritter was in elementary school and
would fade        in   and out      as   he moved around and battled various drug
habits. Ritter believes his father            was a good man with problems who was
unusually vague about his past:               He   thinks his father          worked      for a secret
found a more mainstream outlet for a similar drive, serving as a U.S. con-
near where his father was living in a double-wide trailer and running a
gardening business. Ritter stayed in Florida through high school and
would      visit his father       every few weeks.          One      Christmas, perhaps angry
that her thirteen-year-old son             had chosen that day to             visit his father,     Rit-
ter's   mother    called   and drunkenly told him not                 to   come home.      Ritter     was
crushed, but his        father was overjoyed, seeming to have been waiting for
just such an opportunity. Ritter moved in with his father, staying close
until he left for college. The pair had a loving but rocky relationship that
When it came time for college, scrounging enough money for just the
But   his parents directed          him       to    Lehigh University, which awarded him a
much larger grant and was                nearer to his successful uncle            Don.
      Ritter left for    Lehigh in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania,                        at seventeen, tak-
ing his computer with              him on the Greyhound                  bus.   Soon he grew bored
with the computer courses and decided to work one                               summer    at the lab    of
Terrance Boult, eventually managing the systems for the                                 man who was
founding chairman of Lehigh's computer-science department. "He's                                      my
god," Ritter said.       "He turned me on               to [free      computer operating system]
Linux, using free software.              He        turned   me   loose and trusted me." If Ritter
appreciated his mentor's trust, he didn't always keep his end of the bar-
their own ethics. The debates within groups and among them are legion,
tions of the practitioners.              Hacking        for    its   own    sake can be educational
and amusing,       a   power       trip for a        bored but clever teen.        One way        to turn
that skill into extra income is to publicly reveal a hole in a system, then
offer a "patch" to fix       it.   The demonstration of expertise can                    lead to secu-
rity jobs.     But the timing and the publicity of the security two-step can
change everything. If you just teU the company of the problem, implicitly
                                    (    22    )     JOSEPH MENN
suggesting that          it   hire   you to resolve      it,   the step can be interpreted as
extortion. If   you give the company notice of the problem, then post the
problem and the patch                —   or worse, just the problem            —   in an     open forum
the very next day, you get wider recognition but can be criticized for
there online:       no   gov,    no   mil,   no money. In other words, don't hack gov-
ernment or military computers or                  try to profit       from the      activity.    As     they
trolled for   computers to            infiltrate, Ritter       and   his   band often looked            first
for systems that had already been compromised, leaving easier access.
was getting    fat.      He    quit college,    moved     to   Chestnut Hill outside Boston,
and took a job writing security software                  for Netect Inc.,         which had opera-
tions in the   United States and              Israel.   Soon BindView bought Netect and
its   code, firing    most of the employees other than                        Ritter.   BindView        left
the age of twenty. "I just hacked day and night," Ritter said.                                 At Bind-
View, he excelled:            One    of Ritter's published      articles revealed           what became
known      as the    Palmetto Bug, a vulnerability                   afflicting 60 percent of the
world's Internet servers. BindView was publicly credited for the find by
infomercials. Parker had two younger sisters and was a strong swimmer at
an early age, before his asthma grew worse and he had to carry an inhaler
able student," with multiple As and Fs, depending on whether he felt like
Basic, a little C, and some Perl. That was enough to pass as geeky in the
hundred      dollars in profit.           Not long           after that, Parker started his              own
Web-design shop, then             a security firm             he called Crosswalk.
     "Most of       my    productive time was spent either doing computer stuff
or entrepreneurial stuff," Parker said.                      Some of the          unproductive time was
spent on Internet Relay Chat, though he chatted far                                        less   often than
Shawn and Ritter. On IRC, Parker met Shawn and future Napster engi-
that grab visitor names and passwords. It wasn't a bad hack, but Parker
knew he         wasn't the sophisticated engineer that                        some around him were
turning into.       "I   never was as hard-core a programmer as others," he said.
Instead, Parker          was    a brilliant talker, using               what knowledge he had               to
preparation figuring out what would get the most attention.                                       "My mom
thought     I    was wasting      my time,         but   I   needed     to   come up with something
                                      (   24   )    JOSEPH MENN
that    was        really hot,"     Parker said. "The Net was just breaking."                    At   the
time, many were writing about software "agents" that would sift through
the Web and return information to users based on their interests. Parker
figured he could capitalize               on the hype, and he wrote two simple algo-
rithms, one that searched the               Web       broadly and one that searched deeply,
showing that the former worked best                      to get information to people               with
low-bandwidth connections. More important, Parker learned that the
same broad-and-shallow approach worked best                                in conversation.        Most
people in America, investors included, aren't technical experts.                             They     are
hke the science-fair judges were, appreciating someone who could synthe-
size concepts            and explain in English         how   they   fit   together. Years later at
the spot and plowed the prize money into Crosswalk. The team there "bit
off    more than we could chew," Parker                       said,    and Crosswalk burned
through a couple thousand dollars before folding.                            "It failed    because     we
didn't have a cohesive organization. It                      was hard        to keep a       bunch of
sixteen-year-olds            all   over the country motivated and focused." Parker later
Christian portal.
       One     day in 1996, Parker attended a local job                    fair   and walked up       to a
vice providers like UUNet. Freeloader sold programs that "pushed" con-
tent to computer users with techniques like those Parker had worked up
dirty looks, but each of the several               UUNet       staffers   he met wanted to hire
him. Parker was "cocky but creative and amusing," said Jonathon                               Perrelli,
who headed UUNet            's   hiring at the time. Parker                came away with an
entry-level job writing internal software appUcations.
time Perrelli himself, a recent Virginia Tech graduate who had run a
small business before joining             UUNet.      Perrelli   took Parker under his wing,
and they became good             friends. Parker      would bounce business concepts                 off
over the whiteboard, started drawing with markers, and helped Perrelli
come up with      a system that allowed             UUNet to       hire three      thousand people
in less than     two   years.    In return, PerreUi built up Parker's confidence and
dressed    him   in    promotional          UUNet     gear until Parker resembled a fully
outfitted    "UUgeek." Parker stayed                 a year      and a     half,    until    February
1999   —the     longest he       would hold any           job, including his assignment               at
Napster.
                                   (   26   )     JOSEPH MENN
with a customer whose computer server he had configured                   —Ben LiUen-
thal,   who   nearly   became Napster's              CEO.
                                              first real
    While Parker spun            visions of   how the Web      could    work   better   and
who     could help     him   realize those dreams, his firiend    Shawn Fanning was
experimenting with code and tossing around technical ideas in                  wOOwOO     a
few hundred miles to the north. In              his   freshman year   at college,   Shawn's
roommate complained             that nearly every time he looked for an        MPS,     the
link to the digital file was dead and the music was gone. There had to be
tronic links to those songs were broken —the song was no longer there.
commands for transmitting files. It was hardly worth the effort to try.
"The index would become out of date because the indexes were updated
infrequently,"    Shawn would      testify. "I    began thinking about ways       to solve
                                         (   29   )
Wide Web had been                 to   make information             available to people using        what-
ever connections and computers they had, whenever they                                    had them. "The
system should not constrain the user; a person should be able to link with
equal ease to any              document wherever              it    happened       to be stored,"    wrote
Tim       Berners-Lee, the Web's inventor. "The basic revelation was that one
information space could include them                         all,   giving huge power and consis-
tency."     When            Berners-Lee was doing his pioneering work, the content
available        was    static.   Now       content was changing more often, and                     Shawn
was about         to try an ambitious                 method   to help the system's users catch
up to it.
early     consumers were fans of the Grateful Dead, whose members had
realized in the late 1960s that permitting                         boodegs of concerts would help
their paying fan base grow.                       (Dead   lyricist       John Perry Barlow,        a prep-
school friend of the band's guitarist                      Bob Weir, would            later   cofound the
Electronic Frontier Foundation,                        which defended other music-sharing
services in court, but not Napster.)
various         methods       for posting songs         from Patterson's band, the Ugly Mugs,
to Internet newsgroups.                 The band          spent $100 on software to compress
the music using                MP2     technology, the best then available.                     And   they
steered potential listeners to a free                   MP2 player, one           made by     a firm called
Xing Technologies. They got                       a few enthusiastic e-mails asking for               more
music.     The     realty exciting thing for Patterson                    was that some of the mes-
sages     came from           places like        Turkey and Russia, where            it   was hard   to get
Western music.
     Within        a    month, Lord and Patterson started what they dubbed the
Internet         Underground Music Archive. The idea was                             that     lUMA,   with
the permission of the              artists,       would make        available alternative      music that
wasn't getting mass distribution.                     With   only limited compression from the
MP2        format and slow dial-up modems,                          it   could take half an hour to
                                        (    30   )    JOSEPH MENN
download            a three-minute song.                   But   lUMA drew fans                nonetheless. Lord,
who     would later cross paths with Napster, took a very different approach
from the one that Shawn would                               take.   The   first       songs he encoded to the
MP2 format, rare tracks by the Durutti Column and the Residents, he
kept in his computer for his own use. In a decision that would come to
appear quaint, and                   still   later   would appear          to have            been the right idea
after   all,    Lord          didn't distribute those songs over the                          newsgroups for the
simple reason that he didn't have permission from the copyright holders.
lUMA       cadged             free   equipment from Sun Microsystems                             Inc.   and Silicon
Graphics Inc. and hired people from the Santa Cruz music scene,                                             who by
1994 convinced other bands                       to    pay in order to post their music.
     When            a    newspaper           article       about     lUMA            appeared that year, the
record labels took note. Yet despite                          some     internal debate, they did            little    to
encourage the new technology —or to fight it, since MP2s could also
making         it   much       easier for people to find              what they were looking               for.   And
in   Germany, research                   efforts to         improve video-compression technology
had spun off                  a vastly       improved audio-compression technique. After
approval by the                  International              Standards      Organization,             ISO-MPEG
Audio Layer-3 emerged, soon                                to be better    known          as    MPS. The        source
code was made                  available, so that             anyone could distribute the tools for
encoding music to the new format. By eliminating data used to convey
silences, the            MP3     technique           fit   much more sound               into    many    fewer    bits,
making transmission and storage much easier. And the developers hadn't
bothered to include any system for locking the data to prevent copying.
      The       software for opening and playing such                                  files    on computers got
better too, especially one called                          Winamp,        cobbled together in 1997 by a
nineteen-year-old coUege dropout in Sedona, Arizona,                                                 named      Justin
Frankel.        A geek's geek, Frankel gave Winamp away and asked for a mini-
mal payment on the honor system                               if   the users liked        it,   a process for soft-
ware known as shareware. Winamp wasn't the first MPS player, but it
most popular. Winamp let users make the player look like whatever they
Madonna and other rock stars. As he kept a close eye on the MPS scene,
Lord made it one of his top priorities to get N2K into some kind of
alliance   with Frankel's tiny company, Nullsoft Inc.                                   "I   was kind of
shrugged off" by           N2K    executives.          Lord    said.    So he asked Frankel             if   he
could join Nullsoft instead.            "He       said    he wasn't very interested in turning
Nullsoft into a [serious] business, but that he                    would        listen to ideas."       Lord
had    several.   How       about putting a picture of the product on the website?
How     about selling ads? Ads, Frankel mused. Okay, see what you can do.
Lord went         to ArtistDirect, another               Web    music       retailer,   and showed the
company      the     immense      traffic       Nullsoft was getting to               its    site as   people
$300,000.       A   surprised Frankel asked his parents                      what     to do.      His father
recruited an acquaintance as a business-development                                   man and teamed
him with Lord            to write a plan.       They     returned with a white paper predict-
ing that   if   Frankel continued on his own, he could build a                           company worth
$1 million.     With       help, they said,       it   could be worth tens of millions.
      Nullsoft hired both men.              The company          stayed very small, with five or
explaining what they were doing and giving his phone number in case the
into an    MP3      format, and post         it   for others to        download. David Weekly, a
Stanford University student, did just that                     —   a lot    —   until    Geffen Records
executives complained and university network administrators, already
                                   (   32   )       DOSEPH MENN
upset at the massive              amount of bandwidth              that Weekly's visitors were
which had more to lose through piracy, were naturally more conservative.
But even some of them wanted to release the occasional track digitally,
often having to fight their labels for the right to do                      so.    When      they won,
the effects could be huge, as Michael Robertson found after he opened
the website      MP3.com           in the fall of 1997.         Robertson knew almost noth-
ing about music, he had no technology of his own, and his business back-
ground was         at best undistinguished.               But he knew          college kids          were
constantly searching for            MP3s on      the Internet. Robertson looked                    up the
man who owned             the   domain name MP3.com, which                   the    man had        picked
because of his      initials,      and bought      it   for $1,000.    Robertson paid another
$2,500, plus $500 a month, to take over the content of a Netherlands                                   site
The day that Robertson's version of the site went up with just the
software guide on           it,    he got ten thousand            Web     visits    and a     call   from
someone who wanted                 to advertise.    "We     didn't   know     anyone.        We      didn't
displayed articles about            MP3s, which          in the early days          he had to write
himself,      and posted        links to   where    MP3s         could be found. Small bands
sent in clips, usually of singles, in hopes of generating sales of full                              CDs.
Some big-name             acts followed suit, including Alanis Morissette,                            who
accepted pre-IPO shares in              MP3.com and             the firm's sponsorship of a tour
keep the song up for one day.                And    during that day, the single "Free Girl
Now" was downloaded 156,992 times. There is no way of knowing how
many of those downloads were later copied and spread to others; what is
clear   is   that the   gimmick helped Echo debut                in the   Top Ten. But even           that
gist. "Right now, we have a great system for them and one that screws the
artist."
Shawn Fanning's big insight, like his instruction, came from his time
ing of today, IRC knows who is on a channel at any time. It has, in the
business, the content on the site may well have changed or be unavailable.
"My idea was to have a real-time index that reflects aU sites that are up
and     available to others           on the network                    at that   moment," Shawn            said.   The
easiest      way    to accomplish this                 was to have a                 central   computer     server, to
        Shawn      ran his idea past a few adults,                          who       gave him various reasons
why     it   wouldn't work.           Too complicated, they                       said.   Shawn     listened atten-
tively,      weighed     their arguments,                   and    didn't       buy any of them. "Somebody
would say something negative about                                it,   and some of that          stuff really got to
draft of the software that                  would run the                 server that connected everyone.
Finally he turned to the "client," the application that the user                                           would    see.
                                        (    34    )         JOSEPH MENN
"I    wanted     to   make          this software           work, and to prove              my    concept for       file
The only real problem was that Shawn had never written a program
banging away on             his laptop. It             took just a few weeks, and the                     first   rough
version of Napster was done.
          The most    elegant sociological element of what                              would grow        to eighty-
five      thousand    lines         of code was that Napster both gave and took away. If
you used the system to look                         for a    song and then began downloading, the
system would open your                        MPS     files    to others at the          same time unless you
actively blocked           it   from doing            so.   Like magic, the more people                    who were
seeking music, the more music would become available.
          Another important innovation was the system                                       architecture.         Most
huge       stores   of information are housed on databases controlled by a single
computer         server.    While people can                       get access to that information from
different places, the data                     is    all   mashed        into one giant machine.                  With
Napster, such a server would have been overwhelmed in minutes by aU
the space required for MP3s. Shawn wanted Napster to work more like
but they leave the data where                        it lies   for      you to   retrieve.   That meant Nap-
ster required central servers                       only to    list     who had        possession of what, not
to store the actual songs.                     At    the peak in 2001, that would                        mean about
150 servers         —not        a   number weU              into the thousands, affordable only                      by
the biggest corporations.
          From   very early on,               Shawn turned              for help to his      more experienced
comrades on IRC.                    "I   could always ask them a question about protocol
design or just shoot a question to the channel and have somebody answer
it.   I   wouldn't have been able to write Napster without                                   IRC and         without
these groups of people,"                      Shawn        said.   "The amount of time              it   would have
taken       me   to find answers in                 books or find the resources              I    needed,    I    would
never have finished                 it   on   time. I definitely          owe    it   to a lot of people."
members. But the group               also    maintained a pubHc website. There                          it   pub-
lished   some     exploits      and patches on               a range     of systems. In June 1999,
the   word "wOOwOO" was one of the top twenty most-searched-for terms
on the Internet search engine Google. (Google was more of                                              a search
engine for Internet experts at the time, only later developing a                                mainstream
following.)
      Shawn was         a regular   on wOOwOO, and so was                      Ritter. Ritter       was on the
channel in early 1999            when     the hacker he               knew    as   Napster sent him and
the others an application, telling                 them       to check    it   out. It     was the     first   ver-
sion of the program, and Ritter wasn't                        blown away. "What               are   you going
to   do with    it?"   he    typed. "Is it free?"           The     reactions of others in the chan-
nel varied. Seth            McGann, known               as   Minus, was amazed.               "I    was pretty
impressed. But a lot of people                I   showed       it   to didn't really get       it,"   he   said.
pictures of their girlfriends,               and generally gave each other a hard time.
While they made fun of it, the group frequently used the                                     "elite"   slang of
working and routing. "He took                          it    and ran with           it,"    Song    said.      The
Napster program came to dominate the                          wOOwOO discussion after each
improvement, so much so that                       a   new "Napster" IRC channel launched
                                    (   36    )        JOSEPH MENN
with a handful of people from the                            wOOwOO             channel. Conover initially
disapproved of the way others in his group had glommed onto Napster. "I
was opposed to it," he said. "To me, it was leeching off the success of a
of them, "I didn't want to sell out cheap," he said. "Now I regret it."
        McGann          was one of the            earliest testers       of the beta version of Napster.
At one        point, he,       Shawn, and two other people were the only ones using
the program.           The system was               poorly set up back then, using no database
software to house the                 lists   of songs.     It   was buggy and would                 freeze      up   for
no apparent reason. But McGann, who had little patience for tracking
down MP3s on IRC                      channels, realized he             still    could triple his music col-
lection in weeks.             While he was            testing the system, he sent                    Shawn       a pri-
vate e-mail.          "Do you         realize that this          is   going to change everything?" he
wrote. "Yeah,           I   know," Shawn replied.           McGann gave Shawn some                            sample
code for recognizing songs by                       electronic tags. And he copied the                        system
for his       roommate, a nonhacker who couldn't believe                                   his   good    fortune. It
was just so easy to use, the roommate told others. And the smooth give-
Outside of the wOOwOO circle, Shawn was chatting about his inven-
tion with his old friend Sean Parker on another IRC channel called
how      to   make      a business out of            it,   regardless of the fact that the code                    was
still   buggy.        Shawn "had very little               business acumen," Parker said.                  "He just
wanted           to code      it."    Parker had a point:               With more and more                    people
coming aboard, the system needed money                                  for   more       servers.
ten.    There were some obvious bugs, which Ritter                                  fixed,    and the program-
ming was              raw.    Among           other things,            it   was written             in   C++      with
system when it crashed, and he did. He was more interested in the pro-
gram than the music; he doesn't remember what song he searched for
solutions were elegant, according to Scott Shinn, the engineer Parker had
met through Jonathon Perrelli at UUNet. "Shawn had the brilliant idea
and prototyped              it   in a     way      that       was    practical," said Shinn,                 who had
helped put the White House and the Securities and Exchange                                                  Commis-
sion online and held senior technical positions at                                   many      firms, including
Cisco Systems Inc. "He was able to put it together and put it in front of
his little sisters         and   his   grandmother and they would be able to use                                   it.   Jor-
dan took what Shawn had put together and made                                       it   scale   up to       five    hun-
dred thousand users. Those are numbers                                AOL      has to compete with, and
AOL needs acres of equipment. Jordan did some really brilliant stuff."
      Shawn       did some of the coding in his                           dorm      at   Northeastern during
the week, then             went    full   steam         at his uncle's office in          Hull on the week-
ends.     He     kept himself awake as long as possible to finish one piece or
another of the Napster puzzle.                         One     of the biggest challenges was an early
attempt to link the multiple servers together, so that people could look for
music, or each other, no matter which piece of the system they had signed
onto.     Shawn grew             obsessed with figuring out                 how     to   do   this,    and he took
advantage of a conveniently stored case of the ultracaffeinated soft drink
Red      Bull. (Ritter       had another method                     for keeping the intense concentra-
                                          (   38   )      JOSEPH MENN
      "We    didn't have          any money, and                we   didn't have            Coke        left,   and   I   was
literally trying to finish this,"              Shawn            said.   "And          I   looked at the Red Bull,
and I'm      like.   It has caffeine in             it!'   I literally    went through most of a                          case
that time, and I was up two or three days. . . . The strange thing about
Red Bull is that it has this really weird ability, and it's not just the
caffeine, to      keep you         really sharp            and focused, even though you've been
up   for   two or three           days. Usually [on caffeine]                         you get hazy and you're
wired but you're            tired,   mentally not functioning. But [on                                  Red     Bull]     you
can focus, and you can think logically and                              clearly.          You     get tired,     but usu-
ally it just gets you tired to the point where you're not Hkely to get dis-
tracted. You're just kind of a zombie, but you can focus and think, and it
because there was a car across the street the second night and I thought it
was going to do something bad." Not people in the car, mind you, or even
the people      who owned             the    car,    wherever they were                    —the        car itself "I      was
slightly hallucinating             by then," Shawn                said. "I        remember             calling the cops,
and they said something about it not being in their jurisdiction, call
joined Shawn's cause, though they lived just a few miles apart. Finally,
ment. Shawn's hacker friend,                         who would            later join Napster,                   had been
drinking too         much        to be   deemed            presentable,           and Shawn made him wait
in the car as he            went     upstairs.       Shawn and            Ritter chatted about the pro-
gram, and Shawn said he would be moving west, to He start the business.
asked Ritter to come. "How do I know this is real," Ritter thought. "Who
is   the   management team? How are we going to sell it?" He was skeptical
about other things            as well,       and he decided not to chuck                            his job     and adult
life. "I    had      lots   of    issues.     He     didn't really have answers."                          But Shawn's
enthusiasm was boundless.                    "It's   going to be fucking huge," he told                            Ritter.
birth of a business
cal resemblance to his nephew, having smaller eyes, thinning brown hair,
                                             (    41   )
worked there two years with the                  title       of national console representative,
from which position he redirected incoming                            calls.   Console representatives
do not make       trades:     "They   are responsible for                 watching customer           call vol-
    Wanting        to run his    own    firm,        Fanning was             still   in his twenties     when
he inquired about the struggling computer business of a                                       man he met
playing squash at Bostons University Club.                                    Around 1990, Fanning
bought      Ed Walter's Cambridge Automation on                              credit.   The company took
in big general-purpose          computers from manufacturers and resold them to
laboratories      and other customers. But the business models were changing
then, and large computer makers started                               making more of              their sales
with creditors, from the phone company to the computer suppliers that
were the     firm's lifeblood.    When          some businesses demanded                        their   money.
Fanning would          call   up and sound outraged,                      insisting     on speaking with
superior after superior until          the creditor gave up and offered new terms.
"He learned how to look the big boys in the eye and not blink," said
sensitive position given the firm's precarious finances. Nevil, who would
also play a    key role in Fanning's next venture, had made a                             lot    of money in
real-estate deals.       But    his history          still    left    something to be desired. In
1985, for example, Nevil had been fired after three years as treasurer of
Aunyx       Corp., where the majority owner accused                             him of spending com-
pany money         for a Cadillac used           by    Nevil's family                and other    conflicts   of
interest.    He   sued for wrongful termination. "Until the termination of his
employment by Aunyx, Nevil engaged                           in a pattern of breaching his fidu-
ciary duties," the      company       said in Nevil's lawsuit,                 which was dismissed by
agreement in 1987.
    That dispute was            just a taste         of things to come. In 1989, some of
Nevil's real-estate deals         went bad and                  resulted in massive defaults to
                                  (   42   )         DOSEPH MENN
million against Nevil personally and collected                     more than $5 million from
one of his codefendants.
      At Cambridge Automation, Fanning, Martin, and Nevil                             weren't able
to keep things going for long. Key supplier Unisys ultimately sued the
solved without paying off the purchase loan, according to Walter. Yet
even as the business was sinking. Fanning carried himself like a successful
sales executive, dressing in            good        suits    and driving expensive         cars.   "He
took over a tiny company, and               it    continued to    fail,"   said   Duncan   Audette,
a   Cambridge employee.            "I didn't      think he had     much     ability as a   manager,
but he liked to appear wealthy and                   flashy."   Fanning     also   remembered           his
Fanning's next try at business success began with                             his love   of chess, a
game       that   drew him and many others                 into computers. Just like       math and
music, chess reaches          some    intuitively analytical part          of the brain. All three
areas have turned out child prodigies for generations.                        As   access to       com-
puters spread, prodigies began showing up in that field as well.                         With such
deep       ties   between chess and computers, chess players became rapid
adopters of the Internet as a           means        for    matching wits remotely.
      Chess enthusiasts designed              a   computer server     for those seeking fellow
arrived at Carnegie            Mellon    in the early 1990s           with about      fifty    people
logged in at any one time, enough to find a partner of roughly equal
        One
strength.                regular player     was a       CMU       computer-science professor
named Danny              Sleator. Sleator   enjoyed the system, but a number of bugs
in   it   bothered him.      And   he didn't       like the    time clock, which turned some
late-developing games into             mad        rushes at the end.    He    preferred a     mecha-
nism that gave each player            a bit   more time based on the number of moves
they had          made   already. Sleator asked the people           running the system            if   he
could tinker with the system, and they agreed. In 1995, as the Web's pop-
ularity     was    increasing, Sleator decided to try to             make some money back
from      his   improvements.      With     his wife       and two other online chess         players,
buggier version of what was called the Internet Chess Server up and
running for anyone to play for                         free. Instead,        he announced that anyone
already     on the system would have                         six   more months        for free, then have to
pay the same $49 a year he was going to charge new players. At the time,
very few       sites     charged for anything on the Internet, and some                                    CMU
students were outraged.                 They cobbled               together another system, calling               it
the Free Internet Chess Server, and in the spirit of the open-source
movement, they posted                   their code to the               Web    for    anyone    else to    modify
for their     own      systems.         That       effort      took half a       year.     By   then, Sleator's
system had critical mass and could advertise that it had more players, bet-
ter customer service, and stronger features than the free alternative.
Sleator hired students               from time              to time,    and others volunteered to help
administer the system, which did business as the Internet Chess Club, or
ICC. One of the            helpers       was Dmitry Dakhnovsky, an online chess player
from    a     California high school                        whom       Sleator    had recommended                for
better than Classes E through B but shy of Expert and Master. On the
ner offered a package for $500 that would include a mass e-mail to                                         mem-
bers of the      ICC. (Now known                       as   ChessClub.com,            Sleator's   system    is   the
most popular chess site on the Web.) Fanning didn't respond, Sleator
said. He had figured out a way to get the e-mail addresses ot the club's
members on his own, and Fanning sent them all offers to buy the video-
                                         (   44    )        DOSEPH MENN
tapes directly. Sleator sent              Fanning a         bill for    the spam, which he didn't
pay, and the argument escalated until the company kicked Fanning off the
Mellon students, including Ali Aydar, who was working on the Free
Internet Chess Server. The team used the code from the free project to
start a rival service for      Fanning, which he                named        Chess.net.   And   Fanning
didn't stop there. In 1996,               he    filed a lawsuit against Sleator               Games      in
Massachusetts, claiming that the firm had improperly barred                                   him from
advertising and thereby cost Chess.net $248,000                               in potential profits.     At
first   read, the suit appeared ridiculous.                 But   it   allowed Fanning to capital-
ICC, who prevented Roman from                      selling his video tapes              on ICC." As the
rhetoric flew in chess chat           rooms and on              bulletin boards.        Fanning      built a
following by allowing free games and charging only for additional ser-
vices.    And       in the legal process         known          as discovery,       Fanning sought to
learn    all   of ICC's business partners, a move that struck Sleator                         as a   bid to
obtain "a       list   of people they should contact                   if   they want to run a chess
server."   The sniping and bad blood continued                              as the lawsuit   dragged on
until    1999, when Fanning's lawyers won court                             permission to abandon        it:
They told the judge that their client owed them $94,341.82 in legal bills.
really inspire trust." Ramme said that the team was too inexperienced in
business to        know    better    and had              initially     been overly influenced by what
they thought was Fanning's past business success.                                  "We were working for
free, essentially,"       Ramme          said.       Fanning "stopped             talking to me because I
was the least tolerant of his bullshitting." Ramme was the first to leave.
When        Dakhnovsky           also quit,          he    left   the    new     car behind,        and Fanning
gave   it   to   Shawn. But Fanning                  also   stopped making payments on the                          car,
and the financing company came after Dakhnovsky tarring his credit
record to this day. After about a year, the car was repossessed.
       Fanning was committed                     to the chess             company, and he did some
things right.       The    technical system                was    solid.    Fanning hired other world-
class chess experts,        and he made a deal                    for referrals      from America Online
that brought in thousands of      new players. The internal management was
another      story.   The programmers soon discovered that the office rent,
other    bills,    and even paychecks were going unpaid. Aydar in particular
confronted Fanning about his concerns over where the                                     money was            going.
"Obviously, the         money was           misspent,"             Dakhnovsky          said.    Fanning        reas-
sured the programmers that a good                            man was         handling the books              —none
other than Jack Nevil of Cambridge Automation, Aunyx, and the $7 mil-
lion   judgment. Aydar wasn't impressed, especially                                 after   he went         late   one
night with Fanning to bail Nevil out of the local jail.
       Fanning      also    mixed        his personal              and business         affiairs.     As     late    as
records from 1997 show thousands of doUars flowing back and forth
                                     (    46     )        JOSEPH MENN
ning's wife,    Coreen       Kraysler, a portfolio           manager      at   Independence Invest-
ment    in Boston, shortly before the card                  was revoked.
      The problem with             Kraysler's credit card            was unusual: Normally, Fan-
ning insulated his wife from his business                     The HuU condominium
                                                               issues.
where they       lived     and the       house he was rebuilding at 2 Summit Avenue
were both in Kraysler's name, protecting the properties from any debt
collectors     going   after      him.   Whoever      the owner of record, the house was a
source of pride for Fanning. The mansion overlooking the Atlantic was
that each of the instructional chess videotapes Nevil was storing for
shipment had        a putrid smell to         it.   Only then did Fanning                fire   Nevil.   The
financial     problems drove several employees away from Chess.net, includ-
ing a young friend of Shawn's                named Tarek Loubani.                  "I   never learned so
      Numerous         lawsuits     from the        late    1990s show that Fanning's               money
troubles extended well             beyond Chess.net. In mid-1999, the year of Nap-
ster's birth,    a court entered a default judgment against                        him   over a $17,529
bank debt. Later that year, he lost another judgment for $26,759 owed to
collection agency Creditrust.               The     first   debt would prove enough to deter
the   first   venture-capital firm that Napster courted, Draper Atlantic.                                And
Fanning's wife was not immune.                    Her condominium complex sued                       her in
April 1999 for unpaid fees over the unit she bought in 1988. That case
was     settled the following year.          More          serious   was the 1998         collection case
against him. But rather than simply pay off the debts, he fought back Uke
a wolverine. Fanning hired lawyers who filed motions to vacate the judg-
ments on the grounds that the creditors had his address wrong and hadn't
served him with the paperwork. Fanning even countersued Creditrust for
      It   was a   stretch for Creditrust to agree that since                     Fanning had never
been served, he       didn't officially          know about      the suit against him.          The    firm
That's almost always all it takes to get the defendant to appear in court
Plymouth         sheriff's   spokesman Mike               Seele, all    without success. "The guy
was pretty good            at hiding.      We        put a lot of shoe leather and effort into
that guy," Seele said.              A     frustrated deputy reported to the Creditrust
lawyer that he had done everything he could. "Defendant will not                                      come
into court," he wrote.
suit again.      Neither case had been resolved by the time of this writing.
        Fanning responded            in a        more    conciliatory     manner       to the $13,000
judgment against             his wife,     whose        wages were nearly garnisheed by her
employer. In that          suit.   Fanning interceded with the bank and negotiated a
deal.      On    September 30, 1999, a month                   after    he raised the       first   outside
investment in Napster and sold some of his shares. Fanning sent a check
                                      (   48     )     JOSEPH MENN
for $5,685 to the        bank   to fulfill the   compromise settlement terms, and the
case   was dismissed.
courthouse steps. "I'm a fighter," he told one interviewer. "I don't let peo-
ple push me around." In January 1999, Fanning was charged with assault
and battery with a deadly weapon                  —   his    shoes   —   after   he kicked and
punched the maintenance man                   at his    condominium complex on the
morning of December 31, 1998. The two men had                        a history of animosity
       Later that day. Lynch encountered Fanning and his brother David,
and they beat him           badly, according to the district attorney.                 "They      seri-
places and was laid up for a week. Lynch told the judge in the case.
finished three         months of     pretrial probation, the charge against                him was
dismissed.
more than three          years. After the beating,      John Fanning moved out of the
sixty-six-unit        complex and into the big house on Summit Avenue. His
brother David          moved    into Fanning's old apartment             and was    later   charged
Lynch and warned him                to   drop the    case.   "He came up          to   my   car    and
punched on the window and                 tried to get in,"    Lynch      said at a court hear-
ing. Since aU sides had been ordered to stay away from each other. Lynch
David Fanning, who like his brother had been charged with assault and
of assault and battery and was sentenced to two years' probation in Febru-
ary 2002.
John Fanning made out much better. The district attorney pushed for
the same result his brother received — a no-contest plea and formal proba-
tion. But Fanning's lawyer stressed his client's business prowess and his
growing family. After noting the existence of related civil lawsuits, the
lawyer argued against a no-contest plea. "There are serious and collateral
consequences to Mr. Fanning                   if   Mr. Fanning were           to    admit to   sufficient
the lawyer said, "this matter can be concluded in the criminal courtroom,
and Mr. Lynch can have                  his   day in a        civil session, if that's his desire."
Over the       objections of the prosecutor and Lynch, the                            Hingham judge
agreed.    John Fanning received               six     months of pretrial probation beginning
in February 2002.
Six months later, the charge was dropped. But that didn't end the
matter.     Lynch was pursuing            a suit he filed in late             2001 against Fanning,
his brother,        and Fanning's wife, who owns the $200,000 apartment. (Fan-
ning has countersued for assault, trespass, and defamation.)                                   And      the
                                    (   50    )         JOSEPH MENN
change-resistant places as the telephone monopoly, arose from the fact
that the Internet's architects had no idea what the ultimate use of their
creation would be and didn't try to direct that evolution. Instead, they
     Stanford law professor Lawrence Lessig and others have argued con-
vincingly that the reason innovation happened so quickly on the early
Internet was that so much of its design was open and not driven by the
quest for       quick profit. And Shawn Fanning fits into that                                tradition.   He
didn't release Napster's underlying                   code to the public,              as    Linus Torvalds
did with the free operating system Linux, but neither was he driven by
the goal of getting rich by any                 means      necessary. "If Napster             had magically
had Shawn            in charge, I think his attitude               would have been                to   make     a
deal"   and stay on the right                side of the law, said Shawn's             father,    Joe Rando.
"He     started      it    because he thought          it   was   cool.       Then      later,   he thought
maybe     it   was a way         to   make    a living."
yet another          new       generation: people     who     spoke the hardball huckster lan-
guage of Silicon               Valley. People, in other       words, Hke John Fanning. Their
styles    and       their tactics varied        one from the other. But deep down, there
on the couch in the living room of the crew's rented house as the firm
grew   to about a half-dozen employees.                   "He       did more listening than talk-
ing," Chess.net colleague              Brian McBarron           said.     "When          he gets interested
in   something new, he dedicates                 all   of his resources to mastering                  it,    and
then he goes beyond that.                He     just has a single-mindedness that                       made
him   proficient." Ali         Aydar and Tarek Loubani both                     said they         had seldom
seen anyone as focused as Shawn. "I don't think people can appreciate
how    hard he worked. This was his way out of the 'hood, out of every-
thing,"    Loubani       said.   Shawn gave up           sports     and pretty much everything
else to    program, blowing off steam only by playing the computer game
Quake 2 with         his friends. It     was    a life   of full-time hacking with few                      frills
or even decent meals.            "We     ate at      Burger King four or                 five   times a day,"
Loubani      said.    But Shawn was having a                    blast.      Looking back on                 that
summer, both Shawn and Aydar remembered what was probably just a
coincidence and not a sign from God: Aydar drove Shawn to a Borders
      At   the end of the         summer of            1997, after the          last         of the Carnegie
Mellon crew had graduated and worked                                 at   least      a       few months        at
But the marketing went slowly; it was hard to convince the chess players
to   pay for lessons or other premium                  offerings.     And       the      management was
an obvious     disaster. "I felt        Uke we blew          it,"   Aydar       said. "I felt       Uke John
had no     clue,   and   I'd   been taken for a        ride."
                                   (   52   )        DOSEPH MENN
Shawn          said,   he never realized the depths of the problems                                         at his uncle's
company. He had to have known some of it: He was close to the embit-
tered employees there, and once he rode his bike to deliver an overdue
When Shawn                was around              his uncle        during Shawn's freshman year in
1998 and 1999,             it    was mainly to pour out code                     for Napster.                 "The dorm
was not conducive to work, so                     I   would go back            to the office,               and then      my
cousin would have to drive                      me    back to school and drop                         me     off,"   Shawn
said. "I started noticing                 my weekends          would get longer and                         longer,    and   I
would have to drag myself back to school. And one day, for some strange
reason, I pulled up,                and     I   think    I   had skipped             a    day where there was
something          really important, like finishing                 up something or finding bugs."
      It   was January 1999, and                  his cousin Brian             Fanning had                  just   dropped
Shawn          off for the       week      at   Northeastern's campus. Shawn walked up to
his dorm's front door and stopped. Then he turned around and walked
back to his cousin's car. "I'm not going back," Shawn said. "You're crazy!"
Brian told him. Shawn shook his head. "I gotta finish this. I gotta pick."
Shawn was torn about the decision. If he had stayed in college, "I was
for a      few months.          And       then   finally     once   I   had launched                  it,   and they saw
what       I   was doing, they            felt a Httle better       about      it.   I   think they could               tell I
was never happy— ^well, not not happy about school, but I never felt like I
tears. All of her dreams for Shawn had been bound up in his graduating
college, something she had never done. "It was tough," Coleen said. "I
built this thing up about him going to college. He knew how disap-
pointed I was." She asked why he was the one who had to go, why it
couldn't be one of the other kids he                            was working with. But Shawn
explained that        if   he didn't do         it   now, and someone            else     came up with the
idea,    he would always regret not having pursued                             it.   Coleen fought back
her feelings and thought about what would be best for her son.                                           "I told
him he should go with             his gut," she said. Secretly, she                      was thinking, even
hoping, that Napster would                      last six     months or         so.   Then Shawn               could
come back and         return to college.
him he would help with the business end. Fanning drew up papers incor-
porating Napster Inc. At first, Shawn was pleased: It was a sign that his
uncle believed in him, and that his project was becoming a                                        reality.     But
then Fanning told           Shawn       that he        would be getting only 30 percent of the
company. John Fanning would keep the                             rest.   Shawn was             stunned. "Nap-
ster   was   his baby,"      Loubani       said. "It         was completely do or               die."   Fanning
told     Shawn      that the     company needed an experienced businessman                                     like
new investors. Fanning would sell some of his shares, reducing his
percentage of the firm. Less emphasized was the obvious corollary: that
Fanning would be the              first   to get       money out of the              project to     which       his
       It isn't   unusual for an inventor, even one                      who   starts     with 100 percent
of a company's ownership, to end up with 20 percent or                                     less   by the time
of an    initial   public offering. Early investors and top executives are impor-
tant to the process and often have equal stakes by that point. What is
                                    (    54     )      JOSEPH MENN
     An interesting perspective                     on the matter comes from Shawn's mother.
First,   John Fanning               is   her brother. Second,             it      was she who steered Shawn
to him.        And     third, she currently               is    making ends meet by cleaning Fan-
ning's    house for pay. Even she leaves                         little       doubt that both she and her
son were unhappy from the beginning about the                                           split   and what     it   led to.
"My main           concern was that he have the proper people to guide him,"
Coleen         said.   "When         there's so      much money                involved, there's going to be
people that don't have his best interest in mind.                                   I   would    like to   think that
what [John]            really    wanted was          for   Shawn   succeed—^what he
                                                                         to              had                really
In May 1999, Shawn signed the paper that his uncle told him to sign.
At   the   gym one day with Loubani not long afterward, Shawn talked
about     how he could get more of Napster back from his uncle. But he
didn't see a way.              "He       never forgot that         it    was       his uncle that did this to
him," Loubani said. "From then on, the relationship became really
private,       Shawn and            his uncle sparred,            broke off contact, and eventually
made some kind of peace.                          When     it   comes     to his uncle,           "Shawn       is   like a
battered wife," said one former Napster official                                        who knows both men
well,    referring to Fanning's unchecked sway over Shawn.                                        It's   just too hard
                                                  (   57)
take    off.   "People were just awakening to the possibilities," he said. In
stadium.       He   was looking       for   something new when the phone rang. "Sean
Parker called           me up   out of the blue and said,           'My      friend    and   I are    about
to launch a realty cool service for sharing online music,'" Lilienthal said.
Lilienthal told him. "You need a business plan, and you need investors."
mate."      He    soon called a college friend                 who had been one              of his early
backers at Nascent,            New York investor Jason             Grosfeld, and told           him what
he knew. Grosfeld had analyzed investments for Black Rock Financial
Management and then                specialized in technology stakes for a                    hedge fund.
He     had just     started his    own fund and was             looking for ways to take advan-
tage of the trends toward broadband connections and increased desktop
capital firms come in later and can put in tens of millions of doUars
                                      (   58   )        30SEPH MENN
former hotel on the wharf in Hull, which was                                  itself   not   much     to look     at.
Fast-food containers littered the place. Next to the old hotel lobby sat
Tom        Carmody,          a former         Reebok marketing                executive      who owned          the
house next to John Fanning's. To the left sat Fanning, wearing black
Reeboks and pink Bermuda shorts. In the back was what appeared to be a
card table, where              Shawn      sat     coding away on his laptop.                 The   entire   Nap-
ster brain        was   in that laptop, connected to the                     Net by     a cable    modem.
       Lilienthal wasn't looking for                        much. Mainly, he wanted             to    make   sure
that Shawn was a true hacker. Clearly, he was. Lilienthal's first impression
turns talking seriously with Shawn while the other occupied his uncle.
"We       sat there      and listened            to   how      impressed this guy was with himself.
All   I   wanted     to     do was     talk to the kid," Grosfeld said.                 When it was         Gros-
feld's     turn to set the pick. Fanning started peeling through a stack of
business cards on his desk, bragging about his contacts.                                  Among the         cards,
ture capitalist who had founded Compaq Computer Corp., then the
something that had already gained such traction                                 in the       underground that
it   sort of  momentum of its own. I got an inkling of what was ger-
                  had   a
minating." When the two men who might soon be running the company
asked about the legal issues,                         if   Fanning had hired a lawyer, he brushed
them       off.   "My       first   question was, have you consulted a lawyer," Grosfeld
said.     "They     said no, but          it's   perfectly acceptable."           Fanning turned on the
hard      sell,   telling the pair that               Napster needed money quickly to keep the
momentum            going.
       Fanning seemed                ecstatic     about his         new partners, at one point handing
Lilienthal options to                 buy shares             in   Napster Inc. The documents hadn't
get the core Napster machine                     moved      to a server farm               and see about get-
ting venture funding. In the meantime, he                                 and Grosfeld planned to
research the legal issues.
Fanning at a Herndon mall for lunch, and they explained how the service
worked.        When Hanks               asked about the reason for the Napster name,
Shawn      didn't talk       about his previous hairstyle.                    The group           talked instead
about a cat napping, and Parker suggested a logo with a cat running
across a       PC   screen.      Maybe      a hip cat, a cat        from the club scene. As Hanks
worked on           it   for a   few days, he was thinking of younger users and was
probably influenced by the Japanese animation he had been watching.
Hanks emerged with                 a   drawing of headphones on a face with                         catlike ears,
eyes,   and a nose. At a second lunch he presented                              it,   and the Napster crew
loved    it.   Hanks thought he was done. But Parker                                   called a     week     or so
afterward, pointing out that the eyes and nose looked Hke a mustache and
goatee. "So I stuck in a Httle smirk," Hanks said. Not long afterward,
Parker called again. "Some of the venture-capital guys think it looks like
Satan," he said.           Hanks asked what Napster                 users thought of it,             and Parker
told    him they loved            it.   "Well,       who   are   you seUing           it   to?"   Hanks      asked,
realized, cats are risk-takers who escape death. The finished symbol
would rank among the most recognized symbols of a volatile new era.
Hanks had never              negotiated a payment, and                   it    took him months to col-
lect his due: $5,000, plus options that                     proved worthless.
                                        (   60   )      JOSEPH MENN
came up between us with the                         right answer," Grosfeld said.                    Both were
excited about Napster, but their                         minds      didn't   meet on one             issue.     The
more-cautious Grosfeld wanted to cut a deal with Napster                                          first,    which
would        establish   what     their stake            would      be,    what   role Lilienthal           would
have    at the    company, and what would happen to both of those things                                          if
venture      money came        in.   At      a   minimum, they should                set a   commission for
bringing in venture funding                   if that     meant they were forced out                 as a result.
But Lilienthal was          fired       up   to act fast,         and he thought he could trust the
venture investors he had in mind to do the right thing. "Let's get                                         it   done
as quickly as possible," Lilienthal told his partner. Later,                                he said Grosfeld
"ultimately had the right idea                    —     cut a deal with       them     first."   But securing
the commission wasn't as important for Lilienthal, since he didn't plan                                           on
getting involved unless there were deeper pockets than Grosfeld 's.
A second reason was the firm's ties to                            SiUcon   Valley,   through the stake in
it   held by the bigger venture firm Draper Fisher Jurvetson, backers of
Hotmail and           Sierra      Semiconductor Corp. Most important, Lilienthal
had earned Backus's                trust.         Backus had offered to fund                         Lilienthal's
Nascent, and LiUenthal had turned him down, saying that he was likely
to sell the company soon. That had spared Draper the hassle of a short-
term investment.
       In three days, Parker put together an outline of Napster's plan, and
Lilienthal did        minor     editing.          "The idea was,          this   was   a user play," Lilien-
thal said.      "We      get as   many           people to use        it   as possible,       then     sell     them
ancillary stuff like concert tickets                       and music.        Let's     go    after   10 million
users.       Then   we'll figure out              what     to sell them." Parker               and Lilienthal
went     in to      meet Backus and Draper Atlantic managing partner Jim
Lynch. "They loved                it.   They got             it   right away," Lilienthal said.                 The
Draper team          said that there             might be         legal problems,       and each        side said
that    it   would    study the issue before anyone committed to anything. But
once again, no one           felt like        waiting. After just a few days, a meeting                          was
set for the         Draper men, Grosfeld and                       Lilienthal, Fanning,           Shawn, and
venture capitaUsts,          Lynch and Backus, who                  arrived late in their suits.       The
air-conditioning couldn't keep pace with the heat, and Fanning and
Shawn still hadn't appeared, so the group adjourned to a gritty Irish bar
Napster's server in the backseat. Trying to ignore the smell of stale beer at
Brady's, the men pushed together two tables in the back and ordered
chicken wings and soft drinks. After the pleasantries, Jim Lynch sur-
prised everyone but his partners.                      He whipped         out a ready-made term
sheet, a     page-long summary of how                   much    the firm     would     invest in      Nap-
ster   and under what conditions. Grosfeld couldn't believe                            it.   The   venture
pros had     moved even           faster   than he had.       And now        they were cutting         him
and Lilienthal out of the                 deal.     "They   weren't honorable," Grosfeld said.
"They did something                 that   I    had never seen another investor                do.    They
tried to take       aU of the action."      He puUed his old friend aside. "You fuck-
ing idiot," he hissed at            Lilienthal. "We didn't negotiate our commission."
Lilienthal looked abashed. "I didn't really think about it," he said. "I
enough money               for the stake they          wanted. For the second time in ten
minutes, Lilienthal was flabbergasted. "John, this                            is    the most friendly
term sheet         I've   seen in two years," he said. Fanning said he'd think about
it,   and the      signals   he gave turned positive.           "I've    got a bias for action," he
told Lynch,         and    as the   meeting broke up,          it   looked   like    everything would
come together             soon.
After the Draper team left, the rest of the crew went back to Gros-
                                      (    62   )     JOSEPH MENN
feld's loft,     and Shawn showed Lilienthal the new Star Wars movie                                  trailer
on     his laptop.     Shawn and Fanning headed back                 to Boston,         and Grosfeld
and Lilienthal took Parker out                   for a celebration dinner at           one of the fan-
ciest restaurants          Parker had ever seen, the chic Bouley. After staying the
night at Grosfeld's, Lilienthal decided to treat Parker to his                                first   plane
trip,   the shuttle flight back to Washington. Napster's server was going
On      the   way   to the airport, Parker realized             he had forgotten the inhaler
for his asthma. Since               he didn't want to make Lilienthal              late,      he decided
he could make do without                   it.   The two men missed        the       first    plane they
tried for, ran to the adjacent terminal,                    and missed the second plane. By
the time they          made    it   back to the     first   terminal, Parker      was getting ner-
vous about not having his inhaler, especially after aU the running. Hoping
that    enough      caffeine   would open up            his lungs, Parker slugged six shots               of
espresso as Lilienthal watched in disbelief.                    Out of the       corner of his eye,
Lilienthal       saw   a   newspaper headline: The record industry had announced
another step in what                it   called the Secure Digital        Music          Initiative, to
encrypt music that wasn't in the                        MPS   format. "Too late," Lilienthal
thought.
       Finally     on board         a shuttle     and taxiing down the runway with the
Napster server in an overhead bin, Parker asked a stewardess                             if   she had an
inhaler.      He   didn't realize that the airlines have strict rules about asthmat-
ics,   since the air gets thinner at high altitudes.              The   stewardess ordered the
plane to return to the terminal and told Parker to get                          off.   Lilienthal lent
the teenager $20 for cab fare to get back to Grosfeld's for the inhaler.                                 As
the plane finally lifted off with Lilienthal and the server, the entrepreneur
shook his head and reconsidered Sean Parker. "Here's a kid who doesn't
have any shares in the company," he thought. "But he has been responsi-
ble for    all   the things that have been happening.              Now he's going to take on
the recording industry.             And    he doesn't     know how to     fly   on     a plane."
With Fanning amenable to the Draper Atlantic term sheet, all that
remained was for Draper, Grosfeld, and Lilienthal to do their "due dili-
                                    alltherave                  (63)
conduct a reasonable investigation beforehand                           if   they want to preserve
the right to claim later that they were misled. In Napster's case, the due
diligence proved to be anything but routine.                   A credit check turned up the
first   of Fanning's   two major overdue debts. The                  assault charge         emerged       as
well.    Though   they troubled Lihenthal, neither item was a deal breaker for
him.     The   bigger problem was U.S. copyright law. Grosfeld spent most of
two months getting deeper and deeper into the                           state    of the law and the
prognosis for Napster.         He    hired the law firm of Weil, Gotshal                    & Manges
to research the     newly passed Digital Millennium Copyright Act and read
the court rulings that         would       later   prove crucial to Napster's chances for
survival,     ruhngs that had arisen from topics                   as diverse as       VCRs      and    flea
markets.
        The   outlook was not good.
        In 1998, spurred by fears that the Internet had enabled both mass
instantaneous copying of intellectual property and perfection in the qual-
ity   of those copies, Congress had passed the Digital Millennium                                act.   The
law extended existing copyright protections into cyberspace.                               And   it   made
it   a felony to circumvent technical measures that protected copyrighted
published work.        And   the law codified         what had been worked out                   in   some
court cases, including one in              which the Church of Scientology had sued
not just disaffected church members                    who had               published the church's
sacred    —and copyrighted—teachings on the                        Internet, but also the Inter-
The judge in the Scientology case had ruled that if the Internet
service provider did not monitor what its users did, it was acting like a
                                 (    64   )       JOSEPH MENN
service providers that merely routed offending material, as long as that
son"; and that no copy of the material was maintained on the system in a
way that left it available to anyone other than the intended recipient.
qualify for that protection, the service provider                        had   to be    unaware that
the material was infringing a copyright.                         The company           couldn't have
Two other cases came up in Grosfeld's research. One was the 1984
to temporarily halt viewing while answering the door for the pizza deliv-
the     way people were         already using the Napster service. In theory,                      some
people could use Napster to transmit their                        own home-studio          recordings.
Napster that way, and they never would. And unlike Sony, which lost
contact with           its    customers after they bought the                         VCRs, Napster kept
watching exactly what               its   customers were doing.
       The      fact   that one more case turned up                  at all     is   testament to the thor-
recordings. Fonovisa argued that                         Cherry Auction was aiding and abetting
those vendors' copyright infringement.                         The   flea     market claimed               it   had no
responsibility to            supervise what the             little retailers         were doing, and a fed-
eral   judge agreed, tossing the case out of court. In 1996, however, a panel
of the San Francisco-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
reversed that decision. Since the police had told the flea market's owners
what was going on, the                  flea   market knew about              it.    And    it   was improperly
profiting       by charging admission and                   selling concessions, the court found.
       The common             threads in the            DMCA and the court cases were knowl-
edge of wrongdoing and the                             ability to stop    it.       And    that's    what made
Grosfeld nervous. Unlike the                       DMCA-protected               Internet service provider
that doesn't           know who         is    posting what, Napster always                       knew who had
what     file   and to       whom       they were transmitting              it.     And    a claim that           Nap-
ster   was   just "indexing"            who had which            songs,   which might               qualify       it    for
the second         DMCA safe harbor, wouldn't work if Napster got complaints
about a given song              file.   The company would have                       to   remove     it,   although
another version of the same song was sure to pop up in no time.
       The more Grosfeld thought about what was                                           actually      happening
inside Napster, the worse                 it   looked.     Not only were             the employees aware of
"facts    and circumstances" suggesting copyright infringement, by                                                    itself
enough       to ruin the second safe harbor, they                        were aware of the infringe-
ment      itself       Napster's        few workers "weren't anything                            like      a     service
provider," Grosfeld concluded. "They were not in reality closing their eyes
                                          (   66   )      JOSEPH MENN
pushing the legal envelope. Shawn just didn't think they'd get sued.
Parker did, but he thought Napster had legal arguments that would be at
least   good enough          to   buy time    until the industry        opted to     settle.    "We
understood where            it   was going   to go. It    was premeditated," Parker             said.
The game plan made Grosfeld very uncomfortable. And as for making
money ahead of a record-industry deal, the law stressed the dangers of
profiting   from the wrongful behavior of others.                  Finally, avoiding that pit-
model. "If they profited, they were profiting from theft," he said. "We live
John Fanning, also well aware of the legal hurdles, was doing his
own research. He called Andrew Bridges, a partner at the top law firm in
SiHcon VaUey, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich                       & Rosati.    Bridges might have
been the best single person to caU. An expert in intellectual property and
ning to a lawyer named Bruce Joseph. Joseph begged off                          as well,    sending
Fanning        to   Washington lawyer Seth Greenstein. Greenstein took Fan-
ning's call,        and the two chatted. As Fanning described                  how   the service
service "on steroids."            Fanning put the phone down and passed the com-
pliment on to Shawn. Both laughed. At                    last —someone who got            it.
Since his firm also represented some record companies, however, he said
he might not be available for any                litigation to    come. Parker soon went to
visit   Greenstein in his office at          McDermott, Will &. Emery. Parker had
never been in a law office before, and he was cowed by the posh trappings
because in those cases the defendant was actually able to exercise present
control," Greenstein said. "For example,                                  someone           says,   'Make      a copy'       and
hands a tape to someone to duplicate. That person                                             is    liable   because they
could see           if it   was    suspicious.        When you're                   looking at a service that con-
sists    of an automatic, technical process,                                    that's quite different."               In his
memo, Greenstein                   wrote:        "MPS      lacks    any         flags or other        means     that indi-
cate    whether copyright has been asserted over the music                                            file   and whether
the music           file    may be     copied with or without restriction."
        Fanning would                trot out         Greenstein to explain the legal defenses,
often by phone, for Draper Atlantic and other potential investors. But he
didn't brag about                 two other points that Greenstein                             said       he made       orally.
The     first      was      that, as   Greenstein saw               it,    the odds of a lawsuit being filed
against Napster were about 98 percent.                                     The second was                 that copyright
law     is    a    complex animal, especially when                             it   comes    to issues       on the edge.
Those             are "the grayest of the gray areas in the law," Greenstein said.
Sampling of older songs                      in rap       music was one such battleground, a fight
between            fair   use and infringement.               The     significance of the trend for                     Nap-
ster    was that the eventual lawsuit was bound                                     to be   what lawyers         call "fact-
                                             (   68   )     JOSEPH MENN
to    check each             file   for   some        sign of copyright violation, such as the
it could qualify for one, but it was far from clear that it could, Greenstein
said. Companies that ignored obvious misuse wouldn't make the cut.
"Napster should be able to                       meet the         test for          immunity from             liability,   but
it   is    not a foregone conclusion," he wrote. "The knowledge standard
required by this section                    is   a 'red flag' of facts                   and circumstances from
which       it is      apparent that infringing activity                         is   occurring. In this case, the
RIAA might contend that the red flag consists of thousands of MP3 files
that were ripped                  from commercially               available           compact         discs   being made
available            through the Napster network.                   .   .   .   This    is   the closest of questions
system.         The technology itself was                   legal   and         a   huge advance over what had
gone before. Perhaps, they thought, the company should                                                   just stick with
seemed           real   enough, but the               men    decided that they couldn't trust                           John
Fanning to follow them down that road.
          "If   it   was    just the legal issue, that              would have been                    okay," Lilienthal
said. But the combination of that minefield with Fanning's behavior was
Napster out of           its   legal predicament,            he would need to make sure Fan-
ning was not in majority control, with veto power over anything Lilien-
thal   might      do.    And     so   began weeks of tortured negotiations during the
summer of 1999                 as Lilienthal           and Grosfeld offered Fanning more and
more money,         finally      more than $1            million, to whittle his stake in Napster
thing and then go to the record industry and cut a deal," Lilienthal said.
"One     side of    me         thinks the record industry was out to shut everything
down. Then part of me thinks that                         at a certain point in the process,               they
would have been willing                  to cut a       deal. I   would     like to    think   I   would have
been able to pull something                    off."
told    Shawn on one             call.   "You can         start over." Grosfeld            even looked for
apartments where               Shawn might             live in    Manhattan, away from              his uncle's
nowhere. Shawn explained that his uncle had helped him                                         when no one
else   would, that he had given him that                            first   computer. "Shawn had an
emotional attachment to him.                       He    was the only        real father figure," Parker
concluded.
       So the     investors' talks            with Fanning continued. At times,                     it   seemed
like   Fanning had agreed                to an offer, or nearly had.                 They got      as close as
"How much           do you have?" he asked Grosfeld                          at   one point.   "How much
could you wire           me      today?" Fanning also tried to drive a                      wedge between
                                         (    70   )     JOSEPH MENN
Grosfeld and Lilienthal, telling each that he wanted                                him involved more
than he wanted the other.                     The     pair ultimately realized that                   Fanning
would never          sign.    "He was        just negotiating for the sake              of negotiating,"
Lihenthal          said. Finally,      Grosfeld and LiUenthal threw up their hands.
Grosfeld       moved on         to investigate other possible investments,                      and Lilien-
thal   went on       a surfing trip to Peru.
Napster kept adding more users and more                                      music.     A   few hundred
users    became        a    few thousand, then ten thousand, then                        fifty    thousand.
Cash     at   Napster was            tight,   but Fanning didn't seem worried.                        He    had
plenty of other angles to play.                He     returned to        Draper and said he needed
at least      some money            right   away    if   the firm was       still   interested.       Spooked
by Fanning's background, the                   legal worries,       and the continuing lack of a
proven     CEO,          Draper agreed to give Napster only a $50,000 loan. In
return.    Draper got the future right to buy more than                             1 million shares, or
about 10 percent of the company, at 20 cents apiece, which was the price
those    men was            Scott   NewHn, who had             little   technology background but
had done well              for himself as president             of Sparks Personnel Services, a
temporary-employment agency                      in   Maryland. Newlin agreed to meet with
Parker and John and                 Shawn Fanning          to hear about Napster. Parker didn't
say    much        at the   meeting, but       Shawn impressed Newlin by speaking pas-
sionately about the project                 while sporting a T-shirt and shorts. "Shawn is
a very nice guy, just a natural kid,"                      Newlin       said later.   The problem was
that    John Fanning would barely                   let his    nephew      talk.    Fanning "did aU the
speaking, and          I just felt it       was too much of a control               issue. It   seemed      like
to him, it was a quick in, quick out. He just wanted to sell it quickly."
Newlin decided               to pass   on the deal         for that reason.         Some time         later,   he
and     Perrelli talked         about making a $1.2 million offer for the company
that    would        leave    them     in charge.        But   in a replay of the stalemate                with
Grosfeld and LiHenthal, Fanning said he wouldn't give up majority con-
trol.   "What makes you                 think you should have majority control                           when
as a team, from their internship at the White House, where they were in
white-hat hackers could break into any corporate system in a day, then
teach the    company how          to protect itself               To   test the claim.    Fortune found
a large   New York company                that      was proud of          its   computer security and
that agreed to serve as a guinea pig as long as                          it   was never   identified      and
an auditor made sure secrets weren't stolen.                           The magazine then              chroni-
warfare     specialists    for    the        government, used public                    data     about the
company's network structure and a wardialer program                                    like that released
WheelGroup           got in through a fax server and then broke into the                                 com-
pany's tax department,           where an employee had                        a popular remote-access
Cisco Systems for $124 miUion, making millionaires out of                                      many of the
firm's seventy-five       employees, including the brothers Shinn. Cisco, the
largest   maker of networking                gear,      was pressuring the Shinns               to    abandon
Virginia for San Antonio, and the brothers were looking for an excuse
not to move. They knew Perrelli from UUNet's interactions with Cisco,
                                   (    72    )         JOSEPH MENN
and when         Perrelli     and Parker told them about Napster, they were recep-
tive.   They     also   knew something about                   digital music: Scott       had decided he
liked    MP3s      but had run into availability problems. Like Shawn, Scott
had done something about                    it.   He     knocked out         a   program      to search for
MP3      files   automatically and bring                them back        to his   home      computer.       The
big drawback was that the program didn't discriminate, and Scott didn't
hke most of what              it   came back with.
       In June 1999, Parker brought               Shawn and John Fanning to meet the
Shinns in their basement in                 Centreville, Virginia. "I knew nothing about
them," Scott said later. "Parker said, 'I got these guys I want you to
meet.'" Scott agreed because he was curious and because the potential for
Justin Frankel          and Rob Lord. That kind of money would certainly be
enough        to justify       blowing off Cisco and staying close to home. The
Shinns hit        it    off immediately with               Shawn and         Parker.     As they          talked,
digital-art network called Ice.org, on which Parker had chatted five years
earlier as a precocious teen.             And without knowing Shawn's real name, the
Shinns had run into                   him as well, on IRC channels covering security
issues. (Later,         when       Scott discovered that Ritter was involved at Napster,
as a security expert               and server      architect.) Finally, Scott            had heard about
Shawn and         Parker, again only              by   their   IRC     handles, after they had            duped
a friend of his         who        was unwisely running a multiuser game from his U.S.
State    Department computer. "They schooled                               my     friend,     who    is   pretty
"Do you like MP3s?" Shawn asked. "Yeah," Scott said, "check this
for. But the idea was "pretty cool," he told Shawn. "I need to marry it to
my      bot." For half an hour,              Shawn and               the Shinns had a Vulcan               mind
meld.     "We     kind of geeked out on                 how     it   worked," Scott      said. "I    had seen
step," he thought. "This is going to catch on big time." Just like that, the
ture   is   kind of weird.         Do you want to               redo     it?'   and John Fanning said no,"
Scott said.          "We     were not convinced                 it   was going        to work, so        we bowed
out."    The Shinns            kept talking to Shawn, but in July 1999 they formed
their    own         firm, along     with Parker and                   Perrelli, to     develop other music
ETantrum and Napster compared notes often, but the most dramatic
moment in the two firms' relationship came later that summer. That's
when the Shinns decided that Shawn alone was worth their million dol-
lars, as long as he came without John Fanning. "We didn't want the uncle.
We just wanted Shawn," Scott said. While Scott was chatting to Shawn
over IRC, Mike called him on the phone. "I've got a million dollars," Mike
told him. "I'U give you a million dollars if you come work for us." The
phone went            silent   on Shawn's end             as   he    tried to digest the offer          and looked
around for his uncle.               "I   have to        call   you back," Shawn            said.   Minutes    later,
he messaged Scott, worried that eTantrum would start its own peer-to-
peer system. "Dude, you're not doing what we're doing, are you?" Scott told
him     no,    and     it   was   true. Besides         wanting to avoid              direct competition      with
their friends at Napster, the Shinns believed the record industry                                           would
soon be screaming for blood. They thought                                it   would be     safer if they worked
but they wouldn't have to give away as much when they did.
                                          (    74   )      JOSEPH MENN
      Shawn           didn't take the      Shinns up on their            offer.     As eTantrum             slowly
security job offers were "falling out of the sky," Scott said, with hourly pay
hacking work. Like the good geeks they were, instead of pulling the plug
on eTantrum, they open-sourced the software and allowed others                                                  to
adopt it.
Given what John Fanning had, which was 70 percent of Napster Inc.,
and what he thought he had, which was control of a company worth far
more than what he was being                             offered,     one can understand                why he
declined overtures from Grosfeld and Lilienthal, Newlin, and the Shinns.
The    harder thing to comprehend                       is   why    eighteen-year-old          Shawn would
turn   down an             offer   from technically superior teams that would have net-
ted    him       "a     million dollars         and a monster             truck,"        as   he laughingly
described        it    later   with a hacker inside joke: That's the nonnegotiable fee
that hacking collective Cult of the                          Dead Cow demanded                   for   handing
over an advance version of                      its    powerful Trojan-horse attack program,
Back       Orifice 2000.
      It   wasn't clear that           Shawn himself understood why he had done so.
"One,       I didn't       take     them that seriously. Two, I didn't really know much
about starting a business, and even                      at this stage    we weren't          really thinking
about it. Three, my uncle was family. So I didn't. I mean, it could have
been that I was just so out of it from working on the code that I didn't
even want to think about                 it,   even though those are kind of crazy numbers.
But most of that period of time was                           a blur,   and   I   just   went    for   what    felt
comfortable and what felt right, and none of those felt right —the idea of
taking a bunch of money and moving somewhere, even though I'd never
seen close to that amount of money. ... I can't even think of the thought
process that I went through when stuff like that happened," Shawn said.
"I   wonder what would have happened                           if   we had done          that. I don't       know.
There       are just too        many variables."
John Fanning continued his ceaseless quest for money on his terms,
turning for help to his neighbor and adviser, former sneaker marketing
executive        Tom        Carmody.     And      one of Carmody's connections seemed                          like
summed up this way: He had managed money for Bill Gates, the richest
man and one of the shrewdest businessmen in the world. Fanning, Car-
mody, Shawn, and Parker flew out to meet him in August 1999.                                      It   was
the    first trip   to   San Francisco         for   both teenagers, and they were in awe of
nearly everything. "I was really excited.                      We      were showing [Napster] to
somebody who might be putting money                             into the     company and help           us
buy     servers,"    Shawn        said. Evans's office was low-key, in the                 new-media
style    of the day. Evans himself was                 much     less   low-key.     He   bragged about
running Gates's investments in the mid-1980s and about his multiple
Ferraris. "Miraculously,"              Shawn         said, the    Napster demonstration went
smoothly.       Beyond      that,    he   said, "I    had no idea what was going on.              It   was
a   weird experience." Evans heard the Napster pitch, and suddenly he was
thinking several steps ahead.                  Of course       Evans would hand the company,
he     said,   but then he might want to set up an alliance with another small
firm that did market testing of                    new   musical groups. After that, Napster
could approach the record companies about an alliance.
       Evans was so excited that he insisted that Shawn and Parker stay in
California at a hotel he             would pay        for.   He would wire        investment      money
the next day. Fanning and Carmody, Evans said, could return east.                                      The
gambit sent up            all   kinds of warning flags for Fanning,                  who    vetoed the
idea.     Even the deal-hungry Parker                    agreed. "There        was something not
right about him," he said.                  And       Evans had misread Shawn.               When        it
became clear that the Napster crew was going to head home that night,
Evans called for a stretch limo to take Shawn to the airport. At that
speak with the guy administering the back end. The Fannings called Hit-
ter at his office at        Bind View and told him that Evans would be phoning
and to answer            his questions.        But they neglected to         tell   Ritter that   Evans
was debating whether                to invest. Ritter, thinking that              Evans had already
invested or was otherwise in the fold, held nothing back.
                                      (   76   )     JOSEPH MENN
    When        Evans      called,     "he didn't misrepresent himself.              He    just didn't
represent himself" as having any particular role, Ritter said. Evans asked
who was running the server. Ritter said he was. Evans asked how stable it
was. Ritter said      it   crashed every ten or twenty minutes. Evans asked                          how
long   it   would take       to get the server to be reliable. Ritter said a                 month         at
best, three      months      at worst.     Evans asked        how much           Ritter   was getting
paid. Ritter told      him     zero, for the       moment, and Evans laughed. (Fanning
soon ordered paychecks sent to                   Ritter.)   Evans    called      Fanning and used
everything negative that Ritter had said for negotiating leverage, and the
talks quickly collapsed.
John Fanning had             Andy Evans, on the other hand, was some-
                             let   them.
thing completely different. His may be the single instance of an investor
who actually could have made Napster's fantastic but doomed campaign
into something even worse.
      That day      at Zero.net,        Evans had talked a          lot   about Gates,       who had
served on the board of Evans's investment                    company and was godfather                     to
his three children.          What      Evans did not        talk about     was    his   1986 convic-
tion for     bank   fraud.    When,      in 1993, questions about           why Gates was            rely-
ing on a felon for financial advice became too frequent. Gates broke most
of his      official ties.    But by 1999, Evans was              clearly a player in Silicon
VaUey, investing alongside the top venture firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield
8c Byers in such monster start-ups as                       Rambus        Inc.    and getting        IPO
shares      from the top investment banks, Goldman Sachs and Morgan
Stanley.     Evans started Zero.net in             May      1999, and one of         its first     invest-
which was spun             off that September.           One   of Evans's investment firms
bought a majority of the               spin-off's shares.    As   the prices of the shares rose
tening Zero.net 's balance sheet and allowing the incubator to raise more
venture capital. Lawsuits soon accused Evans of manipulating the stock
and    failing to    make          required disclosures to the        SEC. The            suits    echoed
previous accusations leveled at Evans,                 when he had been             forced to sign a
criminal past caused a major Zero.net investor to pull back $20 million it
had pledged, leaving the firm with a negative net worth. More than
twenty complaints were               filed   with the     SEC        about Evans        affiliates,   and the
agency was      still      reported to be investigating two years                  later.   Following            its
gence is supposed to work the other way as well. Especially in the early
their backers        and    act accordingly. It         was too       late for   Shawn      to   do so with
his uncle.     But    it   wasn't too late to do that with Evans. If Ritter had been
with its first real outside investor, a man who would be crucial to its des-
tiny. That investor, Yosi Amram, sat in on the talks at Zero.net at the
invitation of his old acquaintance,                   John Fanning.        Amram          saw that Evans
was wiUing to             invest even      though Fanning was a problem.                    And Amram
decided that        if someone       of Evans's apparent pedigree was willing to take a
risk,   he might do so          as   weU.      "I   could see   it   was going      to take off. I liked
the idea, and it was getting some traction," Amram said. What he did not
Fanning with his money. "I was very reluctant," Amram said. He had one
hundred thousand reasons                   to be skeptical        —   that's     how many        dollars         he
had plowed into Chess.net. By mid- 1999,                          Amram knew             he wasn't going
to be getting        any of them back.
                                      (   78    )     DOSEPH MENN
       Fanning had met          Amram years           earlier in    Cambridge, playing chess in
Harvard Square            at the tables outside the                Au Bon        Pain     cafe.   Fanning
loved    all    kinds of chess, often playing multiple games simultaneously.
Amram          favored   blitz, a     kind of lightning-quick chess in which each side
is   allotted a total    of about      five   minutes for     all its     moves. In      blitz,   the regu-
lar rules      of chess can be broken,           as   long as the player doesn't get caught
before the next move. "You have to                    make quick         decisions,"     Amram      said in
explaining his taste for the game. "To me, it's like the real world. Time is
But if there is a more exact metaphor than blitz chess for Silicon Valley in
1999,     it    hasn't   been made public.          And like the Valley's soon-to-be-
obvious missteps in that period,                 Amram had already been tripped up by
his    penchant for the quick-as-a-blink                 deal.
       Overall,    Amram        had been very         successful.       His worldview was part of
what made him            a strong investor; he also           had       serious smarts, a real tech-
nical education, and a wealth of contacts. Raised in Tel Aviv, the son of a
chief financial officer and a schoolteacher, Amram did his three years of
universal military service in the Israeli Air Force in the late 1970s.                                    He
rose quickly to the rank of sergeant major.                      Amram wanted             to be involved
Harvard Business School, graduating in the top tenth of his class in 1984.
Amram          soon, though the partners' flmding did not.                       Amram       went ahead
anyway, founding Individual Inc. in his                    Boston bedroom in 1989.                  "I   went
about nine months without a                   salary, living off        my   savings, before the first
At   the time, before the         World Wide Web,             there       was a    vast   amount of
information on the Internet that people had neither the time nor the
ability to find for themselves. Individual               went out and located informa-
tion that    would be    useful to people or companies               and delivered        it   to   them
by   fax    and e-mail. Individual did              well,   and      in    1996, the year after
Netscape's watershed initial pubhc offering opened the way for Internet
companies. Individual        filed for its       own $200 million IPO. By that year,
the news-retrieval service, later               known as NewsEdge Corp., had 200
employees, 138,000 subscribers, and more than $50 million in cumulative
losses. It also    had $16 million in rapidly growing revenue and                         significant
Paul. After querying strangers in a local bar, the duo decided people
would value software that surfed the Internet on its own while the com-
Inc.    and the online magazine HotWired,                    later    known        as   Wired News.
HotWired readers then could download                     the free software,             which would
scan the publication and other              sites at preset intervals.
offered $25 million for the company. "Freeloader                     had a unique technology
and brand that       I   thought could get us into the market                  much       faster    than
developing things internally would," he                      said.    Pincus suggested that
Amram        double the price, a       fairly    outrageous request given that the com-
pany had no revenue.        Amram          kept calling to chat over the ensuing weeks,
and      Pincus    and     Paul       casually    mentioned          his    interest      during      an
                                  (   80   )     JOSEPH MENN
exploratory meeting to discuss joint marketing with Yahoo! Inc.                                               CEO
Tim        Koogle. Koogle said Yahoo! might be interested in making a
counterbid, and Pincus                       may have        implied to         Amram          that Koogle      was
even more interested than                     that.
Amram. "Yosi's style was frenetic," Pincus said. "He was a man on a mis-
sion, never without a phone piece attached to his shirt. He was incredibly
optimistic about the future, even talking about                                   how       we'd eventually go
against Microsoft."                Amram          described the acquisition talks as "kind of a
mad rush." He split the difference between his first suggested price and
The deal was struck in June 1996 and greeted with ridicule in Silicon
Valley, where the satiric daily webzine Suck called it "era-definingly irre-
which had overcome some initial reluctance in approving the deal, was
surprised         when just         a   few weeks        later,   Amram         told directors that he           was
planning three more acquisitions.                        The      deals     would have        cost in the neigh-
ual, the          directors "asked a               few      polite questions" about his views                     on
integrating Freeloader                  first,   one director         said.   Amram felt insulted,           and he
displayed a temper they hadn't seen before.                                   "He    did exhibit      some crazy
behavior," said             Bob Lentz,           the company's chief              financial ofiEcer. "I         don't
saying that he had resigned from Individual after the board turned                                             down
his idea to contribute              company            shares to Free Spirit Holdings, a fund he
The      escalating         and very public dispute seriously hurt what had been
Amram's shining reputation around Boston.
      Even worse was what never became                                  public. Before         Amram's         press
release, the     company had attempted                        to reach an agreement with him,                    and
it   invited   him     to discuss         how      he might return.            When Amram             showed up
for the       meeting with the company's lawyers, he brought along a chess-
playing friend         —John Fanning. He                     installed     Fanning and a chessboard                in
a conference room. Amram would discuss his job with the directors, then
"puffed his chest out, and I pushed back," Amram said. "He pretended to
officer arrived, both men gave their version of the events, and Amram
didn't think everything of his was in the boxes and wanted to check his
       "I    escorted Mr.         Amram           to his     work      area,    and   I   could see that there
wasn't anything in this area but the desk and chair and trash bucket. Mr.
Amram          went       into the trash bucket                     and found         several paperclips         and
stated: 'See, I told           you they           didn't     pack    all   my   things.'    Mr.   Amram         then
                                          (   82   )       JOSEPH MENN
went    into another area, interrupting a meeting to look into the trash
bucket in      this   room.         I   advised Mr.    Amram       that   was enough, that now he
had   to leave.       Mr.   Amram           went into the eating area of the              company and
wanted    to     remove        several pictures        from the      wall. I advised       Mr.   Amram
that if he      wanted the              pictures he    would have         to take this matter      up    in
had    suffered       some kind of            self-destructive break. "It's a sad story,"               one
director said. "He's got a lot of energy, he's very well educated,                               and    he's
very bright. And he thought himself right out of the box. He built this
racing   car,    we      got   it   halfway around the track, and he suddenly made a
right turn into the stands." Individual                     would eventually be sold           for a frac-
fervor that can surround business leaders. "It                            was   a very   deep personal
change," he said. "The important thing for                          me was      that I   came out of it
with significant revelations about staying calm in the heat of the                                battle."
Amram would need that inner calm during his time at Napster. But his
"I'm not going to invest                  if you're   the   CEO," Amram told him, as gently
as   he could.    "I don't          think   you're effective."
outvote Fanning if need be. And third, the company would move to
northern CaUfornia, where Amram could keep an eye on it. Finally des-
perate for a deal. Fanning agreed.                Amram   wired $250,000 over Labor
Day weekend       for 1.25 million shares at          20 cents   apiece,    and Napster was
set to   move   across the country. "Yosi saved our butts," said             Tom     Carmody,
Fanning's neighbor and right-hand man.
                             (   84    )     JOSEPH MENN
                             going west
    When         Parker arrived at the San Francisco airport and discovered his
partner wasn't there, he realized he was alone in a city where he had no
friends,       no support network, and no place               to stay.   Then he heard       his
name being            called out over the public-address system.           He     picked up the
phone      to the voice of          Roman      Dzindzichashvili, the fifty-five-year-old
chess grandmaster             John Fanning had lured from the            rival   Carnegie Mel-
lon chess network               when he       set   up Chess.net. Fanning had phoned
                                                (   85   )
Dzindzichashvili and asked                       him    to put        up    his   nephew and      Parker.
ered his bags and arrived late at night, having traveled three thousand
miles to a bizarre         new world. A gruff, potbellied giant speaking in a thick
Russian accent           greeted him at the door. "Sleep in there," Dzindzichashvili
on the flight. "I was in really bad shape, just from programming for eight
months.      I   hadn't been exercising or lifting weights," he said. "I                       was going
to a strange place. I didn't get a sense of what I                          was getting into or      really
them    to stay silent          and     in their       bedrooms when              his chess pupils   came
over.   He    was renowned              as a chess instructor,             and nervous parents would
bring their children over in the hope that they had produced the next
Bobby     Fischer.        The   parents      would wait tensed on the couch and                   staring
sense of humor, the same kind that Dmitry Dakhnovsky had shown at
Chess.net.
      Once, when both Napster founders were in their rooms, they heard a
searing, maniacal laugh.                 Alarmed        that something            was wrong, they ran
downstairs to the           room where Dzindzichashvili                      slept.    When   they looked
in,   they saw the giant sitting in front of his computer screen, his face red,
laughing so hard that              it   must have        hurt.    He     kept pointing at the screen,
where a programmed cartoon                       figure   would dance when Dzindzichashvili
clicked     on     it   with the cursor. "He dances!                     Look     at   him!" he boomed,
near tears.
      The        living   situation         was not the only                logistical   hurdle for the
teenagers.       There were        also the matters             of transportation and of meeting
                                        (   86   )     JOSEPH MENN
and adjusting to         their coworkers. Before they               showed up      in   San Mateo
for their first   day of work, they knew almost nothing about the two cen-
tral figures   who would           be running Napster, though they assumed both
were   successfial professionals.         They knew         that Bill Bales      would be     a vice
Steeped as he was in the ways of Silicon Valley, Yosi Amram was far
more connected than an outsider               like   Fanning could ever          be.    As he wired
Fanning the money for               his stake in Napster,           Amram     told his     network
that he needed a         CEO       and other managers            to take a risk   on an Internet
music company that was growing rapidly through word of mouth. To
help with the recruiting,Amram turned to Bales, an excitable business-
development executive Amram had known for years. Bales had worked at
Amram's Individual Inc., and Amram had backed Bales when he founded
a video news service in San Francisco called ON24 Inc. Bales agreed to
and she had called him to talk about another technology start-up she
Alto Coffee Co. Richardson met                Amram         for lunch to see if         he would be
interested in investing.            She spent most of the time talking about the
pseudo-coffee company, which in reality had developed a system for
automated      Web       scheduling of consumer appointments with dentists,
hairdressers,     and the      like.   But Richardson            also   mentioned that she was
interested in other tasks, as a sort of hybrid angel investor                      and executive.
That way, she could gain operational experience and                           stay close to the
she had attended house-music shows and other concert festivals overseas
and had been depressed to find                             little     she liked as     much when          she returned
to   American record             stores        and     radio.         A single mother of two children, she
couldn't   go out to smoky clubs every night looking for new                                                acts.    And
much     of her career had been spent in musical backwaters where she
couldn't have       found what she wanted to hear even                                       if   she had stuck the
sold to Microsoft,               and while                 it    was not the biggest               financial   win of
Richardson's career,             it   was      still   the one she            felt   most passionate about.
      If Firefly was a Zagat guide to music, Napster was Waiters                                                          on
Wheels.     It   would bring nearly any dish you wanted from anywhere                                                     to
your home, and         it       was    free.      Suddenly, just by downloading one program,
Richardson could find thousands of songs to sample. She told                                                   Amram
she wanted       in,   and he hired her                         for a   six-month term. She was the                   first
With her warm and engaging personal style, she came across as far
younger than her thirty-eight years. Yet she was fiuent in the financial
CEO," Shawn            said.      "We          got along really well. She was easy to interact
with, kind of energetic, and kind of experienced in areas                                          we were    not.    She
seemed     to enjoy the time as                   much           as   we   did."
                                           (   88      )        JOSEPH MENN
    Richardson had weaknesses, though they were                                 less   pronounced than
Fanning 's      style   of blustery confrontation and Amram's attempts to catch
up with the speed of                 light.    One        obvious shortcoming was her lack of
management            experience.      She     also       had   a habit of failing to focus   methodi-
cally    on the task          at   hand.     And      she could get overinvolved emotionally
with the firms she invested in and those that worked there. "Either you
love her or         you hate       her," said her         sometime     adviser,     sometime employer,
sometime backer and sometime boyfriend, John Lee.
    Besides her immediate and intense attraction to Napster's technology
and her own career ambitions, Richardson had a personal reason                                         for
wanting to take on her                 CEO job. That reason was Lee, her on-again,
                                     first
off-again romantic partner. Lee was the CEO of the purported coffee
company, which would soon emerge under                                 its   real   name, Xtime. Even
though the two were                 in an off period in their                romance, they remained
close,    and Richardson had agreed to help Lee by serving                               as a vice presi-
dent at Xtime Inc. Lee loved being an Internet                               CEO, which      at the   time
struck        many   as the    most     desirable job in the world. Richardson, though,
thought Lee was getting a little full of himself She didn't feel she had
much      left to     prove, having been a successful                    VC    for years, but she     was
tempted to show him up close that she could run her own company, then
have     it   run   circles   around    his.
    A lot of their mutual friends thought Richardson and Lee would one
day get hitched.          It   was her most               serious relationship since her marriage,
which had ended in the late 1980s. No matter how many times the
stormy duet had broken up, they always returned to one another.                                       The
problem,        as   Richardson saw            it,   was that they were too much             alike.   "We
were both used to being the dominant person in a relationship," she                                   said.
traction at Napster.               But Richardson had never done things the conven-
tional way.
the Valley, had been the             number one salesman               at Intel Corp.,      once throw-
ing in a lawn        mower   to close a deal in the Midwest. His partner                            Vinod
Khosla cofounded Sun Microsystems. Each had a deep understanding of
how     rapidly growing companies function                      on the     inside.      Another reason-
able choice for preparation as a                   VC would be a career as a serious investor
in public companies. Since almost                          no one before 1998             listed venture
capital as    an early career choice, "the only honest answer for the question,
'How     did you     become      a   VC?'      is, 'I     got lucky,'" said Scott SandeU, of the
venerable     VC firm New Enterprise Associates.
       That   certainly apphes to Richardson,                   who was one             of many    who   got
there quite       by chance. But besides natural                intelligence         and ease with other
people,    two useful    VC      qualities,         Richardson had a            third, critical strength:
seven,     and they were poor enough that                     as a   young      girl,   Richardson wor-
ried    about the family losing                    its    house. Often, Richardson's mother
emphasized the way out of poverty that had nearly worked for                                   her: find-
ing a good husband           early.      The        lectures    made an         impression, and after
high     school,     Richardson went to                     secretarial     college,      following      her
mother's plan that she get a job where she could try to marry the boss.
       Richardson's     first    workplace               superior,    a   seventy-year-old          lawyer,
with filing and other routine tasks, and she began doing some of his legal
work. She soon realized that she could do a                               lot    more than     type.     She
entered     St.Thomas Aquinas College in SparkiU, New York, then met a
cadet    at West Point and married him at age twenty-one. Without gradu-
ating herself from Aquinas, she left with                            him when he graduated and
transferred to the       first   of a    series      of Army installations around the coun-
try.   In each    new town,      she took an office job           —once         at   an advertising firm,
another time at a title-insurance firm. She kept thinking she could do
                                     (   90    )         JOSEPH MENN
more, even       as she cared for         her two young children. After her marriage
might pay for her to get an M.B.A. She found Atlas Venture, a VC firm
       It   was 1989, and no one Richardson knew had any idea what venture
capitalists did.      She grabbed a book on venture finance and started read-
ing. "I     thought   it   was the coolest thing        I   had ever            seen," Richardson said.
She stayed at Atlas more than six years, promoted again and again until
she reached associate, helping to bring in deals including Firefly and Ver-
meer Technologies, which developed what                          is       now   Microsoft's FrontPage
publishing tool. "She was energetic and worked hard," said Atlas partner
Barry Fidelman. Richardson's biggest value to the firm, he                                     said,   was her
ceaseless networking.           She    spoke at university panels                     and garnered           local
press as a rare woman in venture capital. Her good looks and self-
described flirtatious manner didn't hurt: They got her calls returned more
quickly. The public attention brought more deals to Atlas. And it was at
the networking fiinctions in the early 1990s that Richardson                                     met people
like   John Doerr,         Intel cofounder       Gordon Moore, and                       local   technology
the top annual technology gatherings.                   With Amram                    at the   meeting was
another Individual employee                   whom Amram                   seemed        to like       a lot, a
disheveled young salesman named Bill Bales. "I liked him personally,"
Richardson said of Bales. "He was so                     fiill   of energy, and he was fim to
hang around with."
       That same      year, a   new Chicago        venture firm recruited Richardson to
join them as a partner. JK&B Capital was flush with money from investor
software expert.           JK&B     had   hit after hit, fiinding                Exodus Communica-
tions,      Phone.com, and other then-stars.                     On        one of Richardson's               trips
west, Bales tried to sell her on a small company he was working for called
Quote.com Inc. She wasn't interested. But when he mentioned his other
made her and many of her contacts rich. Interwoven prospered because
public offering in October 1999, were far from fabulous, as                                    was    its   second
CEO,        a gregarious salesman               named          Steve Farber.        The company             tried to
companies.          Now        chairman,    Ong had             problems with Farber, and eventu-
ally the rest          of the board did         as well.       Richardson, an Interwoven director,
often flew out to Los Altos to calm the troops. Farber "was focused on
the    wrong       things      —saving money, not leading or                     strategy," she said.
because she was one of the most active in inspecting the business and had
developed a good relationship with him.                              JK&B       chairman David Kronfeld
said that         one of Richardson's best attributes was her                            ability to   form such
close       bonds with entrepreneurs. "She                       clearly       had a very hands-on             rela-
was so good that he got the wrong                              idea,    sometimes suggesting that the
two of them run off together. Eventually,                              after a final     blowup by Ong, the
board asked Richardson to                       fire      Farber,      and she      did.   Interwoven went
looking for both a              new   CEO and new investors, and wound up with win-
ners in 1998: veteran software executive                             Martin Brauns and Foundation
Capital, both of               which agreed          to get involved            on the condition        that the
                                       (   92    )        JOSEPH MENN
      By      then, Richardson            had begun dating Lee, who reported                           to the
CEO. When the new Interwoven CEO found out that one of his lieu-
tenants was dating one of his directors, he told the other board                                        mem-
bers even as       Lee        resigned.   Three weeks           later,   Richardson was             also asked
easier for us by screwing up," the other director said. "I'm not a hard-
core moralist, but serious people don't do this sort of                                   stuff.    She was a
complete amateur."
      Ong      said    he knew about the relationship between Lee and Richard-
son before the           new    CEO       did.   He     didn't act       on the information because
so    much     else    was going on, including                  a fierce board debate about the
company's direction. But Ong said it "absolutely" bothered him. "It really
caught        me   off guard. It         was so out of the norm                     for   me.   I   would say
things in executive staff            I   expected to be private, and other people would
know about         it.   It   caused problems at the board                   level."   While Richardson
had done good things                for Interwoven,             Ong      said,     he was relieved          when
she   left.
stage executive at other firms as well,                        and she           called a   few people she
knew.    The meeting with Amram was                           the   first   of what she had expected
would be        a series       of exploratory      efforts to find the             companies she would
work    with. After he told her about Napster,                              it   would be the        last   such
meeting.
By then, Richardson had known Amram for nearly ten years. She
had known Bill Bales for several years as well, and she knew he would be
Napster's vice president of business development, often the second most
that together, he and Richardson could handle any problems with Fan-
said. "I wasn't going to fly to Boston to check him out. I didn't think Yosi
would get involved if the guy was psycho." Richardson didn't stop to
think about how big Amram's equity stake was, and if that might influ-
ence his        judgment. She also didn't consider Amram's history of rash
investments.         And      Bales's presence            should not have reassured her. Farber
had     fired   him from Interwoven                     for failing to        remember where meetings
were being held and for showing up to give                                 sales presentations         with noth-
ing more than a crumpled piece of paper, according to both Lee and Ong.
(Bales said he         was    fired      because Farber believed he had spilled the beans
about Farber 's        unprofessional conversations with Richardson. In a subse-
quent interview. Bales said he wasn't fired at all, but resigned.) And the
there as well.
tive lifestyles are          embraced and neckties                    are scarce as snow, the              rumpled
and dark-haired             Bill Bales        was unusual. Outwardly laid-back much of the
time, he could collapse in tears at a mistake or                               grow        so frantically excited
that he      would      slap himself to                calm down. Bales loved the pace of the
wheeling and dealing in the                        Valley,    an atmosphere that could not have
been more different from that of                         his days playing Little                League baseball
in rural     Thomson, Georgia.                 Bales dropped out of the University of Geor-
gia to    work       at a   brokerage in Atlanta, but he was already thinking about
how     to   make     a serious splash. "I've always                   wanted         to   do something big        in
business. That's what had motivated me," Bales told Georgia's Augusta
      If Bales's southern accent                   made       it   clear   he didn't        hail   from the usual
background, he also didn't act                         much    like the others             once he had arrived.
At Amram's           Individual, Bales             made      overtures        on behalf of the Massachu-
setts    firm to buy Silicon VaUey start-up Quote.com, which gave up-to-
he was described as such by the media. That was not, however, how
                                          (   94   )     JOSEPH MENN
founder Chris Cooper saw               it.   Cooper had         started the     company    in    1993
with his savings years before he hired Bales. "The only founder was me,"
Cooper       said. Bales     worked     at the California             company      for at least five
Interwoven, and that firm's           IPO     stock also would do            him weU.
      Everywhere Bales went, he made an impression. After Interwoven,
Bales began a    new venture in 1998 with television reporter and close
friend   Nina Chen. The pair attended a class on Internet video production
given by Csaba Fikker, a Hungarian immigrant living in the Bay area.
After class one day, Bales and               Chen approached           Fikker about turning his
postproduction       facility into a         new   firm,   and Fikker joined them          at   News
Direct.   The      firm produced video press releases and then news                             stories
about businesses, posting them online. Funded by Bales and his old boss
Amram, who served as chairman, News Direct changed its name to
ON24. Subsequent investors included former Netscape CEO Jim Barks-
dale, former Times Mirror senior vice president Ed Johnson, and
Dataquest Inc. founder Dave Jorgensen, and the company hired Sharat
Sharan    as   CEO.       Bales stayed on as the salesman and dealmaker. "BiU                      is   a
dreamer, a great businessman," Fikker                      said.   "But he can get way out of
line.   He   never pays attention to details, timing, what costs what."
      Bales's single-mindedness got                him   into trouble       when   his personal fife
July 4 hoHday in 1999, Bales told her how nice she looked that day. Then,
Cherkassky        said,   he mouthed the words             "I   want   to fiick you."   Cherkassky
was upset but       in a precarious position at the                company, nearing the end of
her supervisor, and Bales was told to leave the office for good. "Bill does
not understand the concept of no,'" Fikker                                  said. "If     he wants to get into
a    room and      there's      no door, he             will    go through the              wall."   Amram      said
that Sharan probably                wanted to get            rid   of Bales anyway and seized on the
incident to       make        his   move. Bales agreed that Sharan wanted him gone
beforehand        —   after    all,   he had suggested that the directors get rid of
Sharan instead. As for the Cherkassky incident, Bales said he merely
mouthed an         off-color        punch         line to a joke.           Chen        said she could see     both
sides. "Bill's personality            is   somewhat            erratic,"     she said.
charge and was ordered to spend two days in                                      jail,   then join California's
first-offender        program and pay monthly                           fines while         on probation. But
Bales failed to enroU in the program.                          And when             the judge ordered      him    to
appear at a hearing. Bales skipped that as weU. This time, the judge issued
a warrant for Bales's arrest.
The docket sheet summary of the proceedings in the case goes on for
fine in July 1994.             His car troubles continued into                            his   time at Napster:
Bales's California license                 was suspended               in   1999 and remained that way
more than two             years   later.
                                       (    96     )      JOSEPH MENN
According to the woman's sworn statement, she had dated Bales for three
years before his             move    east.    During       that time, he abused alcohol; slapped,
bit, and restrained her; and threatened her with a kitchen knife. The rela-
       It      wasn't enough. Bales found out where her                            new        office     was and
showed up there four days                     in a row.        Then he   figured out          where she        lived
and began coming there                  as well,     even though she wouldn't open the door
to him. After               midnight one January night,                  Bales's ex-girlfriend              heard
someone          outside.         She was on the phone with a police dispatcher when
her bedroom                window    broke. She fled back to the bathroom and locked
herself inside until the police came. By then, the prowler had left the
scene.
"I have not stayed at my residence since that incident for fear that
Bales will return and hurt me," she wrote three weeks                                   later.     "His stalking
has    become more brazen, and                    it is   clear that   he   is   becoming more            violent.
Bales has followed me, called                     me and         harassed    me    for over a year             and a
half       I   believe that Bales        is    not mentally balanced, and coupled with his
abuse of alcohol,             I   believe that he         is   extremely capable of violent               acts."     A
judge issued a temporary restraining order to keep Bales away from the
woman and              her family for three years. (Bales said the woman's statement
contained exaggerations and that he doesn't have a drinking problem.)
       In most walks of               life,   an estrangement from                reality         is   not a good
thing. Yet in early stage business development, in                                 which the job               is    to
bring money and talent to aid something quite small, it has some advan-
tages. That is truer in Silicon VaUey than elsewhere, and it was truer than
ever there in 1999. Bales's friend Adrian Scott, an early Napster investor
and adviser from San Francisco, had backed                             a Bales    company before Nap-
ster    and would do so again                  at Bales's       next venture. "Bill          is   a challenge to
You have to create the perception that they're going to get pushed out if
they don't get in now. That takes a huge amount of energy and nerve.                                    You
can't   be focused too    much on          reality,      because you're selling a dream."
When Napster moved to San Mateo to take its shot at the big time,
Shawn and      Parker weren't the only ones in the dark.                         Amram       didn't    know
about John Fanning's or Bales's legal problems, and he hadn't read Seth
Greenstein's lawsuit-defense               memo          before investing. Richardson didn't
know anything about Fanning, and she knew far less than she should
have about her friend Bales. She didn't                      know about          the people      who had
looked    at investing in              why they had passed. And
                               Napster or                                                   perhaps most
worried.   Amram assured her it wasn't,                    and he told her about the Green-
stein   memo. And that was enough to                        convince her. She was foolish for
not doing at least a          modicum of due              diligence       and speaking to a lawyer
on her own. But        it's   also true that          CD        burners were rare at the time
playable only through the low-quality speakers that were then typically
sold for desktop PCs.           Most       likely,       you would take only            a    song or two
from    a given artist, she thought. If they                 were good enough, you would go
out and buy the    CD.
     Richardson bought 333,000 Napster shares from John Fanning                                        at   30
cents each    and joined him and                Amram       to     form   a   three-member board of
directors,   with Fanning        as   chairman.           Then         she subleased     some adjacent
office space in   San Mateo from John Lee's Xtime, where she                                 still   planned
to   work some    days.       With    Napster, Richardson decided that she had to
keep nearly     as quiet as      Xtime did about                 its   plans.    The   office space       was
appropriately anonymous,              on the upper              ffoors    of an aging off^off^white
                                  (   98    )      JOSEPH MENN
bank building           in   San Mateo's 1950s downtown. Richardson                         also decided
to move fast to raise more money. After Napster's June release in a test
turn into the ultimate case of viral marketing, with                                 word of mouth
spreading        it   faster   than any advertising could. But the usage was already
straining Napster's capacity,              and the system kept crashing. If the positive
buzz was replaced by griping about the crashes, Napster could die even
before   its first official release.
       Soon   after      Shawn and Parker              arrived in   San Francisco, Bales drove to
Dzindzichashvili's house to meet them. Accompanied by girlfriend Holly
Shin and a large golden                  retriever, Bales         took the two teenagers out to
breakfast to learn           more about the company he had just joined. Parker was
used to explaining Napster by then, having pitched to so                                  many    investors
and gotten mostly              positive initial reactions.           But even Andy Evans, who
had promised money the next                     day, wasn't      much of a      preparation for Bales.
As Bales got more and more enthusiastic, his voice rose to the point of
so they could pick up something to get around in. On the drive. Bales sat
Shin in front and the golden retriever in the back, sandwiched between
Napster's founders.                The   Valley's future stars explained that neither                    of
them had         credit cards       and were too young to rent                 a car in   any    case, leav-
ing Bales a bit bewildered about what to do. They suggested that Bales
rent the car while they stayed out of sight, then turn over the keys.                                  The
ploy worked.
       During         their first   two days     in the office,     Shawn and Parker began              set-
ting up the computers and other gear they needed to tend to the Napster
with her, and scurried off. The third time they ran into her, someone else
called out "Eileen,"        and the        woman        turned. In the next second,                Shawn
and Parker whipped their heads around to look                           at   each other.      Whoops,
their eyes said in chorus.        This      is   our   CEO.
      Their    first   encounter with Bales had been one surprise.                      Now meeting
the   CEO      by accident was a second. By the end of the                        first   week,    as the
the stunners didn't abate with time —they grew more common. "The fre-
world experience to process what was happening to us. It really felt like
we were       in a movie, even        back then. Something crazy would happen, and
we'd   say,   'That's going in the movie.'"
      Had     Parker been more experienced, he would have realized that the
next thing that was supposed to happen in the movie was the formulation
of a plan for      how    Napster would make money. But for different reasons,
neither Bales nor Richardson                seemed      to think that mattered            much.    Bales,
      That's not to say there were no early debates about direction: There
were plenty, and they were chaotic. Parker would                             call strategy    meetings
and use the whiteboard to explain what he thought the company's next
steps should be. "I        would put on           a presentation for Bill          and Eileen, and
halfway through, she would                  start      screaming and running around the
office, saying,        'We have   so   much       to do!' Bill      would     say, 'That's brilliant!
We're going to be a $10 billion company!' And I would say, 'Wait, I'm not
finished yet.'"
monthly     rates for basic            and premium            service,   then adding pay-per-view
revenues on top of that.                   A   separate issue    was who would keep whatever
money came        in.   At one         extreme, the Napster crew considered offering the
record labels every cent from the sale of music, while Napster would keep
the profits from selling items like rock-'n'-roll merchandise.                                But how               to
structure a legitimate and sustainable business was simply not the focus.
Fanning's deputy,         Tom         Carmody, flew out from Hull once                     for   an inspec-
tion.   When he was         done, he called everyone together. "A business                               is   like a
person," Carmody said. "Napster has a spirit. It has a body. But it doesn't
have a brain."
      One   of the       first   sketches of the Napster plan was                         drawn      in early
October 1999, when               it   had 150,000       registered users           and 22,000 simulta-
neous    users.   (Some people have questioned                     Napster's claims for the                   num-
ber of registered users               it   had, which    is   a natural reaction to a figure that
log-on names. Users could register more than once at Napster, but the
most     common         reason people reregister at other Internet service firms                                     is
that they forget their passwords. Napster's servers stored users' passwords
tively few people were banned from Napster before the service went dark,
and many families shared one user name. So the logical conclusion is that
the highest figures were only modest                          exaggerations. Ritter          and another
engineer    who    kept tabs on internal               traffic reports believe            that the service
had more than 40 million users                     at its peak.)   The main            author of the four-
page strategy document, which was discovered in litigation                                  later   but kept
out of the public court               file,    has never been established. Parker said                        it   was
the result of groupthink, the record of a written discussion in progress.
Meant     for internal eyes only, the conversational paper lays out a "road
map summary" of the new company's goals, showing that even then, the
point was to cash out, not to make money the old-fashioned way, improve
the technology for its own sake, or make sure the law was being followed.
said.   As much        as   any document that has emerged, the October plan also
reveals a strategy that            comes        close to a dictionary definition of extor-
to any music they want, absolutely free" —the author explains that the
essential to our efforts." And the deal itself would be a trap: The plan was
record industry entirely." The document makes plain that the key to get-
ting rich      was     to get as     many users as quickly                  as possible,   and that the
good news was            that this       was happening             already.    "We     already   know we
can grow the user base.                  The     direction taken after this point                is   trivial.
We      can   sell   our user base out to a portal for a few hundred million, or
take the following steps to create a billion-dollar company."                               Those       steps
included hiring top managers and programmers and, again, getting top-
flight   VC fianding.
       There was one           solid reason for not            choosing a business model that
aimed     at profitability.       Many        of the copyright laws and their interpreta-
tions    by the courts hinged on where the money went. Taping                               a record for
profitless for the          time being. Fortunately for that approach, the stock
market and venture              fiinders       were more tolerant of red ink than ever
before.
Since user growth was happening by itself, Richardson and Bales set
hiring and fijnd-raising as top priorities. Their                         first    hire in California         was
Ali Aydar, the twenty-four-year-old former Chess.net engineer,                                       who     hap-
pened to be working just a mile away                        at his third struggling start-up.                John
Fanning       called    Aydar      first,    and Aydar         didn't believe         him when he             said
Shawn had won fimding for his idea. But Aydar called Shawn, who said
it was all true, and he met Shawn and Parker for dinner the next evening.
"At first, I didn't get how big it could be," Aydar said. "But Sean Parker is
a great pitch guy,          one of the best              I've ever    met." Parker and              Shawn ran
through      how      they planned to grow, then face the labels and                            make        a deal.
Suddenly, Aydar did get it. He lay down in the booth and looked at the
restaurant ceiling. "Oh my God," he said then. "I knew at that moment it
was going        to   be huge.     I   was    like,   'I    will   do anything       to be part of           Nap-
ster.'"    Soon Aydar        satdown with Richardson on a bench outside Napster
and told her that           he had one big concern. He knew John Fanning better
than anyone, including Shawn. "Are you sure you can handle him?" Aydar
asked her. She said she was sure, and he joined the company.
      Aydar was        a rarity    on Napster's            fledgling engineering team.                He     was   a
a month."
Kessler was a pleasant and bookish forty-year-old who had taken a wan-
the Web portal later bought by Disney, staying eleven months at that job.
His claim to fame came more than a year after that, when Kessler
ReplayTV's principal founder, Anthony Wood.                             "We just        kind of had dif-
ferent opinions         and started       to have      some      personality conflicts."
respect him, said firm founder Chris Cooper. (Kessler said he clashed
with others       at the firm           and then        quit,     though he acknowledged that
Cooper "was       definitely ready to get rid               of me.")
      Bales   knew      Kessler from Quote.com, and he introduced the engineer
to Yosi    Amram         before Napster             moved       west. Kessler and   Amram had a
series    of meetings about one business and another.                            When Amram and
Bales described Napster, Kessler was reluctant to join, in part because he
was alarmed that John Fanning had sold some of                                 his personal shares to
Richardson and others. Normally, founders are the                             last to   cash out. "That
was the thing that reaUy bothered me," Kessler                           said. Kessler      asked Fan-
ning about      it,   and Fanning said not to worry, that the                    rest   of the company
would be worth $10                billion      one day soon.          And Fanning passed along
Greenstein's white paper                on the company's           legal defenses. "My reading on
John was that he was a sales guy, unrealistically optimistic to the point of
home and pressed him to join, telling Kessler that he wouldn't have to
work     constantly and could                   still      spend time with             his       young daughter. That
part of the pitch                  was probably even more                   unrealistic than Fanning's pro-
jected market                value for the firm.             But Kessler signed on nonetheless, even-
tually     buying more than two hundred thousand shares and imagining
himself on the road to riches.
      At       Napster, Kessler understood                         some     issues very well,                and he knew
whom       to call            on other        points.      But     as at    Quote.com, Kessler developed
few fans underneath him. Some complained that he took                                                    credit for tech-
nical work that they had done. In one emotional dispute, Kessler vetoed a
decision by the rest of the executives to grant Ritter's wish and list him in
But John Fanning protected him, and Kessler would outlast Fanning's
In Boston, Ritter was still running the back-end                                                    server,       and he was
reluctant to             gamble on a move west. After a                             series   of talks with Richard-
son, he agreed to fly out                        and discuss the terms that could change                                     his
mind.      On the plane, he                   tapped out the            state   of things on his laptop. "The
current design, version 2.0,                      is    in   many       respects a hack," Ritter wrote. "It
victim to              its   own    success. It       is   not    stable,   not scalable in any real sense,
and    realistically              not feature-complete. Version 2.1 has                             made         great strides
over version 2.0 in the area of                            stability.   Numerous bugs have been found
and squashed, but unfortunately                              as   bugs are          fixed,       more introduce them-
selves.    .   .   .   The    harsh truth        is    that, realistically, the current server                       backend
is   not scalable."
      Ritter            made       it   to the Napster offices about 11 p.m.                            on       a Friday    and
was met            in the conference            room         by Shawn, Parker, Richardson, Bales, Ali
Aydar, Bales's girlfriend. Holly Shin,                             who was working                  as Napster's secre-
who seemed           to share Ritter's mission of keeping the system running.                                 But
after the meeting,             Aydar drove Ritter toward                         a hotel that Shin            had
booked him          into,   and Aydar was remarkably open.
       Aydar was excited about Napster, and he told Ritter what he knew
about what was happening behind the scenes.                                      Most     important, Aydar
said that       John Fanning was             still         calling the shots, albeit           from thousands
of miles away.           The two stopped                   at a   Denny's restaurant            at   4 a.m. and
began a friendship that would endure through everything that was to
come.     It   occurred to Ritter that                it    didn't really matter      who was         nominally
in charge of the         company. He, Aydar, and Shawn were the technical lead-
ers.    If they    grew unhappy enough                     to leave, there    would be nothing           left for
the chiefs be in charge of Ritter spoke to his boss at BindView and told
him how torn he was, and his boss told him that if he turned down Nap-
ster, there would be other great opportunities ahead. But he added that if
Ritter could make the critical difference at Napster, helping to turn it into
the offices in San Mateo. After three                              months with grandmaster Dzin-
dzichashvili,        Shawn and Parker moved                       to the hotel as well.
        As   at   most   start-ups, stock             and stock options were               a   major draw for
many. As the          first   outsider to invest for equity,                 Amram        had negotiated an
especially        good   deal.   He   got 100 percent of a                 new    class   of Series    A Senior
Preferred stock, with special rights that                         would prove important years              later.
For those, he paid the company 20 cents apiece. Most of the other early
employees and investors got Series                           A Junior Preferred stock. Amram got
1 million         of those as well, direct from John Fanning, at the surprisingly
settled, sales     by Fanning and the company                          left   Fanning with 4.9 million
Junior Preferred shares,           Shawn with                  3 million, Chicago financier               Jim
Gidwitz with 896,000, and Bales with 733,000. Richardson, Adrian
Scott, Aydar,      and Chess.net consultant Brian McBarron brought up the
rear,   while Parker and Ritter got only options. (Later they got stock as
well.   Both Shawn and Parker would                            sell   some of     their shares to other
chairman of the board and was not shy about giving advice to Richardson
and the    others.   And     he had the power to back up his words, since he                              still
had enough shares           to veto any         new         class     of stock, which would be the
standard      method    for bringing in a venture-capital firm.
day from people willing to volunteer. I had never seen anything like that,"
Dembo      said.   Napster being what                it   was, the hiring         boom produced what
she called "a most unusual collection of people."
       More than one of the new               staffers         appeared to be transgender, and at
least   one used    first   the men's bathroom and then the women's.                             Many were
under twenty-one and looked               it.   The         sight of odd-looking employees                was
so   commonplace         that    when     a    few teenagers sporting                  Mohawk       haircuts
were hanging around late one night, the Xtime employees in the adjoin-
ing cubicles thought nothing of                 it.       Later, they         were compelled to explain
their reasoning to incredulous local police: It turned out the                                   punks were
exactly   what they might have appeared                          to be to outsiders         —   street   thugs
interested in stealing Napster's computers.
       There was one new Napster employee who admitted that he was sex-
ually obsessed with         young      boys.   The         confession disgusted the core people,
but they were just too busy to                fire    him. Better hires included senior mar-
keting executive Liz Brooks, a Bales recruit                              who had been           director of
A&R,      or artist and repertoire, at               Sony and Virgin. Under her worked an
immensely       built   man named Mark Hughes,                           an M.B.A.         who   referred to
the night, often sleeping under their desks, some would sneak off to the
aside     and told him that            his credit record              was the only one of the four that
qualified,       and he balked              at signing the lease alone.                 There would be no
MTV-style house              to    throw       parties in.         The       foray wasn't a complete loss,
however. Bales asked the real-estate agent if she knew any finance execu-
tives     looking for work, and she produced the experienced and grand-
motherly Lyn Jensen,                   who became             Napster's        first   CFO       and one of     its
steadiest hands.          Everyone made                his    own      living arrangement.           Shawn and
Parker     moved        into a nondescript two-bedroom apartment nearby. For a
long time, there was no                 fiirniture inside except for a                mammoth television
set. "I   don't   know       if   we   ever used       it,"   Parker     said.     "We were too busy."
     In San Mateo, the crew worked                            late,   often ordering Italian food from
a restaurant       named      Amici's. "Fun, early on,                   was going       to   24 Hour Fitness
at   two    in the      morning and            lifting weights,"               Shawn     said. "I    tend to be
obsessive, so if         I   could get enough                 work done during                the day,   I   would
reward myself by going to the gym." Even                                 when he had time            to explore,
Shawn       said, "it's really         hard to find a scene out here                    that's   not a bunch of
geeks." Instead, after              some long programming                          sessions, the     young men
blew      off^   steam with drinking games, throwing bottle caps into each
other's beers.      The      habit of smoking marijuana upstairs                           became more reg-
ular after the          crew discovered that the Amici's delivery boy doubled                                 as a
drug    dealer.    On     request, he         began hiding pot under the                   plastic   prop in the
middle of the pizza that kept the                            lid   from being squashed down. Like
average teenage pot smokers, instead of the founders of one of the biggest
began with asking the delivery boy                  if    he could bring anything that would
go in a bowl, referring to a pipe. Soon, they just asked him to bring soup.
Most smoking was done on                  the roof, but once         it   went    further,        with Bales
and Parker slipping into an                office   and closing the door.                  A    telltale   odor
seeped out.        "The     entire office reeked," said Ritter,            who        admitted taking a
hit himself After a             second incident, both Ritter and Shawn told Parker
never to smoke dope in the building again.
       The       lack of a      life   outside the office also led to                      more than one
romance, another            classic side effect in the start-up            world. Richardson had
worked       at   Xtime     since August,     and she thought she could continue there
while helping Napster. For about                    six   weeks, she did. But Xtime, which
was growing by more              traditional   means, wasn't nearly              as    much      fiin.   And   it
didn't help her complicated relationship with Lee when he hired a volup-
tuous and sweet young recruiter named Jessie Garrehy. Lee began dating
Garrehy,         who   also   helped Napster's recruiting            efforts.     A messy and emo-
tionally         wrenching love         triangle    followed as Lee saw both                         women.
Richardson had some rough days, and                          after   one       last    misstep on Lee's
part, she finally told            him    she was leaving       Xtime        to   work          exclusively at
Napster. "I was still loyal to John, really, but I'm an extremely competitive
lawyer. Seth Greenstein,                who had      provided the legal logic behind the
company's copyright defense, was in Washington, and he didn't do corpo-
rate    work. Fanning had found Greenstein through a chain of                                        referrals
that started with one of his               first calls,    to inteUectual-property                 and tech-
nology       specialist     Andrew       Bridges, of the premier Silicon Valley firm of
Wilson           Sonsini.     Now      that Napster        had moved west. Fanning urged
Richardson to hire Bridges, since he'd already laid the groundwork.
Richardson knew others                 at the firm,      which represents             as   many    as half     of
the top companies in the Valley. She went in to meet one of her contacts
and explained what Napster was about, and the lawyer seemed                                          excited.
She was floored. How could they turn down such a hot business,
that one of the very first articles written about Napster, appearing on the
ning down. When the article appeared. Fanning called Bridges to deny
having made the statement. Bridges thought the whole thing was unpro-
fessional.     Richardson blamed Fanning for the                               ZDNet       story   and    felt    she
had looked foolish in approaching the firm without knowing the back-
ground. "That was the               first        time     I   ruined     my     reputation for Napster,"
As THE HIRING SPREE ROLLED ON,                                Napstcr's board           moved on         its   other
top priority: raising           money from                angel investors.        The       obvious place to
start   was Ron Conway, head of Angel Investors                                 LP    and    a Silicon Valley
celebrity.    Amram       got the ball rolling with an October 7 e-mail to                                     Con-
way and       his partner.      Bob Bozeman.                  "Napster, with      its   proprietary Music-
find, share     and download              digital     music over the Internet. Recently, 'MP3'
has replaced        'sex' as    the most searched-for term                     on the      Internet,"     Amram
wrote. After recounting the past problems with broken links and the
breakthrough of having one giant, continuously updated mass library of
music,       Amram      wrote that Napster already had two hundred thousand
registered users offering 3.5 million                           files.   All of that, without having
spent a dime on marketing.                  "I   think this would be an exciting opportunity
for   Angel     Investors.      The       angel round seems to be highly oversubscribed,
but    if   you move quickly          I   would       like to try        and get Angel         Investor's        [sic]
in." It     was a pitch perfectly geared                  for   Conway         —the company         is   growing
fast, it's    on the    Internet,         and other investors want                   in.   Better   move         fast.
ments got larger venture fiinding down the road. Yet by late 1999, it
worth $5 million. Three years later, as Altos was slumping, Conway quit,
spending his time on charity efforts and advising other start-ups, always
taking a piece of the equity for his services. After briefly returning to
Altos and helping         sell it to       another firm, a deal that netted him $2 mil-
lion,   Conway was        itching to get back in the              game      full-time.     He   bought a
majority stake in a computer-instruction firm called Personal Training
Systems, took over as           CEO,        and resolved to either make               it   big or   sell it.
Building the struggling company proved hard, but at long last, as the
company was running out of money, Conway pulled off another lucra-
tive sale.
way. In      fact, in a   rather charming way.             That he cared about the human
side    was very      clear."    In    fact,   the    human          side   was Conway's obvious
met more     investors with     good        ideas,    it   didn't    seem    like   enough money. In
late   1998 he    started over with             Angel       Investors, raising           $30 million        in
that   went public with no          profits     and   speculative ideas, a             wave epitomized
by the November 1998          IPO ofTheGlobe.com,                         a profitless enterprise       run
spurred by day trading and chat-room hype. That day may have been the
nadir of rationality, the bottom of a shde that had begun with the 1995
IPO of Netscape. Netscape's main product was also free, the most popu-
With TheGlobe and its ilk, the traditional due diligence performed
sound idea at the core or not. The rational thing to do was get into as
many     companies as possible as soon as possible, wait for the IPO, then
sell   and make a bundle. Just         like the       economics of the record industry, you
needed only one monster             hit to      make up       for a      hundred no-shows.
       Such lack of scrutiny made                for       some appalling companies. While
there are    now hundreds           of examples,           it is   worth    recalling a       few   for the
sake of context. There was Pixelon, which claimed to have a                                   new system
for transmitting video over the                 Web.       In fact, the firm's top-secret locked
boxes guarded off-the-shelf goods bought from other companies. Michael
Fenne, the entrepreneur behind Pixelon                             Inc., raised      $30 million from
investors,    none of whom bothered                to get a routine records check,                   which
would have shown that Fenne was not what he claimed.                                     He   was   actually
raised. Fenne blew more than half of the take on one of the largest parties
Las Vegas had ever seen, hiring performers such                                    as the    Dixie Chicks,
Tony Bennett, and           the   Who       to play.   The       concert was recorded, theoreti-
videos for niche teen audiences unserved even by obscure cable television
channels. There were a             number of fairly           serious problems with the idea,
including the fact that studio production                    is   exorbitantly expensive            and the
reality   that Internet consumers weren't ready to spend money for much of
that a cursory check             by the    directors should have flagged.                     The founder
and chairman of the              firm.    Marc     Collins-Rector, was living with two of
the company's top officers.               One had been             his sexual partner since               both
had worked         at early Internet service provider                  Concentric Network Corp.,
when      the partner was sixteen.         The other, a good-looking ex-Disney child
actor    named Brock            Pierce,   moved into the house at age seventeen and
was paid a $250,000              salary for unspecified duties at                    DEN. Even       after a
Only      after the   Los Angeles Times reported that Collins-Rector had been
living    with Pierce since before Pierce reached the age of consent and that
other young         DEN employees had been pressured to take social trips with
the trio did the       company        collapse, filing for         bankruptcy              as the three   men
fled the country. Collins-Rector                   was arrested         in Spain in the spring of
2002, and the United States began extradition proceedings over federal
sex charges.
pet-supply store to make a national splash, in August 1999, but the battle
stock out over a clifl" and down. That collapse wasn't much of a surprise,
since the sales Pets.com did close                     were      at a loss.   In retrospect, perhaps
shipping twenty pounds of kitty                     litter   by next-day mail       at a   deep discount
wasn't the most sustainable of business plans, even if pets can't drive.
Pets.com shut        its   virtual doors in           November 2000, with               its    omnipresent
sock puppet as one of its most valuable remaining                             assets.
investors saw it, the entrepreneurs held aU the high cards. If you asked too
many questions or dawdled too long, they could walk down the block and
get cash from         someone         else.    Conway         didn't dawdle.       He    used his prodi-
gious network, always pressing for the latest gossip on                             what was hot and
then investing quickly.              Then he worked               the all-too-receptive media to
hype   his finds.     Sometimes, he             tried    both tacks       at the   same       place.   One   of
Conway's investments was                  in   Red Herring,        a   San Francisco magazine cov-
ering the venture industry                   Conway would              give editorial director Chris
fiand's new investments. Then he would walk down the hall and pitch the
business plan unless the author had been vouched for by                                  someone the
firm knew, like Conway.            What Conway did best was institutionalize the
relationship process.           He looked for who else was going in on a deal, then
followed      suit,   sometimes with only a two- or three-sentence description
of the product.         The important         thing was the pedigree of the managers
and the other         investors. If they     were good enough, they should be able to
get a later     VC     round.    And   if   they got that, the odds were they could go
      The actual product or service was irrelevant. And the more start-
public.
ups Conway backed, the more people came into his orbit that he could
pump for information. He became "the human router," in the words of
Netscape founder Marc Andreessen, who took Conway's money for his
infrastructure start-up          Loudcloud        Inc.
ier elite to    the north, and      many     of them wanted a piece. Red Herring pub-
lisher    Tony        Perkins    introduced       Conway          to      top     agent Jeff Berg of
International Creative            Management. Before                 long,      Hollywood   stars   Matt
Damon      and Ben Affleck,          who were       funding an Internet start-up of their
own, auctioned off an evening with themselves                            at a    Conway bash.
       Most     investors didn't put        money        in    Conway's funds because of the
star   power.   They put money            into the funds, if they could get in, because                 it
lapse if the      mania stopped and the firms couldn't go                          public. "There's    no
way they can manage                 many companies," Bennet said. Of course,
                                   that
that's exactly what happened. By the fall of 2001, the $150 million flind
        But back      in   October 1999, getting Conway's fund on board was the
first   step for Napster to convince venture-capital firms that                           it   was the       real
thing.    And Conway and Bozeman                        told confidantes that Napster               was the
winner in     all     of Angel Investors          II,   the one that would multiply the fund's
total    investment        many   times over. Starting in late 1999, as Napster raised
its   second, or Series B, financing round, and taking two more bites the
following year, Conway's fund spent $1.5 million on Napster stock. For
months, he stayed away from the company's business. But twice in the
future,    when       Napster's survival and his investment were at stake,                         Conway
would come riding back.
        Strategically,      Conway's       initial       $250,000 investment was the most
important piece of the $2 million Series                        B round        that Napster closed in
A NOTABLE ABSENCE WAS Draper Atlantic. The Virginia venture firm had
won      the right to invest at 20 cents a share in August,                           when        it   loaned
Napster the emergency $50,000. But then                            it   passed on the Series       A round
that brought in     Amram and Richardson, largely because Fanning was still
in charge,       Amram said. But Draper's agreement with Fanning had been
worded      so poorly,      from Napster's perspective, that Draper                       felt it still      had
the right to invest later at the same low price.                         "Our understanding             is   that
Amram       in   December, during the Series                   B   round.     Amram was          not happy:
That would have amounted                   to the entire Series         B round at a 75 percent
discount.     So Lynch offered             Amram          an   alternative: He would swap the
current purchase right for a warrant to buy just 1 million shares,                                still   at   20
cents, at    any time over the next three                  years.       By   that time,   Lynch hoped,
Jurvetson firm in Silicon Valley. "Jim:              I   think   we    are miles apart,"        Amram
began. "The      company does not               believe   we have an agreement                 that   was
ever executed between              DA    [Draper Atlantic] and Napster. Even                    if there
was one, according           to the alleged     agreement        DA had the right to partici-
pate in the financing offering but chose not to do so."                             Amram       said    he
could offer only $25,000 worth of shares at 80 cents, or perhaps at 20
cents, if   he could legally do so without tripping over antidilution provi-
sions protecting the Series             B   shares already sold.
Tim Draper didn't appreciate getting put in the middle. "Either don't
Draper wrote         in an e-mail to all sides. "It         is   the   first   time in 11 years of
working with Jim Lynch               that he has gotten this kind of grief for a deal, so
      The   saga continued through the Series                    B and        into February,      when
Amram tried to         end    it   once more    as the stakes rose.       "Napster       is   beginning
to approach [venture firms] for our next                  round next week and            I    think that
having to discuss the              DA   history will not be beneficial to either of us,"
cussing the situation, in detail, with Tim, our offer to resolve the matter
didn't, leaving the    matter to fester for more than a year. Every time Nap-
ster closed    new   financing,     it   had   to disclose the unpleasant experience
with its first flinder. While the dispute was never revealed to the public,
gossip got    enough    circulation in the venture         world that one enterprising
investor later approached           Draper Fisher and offered to buy Draper
Atlantic's right to invest.    Lynch declined        to discuss the experience   beyond
this statement:    "We      have an investment right in Napster.         It   may be    the
best investment we've ever made. It              may be   the worst. Either way,   it   may
be the most noteworthy."
soared into the millions. The crew was beginning to have a tough time
      It   was   after   another chemically enhanced rave that                 Shawn and Sean
Parker returned          home and    flipped      on   MTV. They         caught a few seconds
                                             (   119)
of a news update about Napster                         —the       first   time they had heard the name
of their company broadcast.                       "We        weren't sure that we'd really seen                  it,"
Parker said. "We were pointing at each other and rolling on the floor.
Practically      all   my       dreams were playing out before                      my     eyes."   There were
other causes for celebration inside Napster's offices.                                     One      of the best
nights was in          November 1999, when                        Ritter's   team found       a    bug   that   had
been keeping a Ud on the amount of traffic on a single Linux                                          server.   For
months, the number of users simultaneously connected to a server
couldn't rise past a thousand.                    The problem was both                   a frustrating techni-
cal challenge and a serious issue of expense, since it meant that Napster
had   to   buy more and more                      servers to keep            up with demand. After the
team    finally figured          out was wrong and replaced the bad code in the ker-
nel, it    was     like   wrenching the valve                     off"   a fire hydrant.     The number of
users      and songs            listed       on    a       single    computer doubled immediately.
Another      night, the fourth version of Napster's search engine once again
doubled the amount of                    traffic   each server could bear. Ritter, Shawn, and
Ali Aydar blasted rapper Dr.                       Dre and danced on the                 tables,    mugging      for
each other's cameras. Ritter called Jessie Garrehy to come join them, and
she drove to the office in her pajamas.
      The Napster youth named                               the servers after bands, appropriately
savers on their PCs, and the hours many kept were rock-'n'-roll erratic,
who thought they were part of a                                 revolution    —   it's   just that they         were
among the precious few who were                                 correct.   Dot-commers            sold groceries
access, and they all thought they were changing the world. The year after
Napster's birth was the peak of the Internet frenzy and all the hype that
went with it. And the hype was key. Perhaps no profession in those heady
to outshout or outflirt each other into the                   minds   of the nearly as alarming
number of new technology              journalists.        Many PR pros        straight out of col-
lege   —some of them hired by                start-ups that        had yet to find a          CEO
would harangue            reporters       even    at    tiny websites with           offers   of hot
exclusives.     Often those       stories   turned out to be the release of version 1.1
of an unknown piece of software or a vague partnership deal in which no
money was changing             hands. But the unprecedented amount of cash
poured into dealing with the press made sense                          at the time.      Given the
speed with which angel and venture investments were taking place and
the slim evidentiary basis behind them, a clipping or two in a publication
that an investor         had heard of       —even         a single sentence in such a clip-
the work of the devil, the reporter would dutifiiUy call Napster for a
response.      The    secretary   who     picked up the phone at Napster would then
teU the reporter that no one was responsible for dealing with the press.
She would get a message            to Eileen Richardson
                                                                   —^would the       reporter   mind
checking back later to see           if   Richardson had responded?             When      there   was
no response, the story ran without                it.   But Richardson had reasons            for this
unorthodox approach.
       In part she was preoccupied with other concerns, including hiring
executives, sorting out Napster's             messy       capital structure,    and getting more
fiinding to keep the servers running.                   She   also didn't   have good answers to
the reporters' questions, since after reading up                            on the   law, she     was
increasingly worried that Napster                  would       lose in court.    And     too    much
enterprising reporting might turn                 up John Fanning's spotty background,
the lack of a business plan, or the antiestablishment ethic in the                        ojffice.
before the inevitable awakening of the sleeping giant that was the record
industry, the       more leverage         it   would have      to cut a     good   deal. If everything
kept going as it was, Napster would have an audience well into the mil-
lions,   along with a database about music consumers' habits that far out-
matched anything the record companies knew about                                their    own   customers.
Napster would be able to teU Warner Brothers that the average person
who had Cure MP3s on his computer was most likely to be interested in
finding new music by the Violent Femmes. Oh, and here are all those
users' Napster sign-on names if you want to reach them. In the best-case
scenario, the deal          would turn out             to   be a Trojan horse that would make
Napster even more powerful,                    at least     according to the October           memo. So
when        the Recording Industry Association of America                               called, appoint-
ments were made and then broken. Conversations with the other side
and to prevent the              RIAA      from learning more about the way the system
worked.       And    reporters were fed platitudes.                "My      initial   plan was to stay
      When      a story did break, being one of the few start-ups without                                 PR
helped perpetuate the sense that Napster was a true underdog, appealing
all   the    more   to    its   fan base. "It was David versus Goliath, and                        we had
David," Richardson              said.    She was smart enough to put Shawn forward                         as
sort binding publicly traded companies, Napster did little to dislodge the
misimpression.
      Websites run by geeks and for geeks were the                              first    to take note of
Napster and post                stories   with links to the             site.   Some of them soon
seemed       to feature         Napster every week.            News      sites that      focused on the
Napster fans as the head of ArtistDirect, a sales site for musicians like
Tom      Petty,      and such    critics as        CEO Dave Goldberg of music site Launch
Media        Inc.,    who   said Napster           was    "just a different          way" of getting pirated
music. It also cited copyright lawyers                          who    said that Napster              and    its   users
could be in legal trouble. Even                     if Napster qualified             under the Digital Mil-
lennium Copyright Act loophole                            for Internet service providers,                   it   would
have to take          down    infringing music as soon as                     it   was notified, they            said.
        The   article also featured            John Fanning,             who       identified himself as            one
of two cofounders, along with his nephew. Fanning called Napster "a
microcosm of what's happening on the Net."                                     And         Richardson laid out
her claim that Napster wasn't violating the law because                                       it   didn't host the
the legal position was tenuous, she stretched the truth at least twice. First,
she said, "We're going to follow                          all   the laws to the            letter,   including the
Digital Millennium Copyright Act."                              And      second, she said the               company
was     in talks with the        RIAA. "We're committed                        to   working with them."
        As   the      number of Napster                  users neared a million,               some      journalists
figured out that its office mate, Xtime, a normal start-up with legal tech-
to turn for access. They called Xtime spokesman Travis Murdock directly,
of North Beach. Strange as it may seem years later, many people in those
show prospective workers that their future colleagues were fun. For public
relations,       it   was an easy way to reach a                   lot   of reporters with their guards
down. And, of course, the people monitoring the companies' spending
weren't exactly in a state of high                       alert:   hence the         rise   of celebrity-emceed
wanted was Shawn, and Murdock had assured many in advance that they
could have some time with the wunderkind. After a while passed with no
sightings     of the    prime       attraction,      Murdock went around looking.
Alarmed      to learn that he wasn't             even in the building, Murdock asked
some Napster      executives    and learned the harsh         truth:   Shawn      wasn't     com-
ing, for the simple reason that             he wasn't even close to twenty-one. If he
was going to be in a        bar,    it   sure as hell wasn't going to be with half the
"Our urgent requests for a meeting were not taken seriously. We really
     Richardson retreated into "aw shucks" mode. She said that the threat
of a lawsuit was unfair, since Napster hadn't                 officially   launched yet and
was just beta    testing.   "We     are freaking four      months    old," she complained.
Wisely, she stuck to strategy and refused to say how many users Napster
had, since the figure would totally undercut the posture of a little start-up
with anti-industry rants. Since many knew that musicians got a tiny per-
centage of the industry's take, they had an easy target. And with little
grasp of the law or Napster's history, the firm seemed like one of the
good guys.
     The RIAA         finally filed the lawsuit          on December        6,   1999, in San
who took the time to read it. Filed by Los Angeles lawyer Russell Frack-
man and others on                 behalf of every major record company, the suit accused
Napster of contributory and vicarious copyright infringement. "In an
effort to ensure its users a safe                       haven for           piracy,    Napster promises and
delivers user anonymity,                 and even boasts that                 it   does not maintain logs of
uted are not obscure recordings of unknown or unsigned                                         artists.    Quite the
contrary, nearly every hit song                       by   every significant recording artist can be
       The     industry       came well armed with                   evidence. It        showed how Napster
was involved            in every step of the process, tracking                         when     users logged       on
and off and steering them                   to the desired            file   by    artist,   song   title,   and con-
nection speed. If a song disappeared because                                 its   owner logged        off,   Napster
would         find another copy of the                 file   and resume the download from                      there.
Worst of all, the company had bragged to users that they could "forget
wading through page after page of unknown artists." The suit attached a
Elvis Presley, the Beatles, Jimi Hendrix,                              Bob Dylan, and Bruce Spring-
steen. Since the statutory penalties for                            copyright infringement maxed out
at     $100,000 per work infringed, two hundred songs meant                                            at least   $20
million in potential damages. If the court determined that each copy of a
given song was a separate infringement, the figure could reach the tril-
lions of dollars. To early inquiries about its defenses, Napster said mainly
new     users to come. Napster                 was turning into the perfect technological
snowball.
chaos. "All of the resources on the technical side went to keeping the
servers up and running," Sean Parker said. "On the business side, every-
thing was reaction. There was no time to recognize that there was some-
thing awry with the                   way   the business was being run." Before long, the
Shawn and the others compared notes. They accepted the flindamen-
tal hard-line approach against the industry, but there was little progress
God. Parker thought he could do                         better.   And   everyone      knew John Fan-
ning was poison."
      Shawn, Parker, and Bales talked about quitting en masse and                                 starting
uncle,    "How          could he do this to me?" But the revolt always died at
Richardson's door.              It    hurt Richardson to refuse Shawn, but she told                       him
that he     had turned over the               rights to his creation, that legally he couldn't
leave    and then do the same thing elsewhere.                      "Bill    was   a proponent, as        was
Parker. It       was     me      that kept saying no," Richardson said. "Ethically,                         I
Shawn kept stoic about Richardson's rejections, for the most part. "I
Besides, Shawn added, "we had this whole theory internally, the technical
people. That all these questions about the business model and the legal-
ity — as long as we keep focusing on the technology and keep making the
system better, it will pull through eventually, even if we make bad busi-
ness decisions, as long aswe keep the servers stable and have it growing.
That's what we know how to do, so we'll focus on that."
    When new legal, corporate-structure, or financing worries came up,
Shawn would get distracted. Then he decided to stop bothering. "I finally
ended up saying, unless it affected whether or not we could afibrd to buy
a server to scale or             buy    a database server or something, I wasn't going to
pay attention."
As Napster's new users passed on the word to others, they also spoke
more and more to each other through chat rooms built into Napster's sys-
beginning of the year 2000, the company itself could reply to only a tiny
entice them with the opportunity to test new versions of the system and
Napster           staffers     began watching the chat rooms and nominating the most
helpful participants for moderator status.                                 Those moderators             in turn   nom-
inated others, and debates ensued in a                               new moderator e-mail list over
who was qualified                   to give advice             on the system and who was vouching
for whom.
debates over admission in any self- selecting club, the discussions could
get petty.             At      times,         one moderator would oppose electing anyone
sponsored by another moderator he didn't                                         like.   A    code of conduct was
distributed            on the moderator e-mail                         list,   requiring       them    all   to be both
locations, or] new clients in test." Moderators also got the authority to
In the way of the Internet, this led to prolonged arguments about users
lolu." On the moderator mailing list, some argued against all bans. "This
understand the majority of you are against the censorship the riaa is try-
ing to force upon us. Is there a reason that we are banning 'badword'
    The           subject       was one of the few among the moderators that prompted
Shawn         to take a stand. "I totally dislike                       what      is   happening here," he wrote
on February                   18, 2000, noting that the filters                             would catch the worst
abusers. "Are                 you   telling       me we        have banned over 5000 people simply
because they have cuss words in their username (even legitimate swears?)
I'm sure the value of these users in terms of contribution to the                                              commu-
nity far outweighs the fact that their usernames                                        may be   offensive."
ing curse words in a public channel." Since it was taking months to hire
alternatives to make the job easier, and understand that lesser evils often
times still make reasonable solutions." Ritter and Shawn discussed the
This three-way chat earned "Blaxthos,"                               who           didn't     know he was being
watched, his elevation to moderator:
       <BLAXTHOs> oh heh
       <BLAXTHOs>           yea, there are lots of different kinds                           now
       *Boydii7 (56K) [sharing 14                   files]    has joined.
<blaxthos> well, usually, the unit comes with a serial interface cable
personally
    <Do85>     I    have everything up and running                              its   just that     I   don't   know
        how        to transfer the songs                      I    downloaded onto the mp3
    <boyd117>         i'm leaving                 now      so cya     all   later
<Do85> yeah
nic backgrounds over,                     and they           tried again.      Again, they were confronted
by the message, and the guests turned to                                     their host in     wonderment. The
mother eventually got                     a     message through to                  Ritter,   who       discovered the
overlarge ban and hit the roof.
"I can't even imagine the horror," Ritter wrote to the moderators list.
"We   will   not have               this!       This could have been DISASTROUS from a                                 PR
perspective   —    this        is    disastrous /anyway/." Ritter stripped the offending
moderator of his status, ordered checks on old bans, and changed policy
manager of moderators, or MoM, and who took his orders from Ritter.
At times, disputes among the moderators would bump all the way up the
everyone, no matter what server and accompanying chat rooms they were
connected      to.   Shawn    agreed and put          Chang        in charge of the message
board, which was visible to any Web visitor. That exposure put Chang in
crown was Rick Fletcher, who had been running an                              unofficial         Napster
Frequently Asked Questions               site    on   his     own. The Napster               FAQ_was
incredibly useful to novice users,              and Ritter        tried for   months       to get the
company to purchase the site and give Fletcher a modest salary. He suc-
ceeded only after another dot-com made a bid for Fletcher and his work.
Before that happened, and before Fletcher had                        made     a   dime from Nap-
ster for his efforts,   he decided to make a             little    money by        selling   annoying
pop-up ads on the Napster FAQ_site. This outraged the                               puritans,      and a
debate raged on the moderator e-mail                   list   over whether Napster should
drop its link to Fletcher's unofficial page or take other action. Chang
an     IRC   chat,   which was how most                          sensitive         Napster business was con-
ducted. "Napster himself             isn't    making any money                            off this, so    why    is   rick
selling out?" Chang asked. "He's not selling out," the administrator
rise   out of the moderators on the e-mail                             list   by sending a message touting
"white power           —^wayne of KKK                    .   .   .   (even though            im   asian)." Fletcher
wrote Ritter in April that "more or less all the admins are really wanting
documents, pictures, even movies. Since the bandwidth that Napster was
eating up already clogged the networks at                                many companies,                the advent of
unrestrained video -swapping on such a scale could have caused such
havoc that the government might have been forced to intervene. Inside
Napster, executives decided to ignore Wrapster and hope                                            it   didn't get too
much      attention.   But Chang was ready with                               a quote, accusing          Wrapster of
"ripping off" Napster and "taking                   it       further."        Chang finally lost          his   moder-
ator status.     But with no one             else   paying              as    much        attention as he       had     to
policing Napster's publicly accessible message board, the posters                                          went nuts
in early     May.    An   average visitor saw posts like                           "l   JUST   TOOK A SHIT"           and
"why do jews have such                   big noses?" and                           felt   compelled to write to
academia. Colleges saw their networks clog badly.                             When       they investi-
gated, they discovered that Napster was sucking up virtually                             all   the avail-
to those      on campus, but more importantly,                     this also    slowed     all   campus
Internet     traffic,"   the administrators wrote               on February       1 to all       campus
residents.     "The use of Napster has now                   begun to impair the           vital      func-
tions (education, research) of our                 network to the point that some action
MUST be taken. At this point, the only option                         is   to block access to         Nap-
ster   from campus machines."                UCSD        set the   ban that    day,   and more than
a   hundred other campuses followed                       suit, either      because of bandwidth
issues or pressure        from the RIAA, which was tracking copyrighted music
going to student machines.
       The campus bans were              hotly debated and provided irrefiitable proof
that Napster          had become the fastest-growing application                         for the Net.
That drew stiU more media to the story, with the Los Angeles Times put-
ting Napster         on the front page         in February      2000 and the       New York           Times
doing the same in March. Closer to the hearts of the young                               men     at   Nap-
ster   was   MTV, which          brought a crew to the             office that spring      and turned
Shawn and Parker            into teen idols.        Of all   the media exposure that would
come, sometimes two or three national media interviews in a                                      day, the
MTV        segment proved one of the most                    difficult.     Shawn was          quiet   and
sometimes awkward.              It   was the   glib Parker      who wound up          with the most
excited about      it   with having to represent the company well. You wanted
to have a personality            and be seen            as   having a hot brand. But              at the    same
time, there    was      all    this pressure to act respectable," Parker said. "It                           was
always a struggle.        We were         constantly censoring ourselves: Certain words
solid facade, and we hadn't really established who we were." The coverage
alerted even viewers in            remote areas to the                desirability       and ease of use of
the program.
      Napster didn't want any more enemies, so                             it   largely stayed out of the
fight with universities over access to the system. Instead, it hoped that
students    would do          battle for   it.   "We         can't help the fact that       everyone lovez
Napster," one moderator wrote to his peers.                           "No       worries, after they block
sions such as the        ban of certain Internet                   privileges,"       Paulson wrote on his
website. "Higher education in                    America should be                free   of censorship and
complete administrative control." In his press interviews, Paulson con-
ceded that    many Napster              users were looking for copyrighted material, but
he argued that the innocent shouldn't be punished along with the guilty.
Paulson was also honest                 when          he said he wasn't using the system for
piracy himself          A member of several bands while                          in   high school, he used
poster boy, and Paulson had                 more than          a   dozen chats with Shawn, Parker,
and Napster product manager Brandon Barber. Paulson thought Napster
could evolve into an amazing promotion vehicle for bands that never got
big contracts. But        Shawn and           the others didn't spend a lot of time talking
about that, he said. They seemed militant about changing the industry as
a whole. "I       had    my   own agenda, what                 I    thought Napster would be great
for,"   Paulson recalled. "They had their                     own     agenda, but they wouldn't              tell
me what it was. They were like, 'This is great, we're really sticking it to
them.'    I didn't really     get    it.   They were          definitely playing the role           of victim,
but Shawn was more interested in breaking                               down       the system and seeing
what happened."
As WITH ROCK MUSIC               ITSELF forty years before, public opinion on Nap-
ster    divided largely along generational lines. Older, more-established
Americans generally saw                it   as a clear case           of piracy. Students and music
fans in their twenties often                saw     it   as   mildly    illegal    —   or soon to be ruled
illegal  —but morally          fine, like     exceeding the speed limit by                   five miles          an
hour. Some of the more studious defenders pointed out that artists real-
ized very little money from their recording contracts or that compact-disc
prices were absurdly marked up. One student interviewed on MTV said
the amount of guilt he felt varied by the artist: He decided it was fine to
rip off a no-talent       band, or one that was already wealthy beyond imagina-
tion.    Others embarked on different                    varieties      of philosophical hairsplitting
and     rationalization.      By     the million, they were willing to take legal risks
and moral stretches that they saw                        as small,      and some declared that they
would never buy another CD.
        Among      users under thirty,              who would make up                    half of Napster's
Richardson figured that the best way to keep those fans                                   as evangehsts      was
to reach   them through the people they admired most                                  —the rock          stars.   If
would lose a lot of the weight behind their moral and political arguments,
Madonna       business partner            Guy         Oseary and to early online music enthu-
siast and Beastie       Boy Mike Diamond, among                             others. Since       many bands
were afraid to anger the record companies responsible for their promo-
tion,   most of the discussions were never made                                 public,   and some rockers
who were      supportive could do               little      to   show    their feelings. Napster posted
the public tributes it did win prominently on its website. Courtney Love,
Prince,   and Dave Matthews                 all       had quotes        lifted   from news     articles. And
Chuck     D   of Pubhc          Enemy went                 fiirther,   writing in an April          2000 New
York Times op-ed piece that Napster was "a                              new kind of radio        —   a   promo-
tional tool that can help artists                      who       don't have the opportunity to get
music from Pubhc Enemy. Techno                              star   Moby was also a big help, saying
that "most people I         know who             hsten to          a lot of MP3s will download a lot
of different songs, and              if   they like the song they'll go out and buy the
album.    The     record    company          doesn't          want me       to say this, but out of the
millions of      MPS    files    that are out there, if                 someone chooses        to   download
one of    my     songs or an album of mine, I'm very flattered."                              A key part          of
tional sales, has yet to be resolved. The federal judge in the major suit
against Napster would rule that it hurt, rejecting some surveys suggesting
otherwise.
       Several   unknown bands              that       had been through             hell   with their labels
cheered Napster on, in part because of serious thinking about the future
of the music industry and in part out of a desire for revenge. Michael
Lawrence, a Los Angeles musician                            who had been           with a big    label,    wrote
to    Napster that he was a               new and             enthusiastic user of the service.               He
complained that          his label         had taken back 85 percent of the advance
and halfway through the tour a new president took over. Without notice,
they pulled      all   tour support and           label advertising for            new        bands.          .   .   .   We
went broke trying           to get    home," Lawrence wrote. "Napster has the poten-
tial   to put the     power of art and business back                  in the     hands of an                artist."
       The   furthest Napster          went      to ally itself     with musicians was sponsor-
ing a free     Back    to Basics tour in July           2000 headlined by Limp                         Bizkit.            The
tour cost a          whopping $1.8 miUion but helped spread goodwill, and
Shawn got        to    meet band frontman Fred Durst                     after the            San Jose show.
But Napster          also   embarrassed     itself by        using a heavy hand against another
supportive band, a           punk group       called the Offspring.              The band was one of
many that       decided      it   had no problem with Napster distributing                                  its   music.
tionships with our fans," the               band wrote on            its site.   But         it   grew annoyed
that Napster         had never asked permission. Cheekily,                       it    decided to take                      its
and caps, and selling the gear through its website. The Offspring figured
that since Napster was playing fast and loose with copyright law, it
realized, however, that if Napster knew about someone else using its logo
and failed to get a signed agreement, it could have lost all rights to defend
ing the products. Napster was duly                    mocked        for the hypocrisy of the                      move.
After several days, the company                    and the Offspring struck a deal giving
the band formal permission to                 sell   things, with       all   profits        going to a char-
ity    agreed on by Offspring singer Dexter Holland and Shawn.                                         They chose
the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
       The     Offspring didn't        know      that   it   had stumbled onto another of the
odd business blunders                at Napster, a      mess that had            its    roots in the                  com-
pany's unprofessional beginnings and                        that   would      fester    on through 2000.
raise   money and promote                   the service.         They   also   had wanted     to give   away
the gear to recognize hardworking volunteers, including the moderators
of the Napster chat rooms. Richardson had been reluctant to approve the
clothing plans because they got into the sticky area of profiting from the
service prior to a settlement deal.                         She    felt   that any revenue taken in
before the suit ended              would be used                 against Napster in court,        and she
was     right.
which was no problem                for      Loubani. But          when        the   company found about
the slogans,        it   decided   it   had another          issue. "It   was deemed by the higher-
ups to be too risque," Loubani                        said. "It really     upset me." Eventually, the
that the company had bigger worries than he, and he continued to
I was one of them. I worked for the masses." As the rest of Napster
"became          this inflated, corporate thing,"                 Loubani dropped out of the com-
pany's community, one of many radicalized youths                                 who grew disillusioned
as    they realized that Napster was more and more about the money.
        Shawn      didn't give     up on the            shirt idea.     As     fans   began clamoring for
merchandise on Napster's message board, he tried to press the point. In
April,     Shawn e-mailed marketing VP Liz Brooks, copying                                     Parker and
the site," he wrote, pointing them to the posted chatter. "This is crazy."
Brooks responded that she couldn't do anything yet, because she had been
the help he was giving Napster. Fanning gave him permission to sell
Napster shirts on his own, keeping some of the profits and giving the rest
When       Richardson learned about                  the deal, she          asked     Carmody       to   submit
a plan. Richardson said she got                    no   details    back from Carmody and so had
nothing to take to the board for a vote. Brooks shared Shawn's frustra-
tion. "I    am and          have been waiting on a decision from the board as to
what ownership             Tom Carmody has               of our merchandising rights," Brooks
wrote him.           "Tom    is       ready to go, and    I   am     also prepared to         do an outside
deal with        someone other than Tom, but                         this       needs to be cleared up."
Despite Richardson's claim that                         Carmody had               given her nothing to
review, a draft licensing agreement did                       emerge from Napster's             files    during
litigation,     where       it    remained out of public view. (Richardson said in her
deposition that she had never seen                        it.)    That agreement, which Napster
never signed, appears to conform to the informal arrangement                                        Carmody
said    he had with Fanning. Without any payment from Carmody,                                           it   said
exchange for          royalties equaling           20 percent of the revenue from goods sold
through Napster's website and 10 percent of the revenue from goods
sold elsewhere.
deal with this         ALLLLL DAY. Many                 of these people are talented engineers
at big     companies,"            Shawn       wrote. "I understand that therez lots of shit
going on, but what's the plan?" Brooks replied:                                  "I   have   Tom Carmody
coming up on Wednesday                       to   show me        designs, ideas       and deal      structures.
BUT —I          stiU   need to know what our                     status    is   w/regard to his rights
and that        is   not   my         decision!!!!! I   wish      it were!!!!!!!!     How     can    we move
ahead when there                 is   an outside entity claiming the commercial rights to
our merchandise, and half the board supports him?"
       While he knew                  that   Carmody might have some                    right to sell     mer-
It was yet another thing that his uncle, the board, or both had done to
tried to resolve the matter on the fly, replying the next day that there
wasn't any need for a board decision. "Tom Carmody has NO rights to
ter,   but that too         much    time had gone by since. Glossing over the problems
with taking in revenue, she suggested that Brooks take over the project
and develop a merchandising                         plan.
mody     decided to act on his own.                        "I just     went ahead and did         it,"   Carmody
said.   "Did   I nail it          down       in a contract like I            should have? No." In June,
Carmody        arranged for           IndianapoHs merchandise firm Sport Service Inc.
to sell Napster             brand clothing through a website called Napsterstore.com.
Some Napster                fans found the               site,    and the company sold more than
$60,000 worth of gear, sending a cut to Carmody. Carmody said he put a
chunk of the money                 aside for Napster. In a little-noted case in                        December
2000, Napster sued Sport Service for trademark infringement, and that
company quickly pulled                   the plug          on Napsterstore.
Association was doing the same. It pressed its member labels to get rock
and rap groups              to   come    out against Napster, and some, like Peter Gabriel,
obliged.      "The fiindamental point                       is:   no music, no Napster. This              is   obvi-
ously a big business that was built by taking stuff without the consent of
the artists    who          created   it,"    Gabriel said. "More and more people are going
to     download         their music,          and     if it all stays free          and there     is   no control
over the payments, then                      it   will be difficult for           younger    artists to   make     a
taken,    and [we'd           like to]   have some vote in deciding what's distributed for
free    and what        isn't."    Rapper          Eminem was more                 blunt: "I'm sorry;     when     I
same with music;                     if   I'm putting     my     fucking heart and                 all    my    time into
music,     I   expect to get rewarded for that.                     I    work hard     .   .   .   and anybody can
just   throw a computer up and download                                  my   shit for free.             That Napster
shit, if       that gets any bigger,               it    could    kill   the whole purpose of                        making
music.     .    .    .   I've   seen those      little sissies     on TV,        talking about [how] 'The
working people should                       just get     music for       free,' I've   been a working per-
son. I never could afford a computer, but I always                                  bought and supported
the    artists that I liked. I                always bought a Tupac              CD,   a Biggie               CD, a Jay-Z
CD.     If you can afford a computer, you can afford to pay $16 for                                                 my CD."
   The              record industry's biggest public-relations victory                                   came        in   mid-
April 2000,                   when        the long-standing San Francisco hard-rock group
MetaUica             filed suit against         Napster in federal court. MetaUica accused the
company not only of copyright                           violations but also of running afoul of the
point, this is about piracy —aka taking something that doesn't belong to
you, and that                  is   morally and legally wrong." Richardson was quoted as
saying that the band had never tried to contact Napster. If                                                    it   had, she
claimed,            it   could have learned about ways to "leverage" the Napster sys-
tem.     Rap             star Dr.     Dre,     whom       the Napster kids liked even                          more than
MetaUica, also sued and demanded that his songs be removed.
       The MetaUica                   suit,   which named Indiana                University, Yale,                   and the
University of Southern California as additional defendants, succeeded in
driving a            wedge through              Napster's supporters.            But   filing            it   was    a costly
members              cut their hair.          A few noted that MetaUica's popularity had been
built in       its       early days precisely through unauthorized tape-swapping.                                         And
someone hacked MetaUica's                               site,   leaving the words "Leave                             Napster
Alone."         An            ex-fan of the group launched KiUmetaUica.com and caUed
for a boycott of the band's products.                             The     site   was joined by MetaUica-
Pleasant Hill, California, east of San Francisco. Lyttle,                         who       used the han-
dle Pimpshiz, broke into             more than two hundred websites and                           left a    pro-
Shawn and Ritter on IRC and told them what he had done for their
cause.    The two looked          at   each other in horror. "Are you crazy?"                         Shawn
typed. Lyttle's run ended in             December 2000 with                 a raid     on   his   home.       He
later   pleaded guilty to two of the counts against him and was sentenced
to probation         and ordered to pay             restitution to the sites            he defaced.           He
said    he planned to        raise the   money by          selling Internet security services.
        Others began to         feel   uneasy about their use of Napster.                         The most
important change of heart came from                         Chad Paulson          at   Indiana Univer-
sity, the head of Savenapster.com. Paulson had been listening to all sides
in the debate,        and he had boned up on copyright                       law.      He   had seen the
press reports about Napster's                moneyed        backers,    and he was angry about
what Sean Parker had             told    him on       the phone.      When        Paulson         first   began
organizing, Parker told           him    that Napster          wanted       to   promote new              artists.
Yet almost nothing had been done on that                           score, while songs that                  were
obviously unauthorized were trading like crazy.                              When        Paulson asked
Parker again about Napster's plans to support independent music, Parker
told     him    that wasn't a priority, Paulson recalled. (Parker denied saying
that.)    Paulson also saw too           many       televised   news reports that featured him
defending the service, then cut to arrogant students with hundreds of
MP3s by artists who weren't getting                    paid.    He   felt   he looked       like a stooge.
"I   wasn't really thinking about user habits," Paulson said                           later. "I    was kind
of naive, to say the           least."   Parker didn't help matters           when he came to
speak      at   a   digital-music conference                held    on Indiana's campus. The
teenager spent two hours huddled with a                            public-relations person who
coached him on what he should and shouldn't say Taking questions from
ent from those held by many Napster fans. He got e-mails in support of
artists work long and hard to put out albums. They take quality music for
granted and they don't fully realize that even though a musician                                                      may be
popular and on the radio,                            it   doesn't necessarily               mean they            are full   of
money. Even                if they are, there is            no excuse to break the                  law,   and copyright
infringement               is      breaking the law," Paulson wrote.                        "I     saw much potential
with Napster, yet                   at the   same time           I   had many           issues   on how Napster was
used    as a      haven for            piracy,      something that             I   abhor." Paulson said that he
"got to know more about the music business, as well as the Silicon Valley
way of doing things" and decided that "the company is knowingly facili-
profit     from that without any crackdown." Napster was giving the                                                     MPS
format a bad name by disingenuously issuing statements against piracy
without doing anything about                               it.    "I   personally         want      to see a plan that
explicates (in detail)                 what the company plans on doing about the rampant
illegal use" that                  he estimated made up 90 percent of Napster's                                traffic.
son said. Brandon Barber sent him a fiery e-mail: "I'm struggling to
understand your logic on this shit. Are you looking for new press angles
ries
       —   ^we   have larger            fish to fry.        However,        I      think    it's   safe to say that the
level, I     vouched                for your ass internally              and now you've                 called    my judg-
ment       into question." Barber signed off,                           "It's      a small world.        Have     fim."
son for using the word Napster in his domain name.                                "Who the fuck does he
think he           is?"        he wrote to Barber.                    Then Chang did something else. He
hacked into the infrastructure company that was hosting Savenapster.com
and made Paulson's Web-hosting                                        bill    appear two months overdue.               And
he hacked the                      site itself,       adding a        new      story to the press section bearing
and he e-mailed Ritter to brag. After suggesting that Ritter try to visit
the Savenapster site "while it's still defaced," he added: "I also changed
the pw [password] back on the shell, so chad won't think it's a server
problem. . . . ps: delete this message." Ritter stayed mum, and when Paul-
son complained to Napster about the hack. Barber wrote:                                                "I give      you    my
word      that             no one       affiliated       with         this organization           had anything        to   do
with     it.   I   apologize for what must be                            a very frustrating situation." Paulson
complained to the FBI, which was unable to solve the                                               attack. In      an inter-
view,    Chang                 said   he would neither confirm nor deny                           responsibility. Paul-
son   later quit                school and joined the small online music firm Listen.com,
then moved to Los Angeles to join Capitol Records' digital                                                efforts.
was coming, Napster gathered its own supporters to appear. Several held
sites. The new generation gap got its loudest display when Ulrich spoke
from the podium. Protesters shouted at him to shut up and called him a
sellout. "Fuck you, Lars," offered one. "It's our music too!"
Ulrich could make, and from the               moment he         realized Napster            was housed
in the decrepit building over a bank, he                grew more and more uncomfort-
able.    After pontificating outside, Ulrich and King went in with a dolly
hauling the documents up to Napster's                   offices.    Xtime spokesman Travis
Murdock happened             to be riding     up   in the old, creaky elevator at the               same
time and saw that Ulrich looked miserable.                       When     the doors opened at
Napster's fourth-floor office, the employees                   came up       to   him and     told   him
what     fans they were       and how they had gone to Metallica concerts in ju-
nior high. Ulrich           seemed   to slump. "I really don't           want        to sue you,"     he
said. "All I   want    is   for artists   who want     to get paid to get paid."
    Shawn      and Parker were quarantined on the                   fifth floor,      away from the
press,   but they and Ali Aydar snuck out for peeks                     at   what was going on.
Some of      the Napster crew were upset at                    what was happening. Others
were more annoyed              at Napster's leadership            for   doing a lousy job of
explaining to the public           what the        issues were.    "The bands           don't get the
request to ban the users.          On May      10,   Napster blocked 317,377 users cited
by MetaUica. Fans complained that they had been tricked into download-
ing a    new   version of Napster that          made    the bans possible.            Soon    a section
lose the court battle, and you lose your napster! This is reality man!"
unknown     groups and bolster Napster's court defense about having signifi-
cant legitimate uses, the same argument that had saved the              VCR before
the U.S.   Supreme Court. The           allegiance of fan favorites could keep the
public on Napster's side of the war in the press and on Capitol Hill, if it
came     to that.   And open      support from established acts might bring
pressure   on the record companies             to offer   something reasonable. But
Richardson and her marketing deputy, Liz Brooks, were the only top
executives serious about the campaign. Brooks got Napster to sponsor the
free Limp Bizkit tour to promote the company, and later she offered the
                                         (    147)
more     basic than their positive feelings about spreading free music. Brooks
and New Artist Program manager Stephanie Norton also had secret talks
with bands         like     Korn and Matchbox 20,                        ojffering special       placement on
Napster's       Web    pages in exchange for their endorsements.                                 Band promo-
tions    and an "aggregation of legit partners makes us look                                   legit   and makes
every partner in the industry realize they need to play ball," Brooks wrote
in an e-mail.         The         executives took pains to keep the negotiations con-
about antagonizing the labels. And others in the company didn't see
for obscure music, and touting selected acts might be seen as selling out.
If Napster fans sensed the shift, that might                                  work     against the         company
and     its   phenomenal growth                   rate.    And     that, in turn,      might make          it   harder
to get quite as        much money when                          the time     came   to really sell out, to the
record labels. But the most serious reason for foot-dragging on the                                              New
Artist Program, according to Sean Parker, was a legal one. "Eileen
definitely       wanted       to    do     it,   and      it   went   to the board.      But    it   didn't      make
sense because          it    had      a different interface" than the rest of the song-
searching. Since            all   of the participating                New Artists      gave expHcit permis-
sion for their        work         to be        on Napster, the presence of               a distinct piece          of
the system that had only authorized songs could tempt the judge in the
record-industry lawsuit to order Napster to keep that part and disable the
rest.   "We were          arguing that there were a lot of noninfringing uses with
the main services," Parker said.                          "We had      to stick to our     guns with an           all-
directors       had   dealt with the record industry before,                           and they had horribly
misjudged their opponent. Even                             if   the board had gotten behind the                  New
Artist effort or            won       widespread enthusiasm from big-name bands,                                    it
likely wouldn't have moved the industry. After all, the big record labels
make ends meet. One               story unearthed       by Dannen involved Florida song-
writer      George McCrae, who had                 a   number one record                  in    1974      called
"Rock Your Baby." McCrae hadn't seen                               a    dime of the more than
$100,000 he was due, and he couldn't pay his                           rent.     He went        to visit label
boss Henry Stone in his office and threatened to cut Stone with a knife.
"You really surprise me, today of aU days," Stone said calmly. He fished
out a thick wad of biUs, perhaps a few thousand dollars, and handed it to
McCrae. "But that isn't aU. You see that Cadillac? It's yours, George,"
Stone said, and gave him a set of keys. Stone had a guest in his office at
just   one of the major industry players with close                            ties to    the mob.            Levy
affixed his         name   to the copyrights of songs             he didn't write         —     like    Frankie
Lymon's        "Why Do           Fools Fall in Love?"            —and did business with New
York's      Genovese crime          family. Before his sentencing for extortion along-
hearings in 1960, payola was made its own crime, separate from bribery.
But the law was so weak that no one was convicted                                   for decades,      and the
U.S. Federal Communications Commission                                  specifically       exempted       "social
get smarter. Instead of paying off radio programmers directly, they started
who      did what they needed to do with cash, drugs, and hookers, leaving
plausible deniability for everyone at the record firms' headquarters in
life,   he didn't play one of the good guys. Isgro was charged with racket-
eering and payola offenses in 1989. Employees of three different radio
stations testified that they             had accepted cocaine,                      cash, or both          from
Isgro's business in       exchange for               airplay.      The     case     was strong but was
tossed out because the prosecution blew                          it:   They   hadn't disclosed contra-
dictory testimony from the trial of one of their many witnesses. Isgro
returned to living the high             life   in Beverly          HiUs    until        he was sentenced to
more than four         years in federal prison in the                            fall    of 2000 for loan-
sharking.     As   part of that case, the            FBI        stated that he          was   a soldier in the
to    companies with      collective sales            of $15 biUion. But profit margins are
thin in the music business. After a failed boycott of the                                  Network served
to    make    the promoters only               more        essential to the business, top label
CBS       Records, later bought by Sony, was spending an estimated $17 mil-
lion a year    on promoters, according                 to Rolling Stone. In a decent year, that
was more than 10 percent of the label's pretax profit. In a bad year, it was
themselves.
       The       big record companies could do that because they could do just
about anything they wanted and                    still   sign aspiring stars.        While             the labels
defend their practices by pointing to the more than $2 million they                                             may
spend to promote a band that                      flops, the contracts             resemble those that
decades ago         left coal   miners in debt to the company                       store.   Promotional
fees    became      just another of       what       are called recoupable expenses,                       which
get paid back from the                artist's    advance. For most bands, that advance
money is aU they ever see, and it can be a big number. But the advance is
actually a loan that's forgiven if the record doesn't sell well. If it does sell,
the band must repay that advance before it starts collecting any royalties.
And the repayment comes out of the band's end of the gross sales — as
member band           writing   its   own    songs and with a big five-year, four-album
contract breaks out of the pack and into the top 5 percent of big-label
acts, selling       4 million records. At the end of                   it all,     each   member of the
star    group would net about $140,000 a                     year.     The   record       company would
gross $11 million before overhead.
The promotion system also had the effect of keeping new music off
the airwaves unless a big-spending major backed                              it.   With    radio         sewn up
and most tours         also paid for      by the big companies, independent                              acts   had
few ways          to reach the masses, or even connect                   with the niche audiences
that    might be interested           in their     music     if   they   knew about          it.    "With the
stranglehold in radio,           new artists don't get exposed," said Ted Cohen,
EMI's       vice president      of new media. "That's why everything sucks right
now.    It costs     $1 million to have a hit record by the time you've greased                                   all
the wheels you have to grease." It was small wonder that the industry
music:  The current system worked for them, at the expense of new
entrants. The essentially conservative nature of the label executives also
the retail prices would          come down              as well, at least after their first                few
years    on the market. Instead, the                        prices    inexplicably began heading
toward $20      for collections of material that often included only                               one song a
consumer wanted. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission investigated why
the prices were rising and ultimately                        came up with an answer. The                   clue
down to $10 for many titles. And the industry decided to fight back in
infringing copyrights          when       the labels themselves were abusing the copy-
rights   by acting     collectively to         keep the music from               digital use.      That long-
shot counterargument would be enough to stave off what had seemed to
be certain death through summary judgment through                                       at least   2002.   The
Justice     Department       also       began investigating the                issue.   Yet   it   would be   a
companies, which competed heatedly for artists and sales, were also at
and the    like,   including equipment that played pirated music.                  By the year
2000,    Time Warner's        label       was owned by America Online.            Not surpris-
ingly, the country's largest Internet- access provider                   was more    interested
customers.
       Other   serious differences of opinion             came from      executives within the
same record company. Most                   labels    had hawks, old-school        leaders    who
turned purple with rage          at the      very idea of an    MPS. And most        labels   had
doves, frequently younger managers                     who saw    the Internet as a      way   to
reach fans that were being left behind in the aU-consuming drive to get
hits   on Top Forty        radio.  The contrasts were at times startling to music
outsiders   from Silicon        Valley who were trying this way and that to make
friendly deals with the labels. They would be greeted enthusiastically one
day and met with expletive-laced tirades the next. Overall, the hawks
were in charge when the Internet began taking off in earnest in 1999. But
the active encouragement of the doves was enough to keep the entrepre-
neurs' hopes cruelly alive.
Audio Inc., which offered their own secure digital formats for download-
ing in accordance with music companies' terms for payment. But to have
much     desirable content,         all   of those companies depended to some degree
on cooperation from the big                labels.   And most   of them didn't get the con-
tent they needed.        Without          that,   most of the   digital- music firms    were on
the ropes even before the advent of Napster.                    When     Napster made every-
thing available for        free, it killed    the majority of the legitimate start-ups in
their cribs.
The most important               digital deal by the            labels   turned out to be with
RealNetworks        Inc.   That venture, which became known                 as   MusicNet, was
Napster, and they wanted to show federal antitrust officials and such crit-
ics as   Sen. Orrin Hatch, chair of the powerful Senate Judiciary                                Commit-
tee, that    they were doing something to put content online. But the effort
to   get MusicNet and           its    companion           site   Pressplay up and running was a
lesson in abject frustration for those involved in the project, giving a hint
change. Glaser was a visionary, and he tended to think that the CEOs in
companies in a plan that would allow them to charge users for each song
they downloaded, with RealNetworks or a joint venture taking a small
percentage of each transaction. Reasoning that media attention might
give others the           same idea or even                scare the industry hard-liners away,
Glaser worked on his plan in near-total secrecy before Napster hit the
world      stage.
tion   on the       Internet.   He        took the job, with the basic mission to sign up
labels for the project,         promising each of them equity in the                         new   venture
alongside RealNetworks.                   The   thinking was         that even if they didn't like
be pals before you know it," Citron thought. In fact. Universal was in the
"We've been making real progress." Tieless in a gray shirt and glasses,
Glaser waved his hands as he painted a                         fixture   with music streaming and
purchases of digital downloads, as soon as the security issues could be
worked       out.   "Imagine a record store open twenty-four hours, with every
album ever made, no checkout                      stand, with instant delivery, that's never
out of stock," Glaser                said.     "You would think that everyone would be
excited about          what   it   would do      for the industry."
Not exactly everyone was, however. Citron made the rounds of the
labels in      Los Angeles and flew                  to   New    York every few weeks, teUing
record executives that Real was working on a                              new system       —how could
they    make      it   worth    the labels' while to participate? "Real                   was on top of
the world, and people wanted                     to learn   what we were up          to,   so they took
one office or another, Citron would run through the options. "I'd say,
'What     if   we      charge 50 cents a song?' and they'd say that would undercut
the physical product. So               I'd say,   'Well,    how   about a      dollar?'   and they'd say
there    would be piracy              if it   cost that much. Every time you answered a
old-school record executive from Brooklyn                           who had        once been on the
brink of co-owning a label with Network independent promoter Fred
DiSipio. That deal had been scotched in 1986, after                               NBC      reported that
DiSipio and a close associate, promoter Joe Isgro, had just met with John
Gotti and other top mobsters at a                         New York       hotel.   Smith had    his   hard
Citron said.
was one of the happiest days of                     Citron's    life.   Glaser insisted on keeping
the deal under wraps, hoping to get at least one or two                                   more    labels    on
board before going public with the news. Citron went back to shuttle
diplomacy with a          litde    more spring          in his step.        By   then, though, Napster
was getting too big for anyone to ignore. Even Citron's twelve-year-old
son and      all    of his friends were using the program. As Napster grew,
Glaser and Citron figured they couldn't just offer downloads for                                   sale,   but
instead needed to turn              MusicNet           into something that permitted                   sam-
pling of a wide variety of music.                      They decided              to shift to pitching a
subscription-based model like cable                     TV: $10         a   month      for the service     and
premium       features    on top of that. With work on anticopying                            tools contin-
uing and Warner still patiently waiting for the business model to get
hammered out. Citron made the rounds yet again. Napster had made the
labels   much more        nervous about copying, but Citron argued they should
allow at least a limited           test.    If too      much of         the test music got into the
wild, they could say they had tried. The labels did get more receptive,
even calling Citron on occasion before he called them, "They had to show
their bosses that they        had an answer             to Napster," Citron said.
that Universal         sent label          CEO         Doug Morris and                  producer     Jimmy
lovine   —   real   content people, not technology                      specialists.     "Rob    said, 'Let's
get this done or go our separate ways.' The mood was really positive. It
helped us focus," Citron                said. It     turned out that Morris and lovine had
been in    New York anyway because U2                         was releasing a new album. In the
spirit   of the day, they invited Citron and Glaser to tag along backstage as
they watched         U2   perform on           MTV's          Total Request Live program.              They
met the band, and there was a feeling of real camaraderie. After spending
hours together, lovine invited Citron to return to L.A. with him on the
company's private           jet.    Citron eagerly accepted and spent the                              flight
When       Citron went in for the follow-up,                  it   was    as if    New York had         never
happened. "The business guys blew the whole thing                                  up," he said.      By   this
stage,   Citron was used to being disappointed by the industry.                               Now he was
just puzzled.     Why      had they bothered                to spend a            whole day with him
before reverting to the same old tease?                    "They saw          it   as   an opportunity to
teach us a lesson," he concluded.
      Trying to make the most of what progress he had made. Citron
returned to     New York for            a visit with   Al Smith on the upper                  floors   of the
landmark      AT&T building. In the conference room.                               Citron played a      little
harder than he had before. "We're close to a couple deals," he told Smith,
who    glared. "I don't think           you can     pull   it off","    he   said.   "We    can,   and we're
going forward with you or without you," Citron responded. Smith started
screaming, and he ordered Citron out of the room. "You won't get any
music!" he shouted at Citron's back. "Yes,                         we    will!"    Citron shouted over
his shoulder.     "You won't get Ricky Martin!" Smith                              said, referring to       one
of Sony's top        sellers   of the day. "We'll get plenty!" Citron retorted,                             still
walking. "You won't get Mariah Carey!" Smith yelled. Citron                                   left,   shaking
his head. It     was aU so             primitive.   The     industry valued tough guys, the
more street-smart the better. "There were all these whose-is-bigger' argu-
Bertelsmann, and           EMI         had signed up, and when the technology was
worked      out, they   would begin          licensing music.            Sony and Vivendi Univer-
sal   went   their   own   way, again joined by              EMI, with             the Pressplay service.
When the two systems were finally opened to the public, at the very end
as the user      kept up the subscription payments. But both services lacked
the best content, and listeners stayed away in droves.
MusicNet and Pressplay aside, the doves in the record industry did
many small deals, afraid as they were of piracy. But even the most liberal
were flummoxed by Napster's approach. Two of the biggest doves,
responsible for eighty electronic deals in three years, were                               Ted Cohen and
his boss Jay Samit,        an executive vice president                  at   EMI   and much more of
a technophile than a record-industry                   man.           Internally, they          had   to over-
come    fear that the      music would be stolen and institutional resistance to
                                           —
new forms of distribution a resistance so intense that when Samit
worked on new media at Universal, his request to buy the domain name
Universal.com for $5,000 was turned down. They also had to deal with an
accounting system from the Stone Age. "Digitized content? None of the
companies even had digitized contracts," Samit                           said.   There was no way to
sort out electronically       who had which            rights to        what song.
      Once they got        past those hurdles, the                men had        to structure deals of
enormous complexity. To begin with, songs carry with them multiple sets
of rights holders. The label might own the rights to one performed
version of a song. Someone else often has the rights to the underlying
performance occurred.
      "Let's say I    download         a   song on    my Nokia           in Japan,"        Samit      said. "It's
seems    siUy.   But we're the deep pockets that get sued                             if   something goes
wrong."    Still,    Samit persevered.             A patent-holding            technologist           who had
created the laser disc, he believed that online connection with fans was an
and dice the content," he             said.    Most production         costs vanish, "and          we can
let   you know when your                 favorite artist has a           new        record."   Samit and
Cohen,       whom     he hired in early 2000, did licensing deals for the play of
EMI        songs on Internet jukeboxes, in hotel rooms, for a digital-only single
by Lenny       BCravitz,    and     for a Pizza    Hut promotion           that sold eight        hundred
thousand       CDs with        songs picked by customers.
      It   was hard       to imagine a         more      receptive audience for Napster than
Samit.      And    the     company had           a terrific introduction to              him from Ted
Cohen. Cohen had               started in the music business                   managing bands and
putting on dances at his Cleveland high school.                                At   Ithaca College, he
spent so      much time booking bands                  into clubs that he            went on academic
probation and eventually returned to a local school in Cleveland. There
he became music director                 at the college radio station,              which happened         to
be the only alternative             FM     station in the area.        As      a result, real acts       hke
blues guitarist       Johnny Winter stopped                   in.   Cohen       quit school to be a
record buyer for a chain, then                   moved        into the     promotion business for
Columbia and Warner Brothers.                     "I   kept running away with the band, so
they   moved me            to artist development,"             Cohen       said.     The   next stop, in
1982, was Warner's new- media group, and                              it   was there that Cohen
turned tech.
      When      the   Web      took    off,   Cohen rode with         it   as a consultant,        helping
ducing himself John Fanning called, and they chatted. Two months later.
Fanning asked         if   Cohen would come              to   work   at the firm,       then   still   on the
East Coast.       Cohen demurred,              saying he wasn't interested in working any-
where       fiill-time.    In September,         Cohen heard from Fanning                      again. This
time, Fanning said that he had hired Eileen Richardson and Bill Bales
but wanted        Cohen       as a consultant.         Fanning had Cohen              fly to   San Mateo,
where the conversation with Napster's new executives led to an                                  offer to   be
CEO. Cohen declined again but agreed to serve as an adviser.
   Two months later, Cohen was chairing the Webnoize digital-music
we be talking here about how this new medium can change the face of
Richardson      said.        Allen was nervous                  at   being put on the spot in front of an
unfriendly crowd, and she                       came           across as less        open to dialogue than
Richardson was.              The     vaudeville helped Richardson cast Napster as the
      That wasn't            a fair picture at                all,   since Richardson        had been playing
dumb with       the     RIAA. And Cohen soon would                                 learn   how    incomplete the
picture was.       He        set   up a meeting between Napster and Samit                                    for   mid-
December. Bales came down                        for the get-together                on the top         floor   of the
historic Capitol             Records tower               at    Hollywood and Vine.               So, Samit asked
him,     how   does Napster work? What's the business model? "Lay some-
thing out for me," Samit said. Bales explained that Napster didn't have a
model yet      —   it   was       just letting people get                  music for   free. "I       explained that
that   was   illegal,"       Samit        recalled.       "He        didn't have     any   clue." Bales said         he
would get back               to    Samit once Napster worked out                           a business plan.         He
never did. "These guys were willing to discuss a deal, and Eileen didn't
support any discussion with the labels at that time, so                                      I   had    to   drop the
ball,"   Bales said.
       Bales tried another approach with a Bertelsmann contact.                                                    Tom
Gieselmann, an investor with Bertelsmann's venture-capital arm in Santa
Barbara, California, called Bales at home, saying he thought Napster had
tremendous potential.                   He wanted              to    meet   to discuss investing,         and Bales
knew Richardson would veto the idea. So Bales went                                               to    Fanning and
Amram, who told him to go ahead. Gieselmann caught                                               a plane     and met
ghost," Bales recalled. "You guys are destroying the record industry,"
Gieselmann told him. "You've distributed more music than the whole
record industry has since                 it   came       into existence."      When        Bales reported
Cohen stayed in touch with Napster and coached the company for
another few months.                 On    his last visit to the office in early 2000,                 he saw
whiteboards       filled       with legal arguments to deflect questions about the
theft of music. "It just            became apparent               to   me   that their message       was not
to settle,"   Cohen       said.      In April he gave up trying to convince Napster to
negotiate and took the job under Samit. "I stiU think Napster                                          is   the
coolest thing I've ever seen," he said nearly                          two years   later.   "Had we been
able to   work    it   out,    it   would have grown the music market. But                      it   just got
so acrimonious. It's hard to negotiate with people who are publicly saying
they are going to beat you. And the rhetoric from the labels has been just
as intense."
Samit and Cohen were among the first record executives to get a
existence for very long               itself,    found Napster during routine searches for
MP3s      in chat      rooms and on Internet Relay Chat channels. Some music
trading was going on                all   the time, and the             RIAA     didn't have     anywhere
near the resources to stop                it all.   Instead, staffers were trained to dig a             little
more    deeply.    Who owned the site, and what kind of resources could they
put behind        it? How large was the repertoire? How many users did it
have?   And how         easy was          it   to get a    song quickly? "If it takes thirty min-
utes to get a song, I'm less concerned," said                          Frank Creighton, the RIAA's
you can query         for a specific            file.   Napster combined those services and
brought the best aspects together.                          It   was very robust and                efficient,"
Creighton's job had gotten a lot more compHcated over his fifteen
eight-track tapes. The bad guys weren't too hard to find —they needed a
Creighton sent his first threatening letter to an Internet site in 1997, then
many more.      Usually, a letter did the trick. For                      all   of the eventual criticism
about the trade group's heavy-handed                         tactics, it filed          fewer than a dozen
lawsuits in the ten years before Napster. By 1998, Creighton was feehng
good about the work he had done on                           FTP       sites.   Most of the high-speed
Internet lines were at colleges,                 which were            sensitive to threats about legal
action and even the potential loss of federal funding for their                                     communi-
cations networks.        The       Digital Millennium Copyright Act, written by
Internet service provider of infringing content under                               its   control,   and gen-
erally the     company would               cut off access.             "The euphoria           lasted a brief
period," said Creighton. IRC and other chat networks were multiplying,
and Creighton had to hire more specialists to keep up. The RIAA office
he   said.   John Fanning was the                 registered contact person for the                   site,   and
Creighton dropped him a reasonable e-mail on September 23, 1999.                                               "I
weakness. "He took that as a sign that even the RIAA thinks we're legal,"
would really like to move this forward as I am receiving much press inter-
est   about your service and would                  like to     respond that           we   are in    some
productive dialogue." This time, Fanning replied that he thought such a
positive statement to the               media would be "an appropriate response." But
he added that       it   was unlikely he would be the right person                           to represent
Napster, saying he would let Creighton know who that person was.
"Thanks       for the response John, but this issue can't wait,"                               Creighton
wrote. "I need to speak to the appropriate person                         ASAP."
       Hours    later,   Creighton got a phone              call      from Richardson. "She was
very nice. She came across by her                  own   admission as being very naive. She
said she didn't understand the nuances of copyright law,                              and so she      didn't
know what I        wanted and what she had to do." Creighton gave her a                               week
to get   up    to speed.   When          he called the next time, she was                   full   of infor-
mation about the Supreme Court's ruling on                             VCRs       and about why she
didn't have to shut         Napster down or              filter   out copyrighted songs.               Still,
RIAA      lawyers. "Frank          is    not getting very far with them."                    And Rosen
encouraged a response to a local               district attorney            who had     inquired about
a possible criminal probe into Napster and its users. No one in the loop at
Even then, many record executives                                      didn't get     it.   That changed the
day    after the       Grammy Awards                  in February 2000.             At      the regular      RIAA
board meeting            at the    Four Seasons Hotel in Beverly                      Hills,      Rosen decided
to try a      little   show-and-tell. It had been a                     good year     for the industry,        and
people were feeling upbeat. "You                           know about      Napster," Rosen told them.
"But you need to understand it. This is going to be big, and the fact that
of a couple dozen label bosses.                     Then Rosen            asked the executives to start
naming         songs.        Not   just big hits,               but tracks deep into albums, either
brand-new or obscure. The record men took turns                                     calling out          more than
twenty songs.          The     staffers    found them every time, and                       fast.   Soon no one
wanted any more convincing that the threat was                                    serious.        As     the crowd
sion. "Are       you sure suing them                   is    enough?" he asked. The capper came
when someone                 suggested a hunt for the                   'NSYNC        song "Bye Bye Bye."
The     cut had been           on the radio           just three days,        and the         CD     hadn't been
released for sale yet.             And    there       it    was. Maverick Records executive                  Ron-
nie    Dasher had seen enough. "This                              is   too depressing," he said. "Let's
       With      the labels        now    enthusiastic backers of the lawsuit, they                          began
thinking more about public relations. Worried about the bad press they
were getting for attacking                    a       nineteen-year-old, they redoubled their
efforts to get their bands to speak out. "We want to do a national adver-
tising campaign and will have a large coalition of interests that support it
don't believe          we     will   change behavior until there                      is    more     legal   music
online, but a          campaign      to raise consciousness                is critical      and   as an industry,
we must put our stake in the ground." Eventually, most big-name acts
who took a public position were anti-Napster. But in the early days, it
was slow going.              When     MetaUica stepped forward, "they got                            crucified for
it," said EMI's Samit. "You don't want to look uncool to your fans." Many
From left
to right: Seth
McGann, Andrew
Reiter,   Dug Song
(flashing a sign for
Matt Conover's
computer-security
group, wOOwOO),
and Jan    Koum
at the    DefCon
hacker convention
in 1999. Several
members of the
group, including
McGann      and
Song, helped
Shawn Fanning develop       Napster. Later,
McGann      nearly stole the source code for
chief Napster rival Gnutella, backing off
only   when he     learned the computer he
broke into belonged to Song's friend.
     office after fixing a   bug that limited the number of users able to connect to each
     server.   Their best   work was never publicly acknowledged.
                                                  Napster supporters
                                             rally outside the       company's
                                             first   California office in
                                             San Mateo         in   May 2000
                                             as   MetaUica delivered
                                             thirteen boxes with the
                                             names of Napster            users
                                             who were         offering
                                             Metallica songs over
                                             the system.       The banner
                                             refers to the record-
^    From    the   New   Yorker,   February 2002. Napster became the most-searched-for
term on the Internet,      as tens   of millions of users decided that      it   was morally
acceptable to download digital music from strangers.
artists     were nonetheless alarmed, especially when they toured and heard
fans singing along to songs that hadn't                     been released and were out only in
bootleg versions. Others couldn't get too exercised over Napster because
they never saw more than their advances.                           "I don't feel like         Napster cut
into   my    royalties,     because    I   generally don't get royalty payments anyway,"
said   Dean Wareham,             guitarist        and singer      for the       New York      band Luna.
Besides, "radio in this country                    is   awful," he said. "So           how   else are     you
supposed to find out about music, other than a                                    little    harmless     file-
swapping?"
    Some major bands were Napster believers at least at                     —                   first.   The
Beastie Boys was one of them. The members had developed an                                     interest in
things Internet as early as 1994,       when software writer Ian Rogers, an old
friend of singer            Mike "Mike D" Diamond, showed him how the Net
worked during the             rolling      LoUapalooza         festival.    In 1998, Rogers toured
with the band and recorded performances through the mixing board, then
posted the recordings to the group's website.                              "I   started putting those
things up, and         it   created a big stink for them.            They had          Capitol question-
ing them," Rogers said.                Band manager John               Silva helped the Beasties
negotiate to keep the digital rights to their songs, and the band also kept
ownership of part of their master recordings. That gave them greater free-
dom        than most of their peers to experiment. Rogers kept close tabs on
what was happening               in    both music and technology: By then he was
working       at Nullsoft, the tiny               company      that developed Gnutella.             When
AOL bought Nullsoft and suggested he move to                                San Francisco from Los
Angeles, Rogers quit and joined the Beasties'                        own        label.   Grand    Royal, as
head of new media. Diamond was already a Napster                                  user,    both impressed
by   its   reach and alarmed by             its   implications. Rogers told               him he thought
the system was obviously illegal but had tremendous potential for mass
exposure.
       Grand Royal was               selling      CDs     through     its   website, and the             band
began releasing         a track or      two of each new record, downloadable                       for free.
A link on       the    site   sent   Web     surfers to the        approved cuts on Napster, so
Grand Royal could              sidestep paying for the server space                       and bandwidth.
"We would do            promotions," Rogers               said.   "But the      rest   of the record, no.
That's what       we were       trying to      make      a living on." After waiting in vain for
months to see what sort of payment Napster would offer for the band's
amazing        place, because           he had the            skills   to pull   it off,     but not the experi-
ence to       tell   him not do         it.   It   got      way   fiirther    down      the road than anyone
could have imagined." Napster, Rogers                               said,     was the product of a unique
set     of circumstances, the most important of which was the dot-com
investment fever that hit at the exact                                 moment when Shawn and                       the
opportunists around him were setting out on their quest. If Napster hadn't
started just then, he said, "the time could easily have                                 come and gone where
people would give you                  money to do something                    that    is   clearly illegal."
        Alternative band the Offspring had a later                             but even more enthusiastic
awakening to the power of the Web. In 1998, Rolling Stone printed the
first   of a    new kind of pop               chart:        Most Downloaded Songs on                      the Inter-
net. There, at number one, was the Offspring's new song, "Pretty Fly (for
a   White Guy)." "The whole thing                             surprised us," said             band manager Jim
Guerinot,        who         also handles          Beck and        No    Doubt. At one point, the song
had been downloaded 22 million times and the band had sold 8 million
records. "If         we had been downloaded 40                            million times,          would we have
sold 16 million records?" Guerinot wondered.                                       When          Napster rose to
become the Internet                  vehicle of choice. Offspring singer Dexter Holland
        But    like the Beastie           Boys, the Offspring expected some sort of busi-
ness     model        to be     worked out sometime, or                       at least       Napster to ask the
band's permission, which would have been granted speedily.                                               Even     after
the dustup over                it    selling gear           with the Napster logo, the Offspring
remained a supporter. The                       last       straw didn't       come   until      much     later,   when
word      circulated that Napster                      was seeking            a settlement         by offering      its
stock to the record companies. "Why didn't they come to the artists?"
Guerinot asked. "Why not get in bed with the top one hundred artists?
indirectly.     Generally speaking, the more obscure a band was, the more
likely   it   was    to applaud greater exposure                     through Napster. Midsize and
larger bands, while             less likely to            be outright Napster supporters, were
more     likely to feel       cheated by their long-term and unrewarding contracts
with the major              labels.   Those      acts     now had two new               things to be          mad
about.    The       first   was    their contracts.             And      the second was that Napster
could be hurting their sales, and the labels weren't coming up with rea-
sonable alternatives.
       As they chafed under              the dual pressure,              some bands       set    up   their   own
retail               One was the cult band Ween, which hailed from
         operations online.
million albums total. Yet by the end of                            its   contract.     Ween had        not only
never seen a royalty check,                    it still    owed     the label $1.2 million from                 its
records. Total income: about $40,000. But the band got to keep aU that
income.       A big, fat lightbulb appeared over the band members' heads, and
they considered running their                    own       tiny label.     But     Ween was       torn.      Three
thousand people              aren't    very    many       fans.   "They        don't   want   to be a clique
for geeks," a friend of the band explained. If they go back to a major label,
just don't want that to happen to nobody else." More stars filed lawsuits
for back royalties, and some of them won millions of dollars when the
asking the judge not to assume that the labels owned the master record-
terminate the contracts and get those rights back. The Napster court was
       A bigger and more immediate target for the Recording Artists Coali-
tion    was   a   1987 amendment             to a California        law that had ended the old
Hollywood studio system, which bound underpaid                               stars to   movie compa-
nies for      life.     The   original      law said that performers could end their
contracts after seven years               and become         free agents. Intense          lobbying by
the record industry           won     the later     amendment, which             partially    exempted
musicians. Because of that exemption, record companies could require
seven albums in seven years but make that output virtually impossible to
fulfill   in time because of touring, videos,                 and other obUgations. Then the
labels could       hold out the threat of a lawsuit to keep more albums coming
well after the seven years were up.                  Now,      state   lawmakers in Sacramento
were treated to          visits   by a new breed of lobbyist,           in the persons of        Court-
ney Love, Beck, and Carole King.
        The more         the bands bashed the record industry, the more Napster
users felt as          though they were        justified in ripping off the labels,             and the
less inclined          members of Congress were               to   come   to the record industry's
rights," Henley said. "The record industry fiddled on the sidelines while
competition
faced the music, as      it   were. In the end, Napster dominated the market
both because of its damn-the-torpedoes approach and                    its   flawlessly easy-
                                           (    169)
to-use technology.      Only when            it   was crippled       in court did rivals surpass
Napster, and many users say that the system's successors have yet to
were anywhere in evidence in the                    fall   of 1999. Back then, Shawn, Sean
Parker,    and Jordan Ritter were alarmed by programs with names                                           like
CuteMX, iMesh, and Napigator. CuteMX was among the first real
machines. GlobalScape was               known       for     its   Windows    applications,         and the
"client" features seen      by the users were "gorgeous," Ritter                 said.      As     a result,
"they had a following. They were neck and neck with us," he said. Users
could share music and also movies, which were mostly pornographic at
the time.   CuteMX         could have been bigger than Napster, but two things
got in the way.     One was    that as the product of client-program specialists,
the central servers were structured poorly. That meant it was more vul-
nerable to hackers, and           it   was even            less stable   than the early Napster.
When demand grew,           the    CuteMX           servers       had a harder time keeping up.
The    other problem was more basic. GlobalScape was a real                           company with
traditional executives.      When        the record industry called and warned                            them
that they were facilitating copyright violations, the executives hstened.
The     lead developer of the project left the firm,                     and GlobalScape puUed
the plug.
San Francisco and became friends with Shawn, bonding mainly over their
freaked out," Ritter said. By then, there had been a long-running debate
inside Napster about                whether       to link the servers     and how to do it. One                    of
the existing system's weaknesses was that                             everyone who logged on                       to
search for a song was sent to just one server, which in turn referred the
user to others           who were       relying        on the same machine.           When the           number
of servers grew to               fifty, say,    that   meant each user was only exposed                     to the
industry, which could run to the judge already weighing the case. And it
would       offer another          example of how involved the company was in direct-
ing people to songs.               The more hands-off Napster was,                    the better chance             it
had when            it   argued that       it   was    just like a telephone,          company           or other
automated service that couldn't be responsible for the content                                      it    carried.
mind when he              sat for a     sworn interview with the record-industry lawyers
more than            a    month       after     Shawn      started    working on            linking.       Asked
whether a plan for systemwide music searches was in the works, Kessler
replied:     "There hasn't been any discussion of plans to have the server that
users connect to search across the                      names of MP3          files   other than the ones
that user      is    connected         to." Kessler      explained in a later interview that his
denial      had been based on semantics
                                                          —"We    didn't have a plan to              do     it,"   he
said.   The     other case against linking, voiced often by Ritter, was technical.
It   was    a serious challenge to tie the system together,                         and the whole thing
could crash          if it   wasn't done right.          The   biggest hurdle for the coders was
       Parker thought that linking the servers was crucial no matter what
the risk    —not             so   much      for the extra         music      it   would bring              users,   but to
unloose         chat         and still-to-be-developed functions from the                                          isolated
machines. If you wanted to search the universe of all other Napster users,
it   was impossible without connected                             servers.   With           linking, Parker          imag-
ined, the system                   would allow            users to post personal profiles,                        showing
what music they had                    available,         what they were          listening to the most,                   and
what they had been playing most                              recently. If       another user downloaded a
file   from that person, they might want                             to see       what       else the       person was
interested in.              With work,          the system could develop in such a                               way       that
some      users    emerged            as   thought leaders, and others would habitually turn
to    them   to learn             what was new and good,                   just as people turn again                       and
again to the same friend in the real world for advice on a given topic.
       "Ultimately, Napster could have evolved into a bazaar,                                         where subcul-
tures discovered each other," Parker said.                              "You wouldn't find an                     isolated
person, but a person                   who had            an interest in different genres, with their
own      taste,   who was            part of a community, and that user was a destination
in that    community.               ... It could lubricate the social discovery                            of music and
accelerate        it    and usher          in, I   thought, a       new golden              age of music." All of
that   would be              possible only if aU the servers were Hnked.                              And        economi-
cally,   linking        would make Napster                   a natural      monopoly. America Online's
AIM       instant-messenger program worked the same way.                                         It capitalized             on
the so-called network effect, in which the strength of the network grows
geometrically with the addition of each user. That makes                                              it   very painful
for    someone              to leave the network. Because                       AIM         doesn't interact with
other instant-messaging systems,                             many    users won't leave                it    unless they
can get most of their friends to leave                                as well.          If Parker's plan for a
With      Ritter        still     resisting,    Shawn       sat   down     to     do   it   himself        "It   drove     me
to stay    up     for       two or three days and             write,"      Shawn       said.   "That was kind of
implemented. But it made the staff members feel that they were at least
doing something to ward off Frankel's attack.
      When      Gnutella       appeared       nearly    three       months      later,      Napster's
engineers were nervous but impressed.              The system was much more com-
plicated than Napster's. Instead of relying                   on   a central server, Gnutella
was legal action. Once Gnutella was in the wild, there was little the
record industry could do about          it.   Gnutella was "unstoppable from a tech-
nological perspective,"        Shawn e-mailed          his colleagues.
      Gnutella also gave Napster some reasons for                      relief. It     was nowhere
near as easy to use as Napster was.            And     because of its technical structure,
Gnutella had tremendous speed issues as                 its   usage grew.   The problem was
that each inquiry multiplied as           it   ran through the          decision tree. As the
version never got above ten thousand or twenty thousand users, Ritter
that    would legitimize Napster and thereby keep that audience from turn-
ing to Gnutella and escaping their reach.
       "It   was the best thing that could have happened," Parker                                    said.
"We had been trying to get Eileen interested in using this idea as a
threat to get a deal          from Day One." If Gnutella hadn't been invented
elsewhere, Parker said, Napster might even have tried to do the                                  same
thing    itself, officially   or covertly. In fact, he suggested,          "it's    entirely possi-
ble that someone from Napster gave Nullsoft the idea." That's a fairly
some    point, said   NuUsoft veteran Rob Lord. The hard part was writing
the code.
       Frankel had done some serious thinking before deciding to compete
with Napster.      The   Nullsoft crew had played with Napster                      when        it first
came out. "We looked at it and said, 'There's no way this is legal,'" said
Rogers, and Lord discussed the issue again as Napster grew at a mind-
boggling rate and staved off a court-ordered shutdown.                             They decided
they had to hedge their bet.            The   consensus was      "It isn't legal    —but       if it     is,
       GnuteUa would have had some major headaches, were                                it   not for a
bout of    self-restraint   and the bonds of friendship. Just                as the early        Nap-
ster   work had been done over an IRC channel                        that    grew from          a     few
wOOwOO members to seventy or so Napsterites, rival Gnutella began in a
small IRC channel led by Nullsoft employees. Old Napster aide Seth
McGann, known as Minus to his wOOwOO friends, got into the Gnutella
channel for a bit of opposition research, criticizing the architecture of the
system and trying to learn more.               Then he saw         a posting       from someone
who     appeared to be in-house           at Nullsoft.   McGann       used the information
he gleaned to hack the man's computer. Improbably, he succeeded in get-
ting in,    and from there he reached a server where                          McGann            found
encrypted source code as           weU    as the   names and passwords of early                  users.
Debating whether to take the next                 logical step   of the true black hat and
try to steal    and crack the source code             itself,   McGann       hesitated.        But he
did begin boasting in the Gnutella channel about the access he had, offer-
ing up    some of the passwords            as proof.   That provoked some excitement
from the GnuteUa developers, both those opposed                             to the breach             and
those    who    wouldn't have minded taking the code and splintering from
the official effort. It also caught the attention of                 wOOwOO's Song, who
studied    McGann's account of what he had done and                           realized that he
same conclusion that the Nullsoft team had come to about Napster: If it
wasn't     illegal, it   was   close.   And it didn't help              that    AOL was in the process
of buying Time Warner, owner of Big Five record label Warner Brothers.
Aiding and abetting the theft of its acquisition                              target's intellectual        prop-
erty wouldn't go over very weU.                       AOL          ordered Gnutella deleted from
NuUsoft's pages within days. Soon someone using Frankel's                                          IRC    handle
"deadbeef" said he was wondering about "accidentally" releasing the
source code. Gnutella-like code did emerge soon, to the delight of                                          file-
Napster in structure but had some advantages, including the fact that it
was based in Israel, where it would be harder for the record industry to
attack. And iMesh beat Napster to the punch on one technical front,
tem identified segments within each song. Users were then shipped the
multiple parts simultaneously.                 The        process "generally results in the fastest
possible transfer rate            and almost guaranteed                  file   transfer success,"        Shawn
wrote to his coworkers.
      As    a user innovation,          segmented downloading was                          great.   As    a legal
advantage for the users, according to                          Dug       Song,     who was developing
something similar and offered                   it   to   Shawn. If files         were split among mul-
would have exposed the company by showing that                                        it   knew        too   much
about where songs were and that                  it   had        total   power over the           transactions.
       The    matter took on some urgency after Napster                           VP           Bill Bales     heard
that AltaVista, one of the           first   big Internet search engines, was looking to
get into music downloading by buying iMesh.                                That worried Shawn, who
wondered        if AltaVista's    deep-pocketed parent,                      CMGI,             might merge         it
with its own music start-up. Ritter went to work hacking the iMesh sys-
things, the network put too much trust in its clients. Once a part of the
system, a user could hunt for songs                     —or         a lot    of other things, includ-
ing other users' passwords. "IMesh                    is   a   wanna-be        hacker's dream," Ritter
told   Shawn.
       Recruiter Jessie Garrehy, meanwhile, had nominated AltaVista's head
of search technology,           Don Dodge,             for a job at Napster. Ritter                      went     to
dinner with      Dodge    to discuss the position                      and brought         a   hidden agenda:
to kill   any chance iMesh had of being acquired. Over dinner, Ritter casu-
ally   ran through the state of Napster's competition, taking care to drop in
a   mention of the security problem                    at      iMesh. Dodge took                  it all in,     and
AltaVista soon walked away from iMesh. Just to be on                                             the safe side,
Ritter sent the holes he         had found            to his former colleagues at                      BindView
in Boston.      He   suggested that          BindView              issue a security advisory,                which
might have scared away both iMesh users and potential corporate acquir-
ers.   BindView's Benny Czarny, noting                         Ritter's conflict           of   interest,    wrote
back: "I do not find that ethical."              The       security alert       was never             issued.
ting anxious both about others gaining ground and about the slow pace of
of things to do and bugs to                          fix.     But the major               factors   were the lack of
people and some of the legal                          stuff.      Not anything             specifically,     but just the
fact that                                             —
         we suddenly got sued there was just an aversion to changing it
because we didn't know what the rules were. We had no idea."
    In a rare all-points outburst, on March 23, 2000, Shawn e-mailed
Eileen Richardson, Ritter, Parker, engineering boss Kessler, Liz Brooks,
Brandon Barber, and another                             executive, Chris Phenner. "Hey,                           all,   I'm
sorry if this rant offends anyone                         —       this   is   the stuff that has been KILLING
me for the last few months," Shawn wrote. "While we are making great
strides   on the financing and                        legal fronts, the client                   and the community
are lacking behind.                      We    all   agreed very early that this                    is    the most im-
features. . . .
ability to          transfer not just                 music but other types of content, and a
redesign of the user interface.                       "The current production                      client    is still   using
considering the originality of what they were trying to do. They were par-
ticularly       proud of the search engine, which Jordy Mendelson and Ali
Aydar had developed. Unlike Google or AltaVista, the mechanism had                                                         to
cope with a constantly changing index. "From the time Google crawls a
website to the time                       it   actually       shows up in a search window can take
weeks or months.                         We     had to do the same thing in microseconds,"
Mendelson               said.       Shawn and Aydar made                        early passes at the system,              and
Mendelson took                      it   home    to simplify             it   and make       it   faster. "I    ended up
engineering team was close, after thousands of hours of work. He said the
for the full solution. "It's safe to say that Napster as a company is experi-
encing tremendous pressure from the outside, media,                                         industry, legal        and
financial concerns          making demands, and                 it's        important to react to them,"
he wrote. "However,              I   think      it's   incredibly important to                     make   decisions
that will help benefit not only these variables, but our users (read: our
business)."
"We       have tried at least         two other times with implementations that did
not work," Richardson wrote to Barber and the engineers.                                             "We        cannot
and    will not take a       chance        like that again.         .   .    .   LET ME BE CLEAR: THERE
WILL BE NO BUSINESS TO WORRY ABOUT                                          IF    WE ARE NOT          LINKED BY
NEXT WEEK, NONE!" Soon enough,                             Ritter   and Jordy Mendelson did lash
together Napster's servers into two massive clusters. In late May, Ritter
told the marketing           and customer-service people that he had gone even
further, linking together those                      two   clusters.        For the        first   time, if a user
was looking to see if a friend was logged on, the user could find him or
her. And users could see what songs the friend was sharing through a fea-
ture that        had worked poorly           in the past, called HotList.                      "You know your
friend      is     logged    onto         Napster          somewhere,               and      his     username        is
'biliary rosen sux cock.'" Ritter e-mailed the group. "Ail you have to
do   is   add him to your            hotlist,        and then    click his           username to          see    what
files he's   sharing. Brilliant!"
Why give           out any more information than necessary about the company's
technology?           Besides,        it    might provoke the record                        industry,            which
wouldn't help Napster's increasingly crucial search for                               new       funding. Users
in and sharing that user's server. Once a week or so, Ritter or a colleague
would       flip    a switch for a         few minutes, and the display would show                                how
many        users were        on the       entire cluster.       The number would jump from
about eight thousand to about four hundred thousand.                                      Most       users proba-
bly thought the figure was a bug and ignored it. The engineering team's
share the Napster secrets.                 Some of the more         ambitious used technological
clues about the             way Napster worked            to reverse-engineer                   and clone both
the Napster client program seen by users and Napster's back-end program
       Among         the    first client     clones    was   a   buggy contraption                   called      Gnap,
written by a teenager. After the author announced                                   its   existence         on Nap-
ster's   IRC        channel, Ritter and          Shawn    quickly got hold of him in a private
that others could use the source code to develop bot programs that auto-
software that would weed out such bots. The teen assured them that he
would hold onto the code. "The next day, that prick released it," Ritter
said.    And     the author added insult to injury, posting rhetoric about                                     Nap-
ster's   betrayal of the open-source                movement.
     Sure enough, bots soon started to scan Napster, straining the system
and allowing contractors hke                       NetPD     Ltd. to search methodically for
users offering certain songs.               NetPD, run by              a   man named Bruce Ward
out of Cambridge, England, was the firm that provided Metallica with
the screen names of the             more than         three hundred thousand Napster users
could also hop from server to server before Napster linked them. Napster
rejiggered       its   system to    foil   Napigator, and Boyda retooled Napigator to
fool the        new    system. Napster changed again, and Napigator changed
again.    "They did what they should have done                         in the     first   place,       and then
we   couldn't stop        it,"   Ritter said. Privately,         Shawn thought            that Napigator
was a good thing,           as   was Wrapster, which allowed people                       to   swap movies
or documents over Napster by disguising                           them      as   MP3s. "Why                 are   we
fighting napigator?"             Shawn asked one Napster                    volunteer. "If our users
want it, our users are right. If somebody wants to make something that
it   survive the lawsuit        and    start   charging for something.             The development
of OpenNap's server and client unfolded before                               Ritter and Shawn in a
mailing Hst called NapDev. Programmers would ask each other what they
had gleaned about one aspect or another of Napster's workings, and they
would      trade advice about variants of the Napster client                            program       for   non-
Windows operating systems, including the Macintosh, Linux, and Be.
(Among the names these knockoff efforts took were Macster, Knapster,
and even Crapster.) Ritter and Shawn quietly subscribed to the mailing
list,   keeping their nervous eyes on the rearview mirror.
        Both    Ritter   and Shawn        felt conflicted         about the open-source threat.
Napster was about tearing               down     the fences around intellectual property,
and now        its   own   fence was under attack. It was particularly hard on Rit-
ter,    who had      long contributed to open-source projects in other                             areas.     He
could easily imagine himself on the other side of the battle.                                    And        pride
made it even harder for both to keep silent on the mailing list as the
largely shared, stock options or no.                   "We   at   Napster Inc. have our jobs to
do,     and you have yours. You don't know why we implemented the things
we      did,   and we're not going to explain them to you, mainly because                                     it's
not public information," Ritter wrote. "You can                                   sit   at   your computer,
possibly between classes, or               maybe during               a    company lunch           break, or
whenever, and ponder the meaning of why certain things are as they are
wiU be wrong, because you have no idea what goes on behind closed
doors,       and you assume that we're             all idiots, as         past and current experience
is also showing.
       "Then     you'll post   it   to this       list,   or to        some other forum, and by the
hand of some          perverse irony,     it      will    suddenly become fact and spark dis-
cussion.       Soon   after, it will     have spread              all    over   IRC           or e-mail            lists   or
tually find out most of the answers —no one's debating that (especially
since we're not trying to stop you). Reiterating that point over and over is
a waste of breath        and bandwidth, and often times serves only to antago-
nize us.
       "We     can't give   you any information because Napster                                         is    not some
garage organization working off of some cliche Pentium and 486 laptop,
but rather an incorporated company with a development team, marketing
team, bizdev [business development] team, and an executive management
team. Hypothetically speaking,                    if I    were to have a strong desire to give
you    all   the information you needed to write a complete client,                                          I couldn't.
It's not mine to give any more, it's the company's. . . . Oh yeah, and it
would be nice if you didn't assume we were all stupid, which is ignorant,
and    a gross underestimation.               Almost        all       the Napster developers are also
open-source developers."
       Evan Martin wrote an immediate and public                                apology. "I didn't                   know
anyone would be offended.               I didn't      even       know that anyone was listening!"
he e-mailed. "I'm sorry         this has          caused        you so much grief. I'd like to reit-
erate that everyone who's taken the effort to get to this point has                                            demon-
strated their dedication            and respect           for   your product. Most of us just find
it   fun to hack."     Once    the outside programmers discovered that Ritter and
Shawn were         listening, they       would occasionally ask                  polite questions about
why the Napster team had done the things that they had, or if they were
was going wrong at Napster, the young men sometimes gave answers that
Weekly and ordered him                      to take the posting             down. Weekly did                     so,   then
helpfully e-mailed the               NapDev              effort instructions           on how           to find copies
of what he had written. "I'm not going to                                  let   them            bully me!"      Weekly
wrote.   "And            remember: linking to documents                        is   perfectly kosher.              Looks
like   someone's already             made       a   copy    at http://lovenapster.tripod.com."
morality and ways to avoid copyright liability. After many Napster users
were banned for offering Metallica                          tracks,     some of them blundered onto
the    NapDev            mailing     list   as well in their quest to get reconnected. "Is
there any other way to get back on or where is another MPS sharing
site?" one young AOL user asked. That ticked off a number of the hard-
developers list, not a piracy assistance hotline." But someone else did tell
group ensued over whether Napster was putting its user base at risk for
legal action. "I think               it's   a   damned huge             security flaw," wrote                  NapDev
subscriber Ian            Brown.     "If the        Recording Industry Association of America
decided to really go after Napster,                         it   would be a cinch                 for   them     to write
       What Brown               and the others            didn't    know was           that Napster         was wor-
ried about the             same    thing.       Looking          for   an answer,           it   had begun talking
with Zero- Knowledge Systems                              Inc.,   which made software                      for    anony-
like   an onion, with layer wrapped around                           layer.    When    one of Zero-
Knowledge's servers received the request for information, by necessity
revealing        where the request was coming from, the server peeled off that
information in the         first   layer   and sent the           rest   on   to another server.    That
second server had no way of knowing where the original request had
come from. The            process was then repeated,                       making communication
untraceable.
       Napster tried to make a deal with Zero- Knowledge that would have
given      its   users absolute invisibility.           Even more             provocatively,   it   would
have allowed Napster to keep reaching users                              at corporations       and cam-
puses that had banned Napster access. "As                           more and more         institutions
put the deal together, using Shawn's desire for continued hypergrowth as
a   mild    threat.   "Shawn       (napster)      and   I   are   both getting very fidgety over
the blocking of our service at various institutions, and                             would     like to at
least see    something happen," Ritter wrote.                     A minute later, he added: "And
you know Shawn,           if   something doesn't happen soon, we're                     likely to see a
cowboy roaming the                 halls."    The       talks     with Zero- Knowledge failed
because the         demand     for      bandwidth from millions of users would have
been too large        for the architecture to handle.
Consumers hunting for free music and                                     hackers looking for some-
thing to do were not the only groups inspired by Napster's innovation and
raging popularity. Big companies also took note and began to respond, in
some     cases     by striking     alliances      with hackers barely older than Shawn.
Peer-to-peer, they realized,               was     a very, very big deal.            Longtime        Intel
Corp. chairman   Andy Grove, the head of the world's largest microproces-
sor    maker and a man not known for hyperbole, declared: "The whole
Internet could be re-architected by Napster-like technology." Intel wrote
  own programs for allowing employees to grab files from one another.
its
With improved network flow and cheaper storage off the main servers,
friend Shawn Fanning. When Gnutella first burst onto the scene from
Nullsoft, the Napster             team had been surprised                 to see   Kan quoted more
than anyone            else,    including publicity-averse Justin Frankel, the lead
writer of the software. If            Kan had       truly   become the       lead developer       on the
project, Napster's engineers thought,                  maybe they could            relax: Just   months
earlier,   Kan had asked          for a job     with Napster, and he had bombed by dint
of personality.
       Kan had        applied at Napster as a server engineer, boasting in a group
his early twenties, Ritter               was incredulous, impulsively asking how old
Kan     was.   Kan immediately warned                 that the question          was   illegal   and that
he could       sue.   One      of Napster's personnel chiefs pulled Ritter out of the
meeting and told him that Kan was                      correct, that Ritter        had unknowingly
put the company in danger. So the team decided to keep the interview
going just to build a case for not offering Kan a job on other grounds.
That wasn't           difficult to do.     The engineers sent Kan to see supervisor
Daphne Dembo, who gave                    many job candidates brainteasers to see how
they were at problem solving.                  When       she posed one to Kan, he said he
wouldn't answer          it    because   it   was   insulting,    and that was      that.
       Kan's route to fame and fortune began                      later, at a   lunch for car enthu-
siasts in      Sunnyvale.        He   emerged from the meal                  to find a      young man
leaning on Kan's treasured and heavily modified                            Mazda RX-7. The          pos-
ture first struck  Kan as offensive, but it was intended to show                             respectful
interest. The young man, who appeared to be in his late twenties but was
pentant car freak, Oliver was also a programming ace working as a con-
tractor        at   Nullsoft.        Kan and          Oliver became friends                   and eventually
roommates, just two of the large number of peer-to-peer                                       elites,   including
"I've always Hked cars, but I got into RX-7s because of the guys at
Nullsoft," Shawn said. He wasn't content with his first RX-7, so he tried
to sell   it   on eBay. That became                   a   news item      for the website            CNet, which
embarrassed           Shawn with            speculation that things must be going badly for
him and Napster financially. So Shawn delisted the car and sold it to
Oliver. Shawn bought another in Florida that didn't quite suit him either,
and sold that. "I was just trying to find one I really Hked, and I finally
found the silver RX-7 that I'm in love with," Shawn said. "I mean, it's a
Mazda, and            it's   pretty fast stock,           and    if you fix all   of the weird flaws with
it   and do     a   few minor changes to                  it,   they're pretty fast cars."
racing, where speeds exceeded one hundred miles an hour. "I like acceler-
ating, but that was the first time I could actually open it up and really
learn the limits of the car," he said. Trouble with the police wasn't
unheard of "Some of the top people have been arrested," said Oliver,
naming no names. Oliver had the most reason                                      to be     annoyed when the
police    ended an evening's                 festivities, since        he usually        won       the races even
Everyone had                 a lot of respect for               what everyone       else    was doing," Kan
said.    "Nobody had any kind of an                             attitude.   We    had      fian."   Through        his
new roommate                 Oliver and the other people at Nullsoft,                       Kan kept      tabs     on
the development of Gnutella. After                              AOL shut    it   down, the Gnutella pro-
gram      itself     was released           in the wild, but not the underlying code. Pro-
recode, and improve the program. As they made progress, the twenty-
three-year-old       Kan    offered to help. "I        was   late to the         game," he    said.   But
when an       Associated Press reporter contacted some of the real leaders of
the project, they referred the reporter to Kan.                   A photographer showed up
to take his picture,       and Kan suddenly became the face of what was being
hailed as the      most   likely   Napster successor.
       Kan   stuck around the open-source Gnutella effort for a few months.
at Nullsoft are extremely            hkely to have enabled him to help the other
programmers. Giving away the source code developed on AOL's nickel
would have        violated Frankel      and Pepper's obligations to                their employer. It
also might have opened them and the company to massive Uability if the
record industry sued over the program.                   While Kan              insisted in   an inter-
view that the open-source Gnutella code was redesigned, not leaked,
there   is   an area in between,            filled   with helpful hints, suggestions, and
carefully    worded questions about what methods the new developers were
trying.   Asked     if   the Nullsoft team at least gave the open-sourcers direc-
tion    by means of winks and nods, Kan remained wordless. Then he
winked, and he nodded.
like Gnutella, there         was    a   profound economic one: There was no clear
way for      the creator of a system of ad hoc networks to                      make any money off
of it. So    Kan and      others   who were more         business oriented began rethink-
ing the entire issue.       Kan spoke with           Oliver and another friend about                  how
to   overcome that problem and avoid the "bad rap Gnutella was getting
because      it   was associated with piracy and porn and                          all   these kind of
muckraking things," Kan             said.    During two weeks             in    June 2000, the three
came up with        a prototype product          and    called    it   Infrasearch.
One would-be investor simply had his secretary call Kan and ask for the
     Among      the callers were         VC       firm Redpoint Ventures and                    Ron Con-
way,    who was   never one to         let   an opportunity go           by.   Redpoint listened to
a presentation about Infrasearch,                 which    didn't include         much of a       business
model. "We just wanted them to pay our biUs for a while, to see where it
lawyer's office,    where the contract                 for the    $2 million deal was signed.
"There was no           specific business         model,"     Bozeman            recalled.      "Gene was
getting   some good notoriety            in the press, so        we knew         there   would be       a lot
its cover in December 2000 with a headline blaring that the tiny firm
would be "bigger than Napster." The                     article          noted that Infrasearch had no
revenue to date,             little    technology that others couldn't imitate, and a
swarm of competitors                  in the exploding post-Napster field.                         But by then,
media and       VC     frenzies       had erupted over peer-to-peer, and the corporate
world was paying close attention to                    all    of it. Perhaps the only thing more
surprising than         Red Herring crowning                      a   Napster successor so early was
what Sun Microsystems did about                        it.   Urged on by cofounder and chief
scientist     BiU    Joy, a legendary engineer for                        two decades. Sun               in   March
2001 swapped about $10 million worth of stock for Infrasearch, hiring
Kan and       his   car-happy colleagues in the bargain.
search into the project and launched Jxta weeks                                  later.    There would be no
charge to download Jxta and join in                           its       searchable network.              And Sun
made      the project open source, releasing the code for others to improve as
effort,   and thousands of software writers downloaded the code. But more
than a year         later,    the technology was stiU far from ubiquitous, and                                      it
wasn't clear        how anyone           could    make any money from                       it.   Kan, however,
got a pile for himself and his employees, and they got to                                         work on     things
that interested them at Sun. Asked later why more hadn't happened with
take over efforts at innovation that were successful elsewhere, they assign
ability     because they have risen using a contrary set of skills, those needed
for surviving in a corporate hierarchy full                                  of entrenched systems.            The
effort to     keep innovating almost always                           fails.   Tragically,      Kan     also incor-
ing to buy Napster outright as well. Once in charge, such buyers could
have let the courtroom gamble ride, adapted the system for different uses,
was reluctant        to   do much         talking: If she had, the big             companies could
have figured out               how   to copy         what Napster had done.                  Instead, the
besieged firm would have to                    make     its   own   way, raising     money from         the
professional risk-takers, the venture-capitalist kingpins of Silicon Valley.
all-time high,    and many venture firms were drooling over Napster's unbe-
lievable statistics   —more      than 10 million users. But before Richardson
could get what she thought was the right firm and the right terms, she
would have     to battle   John Fanning more                fiercely   than she had   at   any time
since the   two met   in   October 1999.
      Ahead of that    first   meeting, employees warned Richardson that Fan-
ning was a big problem         who had         hustled his      nephew Shawn and was out
for only himself Ali Aydar, her first hire, told Richardson in all serious-
ness that his    mother would         kill   him   if   she found out he was working for
another John Fanning company, since Aydar had been taken advantage of
so badly at Chess.net.         But    as the     time neared for Fanning to           fly   out and
                                             (   191    )
inspect the operation, Richardson began getting warnings of another,
unexpected sort. "You're going to love him," Sean Parker told her. "He's
incredibly charismatic."
Richardson       how thrilled         he was that she was running the company.                              "I   was
surprised he      was so      likable,"    Richardson           said. "I tried to          be nice and       listen
Fanning and          his    marketing deputy,                Tom     Carmody, were each drawing
monthly       salaries     of about $5,000 through December 1999 despite having
no executive      positions. "It          was so     far   out of what           I   was used      to,"   Richard-
son   said.   Yosi   Amram's         initial    $250,000 investment also went to Hull and
was under Fanning's control                 for far longer than Richardson                      had expected.
Fanning told her he was paying                         office    expenses and              salaries.      Then he
stalled her, telling        Richardson that the               rest   of the          money had been          trans-
Fanning and Carmody. By then, $62,000 was gone, she said. Amram said
company.       Amram        had bought the             entire issue          of Series      A   Senior shares,
which had        special rights, while the others                     had mainly             Series       A Junior
shares.   Amram         paid 20 cents for his shares, while Richardson and Bales
said they paid        30    cents,   both to Fanning's personal account.                           And Amram
got another million shares of the Series                        A Junior direct from Fanning for
what Amram           said   was 2 cents each,              a mystifyingly            low   price.   In declining
order of their stakes, Napster's junior holders included Fanning, Shawn,
Amram, Jim           Gidwitz, Bill Bales, Richardson, Aydar, and Brian                                    McBar-
ron. It remains unclear exactly                     how much John Fanning made by                           selling
his shares through the course of Napster's life. But a capitalization table
reflecting the state          of things after the Series                     A       round shows him with
fewer than 5 million shares,                   down from         the 7 million he took                    when he
incorporated the company. Based on what                            Amram,             Richardson, and Bales
say they paid for those 2 million shares, Fanning                                          made more than
bargain-basement price, were "the chess move John made to get Yosi on
his side" during disagreements                 among      the directors, Richardson later
concluded. Bales figured Fanning needed to do something special for
Amram        to get         him involved     at aU, since     Amram           had     lost   money         at
Chess.net.      When             the weekly board meetings had a key issue,                     Amram
"didn't really vote          with John, but he would try to mediate.                  It   meant noth-
ing got decided," Richardson said.
      Amram         said     he wasn't unduly influenced by the cheap shares. But
he agreed that he was stuck in the middle on                            many          topics. "I don't
a mandate."
showed that the Series A Junior shares had been sold three times, in
March, April, and October of 1996,                          at prices "ranging             from 0.8 cents to
7.5 cents"      —   a spread of        more than 800             percent.     John Coffee, one of the
most widely         cited    securities-law experts and a professor                       at   Columbia Uni-
versity   Law       School, said such sales are legal as long as they are disclosed.
Even with fliU disclosure, selling the same class of shares at different
payments for stock            transfers, salary for             John Fanning, and other question-
able practices weren't atypical for start-ups in their earliest stages. "Tradi-
tionally, it    happens       in the first       two or three years of a company's                      Hfe,     and
it   gets cleaned       up   in the next four years, before                you go        public."
During the bubble, that kind of evolution was so telescoped that the
Fanning and Richardson argued                                   often during his            visits   and board
meetings in which he participated by phone. After Richardson stopped
stock, Shawn asked her for advice on how to sell some of his own shares,
and she gave him the name of a lawyer. During the next board call,
she wanted Fanning         to.   Fanning seemed incredulous that his                     nephew had
consulted Richardson instead of coming to him.                          "I find that       unbeHev-
able   —   that he   would ask you        for help,"    Fanning      said.   Richardson, listen-
ing along with other Napster executives in the                    company conference room,
drew    in her breath. "John," she said.           "Fuck you."
       The   pair also argued over           what stance          to take against the record
was trying to do what was right              for the    company, including lining up the
right venture firm.       "You know what you're worried about? John                           fiicking
Fanning," she told him. The next day, he came in and gave her flowers.
       Vice President Bill Bales said that he had tried and failed to get Fan-
ning to back away from trying to manage the firm. "John                             is   an   egotist,"
Bales said. "He's a wildcat." But Bales said that he didn't fike                                 what
Richardson was doing             at the   company,      either,   and that she handled Fan-
ning the wrong way. "She was becoming almost obstreperous. She didn't
use psychology," he said. Once,              when   Bales suggested that Richardson                tell
Fanning she was sorry about something, she                   said,      "Tm   not going to apol-
ogize to      him     for anything,'" Bales recalled.             "Maybe      it   was    integrity. I
don't know."
Bales said. "He was like Switzerland. That could have been a mistake."
including in his efforts to recruit                         new     executives.     High on     his list      was
Rob Lord,         the young director of online strategy at NuUsoft, maker of the
Winamp MPS               player.       Lord had          first   heard from Napster      when John Fan-
ning called him during the                         summer of 1999 and proposed an                     alliance,
since most Napster users already relied on Winamp software to play their
songs.      Lord looked            at the    site   and discussed what Napster was doing with
his handful           of colleagues.          "We        agreed very quickly that they would be
sued off the planet," Lord                     said.      In October, Lord's         name came up             as a
Napster's system wasn't that hard to imitate.                                The    important thing was
to maintain the critical                 mass that came with being the biggest provider,
she    felt.   Led by Richardson, everyone                         at the    meeting agreed not to go
after   Lord.
      Yet Bales went ahead anyway, swearing Sean Parker to secrecy and
taking      him along             to   meet Lord.          Parker, aware that Bales           had     his     own
relationship with Fanning, wasn't sure                              what     to   do and elected to keep
quiet.      Lord      told Justin Frankel                and the others      at Nullsoft that        he had no
interest in leaving               but would agree to a meeting to see what Napster was
up    to.   Richardson found out about the get-together                              later   and came         to a
second dinner with Lord to close the loop. There she made Lord sign a
nondisclosure agreement, and to the extent that Lord's real mission had
been to gather           intelligence,             he was soon frustrated. "They weren't being
forthcoming enough to even recruit me.                              Which made me         think the situa-
tion    was even worse than                  I'd    imagined," Lord said. "If they had given                   me
a great story, I        might have been                  interested, but I didn't hear        it."   Lord     also
showed         less   optimism than the Napster crew did about the company's
prospects.       "What about                 the lawsuit?" he asked, long before the record
industry acted. Richardson looked stunned.                                 "What     lawsuit?" she asked.
unleashed Gnutella. Using instant messages, the young      men would dis-
cuss coding a little, cars and women more often. A year later, when Nap-
ster was in its darkest hour. Lord was at his grandmother's house when he
got nearly simultaneous instant messages from Shawn and Frankel. His
grandmother didn't understand how both had traced him to her house.
"Well," he said, "they're both                my friends. This            one has always done what
he   liked, building tools for listening to                    music on the Internet.               And   he just
sold his       company       for   $100     million.      And my          other friend          —he    also did
worst thing that could happen                  is   you could throw up                    in your   dorm room
and get kicked            out.   Now, with         the Internet, you can be up $100 million
or down billions."
One day near the end of 1999, after the recording industry had indeed
filed suit, Bales called New York investor Jason Grosfeld. Napster was
raising its second round of financing. Bales said. Since Grosfeld had
nearly invested when the company was back in Hull, Bales wanted to
know if he still wanted in. If so, now was the time. Grosfeld was intrigued
but skeptical, given the history and his dealings with Fanning. During the
call,   Grosfeld realized that Bales and Richardson didn't                                  know how close
he had come to being the lead backer of Napster that                                       summer and what
had gone wrong.            He    guessed that           Shawn and Parker had kept                   quiet about
the early financing quest so as not to spook the new managers. Grosfeld
said he would consider coming out to San Mateo for a meeting if Bales
gave him the capitalization table, the                     list   of who owned what share of the
company.         A basic document, the cap table                   is    essential for funders because
work up a cap table yet because he didn't know who was investing in the
new      round. Grosfeld said that was                    fine;    Bales could just         show him the
one reflecting the              status quo. Bales, himself a large shareholder, said                             he
ought to be able to put one together                         if   Grosfeld came out to                 visit.   Or,
he said, John Fanning would fax Grosfeld one. Right, Grosfeld thought.
ence," he recalled.             When         he was through, Richardson just                stared, her         jaw
literally      hanging open. Bales got up and walked to                         his   nearby       office,      put
his feet       up on     his desk,      and dropped        his    head in   his hands,       not emerging
even to         tell    Grosfeld goodbye. Grosfeld drove to see                             Amram         before
leaving,       and they chatted amicably. "Keep                     me    in   mind    if   you get things
straight,"      Grosfeld        said,   and he flew home.
       There was a natural tension                     in Bales's job, even if        he did      it   correctly.
could replace his boss.             It   was      a delicate proposition,       made    all   but impossi-
ble    when      Bales mixed the two overtures. If he was interested in a poten-
tial    fiander    whom          he also saw           as a potential     CEO,        he was essentially
asking that person to invest in a                        company whose management needed
changing       —not the most assured of come-ons. And                                        may
                                                                                  at times Bales
have overstressed the point about the need for a                                  new CEO. One of
Bales's    multipurpose targets was Peter Macnee,                         who headed           a   New York
Internet firm called FortuneCity.com Inc. Like dozens of its competitors,
profit.     Even though the company was                       losing money,               it   had raised nearly
$100 million in an IPO. Like TheGlobe.com, FortuneCity offered users
free   homepages on the Web.                 It   had added other          services as well, including
invest, and he was going to be very choosy." Bales was more persistent,
calling repeatedly          and coming            to   meet Macnee          in   New York.           Bales   went
over Napster's prospects and confidently predicted that the                                            company
would win       in court. "Bales struck                  me   to be, for his times, a very               shrewd
entrepreneur,"        Macnee        said later, "but sort of made for the time: a wheeler
and dealer made for the up market." Bales never offered Macnee a job,
"but    I   sensed    him   recruiting me. It             was    clear   he had no love for Eileen,"
he   said.
       Macnee was       interested         enough        to fly out to     San Mateo, where he met
Richardson, technology chief Eddie Kessler, and,                             briefly,           Shawn, who was
wearing a black Napster baseball cap. Macnee wasn't impressed by
Richardson,      who was        "all      over the map," he said. Later,                       Macnee checked
with his      firm's lawyers        and a former           RIAA      executive to get their take                on
the lawsuit.      He came away                thinking there was a                   much        greater risk of
Napster losing than           its   executives let on.           He      asked       if   the   company would
indemnify FortuneCity                if   the firm invested and Napster lost in court, and
they told him no. That turned out to be the deal breaker. "For us to take
on     a legal battle like that           would have been           nuts.   We just             said, 'Let's stick
phone with John Fanning.                     When          Benjamin asked Fanning about the
financial     might of Napster's enemies. Fanning told him: "I'm going                                    to   buy
Universal. I'm going to               buy Disney." Benjamin came                               to his senses   and
dropped out of contention for the                        job. "It   was   a total         megalomaniac view
of the world," Benjamin                   said.   "This will be the ultimate business school
of his   fortune into shares in the company, even borrowing $100,000 from
Amram        to invest more,             and he worked without a                          salary. "I     gave every-
thing I had to Napster," Bales said. He met with some potential Napster
touch, she did each time. His continued presence was hard on                                                    many of
the Napster faithful, including Jessie Garrehy,                                    who    sat a   dozen        feet   from
Bales in the        Xtime     office.        Bales was spreading a                     rumor about an evening
of excess shared by Garrehy, Richardson, and John Lee. After Garrehy
found out and confronted Bales, he cockily told her that since                                            it   was    true,
it   didn't matter.       Back      at   her desk, Garrehy picked up a                          full   mug     of coffee
and hurled         it   at Bales.   The mug struck the wall between Xtime and Nap-
ster   and exploded         in pieces.
ten rid of immediately. Kessler had already warned Richardson that Bales
and Fanning were plotting to get                                rid   of   her,   and Aydar and Ritter con-
vinced him that            now was           the time           to act. "If       he doesn't leave, I'm leaving
too," Kessler told Richardson.                          Informed of the situation by Richardson,
Bales figured Ritter was a hopeless case, since he was dating Garrehy.                                                  He
thought his best shot was to turn Aydar around, which might sway
Kessler.
John Fanning, Amram, Shawn, and                                       Kessler. "I      was   told   by Eileen that
you were walking             if I didn't leave                  the    company by            5 p.m.," Bales wrote
just after that          hour on Friday, December                          17. "I've     gone back over aU              my
e-mails with you, and they stand as proof of                                      my   feelings for you. It           was   a
shock to hear Eileen say                     this   .   .   .   but I'm open-minded enough to hear
your side of the            story."      Then       Bales attacked the                  company        itself,   voicing
legitimate gripes shared by others but also displaying much of his special
smeU like a rotten egg? If it's going to stink like this my vote is to flip it
and move on. You absolutely cannot build                             a business    around an environ-
ment    so loathsome."
"DUDE," Shawn fired back immediately to Bales alone. "Why did you
intended upon finding out Ali's story you probably should have cleared it
up with him alone before broadcasting                         this   message. This is just wrong!"
      Richardson             finally sided      with Aydar and the others and told Bales he
was   fired, that           he wouldn't be working through the end of his six-month
term. Bales didn't take the news well. Others in the office were concerned
enough          that they called Kessler to             warn him       that Bales     might be headed
his way. Kessler, in turn,                  took the threat seriously enough that he called
the police. Bales never showed up at Kessler's house. But soon                                              after,
Just firing Bales wasn't enough to stop him. Since he believed Fan-
ning    stiU         held the real power at the company, he launched an audacious
bid to take over the most important aspect of Napster's                                efforts,       from      his
own view and               Fanning's: getting         money fast. In an       e-mail sent in January,
Bales wrote again to Fanning and                           Amram.          "This should not be for-
warded          to anyone,"         he began, "but please note that                it is   for the record.
even understands the process of raising                         money from VCs. ...                   I   wiU be
disgusted if we don't get a                   VC     and we    let   the   momentum         dissipate       with
It's   been 5 months and we are no closer today than we were then. I'm
really disgusted         by the     lost opportunity.                   John."
       Amram,   stepping in once more as mediator, then added his opinion:
"I don't    think saying        we          are    no       closer today     is fair."     Fanning replied with
the last word, saying that in his view the problem was exacerbated
value has risen out of the range of most top tier VCs then we have the
Even while waging                   his rearguard action at Napster, Bales was talking
to     Fanning about new ventures, including some that would be potential
competitors to Napster. In ordinary times and at ordinary companies,
such discussions could be considered a conflict of interest for Fanning.
The      idea that Bales spent                    most of            his post-Napster time            on was some-
thing he called AppleSoup.                         It       was another hybrid peer-to-peer system,
meaning      that   it   would keep               central control of content that                    was housed on
users'    computers. But instead of swapping music, users would swap short
films or animation.            And           it   would come with                 a   rights-management            sys-
tem, so that the creators of the content would have to approve each trans-
fer    and viewing. Since Napster                       at times considered                expanding from music
into other media, a conflict could have arisen.                                  But that        didn't stop Bales,
of Artisan Entertainment Inc., a movie studio best known for the raging
success of The Blair Witch Project.             Mark    Curcio was interested in leaving
Artisan, and he         was vacationing on Martha's Vineyard                  in Massachusetts.
Fanning and Kay flew to the island and spent three hours talking about
NetMovies. Fanning said that NetMovies would be similar to Napster,
only with fees for usage and copyright control. Curcio thought he was
being snowed.       "It wasn't clear      he had any money whatsoever," Curcio told
another entertainment-industry figure.               And when         he went to inspect the
operation in Los Angeles,             "it   was two guys      in a closet. It           was   like the
Wizard of Oz." The code wasn't even written yet, and Curcio passed.
       The two     guys in the closet were Csaba Fikker and Gerald Bagg. Ear-
lier in   2000, Fanning had called Fikker, the old production expert from
Bales's   ON24, and         asked   him     to help. Fikker   was    still   kicking himself for
not following Bales to Napster, so he signed on as                    VP      of operations, and
Bagg joined        as   CEO.   Fanning raised money from Napster investors Jim
Gidwitz and Sung-Bu Kim, a contact of                      Bales's   through his          girlfriend,
HoUy Shin. Bales also met with some prominent Hollywood figures,
tomorrow," Fikker               said.       "Gerald was the only one                 who could commu-
nicate with him." Far worse was Fanning's idea of                                      how to build the
business, Napster-style.                He went          out and bought a bunch of copyright-
protected       DVDs           at     the     store      and directed the NetMovies                    staff to
duplicate the content and put                      it   on the   server,   without getting permission
from anybody, Fikker                  said.   That       certainly     would have gotten NetMovies
attention,      and very         likely a lawsuit.            But Fanning evidently             felt   that the
same negative attention paid to Napster had done wonders. "The plan
was   'Let's    have     it   up on the        servers,       open the     gates,    and then       we'll figure
it   out   later,'"   Fikker recalled.           "It    was   like a lunatic idea."       The       only reason
NetMovies         didn't       go through with the gambit was that the technology
wasn't working well enough, Fikker said.
Napster asking about Flycode's plans. "What's the deal?" he asked. "I
believe Bill Bales              is    the    CEO."        Ritter responded to the               same group:
"Once       a scumbag, always a scumbag."
But Napster           still   had no revenue, and                it   was spending millions of dollars
on    legal expenses,           on     servers to handle the still-bulging traffic,                     and on
improvements to the                   service.     And    only a venture round would get rid of
the last of Fanning's control.
      Richardson's            first call     was    in January        2000    to the established firm of
New        Enterprise Associates on Sand Hill                          Road   in   Menlo      Park.   Her con-
tact there, the          VC      and Fortune magazine columnist Stewart Alsop, had
good reason           to listen to Richardson.                She had courted him             to invest     NEA
When she called this time, Alsop had already heard of Napster and
much that Napster had no business plan: As he saw things, it didn't have
its business model is terrible, and its software isn't even all that good."
million dollars        on    legal bills       and the same amount on research and devel-
opment. Richardson and marketing                           VP   Liz Brooks honed their financing
pitch, putting together a               PowerPoint          slide   show    in February. It included a
tried to    make       the lawsuit a plus, arguing that                     it   had put the brakes on
more cautious competitors. The business model resembled                                              a smorgas-
marketing to consumers.
       When      the    number of          users, already passing 5 million, multiplied a
few more times, Richardson and Brooks said, it would be in the industry's
But the opportunity was so big that Kleiner couldn't bring itself to
walk away completely. Doerr Hked Richardson, and Kleiner had backed
Amram      once before,       at Individual Inc.             At      the end of the pitch meeting,
to stay in the running        —    a       bridge loan of $1 miUion. She got the check the
same    day.   But      at the rate           Napster was burning through money, that
wouldn't   last   even until June. Just as Alsop had done for his partners,
Mackenzie agreed          to look deeper.
      When     he did, Mackenzie thought he saw a way out of the jam that
Napster was       in,   and he suggested that Richardson                     talk to another         smaU
Kleiner-backed firm called                  Gigabeat, which was working on                   a system for
Her   heart set on BCleiner, Richardson redoubled her efforts. She                              met with
Gigabeat's young           CEO,            Erin Turner, and began to discuss a merger.
Turner was a rising          star in the VaUey.                  She had been working toward               a
ence. It seemed like a great fit for Gigabeat, and "from Napster's perspec-
tive,   they realized they had taken off so fast that the ship was shaking and
barely holding together," Turner said.                    The two companies began                     a long
the looming fight over a preliminary injunction.                         "Our     legal   team was not
optimistic,"      Turner       said.   "They       anticipated Napster potentially paying
with the record industry, since Kleiner had concluded that                                     it   would be
backing a losing legal position.
        Richardson returned from a meeting with Turner                           late   one night with
good news        for    Amram         and a     plan.   The two companies would combine,
with Napster stockholders getting two-thirds of the resulting firm, and
then BQeiner would invest S15 million.                     The    deal   would value the merged
firm at       more than $150          million. Napster          would get the Kleiner stamp of
approval,       and    it   would get       a   $100 million valuation          —not bad            for a six-
think that Kleiner would want to share the deal, but he figured that it
would spur the firm to act quickly to cut Yang out. "I suspect it will get
those two more competitive when he calls and KP gives him the finger. It
turn    it   into a sale of assets, rather than a straight                  merger and investment.
If an   asset sale left    Napster Inc. behind               as   an empty     shell,   the trick might
have complicated the record industry's legal                            assault:   Napster could dis-
tribute the sale proceeds to              its   shareholders and promptly disappear.                    And
the gambit likely         would have extracted Napster from                    its   grief with      Draper
Atlantic,      which was     still   claiming the right to invest at a bargain price in
any     new investment         round. Technically, an asset sale wouldn't be an
               Amram mused. "Would it help w/riaa?
investment round,                                                                       certainly     would
help w/DA," Amram wrote to Richardson.
       The meeting        at Kleiner      went       off as planned,       and Doerr told Richard-
son the deal would get done. She and                        Amram        girded themselves for the
big talk with Fanning. Since he had sold                          many of his       shares.   Fanning no
longer had an absolute majority of the stock. But under the company's
refiled incorporation papers, approval                   by 67 percent of the Series              A Junior
shares       was needed    to issue a      new      class   of stock, the     class that      would go    to
a venture firm.        And Fanning had              41 percent of the Series            A Junior shares,
enough        to block anything he didn't like. In a tense                   and sometimes           circular
only an hour passed before Fanning told her that he had changed his
mind.      He      said Gigabeat                was getting too much of                          Kleiner's       money.
Richardson thought another reason was that he feared                                            —    correctly    —that
Kleiner wouldn't want                him        to stay     on the board.
       Just like that, the deal died.
       Strategically, Napster's last best                     chance went             down with         it,   according
to Richardson and her confidant, Xtime CEO John Lee. "They wanted
him off the board. That's where the battle was lost," Lee said. "Either
John Fanning            gets off         and they get             real financing            and legitimize them-
selves, or       he   doesn't.   .   .   .   He      didn't care about the kids.                 He    was a greedy
bastard."
and exhortation to the troops that spoke to those fears. "Fellow Napsters,
our company has come to a critical stage," she began. "What attracted
each and every one of us to Napster                           is   the chance to change the world.                        A
chance to make things better for consumers, a chance to change the                                                      life
ways Napster could blow it: executing poorly, making bad decisions, fail-
ing to get the         New Artist Program running,                          and       infighting.      She asked the
staff to   work        harder, stay focused,                 and be nicer to each                   other.    "Someday
we     will be basking in the glory of having created the fastest growing,
most     successful      company in                 the Valley.    And you,           the   first   25 employees of
this    company, will be the ones                       who       created the foundation for success."
ware and Internet bets, though it had wisely avoided dot-com retailers. It
had supported Viant Corp., the big Web consultant, and Critical Path
got a    call    from John Fanning, who asked                  to   come    in    and make              his   own
case.    Fanning went in and told Zachary that Napster was worth $1                                            bil-
ning     said.   What's more, Napster was               just part of a broader plan.                    Fanning
was     starting his   own   incubator, NetCapital.                Mohr, Davidow should                   invest
$20 million for a       fifth   of the company. Like Kleiner Perkins, Mohr, Davi-
dow wanted Fanning dropped                      as a   Napster      director.     At   a   Napster board
meeting with Richardson and                      Amram, Fanning            again voted no, saying
price before the negotiations                   ended without a         deal.     Along the way, the
partners were informed that Fanning                        would    part with the technology for
swapping music, but wanted to keep the rights for swapping video and
other content. "It was insane," a                      Benchmark partner               said.      "But        that's
greed for you." Fanning also kept the rights to the unused Napster.net
domain name, which he has                    to this day.
Richardson gathered herself to make still more calls. As she did, the
stock market reached            its       historic   high and began        sliding      down. Venture-
capital firms, while         outwardly calm and even welcoming of a modest
correction,       began    recalculating.            The    further the market                  fell,   the less
chance companies had for a lucrative IPO.                           The   less    chance for an IPO,
the less    money venture        capitalists         wanted   to put in      new companies. Nap-
One     of the      last   VC    firms to keep the door                 open was     Hummer Winblad
Venture Partners, which had made an                          initial offer           that spring valuing
Napster      at   more than $100          million.   Fanning had               his usual     problems with
the deal, principally that there wasn't enough                            money      in    it,   and the     talks
dragged on for months. As they did. Angel Investors chief                                        Ron Conway
was getting nervous. Conway went to the annual Webby Awards                                             in    San
Francisco, a        campy but       star-studded gala where winners from websites
judged the best in a variety of categories are limited to five-word accept-
ance speeches. There              Shawn     collected an            award and the only standing
ovation of the night.            Conway       cornered       Shawn and Parker                     at the party
afterward. The two teens had been well out of the loop in all the talks
with the venture firms, but they knew something was going wrong.                                             "We
were going to run out of money.                It   was complete chaos," Parker                     said.    "We
had been forced         to the sidelines.      Shawn was                in his   own   little     world, and     I
was dealing with           legal stuff."   Now, Conway got                 their attention.         Time was
running out, he         said,   and he needed them back in the mix.
       "If   Hummer Winblad               doesn't invest, the              company         is    going out of
business whenever the next payroll                   is,"   Conway             told them.        "We   have to
solve this,       and we have      to solve this quickly. If this flinding doesn't hap-
pen, there are no          more backups." Shawn              tried not to take              it   too seriously.
"He's just a big kid,"          Shawn      said of   Conway. "He was                 just so dramatic. It
was a serious time, but we were just trying to figure out what he was all
about." What Conway was saying echoed the exasperation Shawn saw in
with the      labels,   of trying to establish a business model," Shawn                             said.   "She
was constantly looking             for   someone      to take her place              and help build the
company."
       Conway met with Richardson                   as well,   and he lobbied              Hummer Win-
blad partner        Ann     Winblad, warning her that she was going to miss out
on the biggest Internet company of                    all   time.       Winblad        listened. In April,
look at documents. There were some phone                                calls,   mainly between Barry
and Richardson, and then a draft term sheet appeared                                     like   an answered
prayer on April 22.             Hummer              would put           in $13 million, along with
another million from Conway's fund and $500,000 from elsewhere. After
a   month of       dithering, Napster              was worth not $100 million or more but
$65 million.       "Hummer had us            over a barrel," Richardson said.
director.    Hummer Winblad wound                        up with two out of three                seats,   with
Fanning keeping the             third.   The           venture firm had one more provision,
though. In the event of a merger or acquisition offer, Fanning wouldn't
get to play roadblock again.             He         and the other big holders would have                    to
shares    still   meant he could veto              a   new   series     of shares issued to a venture
firm.   But   if   Fanning were suddenly not on the board.                             Hummer Winblad
concluded, the remaining directors might be able to do a deal unani-
mously without            calling a vote. "If           John Fanning             is   removed and Hank
appointed then can do a unanimous written consent," the plotters wrote
in a two-page           memo with the        improbably bland              title      "Mechanics."
       In a scheme worthy of a Shakespeare play, they saw a                               way they might
be   able, just barely, to get         Fanning removed. Since one director was                        elect-
Ali Aydar's 80,000, and the votes of Kessler, Parker, Ritter, and a handfiil
of others. They calculated they could get to 6.39 million votes, 247,596
more than they needed. But                    there    was     a catch:     They    couldn't get there
without       Bill Bales        and    his 1 million shares.        And       Richardson had termi-
nated Bales,      who had            then started business dealings with Fanning.
      Richardson thought she could                    still   swing Bales,        who was   oblivious to
his role as potential kingmaker.                But     it    was a conversation she           didn't   want
to have.And it wasn't clear the scheme would hold up in court. Instead,
she and Amram talked to Fanning over and over in the next few weeks to
persuade him to support the Hummer Winblad investment. His vetoes
had   cost Napster offers              from the other firms        as the      market was      at its peak.
Now      that things were sliding, even                 Fanning began to see that                Hummer
might be the        last   chance for him to cash out.                 He   agreed orally to the deal.
      As   the lawyers for both sides                worked on the            final contract,    Richard-
son   still   worried that Fanning was out looking for something                              better.   And
on the        May    day that the           Hummer            agreement was          set to     close, she
though she never found out for sure. Richardson didn't know how to
reach Fanning, and she was afraid he would reverse himself again, just as
he had with Kleiner Perkins. She grabbed Shawn and Parker and shoved
them toward the conference room. "Find your                             uncle!" she ordered them.
feel essential, and they would stress that unlike the other deals. Fanning
could stay on the board. "We had to convince him that he was a seasoned
Shawn       said.   At   last.   Fanning succumbed. The deal closed, giving                            Hum-
mer Winblad            about 20 percent of Napster to Fanning's 15 percent and
Shawn's 9 percent.
       With   Fanning's simple scrawled signature, a feeling of immense reUef
flooded through Shawn.                   At   last,    he was    free.   His uncle was        all   but gone
from    his   life.   He   could go back to coding. His                    company had an             official
believed so strongly that Napster                      would win     in court that he         was staking
his career      on the prospect.              "I    was excited when Hank came and got
involved and understood the legal side, which needed                                   some     attention,"
wait long to celebrate his               new    status as a legitimate player in              Sihcon Val-
ley.   That very       night,    Ron Conway was                  holding one of his regular over-
the-top charity-and-networking bashes at his                             home in Atherton, where
the median house           sells for      north of $3 million.           Shawn and Parker were on
the three-hundred-person guest                        list,   right there with billionaire investor
was very awkward going there. I had no idea what I was supposed to
wear,"    Shawn        said.   The       charity auction         was emceed by comedian Dana
Carvey and benefited a host of good causes, including the Boys Sc Girls
Clubs and the Red Herring Community Fund.                                 The San       Francisco 49ers
cheerleaders raised spirits around the backyard                            swimming         pool.    Among
the items for sale were Arnold Schwarzenegger's                            Humvee,       a tennis lesson
from Pete Sampras, and a dinner with Andreessen. The highest bid of the
night, $650,000          from    a   Network Appliance              Inc. executive,     went        for a sin-
gle    round of golf with Tiger Woods. Napster's Chris Phenner introduced
Shawn       to Andreessen,           who        asked         how many     users Napster            had and
       "I   was trying to            figure out if these types                  of things were normal for
this area, or if            Conway was just            a    madman," Shawn           said. "It    was   all   for a
good cause, so it was cool, but it was a scene. Definitely a scene." For a
time,       Shawn           and Parker just stood and watched the street as arrivals
emerged from one amazing car                           after another. "I         thought maybe         this   hap-
pened weekly," Parker                    said.   "We    thought         we had been       inducted into this
inner circle, where everyone you bumped into was worth $50 million."
having signed on for                    six   months, she had needed nine. She wanted noth-
ing more to do with the firm, and                             Hummer Winblad              was ready          to put
for that?"
harbored a rebellious streak that was unusual for one in his position.
Once        again,     it   was aU about the           liberating feeUng of music.               Not   too    many
big-firm lawyers or                VCs        had spent seven years playing rock                 'n' roll.   Those
times were well behind Barry,                          now    a breadwinning family              guy driving a
minivan. But Napster was giving                             him       a chance to recapture that side of
himself Mr. Barry, Silicon Valley lawyer turned private investor, would be
transformed magically back into                              Hank       the Cool     Drummer, He              Who
Brings Music to the People.
       One      of five children in an             Ann Arbor,            Michigan, family, Barry played
in bands in high school                       and during      his first    two years   at the University         of
Michigan.             It    was    a lot      more fun than studying, and Barry dreamed of
drumming              for real.      Deciding to take the chance while he could, Barry
quit school, supporting himself with a radio day job while he played in
bands five sets a night, six nights a week. He cut records with some of the
spots to unwind and then flopping in hotel rooms. Seven years passed,
and Barry still wasn't a rock star. One day he awoke and smelled his
clothes from across his hotel room. It wasn't the kind of life he wanted to
than most of his young classmates, then entered Stanford Law School at
twenty- nine.
       Barry gravitated to entertainment law, keeping his hand in what had
been     his great diversion.               But when he headed to                    New York       for his first
job at a big firm,           it    took only a few weeks before he realized that most
entertainment law consisted of haggling over details in contracts that                                          all
looked the same. He returned west for a shot at some technology work in
the mid-1980s,          when        Silicon Valley              had perhaps         five   hundred practicing
lawyers. Barry worked on mergers, technology contracts, and copyright
deals, where his clients included record giant A&M—the record label
that by virtue of the alphabet would serve as the lead plaintiff in the land-
mark lawsuit against Napster. Barry was unusual at his last firm, the top-
closer to the actual business decision makers," a colleague at the firm said.
"There was more action, and he was a very good dealmaker. He liked
fourth     fiiU partner.       He     had led          just    one other investment for the firm in
the seven     months before Napster made                            its   pitch;   he was     stiU learning   how
to   do what he        did.    What          Barry saw in Napster was what everybody                           else
record industry. Barry wanted to try right away to sell a deal to the labels.
But he didn't plan on being too generous, because he was in the minority
that truly believed Napster               would win            in court.    When it did, he reasoned,
it    could drive a     much       harder bargain. If it lost the case before a deal was
reached    —  ^well,   that   would be            that.      The assumption was                that if Napster
its    in-house expert. For Barry, the investment was a serious break from
his past representing copyright holders.                            And    it    was a     slap in the face to
of dispute. "I said, 'I think it's a really bad idea,'" Kearby recalled. "It
Kearby had indeed advised him against Napster, Barry                                        first   said   he didn't
recall that.   Then,      in ascending order,                  he said Kearby 's version was coun-
terfactual,    made     up,   and    a   lie.
a big way."
respect     and press since          its   founding in 1989,          Hummer Winblad was well
on   its   way to becoming           the venture-capital joke of Silicon Valley.
      The      first   partner on the nameplate, six-foot- nine John                       Hummer, had
gone from Princeton University to the                             NBA,      playing six years before
retiring     and collecting a Stanford M.B.A. From there he went straight to
venture capital without running a                        company himself His                partner,   Ann
Winblad, had            a   more   traditional         VC   background, building software firm
Open Systems             Inc.   from nothing and then               selling   it   for   $15 million. She
consulted for          IBM      Corp., Microsoft, and others. But she was best                     known
in the Valley for having dated the bete noire                        of the VaUey, BiU Gates,          who
was revealed           as a   Hummer Winblad limited-partner investor in                         1999.
      At    first,     the firm focused          on software companies, producing decent
results.    But      Hummer Winblad                  missed the early Internet revolution while
lesser-known firms racked up hundreds of millions or even biUions of
dollars in profits            from   start-ups.         Hummer's       third flmd, raised in           1997
ahead of the big boom, had returned only 42 percent of the $99 million
invested       by October 2000, according                   to Steve Lisson of InsiderVC.com.
(By the end of 2001, the fund showed a 10 percent                                   total gain,    making
each doUar invested worth $1.10; similar funds raised by three other firms
in   1997 by 2001 showed 180 percent, 400 percent, and 660 percent
gains.) If John          Hummer and Ann Winblad had come                           to the Internet reli-
gion   late, their       conversion        made them die-hard              proselytizers.   Their fourth
fiind,     worth $315         million,     went almost          entirely to Internet start-ups. "It's
Dumbest VC." The winner, by a nose, was Ann Winblad. For a venture
fund,      IPOs were          the ultimate goal         —   a   sudden infusion of liquid money
that could be distributed back to the Hmited partners,                              who    could hold on
or   sell if   they chose. Acquisition by another company, also a "liquidation
event,"     was choice number two. There                          really wasn't          much of   a third
choice. In the two boom years ending in the fall of 2000, Hummer Win-
would be below the          IPO      price.    Liquid Audio had gone public                         at   $15 and
was headed down to             $4. Pets.com,           where       Hummer had put in                as   much   as
$7.55 a share, was below $1. The Knot Inc., a wedding e-commerce site,
was    falling   from a $10-a-share            IPO       to $3,      and expense tracker Extensity
Inc.   had caromed from $20 to $823.50 and back to $19 in October.                                          And
those were winners, ones that sold stock to the public.                                         The       others
million write-off;        eHow       Inc.,    an advice           site    that   went bankrupt; Home-
Grocer.com       Inc.,   which was bought by Webvan Group                               Inc., itself headed
for bankruptcy; and Respond.com, best remembered for the free bottles
Kleiner Perkins, Gigabeat, and Napster. (Kleiner also presided over the
disastrous marriage of          two of its biggest                offspring, portal Excite Inc.              and
cable Internet-access firm               @Home           Inc.) After the             Hummer Winblad
takeover, Napster signed a pact with Liquid                                Audio when Kearby's firm
was coming up short one                  quarter.       And       Napster did little-noticed deals
with two other          Hummer Winblad                   firms as weU, both at Barry's insis-
firm, Boston's LavaStorm Inc., proved useful. At the second, it was a diff-
Envive and never even learned that the money changed hands. Envive
tried   and   failed to   come up with             a   way   it   could     assist Napster.     "Eventually
it   just fell apart," said     Envive cofounder Joe Hsy.                         Hsy   said his firm kept
the money anyway: "They never asked for it back." Even Napster's office
       The Envive       deal   was   like    most VC-related                conflicts     of interest in that
it   got swept under the rug. Private firms have few disclosure require-
ments, and entrepreneurs are loath to sue                                VCs     for fear they      wiU never
again get venture funding. But John                      Hummer             never backed       down from         a
pany that            Hummer Winblad                          had flinded with $4         million,   Zero Gravity
Internet Group. Zero Gravity,                                whose smaller shareholders included Marc
Andreessen,                ON24 CEO                     Sharat       Sharan,       and MPS.com's Michael
Robertson, came to                    life       in    November 1999               at the    hands of one Steve
Harmon, an                 Internet stock-picker and the author of a popular                                book on
raising venture rounds. Zero Gravity.                                   Harmon had           garnered profiles in
the Wall Street Journal and elsewhere, and a large following of day traders
watched          his      weekly     stints       on CNBC. When he started his new                           firm,     he
sought investments by a                          number of CEOs whose stocks he was                          publicly
touting,      and         at least   two of them invested                    in   Zero Gravity. Then Harmon
put a    Hummer Winblad-backed firm. Net Perceptions                                           Inc.,   on   his list   of
top picks, helping send the stock                                up 100 percent      in ten days.       By the sum-
mer of 2000,               CNBC became concerned enough about Harmon's multiple
hats that            it   canceled his contract.                   And      Zero Gravity's board suspended
Harmon           for      poor management, then                      fired   him    for falsely telling the      SEC
he had a coUege diploma.                               An        embarrassing situation, to be sure. But
instead of backing Zero Gravity's board and trying to put the pieces
together, John Hummer sided with the loyal Harmon. As lawsuits flew.
Hummer               converted his firm's stake into voting shares, took control of
Zero Gravity, announced he would bring                                            Harmon     back, and installed
ing   in,        a    sports     site    called              Rival Networks Inc.             Hummer Winblad
promptly invested                   as well,          and        Ann Winblad        joined the board. "Their
reach    is   unbelievable.             And           it's   sticky,"   she said at the time. But Johnston
grew alarmed                at lavish executive                  spending that brought monthly individ-
ual credit-card bills of                more than $100,000.                       When      he complained to the
board, he was invited to leave the meeting. "Their whole mantra was
'Don't worry, we're going public,'" said Johnston,                                          who had       to sue for
forced      it   out of business. Well before then, Johnston decided he'd never
invest alongside              Hummer Winblad                        again. "In the bubble, everyone             made
       More than      his peers,      former basketball center John                         Hummer          took
obvious relish in big battles in front of the crowd.                           "I   am     the record      com-
panies' worst nightmare,"            he proclaimed in July 2000. "The fireworks are
just beginning. Before they close Napster, they'll have to pry                                     it   from     my
cold,    dead   fingers."    In his case, the revolutionary fervor penetrated to a
remarkable       level,    considering that his primary duty was to return profits
the Napster deal,          Hummer was          forced to write             what must have been one
of the most      painfiil letters     of his   life,   explaining    how badly the latest fiind
had fared through the quarter ended                     in    September. By then, Gazoontite
and Pets.com were gone, and the S25 million in post-IPO                                          losses in the
latter "were the biggest losses we have ever taken," Hummer wrote. "In
fact,   they are larger than         all   of our losses        ever, in the aggregate. It                  is   an
understatement to say              how bad we          feel    about        this."       Other IPO shares
that    had not yet been distributed              to limited partners included the                         Knot
and HomeGrocer.com, which had racked up another $29 million                                                      in
losses for the firm's third            and fourth funds. While most business-to-
consumer Internet stocks were trading                     at fractions             of their earUer values.
Hummer          said that     was no excuse. The                 firm's        performance was truly
extraordinary     —   it   was a well-positioned venture operation                                  in    Silicon
Valley that hadn't been able to cash in                  on the biggest investment extrava-
ganza of the century.
        Hummer concluded            his letter    by saying that the firm needed                         to focus
cover, along     with the other four "most influential people in electronic
business." Napster executives               were   ecstatic. "It is so   amazing and so        cool,"
CFO      Lyn Jensen wrote            to her colleagues.      John Fanning had a             different
take: "I   hope Shawn          is   going to introduce       me   to his      4 new   friends,"    he
e-mailed the group.         He       also   noted with amusement that his nephew was
the only one not smiling.               "The              Happy (Yahoo) Happy
                                               faces are great!
(eBay)     Happy   (Softbank)          Very Happy (Amazon) and Don't #$%$ with
me (Shawn      Fanning)."           By then, 73    percent of college students were using
Napster     at least     monthly, according to Webnoize.                 On   Monday,    May      22,
Jensen invited     all   employees to come eat and drink champagne                     at   noon   to
toast the    Hummer Winblad                 deal at Spiedo Ristorante in         San Mateo, a
short walk away.         The   stafl" felt    incredible relief    Hummer's cash            infusion
                                               (   223   )
and management takeover came just in time. The stock market, tumbling
since     March, appeared headed                 for a long vacation                 from        its      nosebleed
highs, hurting IPO prospects and slowly endangering all the less fortu-
industry's lawsuit.         The company had argued                    strenuously that                 it   was pro-
tected under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and that the                                                    suit
some types of companies. Napster argued that it qualified for at least one,
and possibly two, of those exemptions. The first was for passive "service
tions.    Putting off a final decision on the second safe harbor, U.S. district
judge Marilyn Hall Patel spent most of her time trying to sort out the
poorly worded breadth of the                 first    harbor,   which         limits copyright liability
call.   But even      if   Napster had overcome that hurdle,                        it   would have stum-
bled on another of the requirements for                         all   the safe-harbor exemptions:
that the companies have "reasonably implemented" a policy to terminate
users about it until the following February, two months after it was sued.
ing to end the case on the spot must show that there's no disputing its
essential version          of the   facts,   and that the law               is   on   its side.   But that was
little    consolation        when     Patel declined Napster's request for                            summary
judgment      in    its favor.    More than just       rejecting Napster's argument, Patel
had highlighted the ineffective copyright policy. And now the labels
least some of the MP3s were legitimate. Shawn then urged the parties to
novices in Internet law. In a way,              it   was       fitting that        both the record indus-
try   and   its    attack dogs belonged to another era. RusseU Frackman, the
had until then never used e-mail, learning only during the course of the
taking a job in 1970 with the L.A. firm of Mitchell Silberberg 6c Knupp.
Soon     after that      move, Frackman paired with partner Howard Smith, an
early force in filing           record-company lawsuits against unauthorized dupli-
cators.     There weren't too many of those, since the duplicating required
massive investment. So Smith led the                     way upstream, going                after retailers
that knowingly sold pirated goods                      and were           easier to collect        damages
from. In the years after that part of the firm's practice began, Mitchell
Silberberg developed a close relationship with the record dons, and one of
acting head of litigation during the Napster case. After Smith retired,
from the RIAA to file against Napster, it didn't take long for him to con-
clude that he had a winner. "I looked at it as a copyright case, not a tech-
1996 he had argued successfiilly before the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals that a           flea   market could be held responsible for letting vendors
sell    pirated recordings. After Napster lost                     its   bid for   summary judgment,
Frackman drafted more                  associates to help           him     as the timetable acceler-
ated. They would have just a few weeks to plow through scores of boxes
        A    week     after she left Napster,            at    the end of             May    2000, Eileen
Richardson went in for the sworn interview known as a deposition. She
had never been through the grueling process before, and the Napster
lawyers told her the cardinal rule: Say as                         little as   possible.    But    as   CEO,
she had already said too much. Frackman put an article in front of her.
"I'll   read this to you and actually give you a copy                            if   you want," he      said,
then recounted her words: "'Maybe I know about this band just in our
local       town, and you         know about them too. I can share that with you
directly.      It's     not     about known artists like Madonna.'" Richardson
acknowledged that she had said something to that                                 effect.   Frackman then
presented her with a printout of a directory from her laptop computer.
"There        are, it   seems to me, one, two, three,                     four, five       Madonna      MP3
there they were.               And      she admitted       it   was Ukely that             yes,    they had been
downloaded             fi^om Napster.            Other Napster        executives' hard drives didn't
help the cause. Liz Brooks had seven Beatles songs, five                                           Led Zeppelin
songs, and seven Bjork songs,                      among        others.     Lyn Jensen was            evidently a
Shania Twain fan, with five cuts. At least Kessler's practice was close to
the official line on Napster's mission to aid the discovery of new music,
boasting three obscure Irish folk songs in addition to a track from the
Dave Matthews Band.
      Frackman              also   made Richardson              eat her     words about             "collaborative
liked, just as         Amazon.com does                 for books.     No        such system had been put
in place during her nine                    months on the           job,    though         it   would have been
with Gigabeat.               And Frackman hammered on                           the   New        Artist Program,
which had taken so long to finally reach the website, in a fairly unusable
form, just a month earlier. In the program's first phase, bands could fill
Bales,       remembered discussing                 strategy at the office the previous                     fall   with
Shawn, Parker, Bales, and adviser Brett Bullington of Excite. Midway
through the meeting, Richardson walked                                in,   "and she was on a totally
different plane," Scott said.                    "She was talking about unsigned                     artists.     And
we were             like,    'hello?'"     The     balance of power on the issue didn't go
Richardson's           way even          after the lawsuit began.               VP     Liz Brooks, in trying
to defend the stripped-down                       New Artist        Program           as   more than window-
dressing, gave a typical response in an April e-mail to a critic in the                                       music
business: "There will always be a                        mass of people            who          only want to hear
the current           pop     hits.    Our job    is   not to force a musical education on these
people."
      But      it   wouldn't have done Napster any good for Richardson to say she
had     tried       and     failed, so    she held her tongue. After Frackman ran through
    Frackman was just getting               started:        The      next day was Shawn's turn.                  As
they had with Richardson, Napster's lawyers gave                                    him     basic lessons in
deposition. Tell the truth, they told him, but volunteer nothing.                                          Other
than that, the only thing out of the ordinary Shawn did to prepare was to
get a decent night's sleep.             Frackman walked Shawn through Napster's
early days, paying special attention to                     who        held what       title.    "You      said at
the beginning that one of your                   titles is        'founder' at Napster.              Are there
other people         who   share the    title    'founder'?"           Frackman asked. "John Fan-
ning,"      Shawn     said.   Anyone    else? "Sean Parker does occasionally, but                                it's
follow-up question, Shawn said it wasn't clear because Parker had started
work    a   few months        after the project began.                 Neither Parker nor his uncle
had contributed          to the code that            made     the Napster system,                  Shawn con-
firmed. So before the             move      to CaUfornia,                  Frackman asked, who had
helped write the software? "Jordan                    Ritter. I believe that's it,"              Shawn      said.
       Shawn's testimony, given out of public view, didn't stop his uncle from
claiming that he played a vital role in the development of Napster's tech-
nology.      One     of Fanning's lawyers was               still    repeating that claim well after
Shawn's deposition. And Fanning went to some lengths to get the record
to reflect it. As Napster was preparing to file for a patent on its technol-
with Fanning's name in brackets. Asked                         why that was in his deposition,
Eddie Kessler told            his inquisitors:            "His name is in brackets because at
times John has          made   statements that he was                  —    that he contributed to the
design and technology of Napster, but that claim has been refiited by
Shawn Fanning." Because               Napster's lawyers worried that the entire patent
could have been jeopardized if Fanning was excluded and then later
and     after   Napster came into being. Shawn pleaded to having a bad                                      mem-
ory.   He    said     he couldn't    recall the     song names, the                 artists,    or even the type
of music.       One     live     Led Zeppelin       track was          all   he could remember clearly
from before Napster, he                said.    As Frackman                 pressed on, Annette Hurst,
an attorney there to protect Shawn personally, grew nervous and began
objecting that Shawn's personal actions were irrelevant to a case accus-
can't   do   that?" he asked.         "Whether the man who                      created Napster himself
has committed copyright infringement                             is   not relevant?"            The     legal fenc-
ing continued until the two lawyers agreed to take                                     it   up with the judge
later on.
       In the meantime,             Shawn      testified that the rap                songs on his Napster-
issued laptop were ripped from                       CDs         he owned. Frackman appeared
incredulous that             Shawn had          neither searched the Napster system for
other tracks by Snoop Doggy Dogg and Ice Cube, nor offered his ripped
MP3s for sharing. "Part of it is the bandwidth," Shawn said. "We don't
share things from the office." Pressed about his knowledge of copyright
law,    Shawn       said he didn't understand               it   very well, and he conceded that
might be another reason that he refrained from sharing music himself                                              "I
He     said that       he was       also   concerned about the potential for piracy on
Napster, and that the removal policy was intended to address that.                                               The
climax of the daylong interview should have been the early brainstorming
documents about Napster's strategy and problems. But when Frackman
showed Shawn one of the most damaging papers,                                       asserting that "Napster
brings about the death of the CD," Shawn said he didn't recall seeing it
before.    That was          a   good answer: Patel     later          wrote that the lack of positive
identification forced her to disregard the                            document, which she called                   a
"smoking gun." After the deposition, Shawn felt he had done his part
well. "It's safe to say I was nervous about it, but once I got there it was
documents, while Shawn had been busy coding. And instead of Frack-
gleam in     his eye.   Borkowski had been working                         until near    midnight the
previous evening,       combing through the boxes of documents Napster had
just turned over.   Then he         hit   on what looked         like      one of the best pieces of
evidence he had ever seen in a copyright case.                                  And    then he found
another, just as good.        They were nothing               less   than open admissions that
the     company was     deliberately helping           its   users pull off the largest piracy
pushing demand." Borkowski stopped reading. "It is the kind of thing you
hall to one of the attorneys for the music publishers who had joined in the
lawsuit. "Boy,"    he told lawyer Jeff Knowles,                 "this      is   going to be a fun de-
position."    As he read the documents, Knowles's                    eyes       grew noticeably larger.
him on         his responses. Later, Parker said that they                          had missed the two that
were the worst of            all.   In the same San Francisco law office where                           Shawn
had breezed through                  his    own        deposition, Borkowski sat                 down and       ran
Asked for his job title, Parker said he had never had one. "Let me ask you
this," Borkowski said. "Do you have a Napster business card?" Parker said
yes. "What does it say on it?" "It says 'founder,'" Parker replied. Asked if
the title were appropriate, Parker hedged. "It's the most fitting title at this
More and more, Parker's nerves began showing through his stoic
exterior,      "As part of your duties for Napster," Borkowski asked, "have you
been involved in any drafting of any business plans or proposals?"                                          "It's
possible," Parker said.              "But do you              recall   doing any of it?" Napster lawyer
Laurence Pulgram butted in to establish an objection: "Vague." Annette
Hurst chimed             in as well: "Overbroad."                       As     if   following a cue, Parker
proposals.
       Like Shawn, Parker had a hard time recalling any specific down-
loads of        MP3      files   to his     own         computer.       And     he said he didn't remem-
make it to the website. That wasn't so bad, Parker thought                                —the word
"unknown" had been picked                       deliberately        because       it    could        mean
unknown only           to that particular user.
But Borkowski had saved the best for last. As he placed the printout
the corners of his mouth turned up. The involuntary, evil-looking smile
he been thinking?          How   could he explain           it   away? "Did you write that?"
Borkowski asked,          in his clipped       and precise tone. Pause.           "I believe I did,"
Parker said. The best defense he could muster was that he had been using
"pirated" in the sense the RIAA meant it, that all MP3s were illegitimate.
"I   did not write that /       felt   that Napster       would be making pirated music
available," Parker said.        By     the time Borkowski's colleague Jeff Knowles
got to ask about the user- anonymity document,                        it   seemed       like so      much
piling on.     The damage was           done. Founder or not, Parker's                   name       disap-
Armed with the new evidence and Patel's refusal to grant Napster a
safe harbor, the RIAA moved in for the kiU. On June 12, just a few weeks
injunction that would shut down or cripple the Napster service. "Napster
has been aware from the moment of its creation that its service offers lit-
music     .    .    .    and you can forget about wading through page                                 after     page of
unknown                 artists!"   Even      Napster's       more recent               "sanitizing of   its   Website"
and     its        addition of boilerplate warnings about copyright misuse, the
record industry said, were accompanied by winks and nudges about the
anonymity of the                    service.
The     industry hired Olkin to find out                                 what proportion of Napster                users
was    offering music illegally,                     Olkin picked 1,150 Napster subscribers                    who
were offering                files    and downloaded                 all    of their available           MP3s. Any
percentage above 50 would have presented a big problem for Napster,
showing that the majority of                          its   users were violating the law.                  Any     figure
above 90 would make                      it   hard for the company to talk about any substan-
tial   noninfringing use. Olkin's study found 100 percent were offering
pirated music               —every       single      one of the 1,150 users in the                       survey.    And
while some probably had                        at least a         few    files    that were authorized, a mini-
mum of 87 percent of the songs weren't kosher.
       If the facts were               bad     for Napster, the              law wasn't much          better.    Judge
Patel   had already ruled that the biggest                                safe    harbor in the     DMCA didn't
protect Napster, in part because                            its   policy for banning users wasn't tough
enough.        The         labels    now made          a strike against the smaller exemption, the
one for indexing and search services that steered users to inappropriate
links popped up and then disappeared again as users logged on and off.
is apparent." As the industry lawyers put it, "The DMCA's safe harbors
protect innocent infringers, not those hke Napster, that deliberately build
As SOON AS THE INDUSTRY filed its attack, it was obvious that the labels
David Boies.
       Raised in rural lUinois, Boies had kept his midwestern twang through
his years at Cravath,              Swaine &. Moore, representing the                         likes   of IBM and
CBS      Inc.,   and seldom           losing. After starting his                    own New York              firm,
case.    Boies was interested mainly because the case was on the cutting
edge of the law. "The                 first   thing that struck                 me was       that this    was an
important case not only for the music industry but for the whole of the
Internet," he said.              "Here you have        a   new      technology, in terms of peer-to-
already scheduled for the following month, Boies threw staffers onto the
case    and soon discarded most of Napster's old and                               failing    arguments.
       While        still   maintaining that Napster should be protected by the
those days, making tapes from purchased record albums or other tapes
was   legal. If   Napster users weren't breaking the law, then Napster wasn't
either.   The second major argument harked back                              to another     new     technol-
ogy that at the time had been attacked as ruinous by the entertainment
ducer and the American public as the Boston Strangler                                  is   to the   woman
alone." In a       1984   decision,      by   a vote    of    five to four,           the U.S. Supreme
Court had held that              VCRs    were      legal because             even though some con-
sumers might use them to copy and                     sell   videotapes of movies and televi-
Many viewers, the court held, would use VCRs just for "time-shifting,"
taping shows to watch at another time. Later, the                            VCR provided an entire
new revenue        stream for Hollywood as tape rentals soared.
      Napster's dire straits also helped Boies and Barry recruit major                                  Web
intellectuals to the cause.             Along      with his opposition to the preliminary
injunction, Boies filed statements                 by John Perry Barlow, Lawrence Lessig,
and a handfiil of musicians, most of                     whom            suggested that the record
industry was        more     interested in maintaining absolute control of the
cant legal help. In the end             it   opted not       to,   both because Napster already
could afford some of the best legal minds available and because the facts
were so weak that the            suit   might end up producing case law that hurt the
ble business model." But because Barlow worried that the case would set
choices that would shape society. The book argued that the engineers
who were making               collective     decisions about the Internet                     had better
choose vidsely         if   they were to avoid provoking the government into
imposing harsh          restrictions      on cyberspace. Lessig                 felt    that even    when
technologists        went    astray, as   they might have with Napster, courts should
not be in the business of extinguishing revolutionary developments.
      In a long essay that was more legal advice to Judge Patel than expert
testimony, and was therefore                 deemed     inadmissible, Lessig said that the
that could give copyright holders                  more protection than they had ever
enjoyed.      New     technologies were making                it   possible to track          and control
what    recipients did with digital works. In the interim, before those                               new
technologies took hold, Lessig said, courts should proceed with extreme
caution before killing          new    systems hke Napster.
      Even     if   massive copyright violations had occurred, Napster dramati-
cally   improved on previous search engines, which couldn't keep up                                       as
lations      of copyright were enabled. If that had been the                       test,    then   many of
the early Internet technologies               would have been banned. Likewise would
the     VCR     have been banned, and possibly even the Xerox machine."
Instead of trying to crop a               new technology            to   fit   a preexisting business
model Hke that of the record industry, Lessig wrote, "it has been the prac-
America Online ten times as long to reach. He stressed that the users
were acting out of the love of music, and that the biggest draw                               for   them
was the chance        to sample music before buying                 it.   Barry was surprised              at
how appreciative his audience was. But senators know how to count
users   now    could amount to a major political force, one that could lobby
elected officials, vote       them    in or out of office,        and participate        in   mass       civil
disobedience     if they   thought the law was wrong,                "We        should not brand as
thieves the    20 million Americans that enjoy the Napster                          services,"      Barry
declared, striking an         unaccustomed pose          as a corporate           lawyer and fledg-
ling venture capitalist turned populist crusader.
but they didn't want the            artists to   get paid.    Then        they said they did want
the artists to get paid, but they didn't have the mechanism. Clearly                                it   was
about money, not consumer rights."
       Rosen's inside information also suggested that the Napster                                   camp
wasn't as confident as         it   used to be. She heard from an executive                    at   AOL
Time Warner, Jonathan                Sacks, that      Hummer Winblad               was    soliciting a
break only         if it   bought Napster and immediately shut the                                  service   down.
But even          in that case,         Rosen wouldn't give up the                   right to go after the
massive user base but would have passed on a deal even                                      if it   had stayed on
the table.         "We      never supported the idea that copyrights should be
infringed or that music should be free," Sacks said.                                "We       always        knew   the
well-kept secrets, the big news not coming from Patel's courtroom was
Barry's hiring of Napster's first chief operating officer,                                  Milton Olin. Yet
another lawyer, Olin had been senior vice president of business and legal
affairs at        A&M      Records, one of the plaintiffs in the Napster case. Olin
left   the record business after his                        company was acquired by                        Universal,
out which users were offering infringing content and which weren't, Olin
testified in a deposition that                 even inside the record business,                       it   was often
unclear      who owned             what. But Olin didn't make an impressive witness.
Asked       if   he had ever in his career tried to determine                          who owned              a copy-
right to a work, he said that he                         had      not.    Asked    if at   A&M         it   had ever
been necessary to find out                   who had         the rights to a music composition, he
ings,   then what's to stop              it    from doing the same to movies, software,
books, magazines, newspapers, television, photographs, or video games?"
       Actually, very Uttle          would stop         it.   Shawn had         called for       expanding
Napster to other media months before, and                         now Napster was               considering
doing    so.   As   things stood, Napster recognized only                         MPS      files.      But the
engineers had tweaked the system in tests to allow swapping of Microsoft
Word     text   documents and Adobe Acrobat graphic                            files.   If a   new     version
of Napster was released with that capability, usage could have doubled,
and an    entire    new front        in the battle      would have been opened.                 Ritter,   who
ordinarily supported enhancing functions                           no matter the               risk,   in this
to share   whatever they wanted.                 It   was   just that    he understood the lessons
from aggressive search engines                   like Scour,     which often turned up docu-
ments from computers whose owners                              didn't realize that the material
could be seen by others.              "I      think these format types are a big mistake,"
Ritter wrote        on June 26, weeks                 after Valenti's declaration.              "Napster    is
hyped and misconstrued enough; the above types                                are excellent fuel to         an
already unmanageable               fire."      Barry killed the plan, probably influenced
more by Valenti than by                Ritter.    As    the former AltaVista executive                    Don
Dodge      explained     it   to Ritter three days later:                "Hank decided             yesterday
that    we would not          release      the non-music          file   types.    ... As with most
decisions these days,         it   was     a legal caU."
       Other    legal calls kept       Napster documents out of court and out of the
public eye.      Almost        all    corporate litigation includes minor but time-
tions    from   whom     and which documents they get to                          see.    When         enough
arguments       pile   up and        can't    be resolved through compromise, the judge
gets stuck having to          make       rulings      on such minutiae.          A hearing on several
of those    flaps   was held June 19             in   what would be one of Napster attorney
Laurence Pulgram's            last turns in           the leading role before Boies got up to
speed.    Most of the         issues   were of little consequence. But one of them, a
request for Napster documents, was so clearly legitimate that Patel didn't
understand why Napster was resisting. The documents, like most of those
ments at issue. One included the contract for Shawn's initial transfer of the
rights to his invention to the            company. Shawn had testified at his deposition
that he     knew he had        signed something of the kind, but "he was generally
unable to articulate precisely what it was," the record-industry lawyer said at
the hearing.      The       other documents recounted John Fanning's sales of his
stock. Pulgram argued that the two documents weren't relevant. "All this is
tion about to whom he sold stock," Pulgram told Patel. Pulgram didn't
give another logical, though legally insufficient, reason for fighting the
       The documents would show just how little Shawn had received,
request:
and how many hundreds of thousands of dollars his uncle had made from
the piracy of others. Patel ordered the documents turned over.
      Other documents went the way of the shredder. Napster was moving
to   new    offices in      Redwood      City,    and on the eve of the move chief finan-
cial officer     Lyn Jensen        sent a     companywide e-mail             telling    employees to
keep copies of documents that might be required for court. All the others,
she wrote, should be               dumped         in the "large locked bins that have the
words 'shred works' on the                side."     Moving       offices   added to the       stress   of
the Napster team.            Most of them thought               their lawyers    would defeat the
attempt at a preliminary injunction, but they couldn't be sure. Napster's
users weren't sure, either,              and they poured onto the system                  in   numbers
that as     much       as   doubled every few weeks.              On July    24, one of Napster's
colleagues. "We have finally reached full pop culture saturation," she
wrote. "I just got a phone call from the fact-checkers at                       Who Wants to be
a Millionaire. Qj^ Dr.             Dre   and Metallica recently filed lawsuits alleging
copyright infringement against which Internet                           MP3     sharing program?
High noon came two days later,                             at   2 p.m. on Wednesday, July 26,
2000, in Patel's eighteenth-floor                   courtroom across the             street   from San
Francisco's      black-and-gold-domed City Hall. Journalists and other spec-
tators     had been lining up since 10 a.m., and two hundred were there
about losing, especially right away. Fanning sent an e-mail saying that
even   if Patel ruled against                     the   company        eventually, the order             would be
stayed during an appeal.                  He      estimated there was only a 10 percent chance
the higher court                would     also rule against Napster.              Barry sent a cheery             all-
hands message the day before that began with the word "Greetings!" and
reminded the                 staff to avoid        speaking to the press.                "We     are having the
hearing tomorrow.                 Shawn and             I will   be attending for the company, and
we'll call      you guys immediately                    after    and   let   you know how           it   came     out.
There      is   a   good      possibility that          nothing will happen," Barry wrote. Statis-
tically,   he was making a good guess. Preliminary injunctions, especially
those likely to be appealed by one side or the other, are rarely issued in
open   court, before the judge has                        had time         to digest the       paperwork and
craft a written ruling solid                  enough       to withstand further challenges.
     The        forty-seat        courtroom was so mobbed with attorneys for the vari-
ous parties that              many had       to    watch on closed-circuit               television next door.
Barry and Shawn,                 who wore         a blue blazer        and    tie, sat   behind their lawyers
in the stifling              room. Record-industry attorney Frackman, confident that
his brief       had shown          his side       would probably win              at trial,    focused his oral
argument on the other half of the                         test for     an injunction: the likelihood of
irreparable harm.               And   now, Napster's soaring popularity was the strongest
ammunition against                  it.   "Since the court walked in several minutes ago,"
Frackman began,                  "30, 40,         maybe 50,000 recordings have been down-
loaded using the Napster system; 14,000 recordings are downloaded a
minute ...            if   we   take the six       months        that Napster has posited            it   will take
the same rules of the road that other media businesses have followed for
       Appearing        for the first time before Patel, Boies                          pursued the same
points laid out in his brief, starting with the language in the                                    Supreme
Court's    VCR ruling that allowed technology to come to market if                                  it   could
have substantial noninfringing uses. Boies handed up his charts and case
citations, cleared his throat,               and got out three           full sentences.         The   last    of
them was: "We have              at tab   No. 2 of the book that the court                       has, a refer-
that mean, 'is capable'?" she asked. "As opposed to 'is in fact' or 'has in
fact been performing?'" From that moment on, Boies was crippled.
Unlike in the          VCR case,       there   was       a wealth of real data about              how Nap-
ster   was being used right then.
       It didn't   get any better from there. Boies said that various courts had
held service providers and others not responsible for the actions of their
users.   But Patel had been immersed                      in the early    memos and             e-mails from
Parker and the others, and they were still staring up at her. "Isn't that the
guts of what Napster was all about?" she asked, interrupting Boies for the
fifth time. "'Pirating          be damned,'          I   think,     was pretty much the sense one
gets in reading         some of the      exhibits         from some of these early meetings or
memos,      et cetera. I      mean, piracy was uppermost                  in their       mind, right? Free
music for the people, right?" Boies had                            Httle left to say, except that the
facts    about present-day Napster and the law were more important than
the previous writings of a clever nineteen-year-old. In everything Boies
brought up, from the Audio                     Home         Recording Act to the prior                   year's
decision allowing sales of the Rio                   MP3       player, Patel kept after            him.     The
toughest jab       may have come when                    Boies said that the            VCR case     permit-
ted    home copying           that wasn't commercial.                "They weren't sharing             it   with
the world," Patel interjected.
Boies's sidekick from Pulgram's firm, Daniel Johnson Jr., then tried to
fit   Napster into the remaining                   DMCA exemption, the one for objective
search services.        To be denied           that exemption, he said,                 you "have      to have
ing.   Again, Patel was having none of                       it,   because      all   the other evidence
suggested that the piracy bazaar Parker envisioned had very                                      much come
to fruition. "I don't think this system                 is   just invested in           and supported by
a single nineteen-year-old," she said                  from the bench. In any                    case, "if    you
have in fact designed a product, a system that                             is   in fact designed to           do
just   what     it's    been doing, enabling infringing, enabling                         piracy,       you can
hardly stand back and             say,   'Gee,   I didn't      know       all   that stuff   on there was
pirated.'"      Johnson jumped to the             VCR          decision,        which he     said allowed
sharing films with friends. "All 79 million of them?" Patel asked. "Seventy
miUion or seven," Johnson ventured. "But doesn't that take                                         it   beyond
personal use?" Patel asked. Johnson attempted a hop to the Rio decision
in the    Ninth        Circuit,   which had interpreted the Supreme Court's                               VCR
ruling broadly to cover            some other nonprofit copying,                       in that case          from
CDs      to   MP3s.      Patel hadn't telegraphed her thinking, but she                          had already
made up her mind             that the Rio case dealt with certain types of hardware,
not giant interactive webs of software. Sensing that the                                   last    door was
closing       on him, Johnson pressed so hard that instead of allowing Patel                                   to
hves inside each litigator had seen he was surrounded and simply decided
to   go out with guns blazing.
       The Rio         case "doesn't apply here,        and        I   will explain     why when         I   ren-
der    my decision," Patel said.
       But    in that decision,      Johnson       persisted, "once the                 CD   is    on    a hard
       "You're not listening. Let          me    try   one more time. Once                it's   on the hard
drive
        —
       Patel interrupted          him    back, ending the exchange. "You're finished,"
she snapped. "You            may have      a seat," After allowing brief rebuttals, Patel
"The court is able to render a decision." Speaking off the top of her head,
Patel ruled first that most Napster users were violating copyrights. "This,
in fact, should          come       as   no    surprise to Napster, since that                .   .   .   was the pur-
pose of     it."   Tackling next the              VCR         case's   approval of technology capable
of substantial noninfringing use, she said that even the potential for such
use at Napster was minimal. "While                              it   may be    capable of             some of     these
actually used for, what it was promoted for, and what it continues to be
used for." She conceded that the issue of acceptable personal use was a
trickier one, because the technology had gotten out ahead of the law. But
she said users          who    distributed           files   to large   numbers of strangers "cannot
be said to engage merely in the typical personal use."                                  And            she got rid of
the rest of the VCR case by pointing out the huge flaw in the parallel:
in charge of            how   its   service      was used. Then Patel disposed of the Audio
Home       Recording Act in four sentences, declaring that computers were
not "audio         home     recording devices" as defined by that law.
      Satisfying herself that Napster users were breaking the law, Patel
turned to what Napster knew about the behavior and if it abetted their
ment. Citing the internal documents about piracy and the need to remain
ignorant of IP addresses for that reason, Patel ruled that the evidence
"overwhelmingly establishes that the defendant had actual                                             or, at   the very
      For good measure, Patel went beyond what she needed to do to shut
Napster down. She said that Napster had added                                       liability         because     it   had
"supervisory powers" over                       what was happening on                    its          network, as       it
copyrights, even if Napster had to redesign from scratch. "I'm sure that
anyone as clever as the people who wrote the software in this case are
Patel said.
spoke. He clutched a red pen tighter and tighter, until the ink squirted
out on his hands. As Patel invited the record industry to submit pro-
posed wording for what would become the formal injunction, Boies tried
to say       it   would be technologically                 infeasible to carry out        what she was
ordering, and that Napster executives didn't even have a Ust of                                        what
songs were infringing. "That's their problem," Patel said. "They created
the monster.'"
Patel asked Frackman when the industry would like the injunction to
take effect. But Frackman was still recovering from his surprise at having
won almost the entire case in a single day. "It was obviously a huge vic-
tory. It     was one of the most public                   victories     we had    ever had.    I   had given
one of the best arguments                  I   had ever     given, a long       argument     in a long day.
And     it   had been a long eight months                      since   we had    filed the suit."   Watch-
ing Frackman's next                 move from             the audience were Hilary             Rosen and
other    RIAA          officials,   plus lawyers            from Universal, Sony, and Bertels-
mann's        BMG label. Frackman got to his feet slowly and started walking
to the       podium, trying to think of                    a    way    to say "immediately" without
looking at the clock, not the calendar," Patel said, getting a laugh from
two days           later at   midnight, and she refused Boies's request for a stay of
her order while Napster appealed to the Ninth Circuit.                                The    gavel rapped,
tears. He looked down at his hands and started picking at and pinching
statement on the spot, and the company's public-relations staff told jour-
nalists that        he would read             it   to   them    in the lobby. Instead, the Napster
crew evaded the media horde, climbed into a Lincoln Town Car, and
drove off.
at   one of the San Francisco firms happened to sing in nightclubs, and she
lent vocals to the occasion, getting extra appreciation for a                                     Gershwin
      —
number "They Can't Take That Away from Me." Afterward, Sherman
told her that given their audience, if she couldn't get a big-label contract
ing what Barry probably would have read to reporters: "Hi aU. I just got a
call    from hank and              milt.     We         are surprised        and disappointed that the
judge has apparently decided to issue some form of injunction,                                        we may
have to shut          down aU          or parts of the service within 48 hours. Obviously,
we     will   comply with the            court's order          and move forward.         We haven't seen
her order and          we   don't yet        know what          it   says.   You   are invited to tune in to
the webcast at 7 pm." Parker was in Virginia and called the office to find
out what had happened, reaching Barry's assistant, Alicia Morga. "It
doesn't look good, Parker," she told him, recounting the decision.                                         "And
she talked a lot about your documents."
       Boies and his team threw together an emergency request for a stay
from the Ninth Circuit pending a                            fliU appeal.        Work     at   Napster pretty
much ground            to a halt as          the forty-six employees wondered what would
happen to them — if they would be laid off when the system shut down or
kept around to rework it into something that complied with the injunc-
tion.    The       severity of the situation              was   glaring. In a rare e-mail        from Nap-
ster recruiter         Inga Kulberg to the whole                       staff,   she urged     them    to   hang
tight:                 know you have been bombarded by recruiters, and
           "Hi everyone.           I
staffing managers, but don't jump ship yet! We will work it out together."
about how he could change the system. Shawn had given out one of his
e-mail addresses on the webcast and was rewarded with 2,626 messages
in support overnight, ranging                  from the funereal                to the defiant. "Napster
was       my bible   for awhile,     and   I   hold    it       sacred. If there's anything I can              do
to help, like creating           some kind of              a petition, please just let                 me   know,
thank you for everything you've done for                                us, the true fans              of music,"
wrote       New     Yorker Daniel Uhl. Others suggested setting up servers in
unreachable countries.           Many       said they            had bought more            CDs        than ever
after      sampling with Napster, and more than one credited Napster's chat
rooms       for their romantic relationships.                    Within hours, there was indeed                 a
petition:        Napster   staffer   Nate Mordo spread the word internally about the
document, in which thousands of signatories pledged not to buy                                               CDs
while Napster was down.
       The day       after,   the Napster ruling                made     front pages across the coun-
for    MTV,       saying he was upset mostly for Napster's 20 million users. "To
me, they were the ones being attacked, not necessarily                                  me       personally, or
even the technology," Shawn                    said.   He        said   he didn't    know how Napster
could comply without shutting                   down but              didn't   support a boycott. Shawn
was       at his best    when he was both modest about                             Napster's innovations
and mystified about the attacks on                         it.    "It   was the     first   appHcation out
there that demonstrated file-sharing, so                          I    suppose I'm not surprised that
it   is   directed toward us," he told the interviewer. "But                                it    is   surprising
The number of Napster users soared to the highest levels yet, just as
and       just   $400,000 worth of hardware, the Napster system                                  finally    maxed
out,      and not everyone could connect. That week, "Napster" became the
the names of doctors who performed the operation, and he had held that
a lawyer     was   free to criticize a judge.       Kozinski was also an early fan of the
Internet, having         penned columns         for Microsoft's online             magazine      Slate as
far   back   as   1996.   To many working          at the court's offices in          San Francisco
when      Napster's request for an emergency stay                     came   in,   the question was
But Kozinski was excited about the prospect of a debate on the issues,
which he argued were so important and so new that they merited a flill
airing.     After some      effort,   Kozinski was able to convince one of the other
two judges on           duty, Barry Silverman, to vote with              him       to grant the stay.
None of the        parties in the case ever learned             it,   but Kozinski also tried to
have the three-judge motions panel retain control of the case through the
briefs    and     oral arguments, a step that         would have kept him involved                         in
the final ruling.         The    other judges didn't agree, and arguments were
instead set for October,         when       Kozinski was unlikely to hear              it.
and noted that the appeals court would consider not just the merits but
also the      sweep of the injunction. In order to sway Silverman, Kozinski
was too harsh. Most memorably, he had cited the opinion of his son, a
Napster user     who had           reported that forcing Napster to                            weed out copy-
righted material "would be like trying to take the piss out of a pool."
      With no     idea       how   close they        had come to            failing to              win the        stay
and no clue that their best hope on the bench would be ojff the case by
October, the Napster crew exploded with                        joy.   They would have months
to convince the appeals judges to reverse Patel,                            make               a deal with the
labels, or   develop a       new system      —   possibly     all   three.      Napster director John
Hummer       strode around the office and crowed. "This                              is       like the playoffs,"
said the former NBA center. "They won the first game, and we won the
second game.      It's    going to seven, and we're going to win                                  it."   Others in
the office   jumped up and down and hugged each other                                          at the        news.   "It
was one of the most incredible experiences of my life," Kessler said. "I was
I   had been."
      On   Monday, Barry           sent another group e-mail, thanking                                 all   for their
we    are trying to get a settlement            with the record companies. These reports
are true. We're exploring several business models, and we'll probably be
discussing them more in public as the week goes on . . . the basic options
In fact, Barry      had been trying to get a deal with the labels from as
early as June,    when his venture-firm partner and fellow Napster director
Hummer       called     Edgar Bronfman. Bronfman was                         CEO               of Seagram Co.
Ltd.,   owner of the         largest record firm. Universal                Music.             More       important,
Bronfman was        far      from being an old-school music executive, having led
Seagram into the business only recently from                         its   beverage-industry roots.
Bronfman was confident                that the music industry                   would win                    in court,
posed to      listen.   "The notion was                 that Napster        was only the        first   —there
will    be others to replace             it,"   he    said.   "Here was an opportunity to main-
tain a large        customer base, potentially, and over time migrate                                it   into a
The ideas came fast and furious, but there was no technology available to
make Napster legitimate, and the company was reluctant to charge its
any way that Napster could make a profit even before                                  it   paid    artists     and
the record companies. Yet both sides realized the prospects for a deal were
best before Patel ruled one                 way       or the other     —   especially if she       found that
Napster was breaking the law, which would give any                                   new owners           a   mas-
sive liability     headache. So Bronfman arranged for a summit meeting to be
held with other label executives in the most conducive setting for deal-
making he could imagine                    —investment banker                 Herb    Allen's      upcoming
annual media-moguls-only conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, birthplace of
the Disney-        ABC   merger and countless others.
       Ahead of      the meeting.               Hummer         planned to offer the           labels just        10
percent of Napster's revenue.                    "I   urged him to be more creative and more
flexible,    because nobody would stand for that," Bronfman                                said.   And Nap-
ster did     up the ante       dramatically, suggesting that the labels could share                              60
percent of Napster's ownership. In the late afternoon on July 13, the two
Napster directors met in Sun Valley with Bronfman, Bertelsmann                                                CEO
Thomas        Middelhoff, Sony Corp.                         co-CEO Nobuyuki           Idei,       and Sony's
U.S. chief,       Howard       Stringer.         The meeting went            well,   and Idei and Mid-
delhoff told Barry to keep dealing with Bronfman,                                 who wanted            to craft
that the company's directors                    would be willing         to risk their     pending acqui-
sition      of Time Warner on the Internet upstart.                          And     that's   what Bronf-
When the preliminary injunction came down and was stayed and the
price tag, the offer        was   still less   attractive   than the Sun Valley summit
terms, before a federal judge had concluded that Napster was probably
breaking the law.         It didn't     make     sense.    "Things went backward from
there,"   Bronfman        said. Barry,    who     called   Bronfman       a visionary, said       he
doesn't   know what went wrong             that    summer    as   he pitched variation        after
Napster was the unstoppable way of the future. More important. Grove
Silicon Valley, and John was going to listen to Andy harder than to me or
to give up control of Napster. "The two people who forfeited that oppor-
the record industry win the power to change Napster's direction.                             "They
always wanted to figure out a             way    to tax every individual transfer,           and   it
just wouldn't work," Hummer said. "Either you believe that Napster is
super-radio, or       you   don't.     In the end, these guys just don't believe that
Napster was the best promotional tool they ever found." Hummer's                              own
sense of high purpose couldn't have helped: His quote "I                          am     the record
industry's worst nightmare" appeared in Fortune                   around the time that the
negotiations collapsed.
break the law. As Napster neared the end of its rope in court, that perver-
sion intensified.      The more endangered                   the    company became,                 the   more
users flocked to the service to get                what they could while they                  still   had the
chance.    And     that added to Napster's strategic dilemma. "Your biggest
problem," Rosen told Barry, "is that instead of a business, you created a
movement.        And   it's   impossible to convert             it."   Every time Napster could
have shifted models, Rosen said                    later,   "they were hampered in doing so
In the end, she said, "I have never seen a brilliant idea handled so badly,
bungled by such greed and so many opportunities                             lost."
       All the   traffic,   combined with the Robin Hood pose, made Shawn
Fanning an international celebrity                    And     he was beginning to enjoy the
extra    money he had         gotten    when Barry took             over    —   eventually         more than
$100,000 in annual            salary.      He would         also sell       more than $100,000              in
off" aU of the women that sought him out. For much of the time after
"But    as the press   kicked     in,   and he was on the cover of this magazine and
that magazine, he       had     less   time to code.         Then he        got used to not coding."
Shawn sometimes             frustrated Ritter        and Kessler with            how long he           took to
make modest upgrades             to the Napster client.                As Shawn        lost    some of his
drive,   he devoted hours to distractions                   like the   game Quake             3,   which the
Quake     players, using the screen         name     "Napster."       Of the     hundreds of peo-
ple playing,   it's   unlikely anyone suspected that he                 really   was who he          said
he was. Shawn played with the same focus he had brought to his file-
sharing program, keeping at it until he was number one, and then he quit.
turned him into a scapegoat, not an appealing mascot like Shawn, and his
public appearances were curtailed.               "Hank was        never able to forgive         me    for
from    grace. After the first    months, Parker had never done much that was
concrete at Napster, and the tolerance for that kind of meandering was
gone. "He was young and kind of immature, I guess just inexperienced,"
Shawn said. "Parker's more of a strategy guy, a vision guy, and he was still
learning how to influence the direction of the company with his ideas."
recognition.      What   he did have was authority inside the company. Since
moving west, he had the same rank                   as   Shawn. "He did the              client,   and   I
did the server, and          we didn't ask each other's permission" to make
changes, Ritter said.       As the company grew, Ritter was insulated from the
guided belief that Napster would win in court. But he had little to say to
the hacker staffers and barely tried.                    He    was     stiff in    company meetings,
and     his occasional             companywide messages were often                         sent from the
Ritter 's bonus. That was also the time when the venture deals kept falling
through. "Eileen could not get John [Fanning] out of the company," Rit-
ter said     of that     era. "All these things              were coming to a head. There's a
cliche that engineers always think they're the center of the universe,                                    and
they never      are.    But    I   look at Napster, and         it   had no business model, a bad
legal strategy,        and no value in the management. All                        it   had was the tech-
nology."     Back      then, Ritter        had talked         to Ali    Aydar about coming with
him     to start another firm, figuring that the                      two of them together could
get     Shawn     to follow.         One day        after lunch, the       two walked              for blocks,
him that leaving was the only logical thing to do. Aydar seemed to agree,
then wavered and did nothing.                   "I   could never get       him     stable    enough     to   go
to   Shawn with         it,"   Ritter said.
       So   Ritter, too,       had   stayed. Since then, he            had seen Napster get both
much     bigger and        much       closer to extinction.          Near the end of the summer
came another blow. John Fanning                       accidentally sent       someone          inside   Nap-
ster    an e-mail disclosing that Napster was in                        talks for       an investment by
Bertelsmann.           The     e-mailed documents included the terms under discus-
sion and an embarrassing laundry                      list   of disclosures Napster had to make
it   was more insulting               to learn about chief operating officer                          Milt Olin's
perks: a $50,000 signing bonus, a $1,500                               monthly                car allowance,        and
$3,200 in monthly               rent for an apartment. In addition to the raft of litiga-
tion, the unresolved issues that                        had to be disclosed included                     Tom       Car-
mody's claim "through John Fanning" that he                                      still   had the right        to sell
accounting and tax headaches, including the fact that Shawn, Parker, and
others      had never turned           in receipts for their original                    moving expenses.
rate lawyer, as far as swaying the public was concerned. That fall, in a
in Provo, Utah, laying out his intentions in creating Napster                                        and some of
how        the technology worked.                  On   September          7,   2000,         Shawn appeared on
the   MTV Video Music Awards show, introducing Britney Spears. Shawn
had been nervous about                  it,   since he tended to            clam up before crowds.                  He
sent a message to Ian Rogers, formerly of NuUsoft, explaining that his
cant: It was the most prominent positive exposure for a hacker in history.
"Say something; I'll even write it for you. Don't just say, 'Thanks,'"
stage, there     were a         lot   of people in the          crowd who were in the front area,
and they were saying reaUy nice                      stuff,"   Shawn        said. "I just         had    to read the
TelePrompTer and not                    freeze up." After            MTV           show host Carson Daly
introduced       Shawn          to massive applause, his main message was a visual
appeal for peace: He wore a Metallica T-shirt, which he told Daly had
You're trying to figure out                  how to      let   something go,          how to move on from
something. Next time                I   saw him was            after the   band had broken up and he
was working on             a side project,         and he was incredibly happy."
       Shawn himself              didn't      seem very happy              in interviews he gave the
hard to do          it   in front   of prying           eyes. "I enjoy talking              about Napster but
not having to do press. If anybody saw                                 me on      camera, that probably
means     I   wasn't having             fiin,"   Shawn         said. "If you're, like, a           musician or a
sports player,           you know       if you     do   really well, you're          going to be famous or
there's   going to be some notoriety associated with                                      that.   But       if you're a
computer coder, you               really don't expect that             kind of stuff to happen.                        A lot
of times,       I    would hear about an                 interview,     and     it    would        just      make me
nervous and affect            my ability to work."
       That     didn't diminish the sex appeal.                      The September 2000                           issue   of
Vanity Fair included a photo feature                            on "enfantrepreneurs," with Shawn
looking miserable.            The        writer described           him      as "shy, street-smart beef-
cake." Shawn's             fame peaked with                his    appearance on the cover of the
October 2 Time magazine. The writer had been to the                                           offices six          weeks
before,   when Napster spokesman Josef Robey                               sent a         companywide e-mail
asking employees to behave and to remove any "Hilary/Lars target prac-
tice   signs"        and other indications of revolutionary                                 spirit.       The      article
founder Justin Frankel and Ian Clarke, the Irish creator of FreeNet, an
even more decentrahzed peer-to-peer system. As was the case with                                 many
Napster administrative communications, the e-mail came from Alicia
Morga.
       David Spade was hosting the Rave Awards, and musician Beck would
perform     at the party afterward.           Also attending were San Francisco mayor
Willie    Brown and Daisy        Fuentes, the          MTV personality. The morning of
the event, spokesman           Robey e-mailed           a   dozen top employees, inviting
them    to the     VIP   party beforehand.       An hour later he         disinvited them, say-
ing that he had "just been informed that the space for the pre-party is
tight   and   can't   accommodate        all."   Ritter     and product marketer Brandon
Barber,    who     had both planned on accepting awards, couldn't believe the
snub. Four awards, and only             Shawn and Barry would be                 there to bask in
it?   After a flurry of discussions, Robey reinvited Ritter, Barber, and mar-
keting    VP     Brooks to the VIP            party.   When      the actual event began, he
wrote, "Jordan will go up with            Shawn        to accept best music        site.   Brandon
and Liz wiU go up to accept best               guerilla marketing."
It wasn't national television, but Ritter was truly excited. Bill Joy, the
Shawn. The preparty went fine, and Ritter was enjoying himself as he sat
at    the Napster table for the awards ceremony. Then someone approached
and said that Courtney Love had requested that Shawn alone come up                                   to
accept the best-music-site award.              The Wired editors         sided with Love,         who
was one of the        night's top   draws and sported a famously indomitable wiU.
Ritter    was flabbergasted, but there was nothing he could do.                              When
white dress, had wanted                  Shawn by      himself.   She couldn't keep her hands
off him,    and she introduced him to the crowd                    as   "my future husband."
      To   his credit,   Barry brought Ritter with him to accept the innovative
start-up     award and graciously pushed him alone toward the microphone,
where Ritter raised        his fist       and saluted Napster's by-then 35 million                     users.
Afterward, Love came to the Napster table and would not go away. She
sat in   Shawn's   lap, flirting heavily              enough   to get     mentioned        for   it    in the
San Jose Mercury News.                   What        she didn't   know was        that the        woman
seething quietly by Shawn's side, Alicia Morga, was his girlfriend.
      Physical attraction aside,                Love had another reason         for being        drawn       to
Shawn: He was the enemy of her enemy. In fact, if Shawn was the record
ing for production, marketing, and other costs before distributing any
royalties.   In the case of Love's band, Hole, after seven years of work, the
four band     members had                collected a total of $375,000, less than $14,000
A WEEK AFTER THE Rave Awards, an old friend heard that Jordan Ritter
was   at   Napster and tracked him down. Ritter wrote back a long e-mail
explaining     how worn      out he was.
      "Most people want              to    know what happened             at Napster.       You know,
I'm sorry, not only        am    I   personally sick of Napster (as if that weren't bad
enough), but I'm personally sick of talking about Napster. I stayed only
for   my   fellow team      members              (no, not the     money, they jacked             all   of us
except Shawn), and at one point even for Shawn, but                             my   personal growth
the revolution leaders were always killed and beheaded, so                                                who the flick
knows what's going               to   happen          to us.        .    .   .       Did     I   mention how fucked up
everyone's values are here?                 It's     a requirement, I think,                               on        CA rental agree-
ments or mortgage apps                  —Check                 if   you              are:    [    ]   a heartless fuck                            [     ]    a
a   wannabe of any           discipline listed above. If                               you        didn't         check one of the
above, please go the flick                  away because you                          will       be miserable here. Some-
how     I   missed   it,   but   I    know       it   had to have been                            there.         .   .   .    Life goes on,
and we all go on with it. Problem is, I have no idea where I'm going. I
San Francisco who offered                     to double his salary.                              His resistance to leaving
was gone.          On   October 31, 2000, Ritter wrote another                                                        letter,           resigning
from the company he had helped build. He sent it to all the staff.
"To those most important to me, and to the company: It has been a
long road for        all   of us,     even for the few that have only been with Napster
for a short time. Revolutions take energy,                                       commitment, and                              sacrifice,              and
are,    almost always,        won       at great cost                   and expenditure of                               effort.             Napster
has never been an exception to this rule; against forces of                                                                        all           odds
duplicitous        and self-serving uncles, angry rock bands, an                                                         entire industry
up in arms — ^we've really struggled, together, for what we believe in, for
underestimate your impact on the company and the world; Napster needs
you     to be whole, the Revolution needs                                you to carry on the                                  torch.             And        so
it is   with a very sad and weary heart that                                     I   inform you             all I            will   be leaving
Napster. ...         my     departure           is    not a reaction to this                                company                     or events
within, but a proactive change in my career and life. I must stress this
      It   was Halloween, just a year             after the rave in   Oakland, when Napster
had   about 400,000 registered users.               By the time    Ritter served out his final
Shawn thought Ritter had done the right thing. "He was getting
really     down and     bringing people around           him down," Shawn         said.   "He got
the opportunity to          move on       to     something that enabled him to get more
responsibility       and have a          little    more freedom,        so I    think that was
definitely the right        move       for him."    But Shawn wasn't there        to tell Ritter
any of that. He was in New York with Barry, announcing Napster's latest
would-be savior.
was better to join together than to fight —or perhaps best of all, to bet
                                                (   261    )
       Of the      media barons, MiddelhofFwas among the most predisposed                                   to
making a break with the past. Just forty-seven, he had written his doctoral
thesis on new media, and he brought an intense focus on the field to old-
service but not take             down       the pirated service.            Then   they said they would
do     it   simultaneously.          But they        still   haven't    come     to terms     on   licensing
even now, which              tells   you something," a            BMG        executive said a year      and a
half    later.     As   Napster's      money         ran low, Barry,         Hummer, and John Fan-
ning tried to attract financing, without success.                            Napster wooed Microsoft,
Intel,      and even tiny Liquid Audio.                 "I just   got used to being turned down,"
said chief financial officer               Lyn Jensen.
       In the meantime, Middelhoff's e-commerce chief, Andreas Schmidt,
was spending more and more time                              in Silicon Valley, chatting       up   digital-
music firms and talking about the potential for Bertelsmann buying
them. "He looked Hke                 Daddy Warbucks, with                   Bertelsmann's cash coming
out of his ears and his breast pocket," said Gerry Kearby, head of Liquid
Audio. "They were making overtures to purchase every company in the
space.       They were        thinking about forming a giant roll-up of companies."
was the bane of Liquid Audio's existence. Kearby had known Barry for
years,       from when Barry had been Liquid Audio's lawyer                                    at   Wilson Son-
sini.    And Hummer Winblad had                               funded Liquid Audio. So Kearby
helpfliUy passed            on    Barrj^'s   phone number.
        It   was     also   around then that Middelhoff and Schmidt discussed the
potential for a Napster settlement with a discouraged Bronfman.                                              Middel-
hoff and Schmidt                 left   the meeting thinking there was                       some kind of deal
possible, that            Bronfman        just wasn't seeing         it.   Schmidt           called Barry, leav-
ing the music people at                   BMG out of the loop.                   The     talks   were on again,
off again,          and   all   over the     map both         figuratively       and    literally,    taking place
in   New York,            Miami, and San Francisco. The deal died three                                   times.    At
last,    a    handshake deal was                  struck.      According to the draft that John
Fanning accidentally sent                    to Napster troops,             it   called for a         $20 million
loan, convertible into 58 percent of the                         company.
        BMG          chief operating officer Strauss Zelnick was at                              home        sleeping
off the effects of oral surgery when Schmidt called him. "We're investing
in Napster,"              Schmidt        said.    "We're dropping the                  suit   and making the
announcement tomorrow." Stunned out of                                     his stupor,        Zelnick couldn't
believe it. "How could the music group not know about this?" he said.
Zelnick and his digital-music deputy, Kevin Conroy, went into overdrive
trying to convince Schmidt and Middelhoff to hold off on the deal and
rethink        it.   They argued          that if Bertelsmann              made         a deal with          someone
violating copyright protections, the                           company could be putting                      its   own
vast treasure of copyrights at risk under the legal doctrine of unclean
hands. And they said that if Bertelsmann was still intent on such a pur-
chase,       it   should simply wait for Napster to go bankrupt, then buy the
assets for pennies in court.                     Schmidt      said that Napster wouldn't                   go bank-
rupt and might even soon                         file   for   an IPO, that             its   legal fortunes         had
turned with the help of David Boies. But he passed along Zelnick's
complaints to Middelhoff. "In his view,                           we   are supporting               an   illegal act,"
Schmidt wrote.
        Middelhoff agreed to delay the announcement to hear out Zelnick,
Conroy, and               BMG           chairman Michael Dornemann. In one follow-up
conversation outside a                   New York conference               room, Schmidt told Zelnick
that he       was missing the             essential fact      —Napster had 33 million customers
                                        all the           rave         (    263    )
who would become Bertelsmann customers. "They                                       aren't customers,"
Zelnick replied. "It's free. And they have zero revenue. I don't like invest-
me two weeks, and I'll try to bring in two other companies. If we take all
the credit for this             first,     you're not going to get Edgar to play or               Warner
to play"
      Zelnick ran through the numbers with Middelhoff, arguing that con-
verting free users to paying users was incredibly difficult. Say 20 percent
of Napster's users weren't kids without credit cards and could affi)rd the
to convince another big label to settle in the next                          two   years,    then the loan
could convert into just 35 percent of Napster's stock.
      Like Yosi       Amram, Ron Conway, and Hank Barry                                before him,    Mid-
delhoff was seduced by Napster's technology and incredible audience. But
he wasn't      as   bhnded. UnUke Barry, he didn't believe Napster was                               legally
defensible. "It is true that this private exchange of music via the Internet
has thus far infringed                     upon the copyrights of        artists   and record compa-
nies,"   he wrote to colleagues.                      And     instead of a direct stock investment
Uke those of his Napster predecessors, he was willing only to extend the
loan.    The     reasoning was spelled out in a September 2000 briefing for
Bertelsmann executives by a consulting firm. In a                               slide identifying the
stay operational until the new, copyright-friendly version was ready, even
if    it   took   six    months or more. That way, the maximum number of sub-
scribers could be pitched to switch. "Otherwise the customer base will be
Post House, where they had steaks and a $219 bottle of Phelps Insignia
Cabernet.          "I   had        to explain the          Bertelsmann culture and the Internet, the
rapidity with            which everything                  is   changing," Middelhoff said.                 Shawn was
surprisingly hard to convince. "I                               had    a lot of concerns about              it,"   he   said.
"There was this whole notion of selling out to a label." Shawn called his
mother on Cape Cod, teUing her he was thinking of walking away from
Napster for good.                       "I   think    I    want        out," he told her. Shawn's                  mother
encouraged him to stick with what he had                                       started.       Four days before the
deal        was   disclosed, Napster                  added sweeteners              for       Shawn. The company
raised his salary to $120,000,                            promised         a   November bonus of $60,000,
and vested the remaining 993,000 of his 2.7 million                                            shares.    Shawn began
to focus          on the bright              side.   "Bertelsmann understood the software. They
understood              why        it    was   interesting,"            he said months             later.    And        "they
seemed Hke              if   they got involved with a company, they gave them a lot of
freedom to           let       them continue              to    do what made them successful and                        offer
tionship in terms of deals and trying to get Hcenses and security and stuff.
Those were all new issues for me that took a while to get comfortable
Napster system would continue as it was, that BMG wouldn't drop its
suit for the         time being, and that a                                   new    business    model hadn't been
worked       out.    The       principals               seemed only                to agree that the      new Napster
would charge          for     membership, and Barry mentioned $4.95                                       a month as a
hypothetical.        The        executives were coached not to say that Napster                                      was
running out of money.                      And           if       they were asked whether the loan would
facilitate        more   illegal          downloading, they were told to say neither yes nor
no, just to parrot a            hne about the loan being used                              to develop a legitimate
industry      would         react.        Rather than racing to sign up, competing record
labels   were aghast, since the deal gave Napster the financial means to
keep fighting them.                  At Bertelsmann, Zelnick and Dornemann                                      resigned
within a           —Middelhoff
                  week                                   later said           they were    fired, since       BMG    was
doing so      poorly— and Conroy                              left   two months        later for    AOL.
       Middelhoff and Schmidt were supposed                                          to travel to   Redwood City to
meet the Napster                staff after the                    announcement, but only Schmidt made
it.   Middelhoff sent an e-mail instead, which Barry told everyone to keep
out of the press. "You have                             all   done an incredible amount of work                    in the
know        that bringing the                   company                 this far has required the talents            and
dedication of         all     of you.       .   .   .   Shawn           is   right   when he    says,   'We   will always
have the user's best interest in mind.' At the end of the day, Napster does
       Barry and Middelhoff still believed that the labels would follow them
in the deal, but they                     were soon disappointed. Unlike Bronfman's plan
from earher         in the year,            Bertelsmann didn't yet have the equity to divide
Thomas      doing a favor for the industry," said Bronfman,                           who      told   Mid-
delhoff the day after the announcement that he had                           made     a mistake.      Nat-
ural competition          among    the record companies             made what was              already an
unlikely resolution far less achievable,                 Bronfman and            others said.         And
Bertelsmann's presence didn't              make up      for   two huge holes          in Barry's plan:
that would guard against constant pirating. Bertelsmann's move just made
it   the biggest victim stuck to the Napster tar baby. Middelhoff said the
failure   of the rest of the companies to follow him showed their poor
analysis,   not   his.    "The   rest   of the industry didn't see what was going on,"
Middelhoff        said.   "They   don't have an         end   in this legal battle,         and on the
other hand [Gnutella successors] Kazaa and MusicCity and                                 all   the others
Under the new Napster                    regime, Barry was           still   in charge.     But he had
a    new and more powerful              partial   master in Bertelsmann. That was good
for Napster's ability to continue as a going concern, but                        it   further compli-
cated Barry's renewed            efforts to find his     own       successor as     CEO, someone
with more operating experience.                   The    candidates          weren't sure who was
calling the shots on the Napster board, Barry interviewed several pro-
the search, Bertelsmann's ill-defined power was only part of the prob-
lem. Barry didn't seem to be sure what sort of a                              CEO     he wanted: an
entertainment-industry veteran, a Silicon Valley technologist, or a differ-
ent beast entirely. Since Barry thought that a lot of the issues, and
Napster's ultimate fate, might well be decided                       on Capitol          Hill,   he even
gave some thought to recruiting a lobbyist for the top job.
      The   candidates for permanent Napster                       CEO        ranged from former
eGroups     Inc.    CEO     Michael Klein to            Mark       Curcio of the film company
Artisan Entertainment and even to Julie Wainwright, the former                                   CEO of
the disastrous Pets.com and a friend of Ann Winblad.                            Most of the people
approached about the top job                 at   Napster were too curious to                  reject the
unsuccessflil doing that. At the same time, they were trying to rewrite the
didn't know what the service was going to look like. At the end of the
day, since they didn't know what the strategy was, they couldn't agree on
had     different ideas than the rest            of Napster and Bertelsmann about                         how
to proceed.     A number of candidates               thought they had              offers   from Barry,
who      purported to be running the show, only to find out that he had been
outvoted by the Napster board or other influencers. "There were a lot of
decision makers," one person close to the process said. "You had different
on from      Barry's   appointment in            May 2000       until past the        same month the
following year, a less-charitable interpretation emerged: that Barry liked
being      CEO,    and even though he took pains                          to refer to himself as
long as possible.
      While Eileen Richardson had pushed Shawn alone                                    in front of the
cameras, Barry was allotting himself more of the spodight. He did more
of the speaking than Shawn              at joint press conferences,                and he made many
more      trips to testify in   Washington and             to speak at industry conferences.
Some CEO candidates concluded that Barry was running such a long,
that the board           would throw up            its   hands and keep                letting   Barry do          as   he
saw   fit.   "Hank enjoyed          the job.       He     enjoyed the profile," the recruit                   said.
autocratic style. Barry             had    a serious temper, especially under pressure,                             and
the edicts emanating from his BlackBerry rubbed the engineers the
wrong way. "He was often extremely charismatic and focused," one
employee        said.    "Other days, he would just be negative and not reason-
able."    Eddie     Kessler,     who   initially        enjoyed strong support from Barry, said
that he was, in "some respects, a breath of fresh                                      air."   But    Barry's top-
down      style    included hiring executives without the input of the leadership
team, which "was kind of unheard of in the Valley," Kessler                                           said.   Shawn
said Barry turned out as advertised                       —     a solid lawyer.         "He took       care of the
legal stuff very well.           But   I   think the Htigation was kind of a losing battle
overall.     Not because         ultimately        it   went against us but because every time
we   expected       it   to   go one way,     it   went the        other. It       was    a roller coaster."
For whatever reason, Barry was still                                 interim           CEO,      and there was
still no deal with the record labels, when                           the U.S. Court of Appeals for
ary 2001.
      In August 2000, Napster had                        filed its   fiill   appeal. It asked the three-
judge panel to           revisit nearly     every holding by Patel, including those inter-
preting the        VCR         case, the    DMCA              safe harbors,         and the Audio              Home
Recording Act.                And   the    company argued                  that Patel's injunction                   was
overly broad and too harsh, in effect a form of prior restraint that                                           would
convert the network from a peer-to-peer system to "a centralized source
of authorized material."               Hammering on                  the "substantial noninfringing
use" argument from the                 VCR         case, Boies said that seventeen                       thousand
artists      had authorized         their   work         to be distributed, at least              when        it   came
to concert recordings               —even      MetaUica.             The major             labels,    meanwhile,
released only twenty-six               hundred albums a              year.    Boies said Napster would
court briefs rolled in on both sides from the                         ACLU,         the Digital    Media
Association, the         Motion         Picture Association of America, and a troupe of
hurting Napster          when     they stated          flatly that   the    Audio    Home     Recording
Act, which permits private noncommercial copying, didn't apply.
        The   climactic oral arguments                  came October 2           in the appeals court's
cuit judge Mary Schroeder, the most senior of the three judges, sat
between the two men on the panel and said the lawyers for each party
would get just twenty minutes to make what could be the defining argu-
approached the lectern and told the judges that the record industry was
asking     them     to   make    a series of rulings unprecedented in the history of
infringement. Yet the users were deriving no financial benefit from their
actions,      and Napster had no              financial relationship            with them.
        Just minutes into Boies's presentation, the judges began firing ques-
tions. Since       Napster users were sharing music with millions of anonymous
strangers, "you can't characterize that as personal                              and private    use," like
that allowed under the Sony VCR decision, Schroeder said. Boies shifted
computers might be devices with legitimate uses, he                                 said,   but the pro-
gramming           that linked users                together was an ongoing service. That
impUed        it   didn't qualify for protection              of the sort accorded the                 VCR,
which Beezer          said   was       "clearly,      from beginning        to end, a device." Boies
appellate judge on the panel, Clinton appointee Richard Paez, said little.
his throat and begin to praise Beezer for questioning the relevance of
Sony when he too was interrupted. "Are you prepared to discuss the
mation. "I find that extremely troublesome. . . . If this is a service, how are
they expected to have knowledge of what comes off some                                           kid's   computer
in   Hackensack         for transfer to     Guam?" Frackman was                          prepared. "You start
out talking about what they designed their system for. They designed it
for piracy,"    he      said.    One    last time,    he read Sean Parker's smoking-gun
e-mail saying that anonymity was important since Napster users "are
exchanging pirated music."                And moving               quickly to take advantage of
Schroeder's presence, he said, "This                 is   no     different than the               swap meet."
     The     advantage immediately proved smaller than Frackman had
hoped. "This       is   different,"     Schroeder told him.                     The     flea-market operator
could wander through at any time and learn that pirated goods were
being sold on      its    premises. "Napster doesn't have any idea at any point in
time," she said.        The     judges kept firing questions at Frackman and Boies
during their rebuttals.           At   the end,     some       observers thought the question-
ing was tougher on the music industry than on Boies. Perhaps the suave
litigator   had pulled another rabbit out of his                       hat.
      Neither side expected to wait long for a decision. But the delibera-
tions   among      the judges and their clerks wore on and on.                                    The    longer      it
lasted, the better        Napster thought          its    chances were and the more nervous
Frackman became. In the                 interim, Patel appointed a mediator to try to
broker a settlement:              The    parties     met only once, and the                          talks   went
nowhere.      On   February 12, 2001, four months after the oral arguments,
the Ninth Circuit finally handed                  down     its   verdict. It           was unanimous, with
much either, because Napster had an ongoing role in its users' behavior.
And      the judges agreed that Napster                         was     likely to      be found to be con-
tributing to         its   users' copyright violations, since its                    worth would             rise   with
the     number of users          it   drew.     "The     district court         did not    err:   Napster, by          its
file offered for transfer didn't violate a copyright. The appeals court, on
the other hand, moved the burden back toward the labels. Napster would
still   have to police        its     system to the best of its              ability,   but the record labels
would have           to submit the             names of        files   with infringing works. Possibly
the result of a compromise                       among         the judges, the court              may        not have
realized that         it   was    calling for a logistical nightmare.                       As    it    noted       else-
had     to report every          file,   because each would probably be gone by the time
Napster got around to disabhng                          it,   with another       user's    unblocked version
of the same song taking                  its   place.
        StiU,   it   was   a resounding victory for the record industry.                           "The court of
appeals found that the injunction                        is   not only warranted, but required," the
RIAAs       Hilary Rosen              said.    "And     it    ruled in our favor        on every         legal issue
presented."          The    ruling also         made     it less   likely that       Napster could make a
deal with labels besides Bertelsmann,                            Schmidt acknowledged. At a San
Francisco press conference, Barry                             vowed     to ask for a rehearing                    and to
appeal to the Supreme Court                        if necessary.        And     he amplified his                 calls for
amazing things."
The old Napster was still running as Patel digested the appeals
court's directive to modify her injunction. But in a sign of how dire things
had become, Barry decided to try to give the stalled negotiations with the
conference the next day," Rosen said. She called Barry immediately,
stunned that he would be so amateurish                           as to      make   a negotiating offer in
public. "It was the only time in three years of dealing with this that I lost
my temper," Rosen said. "I really thought if they played it right they
could have settled           it.   I   spent an hour on the phone screaming at                      him from
BMG's         offices in      L.A.      I said this    was going             to put     them back another
year.    He    told   me I was wrong."
       The     next day, over Napster strategist Ricki Seidman's objections,
Barry held his press conference in San Francisco, joined by Schmidt and
Middelhoff. Before puzzled reporters, they announced that Napster was
offering the labels $1 billion over five years, to                             come from       subscription
fees    on the new        service,      whenever      it   was   ready. Per label, that            worked out
to a very small increase in revenue                   —    a   few percentage           points. Per song,    it
worked out           to pennies.       Given the history of bad blood between Barry and
the labels, the offer was dead               on   arrival.      "You claim you want            to be legiti-
mate and negotiate licenses based on real business models," Rosen said in
a statement. "Act accordingly. Stop the infringements. Stop the delay tac-
used pig Latin for the names of songs and bands. A more sophisticated
just    wanted    to bring       back what was once so                        great,"         Chang        said.    The
record industry complained about                             all   of the holes, and Patel declared
Napster's     early filtering efforts                  to     be "disgraceful." Napster's lawyers
promised the company would do                       better,        and   in April        it   bought a cutting-
edge but still-imperfect system for identifying song                                       files    by the music
they contained. Patel appointed a technical adviser to baby-sit the                                                 new
effort   and demanded frequent updates. The fans were miserable.                                               On    one
personal website devoted to               all   things Napster, the host wrote: "Is anyone
out there besides me wincing at what's beginning to look like the cruel
and unusual death of Napster? It's getting just too painfiil to watch."
Napster was fast running out of alternatives. In June 2001,                                                   the   com-
pany's   first   step in further appeals, asking the                       flill   Ninth Circuit              to revisit
the decision of its panel, failed to muster a single judge's vote in support.
new     screening system something less than a complete disaster. Patel had
given Napster until June 28 to perfect the system, and the in-house engi-
neers clearly weren't going to              make            it   in time. Barry hired several consul-
engineer, and Ucensed still more outside technology in a frantic bid to get
believers
             —"Shawn's       fans," as      Carey            called   them—^who thought the com-
"There were times that the company has been forced due to litigation
or other things to take paths that                        I didn't    think were          ideal,    and       it   was
tough being associated with                   that,"      Shawn      said. "Especially           with a       lot   of
the publicity. Because I              remember when we                started filtering ineffectively,
determining how the filtering system should work, but I definitely felt the
repercussions of that."
      Carey had never seen anything                        like the       mess Napster was              in.    "The
chaos inside the organization was just strangling," he                                  said. "It   took       me    a
week to       figure out that everyone              was operating based on                fear   —of the law-
suit,   of management, of making a mistake.                          It   was    bizarre." Kessler         was      in
charge of the screening effort, and Barry had lost faith in his ability to
puU it together. "The first thing Hank asked me to do was fire Eddie,"
Carey        said. "I said there's      no way        I   can ship        if I fire    Eddie.    It's   aU in his
head." After getting berated one time too many by Barry, Kessler quit in
May. Barry realized that Carey had been right: With no Eddie, there was
no chance. A three-day soap opera ensued, ending only when Barry apol-
ogized and asked Kessler to                  come     back.
The high-speed filtering effort went down to the wire. Just before the
June 28 hearing, Carey and the others had it working in the lab, with
"duct tape and        gum         holding    it   together."   On June 27, Napster switched to
the     new     system.     As     copyright-infringement notices poured in by mail,
e-mail,       and   fax,    the   new audio-based system knocked                          out the protected
songs, and the exhausted engineers congratulated each other.                                        "The tenor
of the conversation changed, to the system having a chance.                                             And        that
hunting for bugs, cutting off what had grown to 2 million simultaneous
users, close to     AOL's        figures       and an incredible technical achievement                                      for
the long fight was over. "Once we shut it down, we knew it was going to
be hard to get it up again," he said. "It was Uke trying to repair the leg of
a racehorse.     You just shoot              it.   But everyone                felt like it        was    Napster, so       we
can't let it go."
that Napster could relaunch the system and                                         weed out 99 percent of the
improper songs. But Patel was adamant.                                     "It's   not good enough until every
effort has    been made          to,       in fact, get zero tolerance," she ruled. "She                                   was
fiirious," Kessler said.         "She said              it's    got to be perfect.             I said I can't        build a
arguing that Patel's zero-tolerance standard was too high was rejected.
And     despite assurances to fans that                               it    would soon be back, Napster's
second-generation system for authorized recordings wouldn't go                                                    live until
had had plenty of time to work out the kinks in their systems. The early
was   also slow,      and   it   had bugs that were                           difficult to         overcome without
some user     sophistication.              But millions                tried       anyway:      The number of hits
to Gnutella websites ran into the tens of millions. Litigation                                                  would      also
to shut down. As Shawn had feared, the open-source effort made steady
peak. As with Gnutella, there was no practical way to stop them. The
With no more legal recourse and no deal with the labels in the
offing, Napster's   only other             way out was   a Hail    Mary      to   Washington,
D.C., and Barry lobbied hard for a mandatory license to force distribu-
tion of digital music. Helpfully, the record industry's unpopularity                           had
only grown during       its       fight    with Napster.    And   a    law that would save
Napster by making the              labels share their      wares in     new ways was            not
unprecedented.    The 1992 Audio Home Recording Act was the grandest
of the recent   compromises, expressly allowing home copies and mandat-
ing fees from the sale of blank cassette tapes that were in turn distributed
among music       authors, performers,             and publishers. Congress had                also
were permanent. In      fact, for          most of the world's    history, musicians           were
free to pick    whatever music they wanted, earning money only by per-
forming.     The same   is    true of Shakespeare          and other       writers,    who were
free to   copy each other or stage someone                 else's plays.   When        copyrights
did come into being, it was because technology had changed the lay of
the land.
      Copyrights began in 1710 in England, after technology made                         it   feasi-
ble to copy manuscripts. Since then, there has always been a balancing act
between the     interests    of the creators and the interests of the public.                  The
pubHc's side of the balance, according to              some     scholars, probably        peaked
in the    United States      at the Constitutional          Convention of 1787.           It    was
there, at the behest         of James Madison, that the framers adopted the
copyright- and-patent clause of the document, giving Congress the power
"to   promote the progress of science and              usefiil arts,   by securing       for   Hm-
     The importance of the phrase 'limited times" was not lost on early-
legislators, who saw copyright as a trade-off" that ensured everyone would
have free use of discoveries and                  artistic   works     after   an appropriate period
of compensation.            The   first   U.S. copyright law provided that the exclu-
sive    rights      would    expire after a term of fourteen years, renewable at
right for corporate         works and        life-plus-fifty years for          works by individuals
by     a further twenty years apiece.               The      bill   was challenged        in court   by a
team including Lawrence Lessig, who argued that Congress's constant
extensions were a           way of sneaking around                  the constitutional requirement
for limited time. After Lessig's side lost in lower courts, the U.S.                           Supreme
Court        in   2002 agreed   to consider the case.
not     itself facilitate    copying.        CSS    kept     DVD      discs    from being played on
computers that didn't contain the Ucensed technology for de-encryption.
In practice, this meant that only                    Windows and Apple machines                      could
play theDVDs. DeCSS just allowed Linux users to play DVDs that were
purchased legally. Any DVD could be copied, legally or otherwise, with-
out having to de-encrypt               it.   Yet not only were the purveyors of                 DeCSS
found to have violated the                DMCA,         but journaUstic websites that linked
to pages that linked to pages that contained the                              DeCSS program          were
barred from doing so by the courts.
        Likewise, the record industry               won      the biggest digital lawsuit besides
MP3.com        in the year     2000 and won           a   $110 million judgment over one of
the dot-com's services,             which allowed legitimate compact-disc owners                             to
listen to versions        of that music from wherever they logged on.                               The     big
legal issue    was     a small practical one:         MP3.com          established a database of
own CDs, the company knew what music was on it. The industry argued
that the very creation of that database, while                     made with purchased CDs,
was unauthorized copying                 for   commercial purposes and not                 fair use.    And
it   won.
      Oddly enough, Napster                    didn't start the fight in              Washington          that
eventually was         its   last   hope: Orrin Hatch did.                 The Utah Republican
chaired the powerfiil Senate Judiciary Committee, where he had been
looking to     make laws on          issues less divisive      than those that previously had
split   the panel, which included ideologues from both parties.                                Hatch had
brought together diverging interests before, when he crafted the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act, which gave                         at least      something to             all sides.
chief counsel,       Manus Cooney, had                spent    many        days in Silicon Valley.
Cooney       began hearing complaints about the difficulty in getting music
licenses     from the Big Five             labels,   and he had long conversations with
Michael Robertson ofMP3.com. Early in 2000, a friend suggested that
Cooney check out             Napster, and he downloaded the software.                                Cooney
began tracking the           RIAA        lawsuit, then in      its   early stages.        When Hum-
mer Winblad            invested in       May, the entertainment industry grew more
alarmed about Napster's prospects. Cooney thought the issue was some-
thing Hatch could use to forge a compromise. So he called                                 Hank Barry at
Hummer         Winblad, eventually reaching the Napster                               CEO      on    his cell
phone       in an airport.    They       talked for twenty minutes, and                   Cooney began
laying the     groundwork           for hearings before the Judiciary                 Committee.
      To    those familiar with reading tea leaves inside the Beltway, the wit-
There was a Sony            executive,       and there was Lars Ulrich of Metallica. But
there were also Barry,         MPS. corn's               Robertson, and        Gene Kan of Gnutella
fame, representing the future of piracy if nothing was                                 worked   out.   For a
number of reasons. Hatch was leaning towards                              Napster's side.       Back   then,
Napster had not yet           lost the pivotal             argument over a preliminary injunc-
tion,   and the worst of the internal documents had not been publicized.
And     the entertainment industry                  is    one of the      largest contributors to the
Democratic Party. But the most personal motivation came from a surpris-
ing place      —Hatch's own musical                  aspirations. Probably             most of   his   Utah
constituents were unaware of                       it,    but Hatch fancied himself a late-
blooming songwriter. From the                        late nineties on.          Hatch had cowritten
some      three    hundred songs and recorded                        several    CDs, many of them
religious.     And      his early impressions             of the record industry were            like those
that handle inspirational music won't handle mine, because they don't
       For Hatch, anything that got obscure gospel and other kinds of
unheard music in front of more people was a good thing.                                      And       if   the
his work, "It's kind of like paying off your mortgage, and the bank still
       In private discussions with the RIAA's Hilary Rosen before the July
2000 hearings, Hatch had                 raised the prospect of             compulsory       licenses as a
could have seized the                moment and                 testified for    such legislation. But
before the preliminary injunction hearing, Barry                               still   believed he     would
win     his case in court.      So he        explicitly         asked Congress not to change the
laws. It       was Ulrich,    instead,       who         pleaded for help. "Allowing our copy-
right protections to deteriorate                   is,   in    my view,   bad   policy,   both economi-
the end of the year, Cooney left and joined Napster as a lobbyist, recusing
star Missy "Misdemeanor" Elliott. At the lavish awards dinner, the record
one of Hatch's        own   songs, "I   Am Not Alone," to the audience. According
to the academy, the         crowd went wild.
       The    industry didn't have to       stall    Hatch     for long.       He would    be out of
the center chair in two months, to                    be succeeded by Democrat Patrick
Leahy of Vermont,           after Sen.     Jim    Jeffords bolted the Republican Party
and handed Democrats a Senate majority. And Leahy had bigger priori-
ties   than following the advice of a corporate lawyer turned Silicon Valley
CEO,        especially    one whose company had been damned by a federal
appeals court as a piracy profiteer.
The last Senate hearings gave Bertelsmann little hope, and the com-
pany was growing frustrated. The initial six-month estimate for a legiti-
mate    service      was ending, and the product was                 still    at least three   months
away. In April, Bertelsmann's               eCommerce Group met                      to discuss   two
goals: getting content            from the other majors and getting management
telsmann manager." The team wrote that it would be "legally difficult, but
doable" to develop a lawful way to get rid of Barry, and the executives
mused about promoting Shawn to co-CEO alongside a Bertelsmann
loyalist.
Just two weeks after Patel ruled that Napster would stay dark until it
could block 100 percent of the infringing material. Hank Barry finally
Shawn, one that had a strong impact on the youth, so                                         his   endorsement
meant even more.              "I like        Thomas      a lot,"    Shawn       said.      "When         things got
really   down, he was           actually a         major reason that a           lot       of times      I       chose to
stick    it   out.   He     believes in us so           much, and he chose                 to put a lot of his
own     personal credibility and other things behind                           it."   Hilbers, too,               seemed
like "a nice         guy" to       Shawn       —perhaps         too    much so. "I was wondering,
wow, does he know what                       he's getting into        here? The music industry, the
    Hilbers interviewed with Barry and John                         Hummer           and decided the
Napster job was for him.            "I believe in        the peer-to-peer aspect, the               com-
munity    aspect," Hilbers said. Like              many     others before him, he also saw
the logic of having a system for wider introduction of music to fans for-
merly reached only through radio. "The Internet                        is   providing a chance for
a totally    new     radar screen," he said. "There's a great middle ground
between Britney Spears and                a   San Francisco garage band." Hilbers had a
few big   goals.    With hopes        fading of a rescue in Congress, he needed to
work harder on          a deal with the labels.         And    he needed to have a system to
show them        that   was secure and controlled              digital rights    —something            like
Shawn as Napster's chief technology officer, but a secure system took six
    When it came out in January 2002, Napster II worked fairly well,                                   and
Shawn was        satisfied   with   it,   though most of the content was from                      lesser-
known bands and minor               labels.And while Napster had faded from the
headlines and the hearts            of many, who turned to new services like Kazaa
and Morpheus, BearShare and LimeWire, 3 million people applied                                       to   be
Napster     II   beta testers.   The      best part     was that      it still felt    to the user like
the Napster of old. "Aside from the limited content, it is actually a very
don't give a rat's ass about the quality of the sound when compared to the
decide between taking something like the record industry's failed hard-
line stance     and offering something small that might keep a                                 lid       on the
willingness of consumers to cheat. "We're the canaries in the coal mine,"
With the old, unrestrained Napster gone, it made sense for the
labels to help a new, legitimate service arise in its place. And the tone of
departure as        CEO. But      he and            Hummer      still   had two of the four board
seats,   and they weren't helping to get                  a deal. In     September 2001, Bertels-
mann eCommerce             CFO         Bill          Sorenson wrote to              his   boss Andreas
November       as his   eCommerce Group was merged                           into the Direct         Group,
which includes book and record clubs and                       electronic retailer        CDNow. The
Direct     Group adopted     responsibility for the Napster                    effort.
and    licensing deals         on the         table ready to be signed            by   AOL    and EMI,"
Hilbers said.         The      deal with         AOL        called for    $20 million in settlement
money, $5 million in an immediate advertising purchase, and $20 million
in future advertising.            Of         course,   it   would take Bertelsmann's money                    to
make      it   happen, and Hilbers passed up word of the pacts. "Thomas Mid-
delhoff was in favor of the deal," Hilbers said. But "he did not convince
his fellow       board members to give us the money." The board wanted                                  all   of
the majors at once.            They      said,   "We    are not    going to invest        now   a substan-
tial   amount of money               in Napster, exercise our warrant,                    and then find
[our] selves in litigation with Universal, Sony,                        and    BMG," Hilbers          said.
would soon land           it   in trouble        with regulators, took the board-level rever-
sal especially        hard.  "AOL is really pissed," Hilbers wrote to Middelhoff.
"They backed out            of the RIAA negotiation and now we took the deal off
the table." It took a call from Middelhoff to                           AOL executive Richard Par-
sons to smooth things over.
       The     industry rebuffed Hilbers's request for a moratorium in the legal
fight,    wanting to close the door by winning the case against Napster in                                     a
the last-ditch defense that since copyright law calls for a balance between
the rights holders and the public, a cartel should not be allowed to set the
terms by which the public will get access                         —     that   would amount       to copy-
right misuse          and a violation of public               policy.   For an industry already sub-
ject to antitrust accusations, the joint ventures                          were   less   than smart, and
Patel let       them know         it.    In an October 2001 hearing on the industry's
request for          summary judgment,             a day that could well have             been Napster's
end, she instead took the industry to task for the joint ventures. "I'm
reaUy curious about             how      the plaintiffs in this          came upon the        idea," Patel
said. "Even if it passes antitrust tests, it still looks bad, sounds bad, and
smeUs bad." Patel put off ruling on summary judgment to allow yet
And Napster had one more card to play —the threat of bankruptcy,
which would           likely leave the record labels                   with nothing, while Bertels-
mann      stood to walk away with the technology.                             Renewed          talks   between
Hilbers and the          RIAA picked up                  steam, and a consensus emerged around
vert its warrants and take fliU control of Napster. Hilbers sought an addi-
Direct        Group backed        the idea. But the world had changed.                          "The bubble
had burst        already,   but   it   had gotten worse since then, with the recession
and September            11," Hilbers               said.    "Everything contributed to people
being more cautious. Napster was a very bold idea, and                                    it    took a   lot   of
money." Middelhoff 's adventure had already proved more costly and more
difficult      than Bertelsmann's board had anticipated. Above Hilbers's head,
Bertelsmann demanded more: a guarantee of                                   fiiture licenses      with more
content.        "We   noticed     it    was only           a limited catalog of seventy thousand
table. "Clearly Konrad was not speaking with any authority, and the rules
"It was like someone let the air out of their balloon," another record exec-
Napster had time: Patel had recently allowed Napster nine more months
to obtain     documents about the           labels' alleged   misuse of their copyrights,
putting off the possibiUty of              summary judgment            until 2003. Yet     with
every     month         that passed, the rival pirate services got bigger, while the
only thing getting bigger at dormant Napster was the red ink. Soon,
the labels learned          why      Napster had suddenly grown too preoccupied to
negotiate.
the coup
decided that the time had come for Bertelsmann to make its own move.
Desperate for cash, Napster had begun laying off staff in the spring of
2002 and returned        to the   pubUsher asking for       still   more money. Seeing
Napster's     weak bargaining     position,   Middelhoff suggested that Bertels-
mann     simply buy the company instead.              He   reasoned that Bertelsmann
would have      a better chance of striking a deal with the other labels than
its   ties   to former   employee Hilbers, two previous loans totaling $85
million,     and the warrants that    entitled   it   to claim a majority stake.   That
one-step remove from ownership provided an extra layer of protection in
                                       (   289)
the event that Napster lost the court case. But since Napster wasn't opera-
tional,     Bertelsmann began to            feel that         it   would have no         liability   even     if
one person in the acquisition talks said. And the directors reminded
Middelhoff that he had missed                    earlier deadlines for the birth                 of a   new
Napster. But Middelhoff stuck to his vision.                            He   thought that even         if   the
      Morpheus and         the other pirate services might have                          more   users       and
more content, but because they were                      so decentralized, they couldn't easily
over an acquisition. That naturally included the Napster board,                                 now made
up of Hilbers, Hank Barry and John                       Hummer          of Hummer Winblad, and
John Fanning. Fanning had held onto                            his   board seat when the venture
firm invested but pledged to vote his shares according to the board's
wishes in the event of a decision changing control of the company.                                    Hum-
mer Winblad had            insisted     on that        proxy,       knowing      full   well that he was
unpredictable.       But   it   would soon be             clear that         even letting him stay on
the board was a mistake.               Hummer Winblad                   would have done          better to
was probably low enough by                  itself to   enrage Fanning, never one to under-
estimate Napster's worth. But that was just the start of it.
       Two    years before, as the negotiations for                Hummer Winblad's                invest-
ment     in Napster        had dragged on and the stock market began sinking, the
terms had been revised several times. In the end.                        Hummer Winblad won
what     is   known       as a liquidation preference in the contract.                  Not uncom-
mon      in venture deals, the clause              meant      that   when      a liquidation event
Group CFO Bill Sorenson testified later that the idea originated at
Hummer         Winblad, but Barry and another person in the                                talks   denied
that.)   That discussion eventually               led to the plan to           buy   all    of Napster,
according to Sorenson and the other party. "There was a series of back
and forth      relative to    purchasing either          Hummer Winblad's            equity or       all   of
the equity of Napster," Sorenson said.              The very real possibiHty of being
left   with worthless paper             instead of IPO riches made Shawn, who was
pored over             all   of the documents. Finally, they found what Fanning con-
sidered to be a sufficient loophole.                       As   is   typical       with young companies,
several series               of stock issued by Napster had the right to convert into
common                                                         The Series A
                  shares if a majority of that class of stock agreed.
       But    it   was enough           for Fanning,        who      planned a lightning attack just
as the       Napster board prepared to weigh Bertelsmann's                                offer.   Fortunately
for him, the Series A Senior shares were controlled by one man — ^Yosi
entitling it to name two of the company's directors, then all the other
shareholders could vote them out and try their own negotiation with
Bertelsmann.
       So    it   was that the disgraced ex-chairman decided to                              see if   he could
round up a majority of                  all   the newly      common          shares    and vote Barry and
John     Hummer off the                Napster board. Fanning tracked                   down       Bill Bales in
Georgia and called Richardson and other investors who were almost as
stunned to hear his voice after a two-year gap                                as   they were to hear what
he had to          say.      Fanning proposed that they                all   sign   documents supporting
the replacement of the two                     Hummer Winblad directors with Amram                            and
Martin Kay, the                   CEO         of Fanning's NetCapital. Richardson's heart
pounded           at the idea: It        was    like a flashback to           everything she had hated
about Napster. But with a haff-million dollars                                at stake, she figured that
away, leaving him and many others who had believed in the firm with
       Parker volunteered to try for Conway's support and drove to see                                              him
at   San   Francisco's          Fairmont Hotel on the eve of the                            crucial   board meet-
ing.    Caught        in traffic        on U.S. 101 coming north                          into   San Francisco,
Parker dialed and redialed Conway's                             cell   phone from the            car,   not realiz-
ing that Conway was on the phone with Shawn. When he finally got
through, Parker told Conway that he had done some rough calculating
and figured that Angel Investors stood to gain or lose only about
come out ahead is if the coup wins," Parker implored Conway. "I don't
bar.    Conway was              dressed in his usual casual                      style,     with a shiny green
jacket over a polo shirt.                    As     expected, he continued to argue against a
ninth-inning attack on the board. But as he turned the tables and argued
that Parker should cast his votes against the insurrection, an idea struck
Parker.    He knew              the    math was          close.      But why was Conway fighting so
hard,    when        it   was   clearly in Parker's interest to                  back the coup?          It       dawned
on Parker that he and another shareholder he knew. Freeloader cofounder
Mark Pincus, had                the swing votes, that without                        them   the coup    would        fail.
everything up. So I thought, let's use the fact that he's going to screw it
swap of investment holdings with Amram, were now the key to the deal.
He     decided he could use his leverage either to force the upstart directors
into office or, even better, to convince                               Hummer Winblad                 to fork over
more of the           kitty in         exchange for betraying the coup. "Hummer's being
greedy. Everyone's being greedy. We're                                 all    fighting over scraps," Parker
said after hanging up with Shawn. "Is the coup actually going to happen?
offer would be tabled for the moment, and disaster staved off.
      But John Fanning decided he had                    all   the cards he needed and that
Hummer Winblad                  wasn't going to turn generous unless forced.                          On
March      25, as   compromise proposals             floated    back and        forth.     Fanning   filed
new directors. The suit named Barry and John Hummer as defendants.
The two gave no comment to the press, but they and other loyalists were
incensed. The suit asked for expedited review, citing an unspecified "offer
to purchase the company." The Los Angeles Times promptly identified the
the conversion. "Did you discuss with                  him what          the effect of his conver-
sion of his shares         would be?" an attorney            for the directors asked. "I don't
know," Fanning replied. "You don't remember?"                            "I don't     have a specific
recollection of a discussion that I                 would characterize           in that way,"       Fan-
ning     said.   "How          would you characterize your discussions with Mr.
Amram on         the subject of converting his Series                A preferred            stock?" "I'm
sorry, how would I characterize them?" Fanning asked. "Yes," the lawyer
    "For what?"
    "You'd have to be more specific."
       "No.   I   want you         to answer         my    question.   What     do people pay you
money for?"
    After Fanning's lawyer objected, Fanning responded: "That's too
broad a question."
       "How do you             earn your living?"
       Fanning paused.            "I   consider that to be overly broad.               I   do work        as a
director of Napster, I'm the largest individual shareholder,                               and   I   was the
founding chairman and                  CEO."
       Fanning said he            didn't know        if   he was   still   chairman of Napster and
that he couldn't say             which other companies he was currently                     a director of
urged the two sides to resolve their differences. Among other things, it
was reached in           April 2002 that would               give   Fanning and the other early
Series    A Junior holders             $2.4 million, while the rest of the investors                     split
$14.1 million. All that remained was to seal the deal with Bertelsmann.
       Surprisingly, even with the total $16.5 million price established                                and   a
tled with the record labels, the settlement would include pledges that the
That    last      demand was            too    much        for the     German company,                  according
to   someone on the Napster                    side    of the       talks.     "They      finally said, 'Basta!
[Enough!],' " the person said. Barry recalled the breakdown differently,
over.   "Hank was          upset that Bertelsmann wanted                         them gone," one execu-
tive said.
riences that Bertelsmann and the labels had with Napster before, only
worse and over            less.   "From the beginning,               it   was   really    tough to negotiate
with the Napster team," Middelhofi" said. "Sometimes they changed their
minds; sometimes they had different camps on their                                      side.   They continued
to believe Napster                had   a   tremendous upside and tremendous potential
market capitalization."
After the talks for an equity deal collapsed and Fanning's lawsuit
continued, Bertelsmann made a surprise, last-ditch proposal on May 3 to
at least   buy Napster's            assets      through a planned Chapter 11 bankruptcy
reorganization.           The     creditors     would get $5 million and the shareholders
would get nothing, but the technology, the brand, and the employees
would    stay together,           and Napster could escape Chapter 7 bankruptcy                                     liq-
ing from the deal, and they questioned Hilbers's loyalty. But they allowed
Hilbers and Napster general counsel Jonathan Schwartz to keep trying,
and the pair presented                   a finished deal         document      for the      board to vote up
or    down on              Friday,    May 10, with the            expiration    on the       offer three days
away. Barry and                      Hummer hemmed                and hawed, objecting that they
wanted           to see      how     Fanning's legal case played out and that they wanted
to reserve Napster's right to sue                        BMG, along with the other record labels,
on    antitrust grounds.
vote on the offer before                  it   expired, Schwartz wrote a long e-mail                    on Sat-
urday to Barry,                 Hummer, and              Hilbers, warning           them      that they were
for Napster's creditors.                 "Given that the company                is   faced with the          most
severe financial constraints imaginable, I                            do not believe          that, consistent
with its fiduciary duties, the board can simply reject the asset purchase
insolvent."
       Barry and               Hummer          responded that they would stick with their
plan   —no            action   by Monday, then             a   meeting of shareholders and creditors
to discuss            it   later in the       week. "Let's move forward with that process                       as
the board directed," Barry wrote.                          And    they didn't respond to Schwartz's
increasingly desperate pleas that they spell out any remaining                                         demands
for    him        to take to Bertelsmann. Hilbers then                      weighed         in,   backing Nap-
ster's     top lawyer and threatening to resign. "This                         is   not a game," he wrote
to the      Hummer Winblad                     directors. "I     am   not going to abandon this buy-
out deal for no obvious reason and then                            move forward with               layoffs   and a
road towards Chapter                    7."   For good measure, Napster's outside bankruptcy
lawyer. Rick Cieri, the                  head of that practice         at   big firm Jones, Day, Reavis
own CEO and general counsel on the reservation. But Barry and Hum-
The next        day, Tuesday,        May 14, 2002, everything happened at once.
Fanning, Barry, and              Hummer were all in Wilmington, Delaware, for an
anticipated three-day trial               on Fanning's lawsuit       against his fellow direc-
tors.   In   Redwood        City, Hilbers       knew that layoffs were       inevitable. Just past
     Just before noon, Barry called the Napster office and                        was placed on a
speakerphone          as the staffers       gathered for what they           knew was coming.
Barry said the company couldn't meet the payroll, and each of the seventy
employees had a choice: get                laid off or take a      week of unpaid         vacation in
the hope that he could resurrect a deal.                     Few   agreed to the vacation.          As
they milled around after the               call   ended, executive after executive resigned
rather than wait for the bankruptcy liquidation that                       would come.        "It   was
awful. People     were glad to get out of there," one                said.   "Everyone thought
John Fanning was             a flick     and what he was doing was stupid and greedy,
but in the end         it   was   really   an anti-Hank sentiment." Schwartz                 quit, as
did Milt      OHn, the top operating               officer   and old friend of Barry. Shawn
wavered.      Then he           resigned, too, organizing a trip that night to a                    San
Francisco dive bar in the Mission District to toast Hilbers's efforts.
     The     resignations were a last demonstration of rage at                    Hummer Win-
blad.   "They    lost the         game of       chicken,"    Conway      said that night.         "The
bickering of Yosi           [Amram] and John Fanning               versus    John     Hummer        and
Hank     Barry   is   what caused the shareholders not               to get their      money back
in   March.    Now          the continued bickering between John                    Hummer          and
causing seventy people to lose their jobs."                           Shawn was        disgusted, too.         Not
only did Barry and             Hummer           decide to play chicken, he complained to a
friend, they decided to play chicken with a                            Mack      truck. Parker      was even
more     blunt:    "When parasites            kill     their hosts, they die as well,"         he       said.
        But there was         still   one more emergency backup plan for the system
Shawn had hatched              in his       dorm room. "A             cat has nine lives," Hilbers              had
said in his farewell e-mail.                 The bankruptcy             filing   would wipe out Nap-
ster's    legal    liability     and        Hummer             Winblad's control, along with                     its
        In the harsh media glare from the resignations and investor criticism,
Barry went back to the                 office      and   called Bertelsmann's Joel Klein. After
ity.    The two companies announced                            the deal on Friday,          May         17,   "We
beHeve in the future of peer-to-peer," Middelhoff                                 said.   "This    is    not the
end. This     is   the beginning of a              new Napster.         If this   is   the only   way     to get
tion,    Napster rehired         its   leaders,        keeping a skeleton         staff   of eighteen from
among what had been more than one hundred                                              employees. Hilbers
rejoined as CEO and the sole director. On June 3, Napster filed for
might owe the record              labels.     The       list   of creditors ran in three small-print
columns for         fifty-nine pages,              from        A-A Lock       and Alarm       to     ZZ       Top.
Standing out         among        the technical suppliers, employees, and restaurants
was David         Boies's     law firm, owed more than $2 miUion. Bertelsmann was
due $91 million. Napster assumed that Bertelsmann's pledge                                     for       $8 mil-
lion more, for an ostensible value of $99 miUion, would top any compet-
pirate systems     housed offshore were well ahead in popularity, some ques-
tioned whether a legitimized Napster was worth even $8 million.
      "Free music created Napster," Ritter said, "and free music will                     kill it."
      But now released from both          his uncle       and     Hank Barry, Shawn was
betting   on someone he saw        as a   kindred       spirit:   Thomas Middelhoff. He
would have       to wait   through the slow-moving bankruptcy process, but                       at
the other side would be a boss who wasn't a walking disaster. Middelhoff
did more than get the technology, as Shawn put it. He showed real
courage.
    And Shawn and          Middelhoff had a        secret plan.      By then         the two real-
ized they weren't likely to get licenses from the other labels at a price that
version that screened out unauthorized songs, Napster                   still   had made dra-
matic progress. Over the objection of some of his advisers, Middelhoff
was preparing      to take a giant legal risk      —   that the system       was so good that
he could get away with letting consumers                  offer    any songs they wanted,
just like in the early days, as long as       it   got through a       filter   comparing the
music to a database of copyright-protected songs.
    If a record    company complained         that an unapproved song                  had gotten
through, Bertelsmann's Napster would simply remove                      it   —even though         it
in court, it was a virtual certainty that when such a song got onto the
system, the copyright owner would not just ask nicely for it to be pulled.
The   offended party would sue the company                 all    over again, and this time
Bertelsmann's      money would be     at stake.
weU. But    as the     summer of 2002       rolled around, the time for such                grand
visions              AOL Time Warner merger had proved a disaster,
          was fading. The
and AOL shares had fallen 70 percent. First AOL chief operating officer
vative      company      in   more and more new           directions,      many of them via more
than $5 billion in acquisitions. Bertelsmann, thanks to Middelhoff the
world's fifth-largest media company,                    was used    to treating   its   various hold-
make quick gambles. And now he was                        pressing for the controlling         Mohn
family to give up more of                     its    stake than    it   wanted    in Bertelsmann's
planned initial public stock offering. The Mohn family didn't like where
he was going, and Napster was one of the most obvious problems they
had:   They        didn't see   how it       could   make any money.
      After a six-week buildup in tensions, the Bertelsmann board dismissed
Middelhoff          at the     end of July. His replacement was fifty-nine-year-old
Gunther Thielen,              a twenty-year veteran        from Bertelsmann's printing arm,
the company's oldest. Thielen ordered a review of the company's busi-
      None of that sounded good                     for Napster,   and Konrad Hilbers quickly
grew nervous. With Napster champion Middelhoff gone,                                    "that left   me
with Joel Klein          as the   most prominent and highest-ranking contact                     part-
ner at Bertelsmann. Then two or three days later Joel Klein was leaving,
which       left   me   with Klaus Eierhoff, the head of the Direct Group.                      Then
a    week    later,     Klaus Eierhoff was leaving," Hilbers complained.                      As     the
       It   was    stiU better to   have a reluctant buyer than no buyer at aU, which
is   what Hilbers and Shawn feared would be the                          case if the Bertelsmann
regular lender when it first gave Napster money, but as a disguised                                 equity
investor. In       bankruptcy law, the distinction            is critical.     If Bertelsmann          was
really a secured lender,           than    it   could count     its   $85 million in loans and
have a giant head         start   on any other bidder        for Napster's remains. If it              was
an equity     investor,    then the value of its holdings would be virtually wiped
out alongside those of Hummer Winblad and the Fannings, and everyone
would     start    from the same place in the bidding.
       The    allegations    were somewhat unusual, and Napster accused the
labels   of vindictively trying to destroy what was                   left   of the crippled com-
pany.    Few expected       the music industry's arguments to sway the judge. But
once discovery got under way, the industry's lawyers turned up a                                    raft   of
evidence that Bertelsmann's relationship with Napster was far different
from that of a normal             creditor.     To begin     with, Jensen testified that she
couldn't get a       bank loan      at    any interest     rate before       Bertelsmann stepped
in.   Bertelsmann not only made a massive loan, they did                            it   at the   remark-
ably low rate of 6.1 percent              —more than         three percentage points                below
the prime rate.        And when           Napster   failed to    make        its   payment, Bertels-
mann     did nothing more than send a letter complaining.                                The      evidence
also   showed       that Bertelsmann            was thinking from the beginning that a
bankruptcy would turn             its   low-risk loan into ownership.
   More       seriously, there      was the matter of management                     control. Hilbers
may have      acted to the outside world like an independent thinker, but his
e-mail was littered with direct orders from Middelhoff, his former boss,
who had given Hilbers permission to take the Napster job                                    in the first
place. Then there were the internal documents, especially the                               Middelhofi^
memo      from 2000, suggesting Bertelsmann knew that Napster users were
breaking the law.         And     despite the claims that the $60 million in initial
months that the old Napster was around. Not only that, but Bertelsmann
legitimate structure.
       "Bertelsmann knew the money was being used to continue to run the
infringing service until the legal service could be developed," music pub-
itself   "This     is       not just about the bankruptcy. Bertelsmann has some real
exposure here," said a third attorney familiar with the                                        labels' thinking.
Record executives confided that they were indeed weighing a                                             suit,    and
lawyers in the case said                 it   was more          likely    than not.   The        case   would be
similar to the never-completed claim against Napster, that                                       it   knew about
the infringement and had contributed to                               it.   The   prospect       made     Bertels-
mann's new leadership nervous: a now- wasted $85 million was bad; a
potential biUion-dollar liability                       was     a   whole new       ball   game. The other
labels' three-year             quest to find someone to pay for the Napster piracy
would have gotten from Bertelsmann. But the facts were so egregious
that he      had no         choice.   There were a number of sufficient grounds                             to rule
as he did, Walsh said, but he cited just one — that Napster hadn't met its
arm's length            and    in     good       faith. "It         seems abundantly clear that Mr.
Hilbers had one foot in the Napster                              camp and one         foot in the Bertels-
mann camp, and was so fiindamentally conflicted that I believe that the
transaction      was         tainted,"     Walsh         said   from the bench. "His contacts with
Bertelsmann,            I   think, are just so significant."
more interim financing                 available for the skeleton crew's salaries,                        Napster
said   it   planned to liquidate. "Without the engineers                             who       created    it,   Nap-
ster   would have no            value," Hilbers said.                He   fired   everyone but Jensen and
officially over,"            Aydar    said.   "We're picking up our                  last    paychecks." Yet
even now, the reports of Napster's demise were exaggerated.                                      A committee
of unsecured creditors, including David Boies's firm, had tried in August
to    drum up          rival   bidders against Bertelsmann.                 They had             failed in part
        John Fanning           told others that he              had arranged          for    $10 million to
fiind another takeover effort.                 But rather than bid                 in the court-approved
procedure and try to walk ofi"with the technology and brand alone. Fan-
ning thought he could take away something even more valuable                                             —the
right to sue other people                on Napster's behalf               He      gathered together his
old     allies   from the spring coup attempt, asking the                          Series   A and common
shareholders to reelect               him     a director    of Napster. Since no one                  else   was
still   on the Napster board, he planned                    to ask the judge for control, cut his
own      deal with the creditors, and sue Bertelsmann,                             Hummer Winblad,            or
both. (The gambit was an obvious long shot, since Napster's hands
weren't clean.)          Over the      last   weekend       in September, just before the                bank-
ruptcy judge was to appoint a trustee to handle a sale to the top bidder,
he came within a few votes and sent an angry e-mail to those                                       who hadn't
given their consent. "Needless to                    say, after raising            200k     in   DIP [debtor-
in-possession] financing, 1 million in Bridge Financing, and 10 million in
permanent financing in order                   to turn Napster Inc.              around and not getting
the opportunity to do just that,                      I    am    disappointed in the failure and
inability        of   this   group of shareholders to              act, in       what would otherwise
seem      clearly to     be there     [sic]   own    best interests. John."
Valley spinoff of data storage firm Adaptec Inc., Roxio made the leading
Roxio     CEO     Chris Gorog, a former Disney and Universal Studios execu-
tive,   wasn't sure   what he would do with Napster. Roxio had good                                   relations
with the record industry, but it had warned in an SEC filing that if free
digital music declined under legal pressure, sales of its software could fall.
The biggest factor behind Roxio's bid was the recent moves by the labels
use, if the labels     would      license content that way,                 and   if   consumers would
accept whatever the resulting terms were.
       But the value of the brand alone was                         still   "absolutely monstrous"
went     right,   Roxio would find the middle road that had eluded everyone
else,    satisfying    both the         labels    and consumers. The night before he
announced Roxio's intentions, Gorog sought validation from the ultimate
proxy for the public's desires, reaching Shawn Fanning on his                                   cell   phone.
If a    now independent Shawn                stiU   wanted    "free       music for the people,"              as
Judge Patel had put it, there would be no deal with the generational icon.
If Shawn's remaining vision was about the "celestial jukebox," where vir-
tually everything         was   available for a      modest       fee,    than anything was possi-
ble.    "One teenager not only                   revolutionized the               way music wiU be
distributed, but also movies              and the spoken word," Gorog                         said.   "What-
ever    we do      will    flow from that philosophy." Both sides came away
impressed by the phone             call   and a follow-up           visit to Roxio's           Santa Clara
headquarters, and          Shawn promised            to think about helping Roxio. "I'd be
speech    —   he's a pretty sophisticated guy.                He's learned the ways of the
world much        faster   than he intended          to."
had begotten Gnutella. Gnutella had begotten Kazaa, and Grokster, and
MusicCity, an interlocking network of decentralized peer-to-peer                                 file-
Napster was, had as many users as Napster did at its peak, and were far
harder to shut down, though the record and movie industries were trying
through a lawsuit in Los Angeles. Because many countries didn't recog-
nize the concept of contributory copyright infringement, Kazaa and                                 its
ilk   looked unstoppable, even with the Napster precedent. Once tapped
into one of those systems, users could trade not only music but also
movies, pirated software, and almost anything else digital. The systems
had    their   drawbacks   as well.   Some       distributed invasive          pop-up ads and
viruses.   And   their users   were not just college kids looking for music. The
website GnutellaMeter, which tracks search terms on that network in
fifty- minute intervals,    reported that the top thirty terms in one sweep
name     in the bunch.     More than        1.8 billion files       were being transferred
monthly on the three biggest post-Gnutella networks, and Morpheus had
been downloaded 89 million times by               May 2002.
                                        (    309   )
     MusicNet and                 Pressplay, the label-sponsored online                        music     services,
prohibitions         on copying            all   but a handful of the             files   onto CDs, that they
were quickly seen                 as failures:          MusicNet         attracted only forty thousand
subscribers in its first four months. The major question was only whether
Little by little, the labels offered more: Universal, in the biggest move,
would     release far        more through Liquid Audio, one of the many struggling
firms that       had obeyed the law but had been spurned by the big                                          labels
when     they sought licenses. Other labels offered locked versions of a few
songs over the pirate services, giving consumers an easy way to pay                                        if they
wanted to go legit.
But the labels also got nastier on other fronts. They seeded the
unchecked           pirate networks              with fake          MP3s     from Eminem's           latest   CD,
hoping to       frustrate surfers to the point that they                          would open       their wallets.
And      they hinted for the                   first   time that they might sue consumers                     who
posted the largest number of unauthorized tracks.
      The     record industry blamed the piracy explosion for a 5 percent                                        fall
in   worldwide music               sales       during 2001, the worst drop-off since the intro-
duction of the            CD in       1983. Sales of blank               CDs      topped those of recorded
CDs. And            it    was obvious that no amount of                           litigation     would    kill   the
hydra. "I fear we're getting into a game of Whack-a-Mole," one label
emerged that one of the three was a technology professional, not a stu-
dent,     and that most of the songs had come                             directly      from friends    via
instant messages. If those songs                      had come from purchased CDs, they
might well have been sent                legally.     (Greene himself was forced to resign
after the     academy paid         a reported $650,000 to                 head off       a   former execu-
tive's   threatened sex-harassment               suit.)
Allied with the more powerful and increasingly nervous movie indus-
try,   the record executives returned to Congress with their                               own demands.
Before, Napster's        army of users had helped the                    upstart       get a warm recep-
tion     on Capitol    Hill,   where Sen. Orrin Hatch had threatened the industry
with legislation       if it didn't   open      its   digital vaults.     As      the courts discredited
Napster and Hatch                lost his      committee chairmanship, nothing serious
passed Congress.         Now       the   momentum was                  reversing in a post-Napster
ulate    demand.
       Soon came the        spectacle of two of the country's                    most powerfiil indus-
tries,    entertainment and technology, colliding head-on. Disney                                   CEO
Michael Eisner         testified in      Congress, attacking Silicon Valley for profit-
ing from piracy-driven             demand        for better        and   faster       machines and con-
nections.      "There       are    people       in    the     tech      industry,"       Eisner charged
ominously,      "who    believe that piracy             is   the killer app for their business."
Intel     CEO    Craig Barrett returned the                   fire,    telling legislators that      such
restrictions    on equipment would                stifle     innovation and prevent legitimate
activity.   "Peer-to-peer technologies constitute a basic fianctionality of the
computing environment                 today,"         Barrett      and Microsoft              CEO   Steve
months. The initial prospects for the biU and its ilk were poor, but the cli-
mate in Washington was clearly turning less hospitable for the technolo-
Napster director John Hummer. "The two groups will never see the world
the same. It's a fight between content and distribution, and in the end I
founded by Joe BCraus and Graham Spencer. The group's website pro-
to lend a video           on condition that                  it   get free rein to snoop inside               and make
sure everything there                was paid            for.     (The industry already had                   a hot that
searched for unauthorized movies, called Ranger.)                                       The Berman            bill   would
give entertainment companies virtual                                     immunity    for       any legitimate con-
tent they        damaged along               the way.               As     hearings on the            bill   began, the
goes. Traditional fair use, such as                  making       a   copy of a purchased         CD, was
quietly heading for an early grave. Microsoft even slipped into                                  its   Media
Player licensing terms the right to disable unapproved content or rival
programs, such as peer-to-peer systems, on users' computers. Microsoft's
monopoly power ensured                       that   its    restrictive      Media      Player would be
widely adopted, but just to be on the safe                            side, exclusive     songs by Peter
Gabriel and Elvis Costello in the format forced downloaders to accept
the new technology. "I was looking at their new innovation, and I was
very much impressed," said Jack Valenti of the Motion Picture Associa-
tion, after       making     his first visit to Microsoft's                Redmond       headquarters in
August 2002.
      With    the benefit of having watching the Napster drama unfold and
movie companies had a much better shot than the record labels at
handling the            crisis correctly.      But   they, too,        were showing early signs of
blowing     it.   They put      little digitally          protected content online and dictated
new usage terms            that were likely to            annoy   their customers. (In          an echo of
Napster's antirust claims against                     MusicNet and               Pressplay, authorized
online movie provider Intertainer Inc. sued three big studios for conspir-
ing to drive       it   out of business after they set up a                  rival joint venture.       And
just like   it    had with the major                labels' ventures, the Justice              Department
opened an         antitrust investigation.)           The     pirate services,         which learned the
Napster lessons           better,   were providing an easy way to empower customers
who    chose to express their dissatisfaction. Because broadband connec-
tions are spreading slowly, the entertainment giants have a                                    few years to
get their answer right. In the meantime, their foot-dragging                                      is   giving
people   less incentive to               pay for high-speed           access, according to the U.S.
That proved overly          optimistic.     But the Valley did       invest in   more than one
hundred peer-to-peer             start-ups,       and such companies             as    IBM, Sun
Microsystems, and Intel began researching and funding new^                            efforts. The
what even supercomputers can't. Though the process was not necessarily
analyzes incoming signals from space, looking for patterns that might
indicate other      life.   By   early 2000,      more than        1.6 million people in          224
countries    had downloaded the program                   to crunch signal data             on   their
protecting anonymity.            Some       people used FreeNet for music, but               it   was
optimized for       text.   Like Gnutella, FreeNet had no central index or con-
trol:   Clarke said that even         if   someone held    a   gun   to his head, there      was no
way he could       disable the system.           And   Clarke's system avoided Gnutella's
to store on his or her own computer whatever the system put there. By
Michael Macedonia. "You don't want to put                          all   your data on one server
because once you take that server out, then you've got a lot of blind
people with a lot of useless electronics."
       In civihan   life,   the giants were moving, too, albeit slowly. Intel was
among     the fastest,      moving   its      internal chip-development efforts                          and a
training system to a peer-to-peer network that took advantage of unused
computer time. In two           years, the       moves upped the                   rate   of   Intel's    com-
puter utilization from 50 percent to 90 percent, according to Chief Tech-
nology Officer Patrick Gelsinger, and saved Intel close to $1                                           billion.
and Web services are all part of a march toward distributed computing."
six months, real companies are saving real money with it. Drug firm
NextPage     Inc. to skip      most centralized          repositories          and speed the hunt
for documents.      The     applications will keep changing, but their general use
All the attention and money that followed Napster into the sector "cre-
of John Fanning and an unnamed former executive who sounds a lot like
the terminated Bill Bales, the article                  made numerous         errors. It said    Sean
Parker had "helped write" the beta version of Napster. It said that John
Fanning had          called   Wilson    Sonsini's         Andrew      Bridges about copyright
law early on and that "those conversations" had given Fanning confidence
in Napster's chances in court. In fact, Bridges                      had declined      to represent
over the Rio portable            MPS    player.        For advice on Napster, Bridges had
referred       Fanning    to another lawyer,            who had      referred    Fanning     to Seth
article for expert opinion on what had gone wrong. It said she was "com-
in   1999 and was able to secure fianding only in                    May 2000, by implication
because of Richardson's unexplained failure to articulate a business model.
In   fact,     any plans about        how   to profit         would have been pounced on by
record-industry lawyers as proof of Napster's gain from illegal                              activity.
CEOs      alarmed        at the size      of his stake, driven away more substantive and
larger venture offers, overruled                  many of Richardson's                         softer approaches to
the industry, including the                       New      Artist          Program and the Gigabeat
alliance,   and generally been the one piloting Napster and                                        his   nephew into
increasingly certain oblivion.
son declined to comment." She had never been reached to defend herself
The    lead writer       on the    story     had sent e-mail                   to her old        company            address,
go through," said Xtime's former                     CEO         and current chairman, John Lee,
who    is still   close to his former girlfriend. "If she could have given every-
thing to the       company and made no money, but had                                            the kids be          made
whole, she would have done                   it   in a heartbeat."
lems   at the     company.         I   had    said I'd get a job done,                          and by        God     I   was
going to do        it.   Also, there was no one to turn the                                      company over              to.
Shawn, John Fanning, BiU Bales? After                                all       the very reason            I    was    CEO
was because no one would back anyone                             else. ... I          know none of you have
control over      John Fanning and BiU                    Bales, so there                 is   no blame        to    anyone
at   Napster      at aU. It   is       a situation I got             myself in and there are conse-
quences that       I also   now        have to     live   with.      My career may have ended this
past weekend. ... In          my heart            and soul       I   know I        gave everything               I   had   to
always said running Napster with aU                        its   press         and lawsuits was dwarfed by
the challenge of working with John Fanning."
business had taken a turn for the worse as well. Yosi                                      Amram's VaUCert,
which went pubHc            in July      2000       in a    $40 million IPO, had seen                    its   stock
fall from more than $27 to less than 50 cents in the Internet downdraft.
In 2001, VahCert            lost    more than $28                 million. It          had enough current
assets to last    one more year;          as    2002 drew           to a close,       Amram        resigned.
BiU Bales's Flycode vanished altogether, and so did he. He and his
girlfriend.     Holly Shin,    who had              followed Bales from Napster to Flycode,
were evicted from their San Mateo apartment in December 2001 for                                                 fail-
ing to pay their $2,000 monthly rent. Bales moved back to his home state
of Georgia.
       Jordan    Ritter's    first       stop       after    Napster, private-financing system
users to flag annoying e-mail as spam: If                            enough others voted the same
way, the e-mail was blocked from reaching more subscribers. StiU in beta,
it   had 173,000 participants by November 2002. Ritter and Jessie Garrehy
planned to be married in February 2003.
        Sean Parker may have been the hardest                             hit   of   all   those   who   left.    For
six    months, he remained obsessed with Napster, refiving the experience by
writing a     book     proposal. Failing to               sell   the book, Parker consulted at                   Sun
Microsystems and other companies, looking for a way to redeem himself
In 2001, he founded a company called Plaxo Inc.                                       The     next year, Plaxo
wouldn't have       known      to    do were         it   not for the terrible things at Napster.
You have       to scrutinize every single hire.                     You have         to have the right bal-
ance of power between the company and                               its   investors," Parker said.             "They
say you learn the        most from your mistakes, and Napster made every mis-
take in the book."        He   eventually            won    fiinding        from Sequoia Capital Part-
ners, a top Silicon Valley venture firm.
to-peer companies with viral marketing and that Napster showed Net-
Capital's "fundamentally value-driven approach." Napster did so well, the
holdings to the portfolio.        Among      those holdings were $5.4 million worth
of Napster stock, $300,000 worth of stock in AppleSoup (by then named
Flycode), and $700,000 worth of stock in                   ON24.
      By    early 2001, NetCapital apparently               had succeeded            in raising $2
all three men signed it. In addition to the salary, the deal called for a
$15,000 signing bonus and six months' severance pay if Altholtz were
      The August day              after Altholtz started            work. Fanning met him on
Nantasket Beach and handed him the $15,000                                         —   a check signed         by
Fanning's wife and drawn from a personal account. According to a
breach-of-contract lawsuit Altholtz filed in January 2001, Fanning told
him    "that he       had    a lot      of personal legal problems and that he wanted
[Altholtz] to handle his personal legal matters." Fanning had reaped hun-
creditors     would have       to refile the cases after            Fanning objected that he had
never been properly served).
      Altholtz refiised on the grounds that he had been hired to                                  work    as a
closed. Sitting nearby are an old carousel                      and an arcade from Hull's better
days. NetCapital's front door stays locked during business hours,                                          and
employees there had ushered away                         people bearing legal papers.                 When     I
shook    his head, gave a half-smile,                   and shut the door without                 a   word.   A
few days      later, his     public-relations           woman      called         me. "He doesn't need a
publicist," she said.        "He needs            a shrink."
norms, she had more information than most                               of the public.     The media had
been timid, and Shawn had yet to                         fault his uncle for            anything publicly.
could get licenses from movie studios.                   The magazine             bore the cover line
"The Next Movie Mogul?" and                    said that Blockbuster Inc.              had led a $4.8
million investment round in NetMovies, though the video-rental giant
wouldn't divulge       how much          it   had put     in.   The     article said    Fanning had
"created"      and "masterminded" Napster and was trying                              to shepherd a
Shawn was          livid   when the Red              Herring story came out. But even
then, and even soon after, as Napster was at last melting                               down around
him, he tried to tune out the drama.                It   was the one habit that most              frus-
trated his longtime friends Parker and Ritter, all the way back to Shawn's
on his shoulder, that everything will work out for the best. And this belief
paralyzed Napster."
      But Shawn had changed               in   many    ways, becoming more jaded about
the business world and the motives and methods of the people running                                    it.
A healthy effect of that process was that he paid more attention to the
had developed with               his biological father, Joe                   Rando. Rando was amazed
that the    fame hadn't affected                          his son, other than to                  make him more
polished. "I'm completely impressed with                                Shawn, but not because of the
public reasons      —because of the person he                        is,"     Rando         said. "It didn't             go to
his head,   which        is    pretty amazing."
issues, the things that had interested him as a young hacker. He discov-
Shawn     said. "I just really                 do enjoy the process of securing things and
finding security problems." Conover analyzed the                                       AOL             hole and          made
national    news by writing and releasing the code                                    to exploit               it,   parlaying
       Well before the end of Napster, Shawn was thinking about what
might come          next, about finding                     something that would keep him from
being remembered as a one-hit wonder. "Technically,                                          I   understand              Win-
dows programming, and                      I   learned a lot about architectures.                          And          I'm not
bored with computers, but in terms of some of the basic computing con-
cepts   and networking and some of those things,                                   I feel   Hke I'm             at the point
where if I want to build something, I know I can build it or find the right
people to build          it.   I've   been able to meet so many talented engineers that
technology-wise, I'm realty comfortable and actually looking forward to
new projects       in the future,"              he   said.   But none of that was the most impor-
tant part of his growth.                        "The        stuff I've        learned the most about                          is
and I'm a       lot less intimidated                 by that    stuff   than before,             when          I    was scared
to death."
geek," said Gnutella developer             Gene Kan. "Not           Bill Gates,       not Kevin
Mitnick, not Steve Jobs. People got interested."
       After the bankruptcy judge blocked the Bertelsmann sale in Septem-
ber 2002 and before Shawn's talks with Roxio Inc. two months                             later,   he
worked on      a different idea.     Shawn sought funding            for   what he described
as a   new   peer-to-peer system for         traffic   on the     Internet,   one that would
respect copyrights.  One of his first recruits was                 Napster engineer Jordy
Mendelson,      who went scouting for San Mateo                    real estate.      Shawn     told
Ritter that the system          would be an open database, one                that   would help
distribute   what     artists   or others wanted to be sent into the world.                  Shawn
also got   some value from        his   former adventure, making a deal with a pro-
ducer and selling the rights to his            life    story to   MTV. The           first   project
struck Ritter as problematic. But he told Shawn: "If anyone can do it,
you can."
       "Once Shawn's      set his   mind on something,"            Ritter said, "no one can
All oral quotes are from author interviews with the speaker unless other-
wise noted. All e-mails, internal documents, and court papers referenced
in the text are have                been seen by the author unless otherwise noted. If any
of the        Web       pages cited below no longer have the content                                listed, try
vii Observe my uncle The entire text of William Shakespeare's Hamlet is available
      online and       is   not protected by copyright. (Neither are          many   old books, nor songs
      from the       forties   and   before.) Hamlet's uncle killed Hamlet's father. It takes              some
      time for the indecisive Hamlet to figure that out.
7     The    third   member         Ritter's   background was drawn from interviews with Ritter and
      others.
                                                        (   325)
9    As       the good feeling Sources on Fanning's history and his relationship with                               Shawn
         are given in subsequent chapters.
10 Since Amram had been burned Interviews with Amram, Richardson, and others.
1:            the rebels
13       It   was   in a ramshackle old           house The chief source              for the account   of the party
         was Coleen          Verrier. Joe      Rando provided           details   on the band.
14        "Money was always a pretty big issue" Shawn quoted in "Napster's Shawn
         Fanning: The Teen Who Woke Up Web Music," by Spencer Ante, available at
         http://www.businessweek.com:/ebiz/0004/em0412.htm. The account of the rest of
         Shawn's childhood was drawn from interviews with Verrier, Shawn, and other
         sources indicated in the text.
16 John Fanning lived an hour away Sources included several former Chess.net
         employees.
16 His uncle wanted to keep playing StarCraft Sources included Parker, Ritter, and
         a former Chess.net employee.
18 Shok's work               is   available See, for example, http://www.hackersclub.com/km/files/
unix/.
19       "I don't see        what's so bad about writing viral code" This and other                      wOOwOO
         exchanges archived           at   http://www.wOOwOO.org/files/misc/wOOfun/wOOquotes.
20 Shawn was an aspiring hacker who was                                 at best a gray hat   These programs were
         available at http://www.younghackers.freeservers.com/files2.htm.
23 BindView was pubUcly credited for the find by                                  CERT See    http://www.infosec.
         com/internet/99/internet                021399c           j.shtml and http://www.packetsormsecurity.
         com/9902-exploits/ftpd.txt.
23 Sean Parker's was a paragon of normality Parker's background was drawn from
         interviews with Parker and others.
2    :        a    big idea
29       It   was hardly worth the             effort to try   The       description of the inspiration for
         Napster came from Shawn's nonpublic deposition in                             A&M Records      et al. v.
         Napster     Inc.,   U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, case
         number      C   99-5183      MHP.
29 "The index would become out of date" These two quotes                                     are   from Shawn's
         declaration, available in the            A&M     Records public court            file.
29-30 The             entire point of the         World Wide             Web      Berners-Lee's thinking and
         comments        are      from Weaving      the Web,       by   Tim    Berners-Lee with     Mark    Fischetti,
                                                    (   326    )         notes
     largely   from author interviews with Rob Lord. Ian Rogers of Nullsoft was                                    also
     interviewed.
32 David Weekly, a Stanford University student, did just that Weekly's experiment
   is told in Sonic Boom, by John Alderman, Perseus Publishing, 2001.
33 as Michael Robertson found                      after   he opened the website                MP3.com      Sources for
     the history      ofMP3.com            included Beyond the Charts, by Bruce Haring,                       OTC
     Press, 2000.
33 Petty manager             Tony Dimitriades The Tom                     Petty story          is   from Haring's Beyond
     the Charts.
34 "They won't cede control" Robertson's quote is also from Beyond the Charts.
35   "I   wanted      to   make   this software       work" Shawn's quote                 is   from the declaration         in
     A^M Records.
36 the word "wOOwOO" was one of the top twenty most-searched-for terms Conover
     said he   was told       this    by   a friend   who worked          at   Google.
36 "What are you going to do with                      it?"    This was from            Ritter's recollection.
37 "Do you       realize that this          is   going to change everything?" This was from
   McGann's recollection.
37 some obvious bugs, which                      Ritter fixed     The   description of Ritter's early role              was
     largely   from    his recollection.
39 Shawn came by              Ritter's     apartment The          first   business discussions between                Shawn
     and Ritter were according               to Ritter's recollection.
3:        birth of                a    business
41 took courses at Boston College According to the college                                      registrar.
42-43 Rockland won a judgment of more than $7 million Rockland Trust Co. v. Jack
     Nevil   et al,    Plymouth County Superior Court,                     case         numbers CA89-1228-A and
     CA90-1055B.
43 Key supplier Unisys ultimately sued Unisys Corp.                                v.   Cambridge Automation          Corp.,
                                                   notes           (    327    )
     Multimedia Engineering Corp.               v. Sleator    Games   Inc.,   Suffolk Superior Court, case
     number      C VI 996-03430.
44 Fanning asked how he                   covild advertise Dzindzichashvili's tapes                This was
     recounted in Sleator's answer to the lawsuit.
45 They told the judge Affidavit of Anthony Martin                            in   Multimedia Engineering            v.
Sleator Games.
45 For Chess.net, Fanning used a core of Carnegie                        MeUon          students     The history of
     Chess.net was drawn from former employees, including McBarron,                                   Ramme, and
     Dakhnovsky.
46 But Fanning         also   stopped making payments The story of the                        BMW was based
     on the car-financing documents, Dakhnovsky's credit report, other paperwork
     from the time, and interviews with Dakhnovsky and another Chess.net employee
     privy to the dispute.
47 The      last   straw at Chess.net came           when Aydar demanded                 Interviews with former
     Chess.net employees.
47 a court entered a default judgment against him over a $17,529 bank debt. Later
     that year, he lost another judgment for $26,759                 owed to collection agency
     Creditrust CAL-SPVl/Assignee of First                    USA Bank v. John Fanning, Hingham
     District Court, case          number 9958CV0272, and               Creditrust v. John Fanning,
47 Her condominium complex sued her in April 1999 for unpaid fees Trustees of
   Nantascot Place Condominium Trust v. Coreen Kraysler, Hingham District Court,
     case   number 9958CV0292.
47 More serious was the 1998 collection case Household Bank ofNevada                                    v.   Coreen
            Hingham District Court,
     Kraysler,                                        case    number 9858CV0623.
49 "I'm a fighter" The quote is from                  "Fanning, the Elder," by Justin Hibbard, in the
   August 2002 issue of Red Herring.
49 Fanning was charged with assault and battery Commonwealth                                  v.   Fanning,
     Hingham        District Court, case           numbers 9958CR0016-0017.
49   He     needed   stitches in      two places Court tape of proceedings on February                        7,    2002,
     in   Commonwealth        v.   Fanning, above.
49 Lynch was charged with malicious destruction of property Commonwealth                                       v.
                                               (   328   )      notes
50 Lynch was pursuing a                suit Robert     Lynch       v.       Coreen Kraysler, John Fanning          et al,
4    :     getting money
57 John Fanning may have sewn up 70 percent John Fanning took 7 million shares
         and Shawn 3       million.   Most   internal      documents           said that 1 million additional
         shares were reserved for future employee options; at least one                       document           says     2
         million shares were reserved.
60 Sam Hanks, twenty-seven, met Parker, Shawn, and Fanning The story of the
         involvement with and study of Napster was mainly from interviews with the two
         men and with       Parker.
67 John Fanning,             also well   aware of the legal hurdles, was doing his                   own       research
         Interviews with     Andrew      Bridges, Seth Greenstein, and Parker.
71 Draper agreed to give Napster only a $50,000 loan                               The   loan was described in
         interviews with     Amram,      Parker, and Richardson,                 among   others.   The     exact terms
         have long been disputed, but the basics of                    it   included here were drawn from
         internal Napster e-mails.
77       Andy Evans, on the          other hand, was something completely different Sources for
         Evans's history included        "Andrew Evans Blows His Second Chance,"                               available at
         http://www.redherring.com/index.asp?layout=story&channel=20000002&doc                                                id=
         110019811 and "Gates' Old Pal Evans Target of Biz2Net's Wild Fraud Lawsuit,"
         available at http://www.observer.com/pages/story.asp?ID=2832.
79 Fanning had met Amram years earUer The history of Amram's relationship with
         Fanning was       largely   from interviews with Amram.
80 Individual was based Sources for the history of Individual included interviews
         with   Amram      and others    at the   company and                the prospectus for the sale of         its
                                               notes               (    329     )
      stock by shareholders dated September 5, 1996, available from the                                         SEC     or via the
         EDGAR online              document         service.
80       One     of those companies was Freeloader                             The     Freeloader story was drawn from
     interviews with Jamie Hamilton,                         Mark            Pincus,   Amram,     other Individual Inc.
      officers,       and    articles   including "Start Up.                  Cash Out. Repeat,"           in the   May      15,   1998
     Inc.      magazine, available             at   http://www2.inc.com/search/1128-print.html, and
      "Freeloader's Free Fall," available at http://washtech.eom/washtechway/l                                                1/
5    :        going west
85 he misplaced his driver's license and couldn't make the                                        flight    Shawn misplaced
         his license fairly frequently.              But     it   wasn't always as         much of a problem: According
         to Parker,     Shawn once was allowed                      to board a flight to          Los Angeles        after   he
         produced       a   copy of Time magazine with him on the cover                              as    photo    identification.
85       When Parker arrived                  This account of the stay in Sausalito was mostly based on
         interviews with Parker.
87       Amram told his             network The            story of          Amram's     hiring of Bales and Richardson
89 Richardson had a personal reason The story of Richardson and Lee was told by
         both. Richardson's career history was largely from her, corroborated by Adas,
91 JK&B Capital was flush with money This was from a JK&B partner, the firm's
                                                       (   330          )      notes
96 Bales's criminal record San Mateo Superior Court, case number SM245322A.
97 the woman's sworn statement San Mateo Superior Court, case number
  F-039868.
99 Soon       after   Shawn and Parker               arrived    The      stories      of the breakfast and rental car
  incident were from Parker. Parker, Shawn, and Richardson                                        all   confirmed the     tale
107 the Xtime employees in the adjoining cubicles thought nothing of it The story
  was told by Xtime's Travis Murdock. The                               stories   from the       early days in      San
  Mateo were provided by                    multiple employees            who      corroborated each others'
  accounts.
108 Bales took Shawn, Parker, and Ritter to look                             at a      house This story was told by
  Parker and Ritter and largely confirmed by Bales,                                   who    also provided the account
108 the young         men blew off" steam              All parts of this story were based either on one
  party confessing to something he did or on the accounts of two sources                                           who were
  closely involved.
109 more than one romance The                         facts   of the Richardson-Garrehy-Lee triangle were
  confirmed by            all   parties.
113 Another Internet video firm that qualifies as a paragon of the times For more
  on       DEN,     see   "How      a Visionary Venture            on the      Web          Unraveled," in the      May     7,
                                                 notes             (     331      )
6   :      fame
119       It   was   after       another chemically enhanced rave                               The      anecdote was Parker's.
120 There were other causes for celebration inside Napster's                                                     offices Ritter,     Aydar,
        and Garrehy were the primary                                  sources.
122 One of the first broader-audience publications The story was archived at
        http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,32151,00.html.
124 At the Bubble Lounge that night This came mainly from Murdock.
124 In mid-November, the                               digital             music magazine Webnoize said the                 RIAA
        intended to sue               .   .   .   Wired confirmed the report See http://www.wired.com
        /news/business/0,1367,32559,00.html.
124       "We are freaking four months                                     old" Richardson's quote was in the story at
        http://www.wired.eom/news/mp3/0, 1285,32559,00. html.
124 The          RIAA finally filed the lawsuit                                  A&M Records         et al. v.    Napster   Inc.,   U.S.
        District     Court           for the        Northern District of California (San Francisco), case
        number       C   99-5183                  MHP.
126 Richardson clashed so badly with John Fanning Sources included Richardson,
        Amram, and           others present during board meetings.
129 This three-way chat The log was posted to the moderators' e-mail Hst.
132 But Chang was ready with a quote See CNet article from March 22, 2000, at
        http://news.com.com/2100-1023-238290.html?legacy=cnet.
135 Paulson was featured in dozens of interviews See, for example, http://www.cnn.
        com/virtual/editions/europe/2000/roof/change.pop/frameset.exclude.html.
136 Chuck             D of Public Enemy went further                                    Op-Ed        available at http://www.
136 Napster quietly paid Chuck                                     D        Napster disclosed the payment in the documents
        for Bertelsmann's loan, saying                                it   was   for "the cost of speaking           engagements and
        support."     The documents were                               filed as      an exhibit in Napster's bankruptcy in
        Wilmington, Delaware. In                             re   Napster        et al, case    number 02-11573.
136 Techno star                      Moby was          also a big help                He     and others quoted on http://www.
        napster.com/speakout/artists.html.
137 the band wrote on                             its site    Still        posted at http://www.offspring.com/
        news/news5 9 html.   .
137 Napster was duly mocked                                   On           numerous websites and the front page of the
        Wall Street Journal on July 26, 2000.
140 Napster sued Sport Service Napster Inc.                                             v.   Sport Service Inc., U.S. District Court
141 Metallica filed suit against Napster Metallica et al v. Napster, U.S. District
                                                                  (    332       )     notes
        Court    for the Central District            of California (Los Angeles), case number 00-
        03914.
141 Richardson was quoted as saying that the band had never tried to contact
   Napster Among other places, at http://www.wired.com/news/politics/
        0,1283,35670,00.html.
141 Even most MetalHca Usteners sided with Napster According to interviews with
   various fans of both Metallica and Napster, including John DiCarlo.
141 Killmetallica.com Other                      sites   were    listed at http://www.killmetallica.com/
        contents.html.
142 Lyttle,          who used     the handle Pimpshiz See                   "An      Internet   Outlaw Goes on
        Record" in the February 24, 2002, San Francisco Chronicle and                                at http://sfgate.com
        /cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2002/02/24/MN182931.DTL8aype=
        printable.
7   :      the industry
147 Richardson wanted to do the most Interviews with Richardson, Parker, and
   other Napster executives.
149 Morris Levy, founder of Count Basic                            home      Roulette Records             From     Fredric
    Dannen's Hit Men, Times Books, 1990.
149 Take, for example, the matter of payola The history of payola                                         is   best told by
    Dannen;          for   ongoing journaUsm on the matter, the best work                           is   by Chuck Philips
    of the Los Angeles Times.
150 Isgro returned to living the high                     life   in Beverly      HiUs    until   he was sentenced
    Articles      on      Isgro's case are available        through http://www.latimes.com. The
    sentencing was reported on September                          8,   2000.
151 In a hypothetical example of a smash success Contained in Moses Avalon's
    Confessions of a Record Producer,                2nd    ed.,   Backbeat Books, 2002.
152 The U.S. Federal Trade Commission investigated                                     A reasonable            summary of the
    issues ran in the          August   14, 2000, Seattle Times.
152 In a 2000 settlement of the charges                          FTC       press release dated       May        10, 2000.
155 Glaser was brimming with confidence                            A video of the speech was                   available over
                                                  notes                (   333   )
155 But he was also a          huslg'^ six-foot-three             Background from Dannen's Hit Men. Al
     Smith declined        several interview requests.
160 Richardson gave her music-discovery pitch Interviews with Richardson and
    Cohen.
160 Bales came down for the get-together Interviews with Samit and Bales.
160      Tom Giesehnann, an investor with Bertelsmann's venture-capital arm
    Interviews with Bales and Gieselmann.
164 "Are you sure suing them               is   enough?" The anecdote was told by Rosen.
167 John Fogerty told the crowd                     at   one benefit concert Reported        in the February
8:        competition
171      The    lawyers opposed linking According to interviews with Ritter and others.
174 Gnutella would have had some major headaches The story was confirmed by
    McGann,        Ritter,   Song, and Rogers.
175 Soon someone using Frankel's           IRC handle "deadbeef Reported by Amy      '
176 Ritter went to dinner with Dodge The story was told by Ritter.
179 Ritter and Shawn            qviickly   got hold of him in a private chat According to Ritter.
184 chairman         Andy Grove,      the head of the world's largest microprocessor                       maker
    The comment was            printed by Fortune and other outlets and was posted on
     Napster's website until Grove asked that                     it   be removed, according to a Napster
     source.
185 Kan had applied at Napster The story was told by Ritter and                               Dembo            and not
     disputed by Kan.
188 soon got a        call   from Conway's more-organized partner Bozeman's                             call   was
     remembered by Kan.
188 "There was no            specific business           model" Bozeman's comment            is    from "Can
     Peer-to-Peer      Grow Up?" by Justin                Hibbard, in the December          4,   2000,    Red
     Herring.
189      The moral of some of Cringely's technology                       stories   Robert Cringely, Accidental
     Empires, Addison-Wesley Publishing, 1992.
189 The Innovator's Dilemma Clayton Christensen, Harvard Business School Press,
        1997.
9   :     ventu re games
192 Fanning and his marketing deputy,                           Tom Carmody         According     to   Richardson
        and Amram. Another executive confirmed the amount. Parker remembered
        overhearing Richardson demanding of Fanning over the phone,                              "Why     is   Tom
        Carmody on    the payroll?"
                                                (    334    )     notes
192 Amram's        initial   $250,000 investment also went to Hull According to
   Richardson and          Amram.
192 Napster's junior holders included According to capitalization                       tables.
194 Fanning and Richardson argued often The wording of the exchanges was
   Richardson's recollection.        Amram      didn't disagree with them.
195 he argued with Richardson and went behind her back repeatedly Bales himself
   gave numerous examples.
196 Yet Bales went ahead anyway This was from Parker, Bales, and Richardson.
197 Bales called     New York investor Jason Grosfeld               According to Grosfeld;
   Richardson and Bales didn't dispute the              story.
200 he begged Richardson not              to fire   him According        to Richardson      and other
   Napster     staffers.
200 The engineers told their boss, Kessler, that they would quit According to all
three.
201 Kessler, in turn, took the threat seriously enough This was according to Kessler.
207 According to Turner's e-mails This was what Turner said the e-mails contained
212 John Hummer, and another                VC at the San Francisco firm drove to see
   Richardson These meetings were               laid out     by Richardson        in her deposition.
214 The charity auction was emceed by comedian Dana Carvey The perceptions of
                                          notes          (    335   )
   Shawn and Parker were                   given in interviews.        The surrounding       events and
  Andreessen's quote are from a Bloomberg News                            article carried   on CNet's       site    on
   May        22.
215 Barry harbored a rebellious streak His career was described by Barry and others
   in interviews.
220 Zero Gravity, whose smaller shareholders included The                                story of       Zero Gravity
   came mainly from the 2001 lawsuit Zero Gravity Management                                 v.    John   Hummer et
   al.,      San Francisco Superior Court, case number 321442, with additional material
   from interviews and from                  articles in     the June 22, 2001, San Francisco Business
   Times and the July              9,    2001, BusinessWeek.      The     last is available at     http://www.
   businessweek.com/magazine/content/01                           28/b3740101.htm.
220 she       said at the time           The   "sticky" quote     is   from the March       19, 1999, Puget
228 didn't stop his uncle from claiming Napster's appUcation for a patent on its
   "Real-time search engine" was                     filed   on December      15, 1999,    and granted on April
   2,   2002, and given number 6,366,907. It can be found at http://patft.uspto.gov/
   netacgi/nph-Parser?Sectl==PT02&Sect2=HITOFF8cu=/netahtml/search-
   adv.htm&i=l&p=l&f^G&l=50&d=ftOO&Sl=Fanning-Shawn.INZZ.&OS=IN/
   Fanning-Shawn&RS=IN/Fanning-Shawn.
230 Borkowski had been working                       until near   midnight This account was drawn from
   Borkowski, Parker, and the deposition transcript.
234     When Napster called,               Boies was out of town           The    story of Boies's decision to
   take the case and his quotes were from the October                             2000   issue   of Wired
   magazine, available              at   http://www.wired.eom/wired/archive/8.10/boies                      pr.html.
247 Shawn played it populist cool for MTV A transcript of the MTV interview is
   Available at http://50.lycos.com/080100.html.
248 But Kozinski was excited This account was drawn from interviews with two
   well-placed sources inside the appeals court.
                                                 (   336      )   notes
249 "This       is like   the playoffs" Also from the August 14 BusinessWeek story.
250 At a California airport on July 5 Most of the details                           in the account         of the early
   talks were from an author interview with Bronfman.
251   less attractive      than the Sun Valley summit terms This was according to
   Bronfman. Barry dechned to address the deterioration in the                             talks in detail, except
   for saying that        Bronfman stopped returning              his calls.      Grove declined           to be
   interviewed.
252 "Your biggest problem" Rosen's                 recollection.
252 more than $100,000              in stock It   was unclear how much Shawn sold                          overall.   By
   around the end of 1999, he had already sold $125,000 worth, according to
   internal e-maUs.         Two     of his close friends said the           final figure       was   closer to
   $500,000.
255   He    sent a message to Ian Rogers This was from Rogers.
257   It   wasn't national television Sources for the scene at the awards included
   Napster employees, a NuUsoft employee, and others in attendance.
258 She countersued Geffen Records                et al. v.   Courtney Love          et al.,   Los Angeles
   Superior Court, case         number     BC     2233364, available           at   http://www.
   cappeUomccann.com/courtney/courtney                        cross.htm. Love settled her case on
   undisclosed but favorable terms in September 2002.
11    :    bertelsmann
261 "There's no question that file-sharing will                   exist"    The     quotes from the press
   conference were from contemporaneous news accounts.
262 MiddeUiofFwas among the most predisposed For more on MiddelhofFs
   background, see         "A New Net Powerhouse?"                in the     November          13, 2000,
   BusinessWeek, available at http://www.businessweek.com/2000/00
   46/b3707001.htm, and "Napster Meister," in the November 13, 2000, Time
   magazine, available         at   http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/
   0,9171, 1101001113-59778,00.html. Other material                          is   from Bertelsmann's
   website.
262   "I just   got used to being turned down" Jensen's deposition and Hilbers's
   deposition, both filed as exhibits in Napster's bankruptcy.
263 "We're investing in Napster" This account was based on interviews with people
   familiar with the conversations.           For more on the internal dispute,                      see   "Thomas
   Middelhoff Has a Hunch," in the June 10, 2001,                          New      York Times Magazine.
   Middelhoff said that Zelnick and the others eventually came around and
   supported the Napster investment, then exaggerated their opposition after their
   dismissal.
263 But he passed along Schmidt's e-mail was                      filed as     an exhibit in Napster's
   bankruptcy.
264   "It is true that this private       exchange" MiddelhofFs memo, the consultants'
   presentation, and the task force report were                   all filed as      exhibits in Napster's
bankruptcy.
                                           notes              (   337   )
265 MiddelhofF treated Shawn to dinner The dinner                                  details   and MiddelhoiFs quote
  were from "Napster Meister," in Time.
265 Napster added sweeteners for Shawn The                            figures      were disclosed in the
   documents      for Bertelsmann's loan, filed as an exhibit in Napster's bankruptcy.
278 that involving the DVD encryption technology known as CSS Universal City
   Studios et   al. v.   Shawn Reimerdes              et a/.,   U.S. District Court for the Southern
   District of   New York,          case   number OO-CV-277 (LAK)(RLE).                          Lessig's Future of
Ideas gives a summary of the issues. Many of the case filings are available at
   http://www.eff.org/IP/Video/MPAA_DVD_cases/.
279 The      labels   went    after   MP3.com            Universal Music Group et al             v.   MP3.com, U.S.
   District    Court     for the    Southern District of New York, case number OO-CV-
   00472.     A copy of the judge's ruling                is    available at http://news.findlaw.com/cnn/
280   "I   know something about            songwriting"            A Web video            of Hatch's remarks was
   posted at http://www.webnoize.com.
280 So he expUcitly asked Congress not to change The testimony of Barry, Ulrich,
   and Kan      are available at http://www.senate.gov/~judiciary/search                               testimony.
   cfm?testimony=napster.
281 Only now did Barry ask Congress to force                          digital licenses        on the record industry
   The      testimony    is   available at http://www.senate.gov/~judiciaiy/search                              testimony.
   cfm?testimony=napster.
281 The most impressive display of the second                             tactic   This was based on interviews
   with people        who     attended.    The    National Academy's version of events                     is   from   a
282 perhaps by replacing HB The eCommerce Group meeting agenda was filed as
available at http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/2000/09/mann-farmer.htm.
284 Sorenson wrote to            his boss Sorenson's              memo,       Hilbers's description of the           AOL
   terms, and Hilbers's e-mail to MiddelhofF were filed as exhibits in Napster's
   bankruptcy. Other Hilbers quotes are from an author interview.
                                            (    338       )       notes
12:        the coup
289     He reasoned that Bertelsmann would have a better chance                               According to
   interviews with Middelhoff, Hilbers, and others close to the process.
290     Hummer Winblad had insisted on that proxy                         According to interviews and an
   e-mail from Barry to Napster directors before the deal closed. Other big investors
   also    had to pledge         to vote their shares as the board instructed                  on major     decisions.
291     Hummer Winblad won what is known as                      a liquidation preference             The     terms of
   the various preferences were described in interviews with Barry and other Napster
   investors.
291 would get nothing             at all for their Series   A Junior           According       to legal papers filed
  in    John Fanning        v.   John Hummer and Hank Barry, Delaware Chancery Court                              for
  New       Castle County,         case number 19500 NC.
291 Bertelsmann Direct Group                   CFO Bill Sorenson              The    deposition was filed as an
  exhibit in Napster's bankruptcy.
294 Caught in          traffic   on U.S. 101     Partially the author's fault; I              was driving and
  picked a bad          exit.
295 Fanning           filed a lawsuit in   Delaware's Chancery Court John Fanning                       v.   John
   Hummer and Hank Barry, Delaware Chancery Court for New Castle County, case
   number 19500 NC.
295 The Los Angeles Times promptly identified On March 28, 2002. Available at
  http://www.latimes.com.
300 Napster         filed for    Chapter 11 bankruptcy in Delaware In                    re   Napster Inc.,   et al,
Napster's bankruptcy.
  http://www.nytimes.com/2002/03/07/arts/music/07POPL.html.
311 Disney         CEO Michael Eisner testified in Congress                      Eisner's testimony         was
  before Hollings's Senate              Commerce Committee and                  is   available at http://
capitahzation tables.
                                              notes         (   339       )
313 according to the U.S. Department of Commerce The Commerce study and the
  Brookings figure were cited in "Kazaa Taunts Record Biz: Catch Us," by Brad
   King, in Wired News, September 25, 2002. Available at http://www.wired.com/
  news/technology/0,1282,55356,00.html.
315 "This    is   serious research"    The army          official   was quoted   in   an interview by
   Richard   Koman       published on an O'Reilly            & Associates website devoted to peer-
  to-peer efforts.     The   fixU   interview   is   available at     http://www.openp2p.com/
  pub/a/p2p/2001/08/28/p2pwar.html.
315 GlaxoSmithKline uses Groove Networks The two corporate examples                                  are given
316 BusinessWeek ran a long cover story "Inside Napster," by Spencer Ante, in the
  August     14, 2000,    issue.    Richardson gave a detailed account of her experience with
   the writer after publication, including her request to                 him for a correction. None
  was ever pubUshed. In an interview by the author.                     Ante decUned to comment. A
   follow-up voice-mail message was not returned.
318 The   firm's    SpamNet peer-to-peer system SpamNet was so good that in January
   2003, Ritter     made it back to Wired magazine's Rave Awards this time in his     —
   own   right, as a finalist for software designer             of the year.
319 In the   fall   of 2000, he pitched investors            A copy of the presentation was           filed in
  Altholtz   V.    Nef Capital, Norfolk County Superior Court,                 case   number CAOl-
   00169.
319 entertainment lawyer Howard Altholtz Altholtz                       v.   NetCapital, Norfolk      County
   Superior Court, case       number CAOl-00169.
321 Fanning blamed, of all people Fanning's e-mail was included                           as   an exhibit in
   Napster's bankruptcy.
                                         (   340     )      notes
                         Bibliography
Heilemann, John. "David Boies: The Wired Interview." Wired, October 2000.
Hibbard, Justin. "Can Peer-to-Peer         Grow Up?" Red Herring, December           4,   2000.
Kaplan, David A. The Silicon Boys.        New York:     William Morrow, 1999.
Kirkpatrick, David.      "Thomas Middelhoff Has         a   Hunch."   New York   Times Magazine,
  June 10, 2001.
Lessig, Lawrence. Code      and Other Laws of Cyberspace.         New York:   Basic Books, 1999.
        .
            The Future ofIdeas.   New York: Random          House, 2001.
Litman,     Jessica. Digital Copyright.   Amherst, N.Y.: Prometheus Books, 2001.
Menn,   Joseph. "Napster     Was GambUng AH           the   Way." Los Angeles    Times, February
25, 2001.
                                             (   341)
Oram, Andy,     ed.   Peer-to-Peer: Harnessing the        Power of Disruptive    Technologies.
                           (   342   )    bibliography
                                                 Index
                                                        (   343)
Bales, Bill (continued)                                            Chapter 11 Napster reorganization and,
  John Fanning and, 193, 195-97, 201-2,                                297-98
    292                                                            loan to Napster by, 264-65, 266, 289
  firings of, 94,      201                                         Middelhoff dismissal by, 302
  at    Napster, 87, 93, 94, 99-100, 126, 159,                     music division, 149, 282-83
        160-61, 176                                                Napster and, 261, 282, 284-85, 289-303
  Napster shares         of,   192                               Besciak, Richard, 15
  post-Napster         activities of,      318                   BindView Corp.,           20, 23, 36, 176
Benchmark          210
                  Capital,                                           192, 319
Benjamin, Yobie, 199-200                                           merchandising rights and, 139-40, 255
Bennet, Steve, 115                                               Carnegie Mellon University, 21, 22, 43, 85
Berg,    Jeff,   115                                             Case, Steve, 262
Berman, Howard, 311                                              CBS   Records, 150-51
Berners-Lee, Tim, 30, 51                                         CDs, 158-59, 313
Bertelsmann        AG,    3,   157, 160-61                         encryption, 63, 224, 311
                                                   (   344   )   index
   MP3     format and, 32-33                                   Constitution, U.S., copyright-and-patent
   price-fixing suit, 152                                           clause,   277-78
   sales   of blank, 310                                       Conway, Ron, 110-11, 204, 211, 214
censorship, 134                                                  dot-com financing and, 114-16
   FreeNet and, 314-16                                           John Fanning coup attempt and, 293-94
  of offensive usernames, 128-29                                 Infrasearch and, 188-89
CERT (computer security institute), 20, 21,                    Conyers, John, 281
     23                                                        Cooney, Manus, 279, 281
Chandler, William, 296                                         Cooper, Chris, 95, 104
Chang, Wayne, 131-33, 144, 145, 274                            Copyright Assembly, 238
Chapter 11, Napster reorganization under,                      copyright law
     297-98, 300                                                 contributory infringement concept, 309
chat rooms, 161                                                  expiration dates,      278
  Napster, 127-33, 138                                           gray areas    of,   68-69
  offensive usernames in,             128-29                     history of,   277-78
  RIAA surveillance            of,   161                         intellectual property theft and, 10, 64,        311
  See also Internet Relay            Chat                        Internet and, 2, 31, 64, 65, 125,           224-25
Chen, Nina, 95                                                   music industry abuse         of,   149,   287
Cherkassky, Alona, 95-96                                         Napster and, 10, 64, 65-69, 102-3, 138,
chess, 43-44,       78                                              141, 142, 143, 149, 238-39, 316
ChessClub.com, 44                                                Paulson on, 143
Chess.net, 20, 86                                                See also   Audio    Home     Recording Act of
  Amram       and, 193                                              1992; Digital Millenium Copyright
  John Fanning and, 16-17, 21, 45-47,                78,            Act     (DMCA)      of 1998
     85, 103, 191                                              Corgan, BiUy, 256
  Shawn Fanning           and, 52-53                           Costello, Elvis, 313
Christensen, Clayton, 189                                      Cravath, Swaine       & Moore, 234
Christiansen, Larry, 53                                        Creditrust, 47,   48
Chuck D, 136                                                   Creighton, Frank, 161-63, 277
Church of Scientology, 64                                      Cringely, Robert, 189
Cieri, Rick,   298                                             Crosswalk, 24, 2S
Cisco Systems, 72                                              Crow,   Sheryl,   167
Citron, Alan, 154-57                                           CSS (DVD       encryption),     278
Clarke, Ian, 247, 314-16                                       Curcio, Mark, 203, 267
Cloudmark,     Inc.,     318                                   CuteMX, 170
CNBC (cable network), 220                                      Czarny, Benny, 176
CNet, 186
Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace (Lessig),
     236
Coffee, John, 194                                              Dakhnovsl^, Dmitry, 44, 45, 46, 52, 86
Cohen,     Steve,   276                                        Damon, Matt, 115
Cohen, Ted, 151, 158-61                                    Dannen,         Fredric, 149
colleges, Napster's       growth      in,   133-35             Dasher, Ronnie, 164
Collins-Rector, Marc, 113                                      DeCSS (DVD        encryption),       278
compact    discs. See     CDs                              Dell Computer Corp., 312
Congress, U.S., 64, 277-81, 311-12                         Dembo, Daphne,              107, 185
  Senate hearings, 154, 162, 168, 279-81                   Devereaux, WiUiam, 82
Conover, Matt ("Shok"), 18, 20, 35-37, 322                 DeVito, Danny, 203
Conroy, Kevin, 263, 266                                    Diamond, Mike ("Mike D"),                  136, 165
                                                 index     (    345    )
Diamond Multimedia                Systems, Inc., 67             DVD encryption, 278
DigitalConsumer.org, 312                                        Dzindzichashvili,      Roman,     44, 45,   85-86
Digital Entertainment             Network (DEN),
      113
Digital   Media Association, 67
Digital Millennium Copyright                Act   (DMCA)        Echo (CD), 33
     of 1998, 69, 123, 162, 269-70                              eCommerce Group              (Bertelsmann), 281-82
  DVD encryption and, 278                                       eCompany Now (magazine), 218
  passage of and court rulings based on,                        EDGAR (SEC online system), 72
     64-66                                                      Eierhoff, Klaus,      302
  record industry lawsuits under, 278-79                        Eisner, Michael, 311
  safe    harbor exemptions          in,   224, 233-34,         el8.org, 18
                                                  (   346   )   index
       93-94, 123, 126, 148, 162-63, 207,                           resignation of,       299
       208, 228, 240, 254-55, 290-91                                RIAA      suit deposition of,          228-30
  Napster coup attempt by, 292-96, 298,                             on Richardson, 88
       299, 305                                                     Ritter and, 252,        260
  Napster stock control by, 9-10, 208                               Rogers and, 166
  nephew Shawn and,               9,   15-16, 54, 55, 70,           Roxio     Inc. and, 306,       323
       301, 320                                                     server linking and, 171-73,              176-79
  post-Napster        activities of,     319-21                     at   Webby Awards,          211
  pretrial deposition of,            295-96                         Wired Rave Awards and, 257-58
  RIAA contact with,             162-63                          Farber, Steve, 92, 94
  Richardson and, 89, 191-92, 194-95,                            Farmer, Dan, 284
       208-9, 212-13, 292, 317                                   Federal Communications Commission
  stock conversion and, 292, 295                                         (FCC), 150
Fanning, Shawn                                                   Federal Trade Commission (FTC), 152
  background       of,   5-6, 14-20                              Fenne, Michael, 112-13
  on   Bales,   201                                              Fidelity Investments,          41-42
  on Barry, 269                                                  Fidelman, Barry, 91
  Bertelsmann deal and, 261, 265-66, 282,                        fiduciary duty warning,           298
       291, 301                                                  Fikker, Csaba, 95, 203,           204
  as Business     Week cover         subject,   223              file-sharing systems
  cars of, 6, 15,     186                                           status in 2002,       309
  celebrity of, 1, 19, 133, 223, 247,             252-53,           See also Napster; peer-to-peer systems
       255-58, 264, 323                                          filtering,   273-76
  at Chess.net,       52-53                                      Firefly, 8, 88,     91
  computer security            interests of,    19-20, 322       Fletcher, Rick,        131-32
  at   Conway benefit, 214-15                                    Flycode, 203, 204, 318
  copyright law and, 66-67                                       Fogerty, John, 167
 John Fanning's coup attempt and, 293                            Fonovisa     Inc. v.   Cherry Auction,       Inc.   (1993),
 John Fanning's influence on,               9,   15-16,                  66
       54, 55, 70, 301,        320                               Fortune (magazine),         1, 9,    72, 205, 221,     251
  MetaUica      suit and,       145                              FortuneCity.com,          Inc.,   198-99
  Middelhoff and, 261, 265-66, 282, 301                          Foundation Capital, 92
  move    to CaUfornia by, 6, 85-87,              98-100         Frackman,        Russell, 125,    225-30, 241-45, 271
  MTV appearances by, 247, 323                                   Frankel, Justin, 31, 73, 170-71, 173-74,
  Napster chat rooms and, 128, 129, 130                                  185-87, 197, 257
  Napster development and, 29-30, 34-39                          Freed,Alan, 150, 310-11
  Napster expansion and, 239                                     "Free Girl    Now"       (single),   33
  Napster    II and,     283                                     Free Internet Chess Server, 44
  Napster internal        conflicts and,       126-27, 209       Freeloader, 25, 81
  Napster merchandising and, 137, 138-40                         FreeNet, 257, 314-15
  Napster's cofounding by, 5-6                                   FTP     (FUe Transfer Protocol)            sites,   29, 162
  Napster's development by,               34-39              Fuentes, Daisy, 257
  Napster shares         of,   192
  as   Napster spokesman, 122
  at   Northeastern University, 21, 29, 38,
       53-54                                                 Gabriel, Peter, 140, 313
  Parker and, 17, 24                                         Garrehy, Jessie, 109, 176, 200, 318
  post-Napster        activities of,     321-23              Gates,       Bill,   51, 76, 77, 218, 234, 323
  at   preUminary injunction hearing, 241,                   Geffen Records, 32-33, 258
       245-46                                                Gelsinger, Patrick, 315
                                                  index      (    347     )
Gibson, William, 235                                           fiduciary duty        warning         to,   298
Gidwitz, Jim, 116, 192, 203, 213                               music industry deals and, 285, 286
Gieselmann,   Tom, 160-61                                      Napster       CEO appointment and, 282
Gigabeat, 206-7, 209, 227, 317                                 resignation of,        304-5
Glabe, Bruce, 82                                          Hit Men (Dannen), 149
Glaser, Rob, 154, 156, 157                                Hoadley, Rob, 25
GlaxoSmithKline, 315                                      Holland, Dexter, 137, 166
Gnap, 179-80                                              HoUings,          Fritz,   312
Gnutella, 165, 170-75, 185-87, 197,                       Hollywood
     276-77, 309, 314                                          antipiracy campaign,              311-13
GnutellaMeter, 309                                             studio system, 168
Godfather of Silicon Valley, The (Rivlin), 111                 VCR effects on, 235
Goldberg, Dave, 123                                       HotWired          {h.tci   Wired News), 80, 122
Google, 35, 36                                            Household Bank of Nevada, 47
Gorog, Chris, 306                                         Hsy.Joe, 219
Gotti, John, 155                                          Hughes, Mark, 107-8
Gould, Kathryn, 92                                        Hummer, John,              212, 213, 216, 218-21,
Grammy Awards,      281, 310-11                                     249, 283, 299, 312
Grand Royal   (record label), 165                              background         of,   218
Grant, Natalie, 281                                            fiduciary duty        warning and, 298
Gratefld Dead, 30, 235                                         music industry deals and, 250-51
Greene, Michael, 310-11                                        as   Napster board member, 290-91, 292
Greenstein, Seth, 67-69, 109, 316                              personal indemnification                    for,   293, 296-97
Grokster, 309                                             Hummer Winblad Venture                           Partners,
     142, 322
  definition of,   17-18
  "Save Napster" movement, 142, 144                       "Iam Not Alone"               (song),      281
   See also wOOvvKDO                                      IBM, 312, 314
Hamilton, Jamie, 25, 80                                   Idealab,         208
Hanks, Sam, 60                                            Idei,     Nobuyuki, 250
Hanson, Kirk, 193                                         iMesh, 170, 175-76
Harmon, Steve, 220                                        Independence Investment, 47
Harwich High School,        6, 14,   15                   Indiana University, 141, 142-43
Hatch, Orrin, 154, 162, 255, 279-81, 311                  Individual Inc., 79-83, 91
Heinlein, Robert, 25                                      Industry Standard (publication), 321
Henley, Don, 167-68                                       Infrasearch,           187-89
Hero Awards, 281                                          Infravio Inc.,          318
Hilbers, Konrad, 282-87, 290,         299                 Innovator's Dilemma,              T"/6(?   (Christensen), 189
   bankruptcy deposition      of,   303-4                 InsiderVC.com, 218
   Bertelsmann acquisition bid and, 289-90,               Intel Corp., 90, 184, 185, 251, 311, 314,
                                            (   348   )   index
 intellectual property. See copyright              law
 International Standards Organization, 31                                                        K
 Internet                                                       Kan, Gene, 185-90, 280, 323
    copyright law and, 2, 31, 64-65, 125,                       Kay, Martin, 203, 292, 319
        224-25                                                  Kazaa, 276-77, 283, 309
    digital    music     availability and, 29,     30-31,       Kearby, Gerry, 217, 262-63
        153-57, 166-67. See            also   Napster           Kessler, Eddie, 104-5, 116, 171, 178, 183,
   peer-to-peer systems, 74, 185, 188-89,                              224-25, 246
        202, 311, 313-15, 318, 323                                 on Barry, 269
   search engines, 35, 36, 239                                     replacement       of,   283
   security issues, 19-20, 22-23, 142,                          Khosla, Vinod, 90
        322                                                     Kim, Sung-Bu, 116,203
   See also chat rooms; dot-coms;               World           King, Carole, 168
        Wide Web;         specific   websites                   King, Howard, 144, 145
Internet Chess Club (ICC), 44                                   Klein,Joel, 290, 300, 302
Internet protocols, 236                                         Klein, Michael,       267
Internet Relay Chat, 17, 24, 34-37, 127,                        Kleiner Perkins Caufield 8c Byers, 77, 80,
        128, 161                                                       90,111,114,206-9
   RIAA        surveillance of, 161                             Knight-Ridder, Inc, 80
   slang of, 36                                                 Knowles,    Jeff,   230, 232
Internet      Underground Music Archive                         Koogle, Tim, 81
        (lUMA), 30-31, 32                                       Korn   (band), 148
Interwoven       Inc.,   91-93, 94, 194                         Kozinksi, Alex, 248-49
lovine,   Jimmy, 156-57                                         Kraus,Joe, 116, 188, 312
IPOs, 154, 210-11, 218-19, 224                                  Kravitz, Lenny, 159
                                                   index    (    349    )
Listen.com, 144, 153                                        Mitnick, Kevin, 323
lobbyists, 168, 277,        279-81                          Moby    (musician), 136
Mendelson, Jordy, 24, 103, 177-78, 185                      MusicCity Morpheus, 276-77, 283, 309
message board, Napster, 131-33, 138, 145                    music industry. See record industry,              specific
                                              (   350   )   index
campus growth            of,      133-35                            name     origin of,       60
CEO search, 267-68                                                  New Artist Program,                  147-48, 209, 227,
Chapter 11 reorganization by, 297-98,                                  317
   300                                                              post-revolution effects              of,   309-16
chat room, 127-33, 138                                              profitabiUty         and copyright law, 102-3
cofounding       of, 3,       6-7                                   public opinion on, 135-36
competitors       of,    169-90                                     public relations and, 121-45
copyright law and, 10, 64-69, 102-3,                                RIAA      negotiations and, 122, 123, 160,
   138, 141, 142, 143, 238-39, 316                                     161-64, 286
Ted Cohen         and, 159-60, 161                                  RIAA prehminary hearing and, 240-45
coup attempt by John Fanning, 292-96                                RIAA suit against, 124-26, 164, 195
development        of,       29-30, 34-39, 85-87                    Roxio Inc. acquisition               of,   305-7
document shredding                  at,   240                       Senate Judiciary Committee hearings
Draper Atlantic agreement with, 116-18,                                and, 280-81
  208, 255                                                          server   Unking and, 171-73, 176-79
Dr. Dre suit against, 141, 240, 244                                 shareholders, 192-93
drug use   at,    108-9                                             startup hiring          at,   87-89, 103-10
due diUgence and, 64                                                stay   of injunction against, 248-49, 268
expansion plans          of,      239                               stock and stock options, 106-7, 208,
John Fanning           as biggest         shareholder       of,        212-13, 240, 293, 295
  9-10, 208                                                         stock transfers, 192-94
John Fanning's approach                   to,   50-52,              strategy       document, 101-2, 121-22, 152,
  54-55, 58-60, 93-94, 123, 126, 148,                                  229
  162-63, 207, 208, 228, 240, 254-55,                               technology        vs.   business issues, 126-27
  290-91                                                            user counts, 71, 101, 119, 122, 123,
John Fanning's coup attempt, 292-96,                                   125-26, 179, 191, 205, 247, 251, 260
  298, 299, 305                                                     users   banned from, 130-31, 145
FAQ_site, 131-32                                                    user uneasiness about,  142-44
Shawn Fanning            and, 5-6, 29-30, 34-39,                    venture funding and. See subhead
  122, 126-30, 137-40, 192, 209, 239                                   financing of above
Shawn Fanning's               vision of, 10-11                      voluntary closure             of,   276
filtering injunction against,                 273-76                Wired Rave Award and, 257
financing for, 6,            8,   9-10, 57-84, 110-12,            Napster    II,   283-84, 290, 306
  190, 191-96, 204-21                                             Napsterhelp.com, 274
Hilbers appointed                 CEO of, 282-83                  Napster.net, 210, 307
Hummer Winblad                    Venture Partners and,           Napsterstore.com, 140
  211-21                                                          Nascent Technologies, 58
incorporation          of,   54                                   National   Academy of Recording Arts and
index of other indexes as core                   of,   34              Sciences, 281,             310-11
internal conflicts and,              148-49                       National Center for Missing and Exploited
Uquidation       of,   304-7                                           Children, 137
loan from Bertelsmann                   to,   264-65, 266,        NetCapital, 292, 319, 320, 321
  289                                                             Netect   Inc.,    23
logo   of, 60,   137, 138, 166, 307                               NetMovies, 203-4, 319, 320, 321
merchandising by, 137-40, 166, 255                                NetPD     Ltd.,    180
message board on, 131-33, 138, 145                                Netscape, 11, 31
Metallica suit against, 141-42, 144-45,                           Nevil,Jack, 42-43, 46, 47
  164, 240,       244                                             New Artist Program, 147-48, 209, 227,                 317
music groups and, 136-38, 140-41,                                 New Enterprise Associates, 90, 204-5
  147-48, 164-67                                                  NewUn,     Scott,      71-72
                                                       index      (351)
News Direct. See ON24             Inc.                              music industry copyright abuse and, 287
NewsEdge Corp., 80                                                  Napster preliminary hearing and, 240-45,
New York    Times, 133                                                 262
NextPage, Inc, 315                                                  revised injunction issued by, 273-74,           276
Nicks, Stevie, 167                                                Patterson, Jeff, 30
Northeastern University, 21, 29, 38, 53-54                        Paul, Sunil,    60-61
Norton, Stephanie, 148                                            Paulson, Chad, 134-35, 142-44
NuUsoft    Inc., 32, 165, 170,       173-74, 185,                 Pavarotti, Luciano,     312
       186, 257, 258                                              payola,   149-50
                                                                  peer-to-peer systems, 74, 185, 188-89, 202,
                                                                       311, 313-15, 318, 323
                                                                  PeUiccia, Lydia,    124
OfFspring (band), 137, 166                                        Pepper,   Tom,    186, 187
OHn, Milton, 238, 255, 299                                        Perkins, Tony, 115
OUver, Cody, 185-86, 187                                          PerreUi, Jonathon, 26, 38
Olkin, Ingram, 233                                                Pets.com, 114, 219, 221, 267
ON24 Inc.,     87, 95,     220                                    Petty,   Tom,   33, 123
Ong, Peng, 92, 93, 94                                             Pierce, Brock, 113
  Napster    as business and, 37, 55, 57,                         Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organi-
       61-62, 67-68, 126, 196                                          zations    Act (RICO), 141
  Napster's cofounding by, 3, 6-7,                9,   37         Ramme, Matt,       45, 46
  Napster    users' questions and,          142-43, 145           Ramos, Carey, 230, 241
  on     New Artist Program,         148                          Rando, Joe, 14, 15-16, 51, 52, 322
  post-Napster        activities of,     318                      Rasala, Richard, 53
  resignation from Napster, 253                                   Rational Software Corp., 79
  RIAA      suit deposition of,        228-30                     Rave Awards      (W^/ri?^'   magazine), 257-58
  server   Unking and, 172                                        RealNetworks       Inc., 67,     153-54
Parsons, Richard, 273, 285                                        RealPlayer, 154, 155
Patel,   MarUyn   Hall, 224-25, 229, 269, 281,                    record industry, 149-68, 309
       282, 285-86                                                  Big Five, 149, 152-53
  appeals court decision and,            271-72                     copyright abuse by, 136-37, 149, 287
                                                  (     352   )   index
   as factor in Napster's       growth, 152                 RICO Act,           141
  fall   in sales by,   310                                 Rio, 67, 242, 316
  Napster     New Artist Program             and, 148       Ritter,     Donald, 21
  online music services, 310                                Ritter,     Jordan ("Nocarrier"),                55
                                                                                                        3,
  organized crime and, 149-50                                     background         of,   7-8, 21-23
  stars'   discontent with, 167-68                                on Barry, 254
  suit against    MP3.com        by,278-79                        California        move    by, 7-8,    105-6
  view of Napster by,          160-61                             Evans and, 76-77
  See also digital music; Recording Industry                      on Shawn Fanning, 252
       Association of America;          specific                  iMesh hacking by, 176
       companies                                                  Kan   and, 185
Recording Artists Coalition, 167-68                               Napster chat room and, 127-29, 130-31
Recording Industry Association of America                         Napster development and, 36, 37-39,
       (RIAA), 67,      74,   160                                   142
  Napster injunction stay and, 248-49, 268                        on Napster        internal conflicts, 126
  Napster negotiations and, 122, 123, 160,                        Napster position          of,     253-55, 258-59
    161-64, 286                                                   Napster programming and, 7-8, 37-39,
  Nullsoft and, 32                                                  228, 239
  on piracy and declining           sales,   310                  post-Napster        activities of,     318
  rock bands against Napster and, 140-41                          resignation from Napster by,                258-60
  suit against   MP3.com,           67, 279,   316                "Save Napster" hackers and, 144
  suit against Napster,        124-26, 164,                       server    Unking and, 178-79
       226-46                                                     user count and, 101
Red Herring     {maga.zme), 114, 188-89                           Wired Rave Awards and, 257-58
  John Fanning cover story, 321                             Rival Networks Inc.,                220
Redpoint Ventures, 188, 208                                 RivUn, Gary, 111
ReplayTV, 104                                               Robertson, Michael, 33, 220, 279, 280
RIAA.    See Recording Industry Association                 Robertson,         Thomas Dolby, 34
       of America                                           Robey, Josef, 256, 257
Richardson, Eileen, 3                                       "Rock Your Baby"               (record),    149
  background       of, 8,   87-93                           Rogers, Ian, 165, 166, 174-75, 255
  Business Week Napster cover story and,                    Rolling Stone (pubUcation), 150, 166
       316-17                                               Rosen, Hilary, 163-64, 237-38, 245, 252,
  John Fanning and,           94, 126, 191-92,                      273
       194-95, 292, 317                                           on appeals court          decision,   272
  Metallica suit and, 141                                         Hatch and, 280
  at   Napster, 98-100, 109, 159                                  Hummer Winblad                suit threat by,   293
  as   Napster interim        CEO,     8-9, 87-93           Rosenberg, Andrew, 304
  Napster internal      conflicts and,       126-27         Roundl          Inc.,   259-60, 318
  Napster merchandising and, 138, 140                       Roxio    Inc.,     305-7, 323
  Napster venture funding and, 190,                         RSI    security firm,          36
       191-96, 204-11
                                                                                             'mm''
  New Artist Program           and, 147-48, 317
  post-Napster      activities of,     316-18                                                   s
  public relations strategy of, 121-22,                     Sacks, Jonathan,          237-38
       147-48                                               St.   Thomas Aquinas                College, 90
  resignation from Napster by,           215                Samit, Jay, 158-59, 160, 161, 164, 284
  onRIAA negotiation, 160, 163, 195                         SandeU, Scott, 90
  RIAA suit deposition of, 226-28                           San Jose Mercury News (newspaper), 258
  server   Unking and, 178                                  Savenapster.com, 134, 142-44
                                               index    (    353        )
Schmidt, Andreas, 262-64, 284                                 SpamNet, 318
Schroeder, Mary, 270                                          Sparks Personnel Services, 71
Schwartz, Jonathan, 285, 298, 299                             Spears, Britney, 255, 256,   312
Scientology case, 64                                          Spencer,      Graham, 116, 312
Scott, Adrian, 97-98, 116, 204,            227                Spinner Networks, 73, 153
Scour.com, 29, 239, 301                                       Sport Service Inc., 140
Seagram Co.        Ltd.,   249                                Stanley, David. See Fenne,          Michael
search engines, 35, 36, 239                                   Stone, Henry, 149
Secure Digital Music Initiative, 63, 284                      Stratton, David,        304
Securities    and Exchange Commission                         streaming companies (digital music), 153
         (SEC), 72                                            Stringer,     Howard, 250
security,   computer. See hackers                             Students Against University Censorship,
Seele,    Mike, 48                                                    134
segmented downloading, 175-76                                 Suck (webzine), 81
Seidman, Ricki, 254, 273                                      Summit      International, 139
Senate Judiciary Committee, 154, 162, 168,                    Sun Microsystems         Inc., 31, 90, 185, 189,
         279-81                                                       257, 314
server linking, 171-72,          176-79                       Supreme Court, U.S.,           65, 147, 163, 235,
SETI@home, 314                                                        242, 243
Sharan, Sharat, 95-96, 220
shareware, 31, 187. See also peer-to-peer
         systems
Sherman, Cary, 246                                            TheGlobe.com, 112
Shin, Holly, 99, 203, 318                                     Thielen, Gunther, 302
Shinn, Mike, 26, 72-75                                        Time (magazine),        1,    10, 256,   264
Shinn, Scott, 26, 38, 72-75                                   Torvalds, Linus, 51
Silicon Graphics Inc., 31                                     Total Request Live       (MTV), 156
                              312
Silicon Valley, 19, 87, 94, 311,                              Turner, Erin, 206-7
  peer-to-peer systems and, 313-14
  venture capitalists,      8,   9-10, 89-90
Silva,   John, 165                                                                          u
Silverman, Barry, 248-49                                      U2   (band), 156
Simulation, Training, and Instrumentation                     Ugly Mugs, 30
        Command, 315                                          Uhl, Daniel, 247
S/ate    (onhne magazine), 248                                Ukich, Lars, 141, 144-45, 280-81
Sleator,   Danny, 43-45                                       Unisys, 43
Sleator    Games     Inc., 43,   45                           Universal Music, 149, 154-57, 249, 258,
Smith, Al, 155-56, 157                                                262, 302, 310
Smith, Howard, 226                                            universities, Napster's        growth    in,   133-35
Song,     Dug   ("Dugsong"), 18, 21, 36, 166,                 University of California, Santa Cruz, 30, 31
        174-75                                                University of Southern California, 141
  segmented downloading and, 175-76                           Unix, 20, 257
Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension                           Uprizer   Inc.,   315
    Act of 1998, 278                                          users
Sony, 65, 102, 149, 150, 153, 155, 157                          banned from Napster, 130-31, 145
Sorenson,    Bill,   284, 291                                   count on Napster, 71, 101, 119, 122, 123,
  bankruptcy deposition           of,   303-4                     125-26, 179, 191, 205, 252, 260
Soros, George, 91                                               on post-Gnutella networks, 309-10
Spade, David, 257                                             UUNet,     25, 26, 38
                                                (   354   )   index
                                                     "Why Do           Fools Fall in Love?" (song), 149
                                                     Wilson Sonsini Goodrich            & Rosati, 67,
Valenti, Jack, 203, 235, 238-39,       313                   109-10, 216, 217, 316
ValiCert Inc., 83, 193, 194, 318                     Winamp,          31, 32, 73, 170, 196
Vanity Fair (magazine), 256                          Winblad, Ann, 211-12, 220
VCRs                                                       background      of,   218
  Napster     parallel    with 235, 243, 244, 269,   Windows           (operating system), 35
     270, 272                                        Winter, Johnny, 159
  U.S. Supreme Court ruling on, 65, 147,                 Wired (magazine), 122, 124
     163, 235, 242, 243                                    Rave Awards, 257-58
venture    capitalists, 2,   89-90, 191-221              Wired News (formerly Hotwired), 80, 122
  due diligence and, 63-64                           wOOwOO          (online hacker group), 7, 17-20,
  Silicon Valley backgrounds of, 6, 8-10,                    23, 27, 35-36, 38, 166
     89-90, 190                                      Word       text   documents, 239
  See also specific funds                            work-for-hire doctrine, 168
Vermeer Technologies, 91                             World Wide Web, 29-30,             31, 51, 165, 166
Verrier,   Raymond, 14                               Wrapster, 132, 180
Verrier,   Raymond, Jr., 322
videocassette recorders. See      VCRs
Vivendi Universal, 157, 302
                                                     Xing Technologies, 30
                                                     Xtime, 89, 93, 109, 123-24, 145, 200, 209,
                             w
                                                             318
Wainvwght,      Julie,   267
Wall Street Journal, 220
Walsh, Peter, 302, 304
Walter, Ed, 42                                       Yahoo!      Inc., 20, 81,    251
Wang,     Charles, 91                                Yale University, 141
Ward, Bruce, 180                                     Yang, Geoff, 208
Wareham, Dean, 165                                   Yang,      Jerry,   251
warez (pirated software), 36, 103                    Yoakam, Dwight, 167
Warner Brothers          (record company), 33,
     149, 153, 156, 157
Webby Awards,        211
Webnoize (magazine), 124, 223                        Zachary, George, 210
  digital   music conference, 159-60                 ZDNet, 110
Weekly, David, 32-33, 183                            Zelnick, Strauss,         263-66
Ween    (band), 167                                  Zero Gravity (Harmon), 220
Weil, Gotshal      & Manges, 64                      Zero Gravity Internet Group, 220
Weir, Bob, 30                                        Zero- Knowledge Systems            Inc.,   183-84
WheelGroup        Corp., 72, 74                      Zero.net, 76
                                          index      (    355    )
             About                    the           Author
Joseph     Menn    has tracked Silicon Valley for the Los Angeles Times for
more   than four years.    He   is   coauthor of The People      vs.   Big Tobacco:   How
the States Took on the Cigarette Giants (1998)       and a principal editor of The
Chronology: The Documented           Day-by-Day Account of         the Secret Military
Assistance to Iran   and   the Contras (1987)     and worked      for Bloomberg       News
and the Charlotte (N.C.)        Observer.   He   grew up    in suburban     Boston and
was executive editor of the Harvard Crimson                as   an undergraduate.      He
lives in   San Francisco with    his wife   and daughter.