Dictionary of new words

DARKNET

darknet: translation

n.
The collection of networks and other technologies that enable people to illegally share copyrighted digital files with little or no fear of detection. Also:Darknet.
Example Citation:
Here is a prediction: thedarknetwill never die. Adversaries will send out their digital agents to hunt down its disciples. But thedarknetwill go further underground, finding new ways to escape the reach of these electronic attackers. The faithful will find safety by banding together in small groups, beyond the reach of the oppressors.
The script for the next Matrix sequel? No — because thedarknetis already here: it is the unofficial side of the internet. And its resilience guarantees that it will remain a thorn in the side of the music and movie industries, whatever successes they may have in crushing its early manifestations.
— Richard Waters, "No respite from the forces ofdarknet,"Financial Times(London), July 29, 2003
Earliest Citation:
"Users will copy objects if it is possible and interesting to do so," said authors Peter Biddle, Paul England, Marcus Peinado and Bryan Willman. That truism, they said, when combined with a high-bandwidth network and only a fraction of users initially sharing content, made thedarknetubiquitous. Sharing has existed for years, they argued, but the "sneaker net" approach of mixed cassette tapes passed among friends or sent through the mail meant the copyright abuse was "trivial."
— Patrick Ross, "Microsoft Employees Write That DRM Systems Is Doomed to Fail,"Washington Internet Daily, November 25, 2002
First Use:
We investigate thedarknet— a collection of networks and technologies used to share digital content.Thedarknetis not a separate physical network but an application and protocol layer riding on existing networks. Examples ofdarknetsare peer-to-peer file sharing, CD and DVD copying, and key or password sharing on email and newsgroups. The last few years have seen vast increases in thedarknet'saggregate bandwidth, reliability, usability, size of shared library, and availability of search engines. In this paper we categorize and analyze existing and futuredarknets, from both the technical and legal perspectives. We speculate that there will be short-term impediments to the effectiveness of thedarknetas a distribution mechanism, but ultimately thedarknet-genie will not be put back into the bottle.
— Peter Biddle, Paul England, Marcus Peinado, and Bryan Willman, "TheDarknetand the Future of Content Distribution,"Digital Rights Management conference, November 22, 2002
Notes:
The ominous tone that pervades the worddarknetis probably no accident. That's because the joint coiners of the term — Peter Biddle, Paul England, Marcus Peinado, and Bryan Willman — are employees of Microsoft, a company on the forefront of something calleddigital rights management. DRM is a set of technologies that aims not just to ensure that people pay for copyrighted digital content, but also that they can't make illegal copies of that content. In a paper called TheDarknetand the Future of Content Distribution: http://crypto.stanford.edu/DRM2002/darknet5.doc), the above authors argue that the existence of thedarknetseverely undermines all DRM initiatives, which is dark news indeed for Microsoft and every other company that hopes to control the use and abuse of copyrighted digital files.
Related Words:
bitlegging
burn and return
cuckoo egg
digifeiter
IP theft
Napster bomb
P2P
paracopyright
splinternet
Categories:
Data
Internet
Networking
Programming and Software