The new Scour: Users will pay...

Source: ZDNet

It will cost money to swap movies and music, say the new owners of Scour technology. Expect the service, called C*, to roll out before March.


The free ride is over for Scour users.

CenterSpan Communications Corp., the new owners of Scour's file-swapping technology, plans to start charging users when the service is re-launched sometime before March, a company spokesman said Thursday.

"The world is changing. There are not the opportunities that there once were for the download of free content," said CenterSpan spokesman Keith Halasy. "It's been shown that content holders won't accept a free model."

He added "any service (that) provides that type of free distribution and access will suffer the same fate that others have been suffering ... millions in lawsuits."

Movies still in the mix

It was a lawsuit by the Motion Picture Association of America that forced Scour to shut down in November. CenterSpan bid $9 million for Scour's assets during a bankruptcy auction this week, beating out high-profile music companies such as Liquid Audio.

CenterSpan still plans to use the technology to swap movies as well as smaller files that require less bandwidth, Halasy said.

The company is already preparing content for the relaunch, having reached a deal two weeks ago with online movie aggregator Moviehead.

Old Scour is history

The new Scour will have digital rights management elements built in to the technology. That means 4.5 million registered users might as well trash the application that's sat dormant on their desktops since Scour was deactivated in November.

The old Scour application won't work on the new CenterSpan version either, said Halasy, although he added, "We're actively going to be reaching out to these folks."

CenterSpan has already begun testing the new service, code-named C*, pronounced "C star." It mixes the Scour's peer-to-peer file-swapping technology with CenterSpan's "Socket" programming, which it already uses for online gaming.

The C* service will be paraded around in January to potential investors and business partners, Halasy said. No release date is scheduled so far.

I wonder how much they are going to charge you... And when Napster comes with the new pay version of Napster...

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