A Recommended Feature
For those not in the know about Snocap or Mashboxx, I recommend reading Putting the Napster Genie Back in the Bottle by Saul Hansell over at the New York Times website. In short, Snocap is a registry that allows content owners (musicians and labels) to register their music and define the rules about how that music is allowed to be distributed over the internet. What is the significance? Peer-To-Peer software that chooses to participate can allow the users to share and download music over their networks and the network owner will collect on any fees that need to be payed. What we are looking at is the potential for a legal Grokster. You can sample all the music you like (as long as the content owner agrees... let's not hold our collective breath) and legally purchase said music. Mashboxx is the first peer-to-peer software to agree to employ Snocap. If this takes off, I'll definetly be using it (provided they release a Macintosh-friendly version). How can Snocap get content holders to register? You would think that they would be super eager to, but I'm cynical. While online music distribution is more popular than it has ever been, I don't believe that enough record labels believe in the power of the internet as a legal distribution source. However, if it were to be said, in a very loud manner, that any number of popular songs were not available via Snocap/Mashboxx, I believe that content holders may become more open to the concept. If it becomes clear that sales are being lost because a song isn't available online (and they are being lost), labels that are currently unaware may find themselves a little more well-learned. Snocap, Mashboxx, P2P

