Earlier this year, the new Napster was given a bit of a fright when reports began circulating that its recently introduced subscription service had been “hacked.” Those reports stung Napster in two ways. They suggested that the service, which in its original incarnation was shut down by the music industry as a rat’s nest for tune nicksters, had, however inadvertently, returned to its old ways. And they appeared just as the service was trying to gain some positive traction in the minds of consumers as well as record executives for its Napster To Go subscription model.
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Posted by: John P. Mello Jr. March 31, 2005 05:00 AMEarlier this year, the new Napster was given a bit of a fright when reports began circulating that its recently introduced subscription service had been “hacked.” Those reports stung Napster in two ways. They suggested that the service, which in its original incarnation was shut down by the music industry as a rat’s nest for tune nicksters, had, however inadvertently, returned to its old ways. And they appeared just as the service was trying to gain some positive traction in the minds of consumers as well as record executives for its Napster To Go subscription model.