RIAA Web Site Moved To Linux 188
xseedit writes "The RIAA has moved their main Web site www.riaa.com from IIS on Win2003 to Apache 2.2.3 on Red Hat. It appears that the move did not go smoothly as it resulted in an 8-hour downtime starting yesterday around noon, according to Netcraft. And the RIAA is still showing a 'temporarily under construction' page. They also moved their DNS from the small company that had been hosting them for the past 4 years, Tomorrow's Solutions Today (TST Inc.), to Mindshift Technologies. One can only guess what happened here, but the move seems to have been sudden and unplanned. They still haven't moved the riaa.org, riaa.net, and musicunited.org domains — those are still pointing to the TST nameservers that no longer accept queries for those domains. TST Inc. deserves credit, however. They seem to have managed to host the RIAA quite successfully for the past 4 years. Will Mindshift do a better job hosting one of the most reviled, and therefore most attacked, Web sites in the world? I wonder if anybody at the RIAA or TST would care to comment on the reasons behind this sudden move. Could it be that the RIAA is being sued by its hosting provider? Or perhaps the sue-happy organizaiton is suing its provider?"
first post (Score:5, Funny)
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It not appears that they are at Apache version 2.2.4, and not 2.2.3 as previously claimed.
w0000000000000000000000w!
So... (Score:5, Funny)
NETCRAFT CONFIRMS: RIAA IS DEAD!
The funny thing is.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:first post (Score:5, Insightful)
What gets me is the rampant speculation.
Did the RIAA sue TNT? Did TNT sue the RIAA?
Or did the RIAA pull their business because the Son of Satan - still a young lad and not yet able to lead the hellish forces and kick-start the end of days - is an intern at TNT?
Who knows?
But until we do know, let's just put anything up on the board. Drudge does it. Why can't we?
Alas, sometimes I fool myself into thinking, just because they use the motto "News for Nerds..." this site actually tries to act as a news site instead of a blog (or a blog of other blogs).
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Hopefully, with GPL version 4 (Score:5, Funny)
Please mod parent +1, Funny! (Score:1, Offtopic)
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GPL4 will be to prevent RIAAisation - RMS.
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Will there ever be a GPL4? Or will there be a law passed, in some little country somewhere in the world, which will guarantee Freedoms Zero to Three "across the board" in that country -- kind of lik
rest of post (Score:2)
My guess... (Score:5, Insightful)
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... and since they have "one of the most reviled, and therefore most attacked, Web sites in the world", they'd be pretty pressed to move to a more secure platform.
Now, though, /. crowd faces a dilemma - who to root for?
If RIAA keeps getting attacked and their site is down most of the time, maybe - just maybe - somebody at RIAA gets the message.
If we wish the RIAA website a long and happy uptime, though, we can keep arguing that yes, Linux is more secure than Windows...
Personally, I'd go with the long an
But... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:But... (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, with a train full of lawyers and politicians.
I'll bring the hotdogs.
Re:But... (Score:5, Funny)
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This would be an interesting party, methinks!
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Finally!! (Score:4, Funny)
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Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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Seeing that the person I was replying to is a friend of mine, it was more joking around as I thought he was going to be modded down.
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Re:Uhh, okay. (Score:5, Funny)
The RIAA is Paris Hilton for nerds where even the most pointless story that is related to it gets too much coverage.
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That made me laugh. So true.
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The difference being that with Paris Hilton, the Paris-ites* are the ones blogging about it, whereas with the RIAA, the parasites are the ones being blogged about.
*Attribution to TV's Craig Ferguson
- RG>
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Well, Yeah (Score:1)
http://cosmiclog.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2007/06/04
and it got rejected. I can't fathom how that isn't better than this shit story.
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If John Carmack worked for Google (instead of being perhaps the greatest games programmer ever) then it'd be front page material.
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This morning my train was ten minutes late and when it arrived there wasn't enough room to squeeze on. After it left the station, an announcement came over saying that the next train would be delayed by another ~20 minutes because of a fault on the overhead lines. I drove to a station on another line and got a train which itself was running ten minutes.
When I got to the city, there we
Re:Uhh, okay. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Or, you could take a somewhat more optimistic view, and say that even though the RIAA are IP trolls, even they don't think Linux infringes anything.
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Yes! It's not that we didn't already know about the RIAA. It's not that we needed yet more evidence. We know they're a bunch of extortionists, racketeers, blustering bullies, poisonous snivelers, rabid dogs, thieves, cheats, liars, slimy weasels, delusional whiny incompetents, and moronic hypocrites. Screaming about what victims they are as they bring devastation on anyone nearby. Pond scum.
But I did expect the RIAA to stand fast with those who support intellectual property rights. I've observed tha
The missing link (Score:2)
Now TFA makes sense, eh?
Irony is Interesting (Score:2)
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Slashdot has banner ads?
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It amazes me that anyone is amazed about dumb posting material on
On Standing Up Targets (Score:2, Informative)
Well, the posited theory is that it's one of the most attacked websites. If you take this line of reasoning further, they probably hired a security consultant to figure out the most secure method of hosting a website, to alleviate problems. Maybe he specified an SELinux-based web server, and that's why they had so much downtime (heh, I kid mercilessly - Dan Walsh doe
Could it be? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Could it be? (Score:5, Funny)
I've been reading Slashdot for years now, this is the first time this happens.
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Really??? (Score:1, Flamebait)
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I honestly can't believe this got posted. Everything in this description is pure speculation and the only link is to the RIAA
It was clearly posted by the RIAA's marketing department in a desperate bid for a bit of publicity for their site. Protection rackets crave publicity because it helps them extort money and they just like showing off how they can get away with stuff (cf. the Mafia). Also, the poster [slashdot.org] is quite a new account with only one previous post (and he didn't link his name in the submission).
(For the humour impaired, no, I don't really think they posted it; just trying to make the boring drivel that passes for a stor
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Hrm? (Score:2, Funny)
I wonder (Score:5, Funny)
This is getting frustrating .... (Score:3, Funny)
All I do is hit "refresh" over and over and over and over
but nothing happens!
I sent them my 300GB of thievery (Score:2)
so are we supposed to... (Score:4, Funny)
Control passes through the teeny tiny loops of slashbot's brain for a while
ERROR: CANNOT DECIDE WHETHER THIS IS GOOD NEWS OR BAD
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Here's a mistery... (Score:4, Interesting)
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as a Linux user (Score:2, Funny)
This stinks of (Score:2)
slashdotting (Score:5, Funny)
Test before going live (Score:4, Informative)
Take snapshot of old server
Deploy snapshot on new server.
Test new server under simulated load.
Sync new server with old server. Bonus if you can keep any web boards fully functional during the transition.
Redirect DNS.
PROFIT.
Sure the details are a bit more complicated but for a single server or small farm that's the gist of it.
If you plan it right and execute it right it should go without any hiccups.
Re:Test before going live (Score:4, Insightful)
Well, they were also moving platform -- I don't know whether their old site was static HTML with only a few simple scripts or something more complicated, but that can throw a spanner in the works.
Their site currently has a message saying they're launching a new site, so I think it wasn't a simple migration. Of course, stuffing up the launch of a new site on new servers takes a special kind of ineptitude all of its own.
Sure, but they're a bunch of lawyers so they wouldn't have done any of the technical planning, and they're moving to different web hosts which means neither host particularly cares: one is the ex-host which doesn't want to waste time and money on a customer they've already lost, and the other already has their money and a contract which says "you can fuck us over for 6 months because it's too expensive to go somewhere else until that point"; and each is blaming the other for the fuck up, as per standard operating procedure.
I'm probably a bit jaded, but it's been a long time since I've received adequate customer service from any of our suppliers, much less good service; but I guess that's inevitable when the only real point of comparison you can make between companies before actually using them for a while is price.
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Deploy snapshot on new server.
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But what would be the point of migrating to Linux if you're continuing to use the same old goat pasture software?
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Take snapshot of old server
Deploy snapshot on new server.
Yes, but Linux doesn't support ASP. So they can't just copy over the old site, but have to rewrite it from scratch...
Correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't Mono [wikipedia.org] have a pluging for apache that allows ASP.NET to run on *NIX/*BSD? Not trolling, I think it's possible, but I don't know if it's been implemented yet.
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My company does 3rd party technical support for many businesses in the area... And I'll tell you right now, once you start outsourcing things there's no such thing as planning it right. We're constantly running into unexpected snags around here...the trick isn't to plan it right, it's to deal with surprises quickly and effectively.
There's always something the software vendor forgets to mention... Or mentions to the end-user, but i
Oh, well, they must be good, then! (Score:3, Funny)
No. (Score:2)
Simply enjoy the irony.
Brilliant (Score:2)
Link to Netcraft (Score:4, Informative)
Is this stuff that matters? Perhaps not for everybody, but some people may be interested. The P2Plawsuits [p2plawsuits.com] site to settle your case online instead of risking court was moved fast, but I wonder how many people would be willing to enter their credit card info on a site with an invalid SSL cert.
time == money (Score:2)
Or possibly they aren't and don't care about downtime and even less on Sundays...
Nothing to see here (Score:4, Interesting)
The RIAA likely doesn't know -- much less care -- what OS or web server is running their web site. Unless you're actually a hosting company, or a company somehow involved in web hosting such that it's worth the time and money to run your own servers, the platform is entirely handled by whoever is doing your hosting. You decide who's doing your hosting based on price and features; "Linux" or "Windows" is not a feature in and of itself. Even the security of it isn't your concern: that's a problem for the people running the servers that host your website to deal with as they see fit. You, as a hosting customer, rely on their expertise in that regard.
So, pointless speculation about the deeper meaning aside, it seems they're launching a new site and moving to a new host at the same time. Only they don't have their new site ready (or it was ready, but then turned out to be broken so they're fixing it before trying again) before they moved. That's a bit odd, unless their old site had incorrect or damaging information on it and having no website was better than leaving that content up... but a big company mismanaging the move and relaunch of a website is hardly news.
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Not true (Score:2)
Nooooooooo... (Score:3, Funny)
Naah (Score:2)
Naah, I feel freemasons must be involved somehow.
How do they get past DRM? (Score:2)
How will they play DRM-protected music and video formats?
My own guess... (Score:2)
Personally however, Red Hat wouldn't have been my own first choice, but a lot of web hosting providers do run it and I doubt the RIAA host their website in-house.
Damn commies!!! (Score:2)
Tacit support of the (Score:2)
My Winamp dines tonight!
Actually, just another excuse... (Score:2)
They seem to have managed to host the RIAA quite successfully for the past 4 years. Will Mindshift do a better job hosting one of the most reviled, and therefore most attacked, Web sites in the world? I wonder if anybody at the RIAA or TST would care to comment on the reasons behind this sudden move. Could it be that the RIAA is being sued by its hosting provider? Or perhaps the sue-happy organizaiton is suing its provider?"
Or, is this entire article just another excuse to beat up on the RIA
Obviously... (Score:2)
This isn't newsworthy (Score:2)
OP - go away.
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A better hobby is probably feeding Vogon grandmothers to the Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal.
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Welcome to
I don't have a problem with modding but it would be nice if there were more and clearer categories (as you can decide in your prefs the effect of the modding categorisation). Mods usually mod any opinion they
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More seriously, I don't understand how the story is detrimental to the RIAA's reputation (they moved hosting providers...so what?) so why would it be libelous.
Here's what I meant (Score:2)
I was referring to linux, not the RIAA. Since when was it a good thing that the most hated organization in the world uses your OS?
Re:Careful... (Score:5, Funny)
My best guess is that the RIAA has been feeding little children to alligators in third world countries and charging admission in order to pay for their webhosting, and their previous hosting company found out about it. I have no evidence that they have stopped the practice, but they may now be selling children on the black market as well because of the higher TCO for running Linux, as evidenced by all the non-libelous reports from Microsoft. Moreover, in my estimation the quickest way for the RIAA to migrate their pages to a Linux host involves slave labor in Chinese coding factories with 16 hour workdays, 7 days a week, paying the overworked programmers only One Pittance per month.It's also really easy to claim that any losses incurred during the switch were caused by "piracy." Now I'm not an expert on the RIAA or anything, but I would be completely surprised if it wasn't true.
Sue me for that, suckers.
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