As much as we hate the spyware and viruses that seem to plague files acquired through Peer-to-Peer applications, (especially those files you know you shouldn't be downloading anyway...) P2P has without a doubt changed the way we look at the Internet. Kazaa is known to just about anyone with an Internet connection and with the currning VoIP uprising, Skype, from the creators of Kazaa, is shaping up to be just as influential. BBC's Click Online interviewed Niklas Zennström, the man behind these two programs:It all started while he was working for the European low cost telco Tele 2 in the mid-1990s, where he met his friend and colleague Janus Friis.
By March 2001, the two of them had created Kazaa and were cashing in on the file-swapping boom kicked off by Napster.
What made Kazaa important was that it avoided having centralised lists of what people were swapping.
This arm's length approach kept it, and other file-sharing services like it, out of trouble.