Subject: FTP Internet and Technology News Record Industry Sues 754 for
Internet Song Swaps


Record Industry Sues 754 for Internet Song Swaps
Thu Dec 16, 2004 04:04 PM ET
By Andy Sullivan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A recording industry trade group said Thursday that
it has
filed another wave of lawsuits against 754 people it suspects of
distributing songs
over the Internet without permission.
The Recording Industry Association of America has now sued more than 7,000
people
for distributing its songs over "peer to peer" networks like eDonkey and
Kazaa, in
an effort to discourage the online song copying that it believes has cut
into CD
sales.
The RIAA typically settles copyright infringement suits for around $5,000
each.
Despite more than a year of headline-grabbing lawsuits, peer-to-peer use has
not
declined. An average of 7.5 million users were logged on to peer-to-peer
networks
in November 2004, up from 4.4 million in November 2003, according to the
research
firm BigChampagne.
The four major labels -- Vivendi Universal, Sony BMG Music Entertainment,
EMI Group
Plc and privately held Warner Music -- have recently begun to license their
songs
to a new generation of online services as a way to slash distribution costs
and reach
out to fans.
But recording-industry officials remain at loggerheads with software makers
like
Grokster and Morpheus that allow users to freely copy their songs.
"With legal online retailers still forced to compete against illegal free
networks,
the playing field remains decidedly unbalanced," said RIAA president Cary
Sherman
in a statement.
Courts so far have declined to declare peer-to-peer software makers like
Grokster
and Morpheus illegal because, like a photocopier, they do not permit
copyright infringement
but merely make it possible.
The Supreme Court will hear the entertainment's case against Grokster and
Morpheus
in March.
The latest round of lawsuits included students at Columbia University, the
University
of Pennsylvania, Old Dominion University and Virginia Commonwealth
University.
Under pressure form the RIAA, many schools have taken steps to limit file
sharing
and at least 20 schools give students free access to industry-sanctioned
download
services like Roxio Inc.'s Napster.
The RIAA does not yet know the names of those it has sued, only the
numerical addresses
used by their computers. The trade group typically finds out suspects'
identities
from their Internet service providers during the legal proceedings.
Copyright Reuters 2004. All Rights Reserved.


For The People  supplies this information  as a service and does
not endorse it or recommend any action being taken based upon it.  Any
decisions taken, by the subscriber, are entirely your own responsibility.
This is an announce only list.  All replies will go only to the list
moderator.
Our subscribers are the source of some of the material posted to this list.
If you have an article you believe to be suitable for this list, send it to.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
If we agree, it will be posted to the list.
To unsubscribe from this list, press Enter on the link below.  A
pre-addressed message will pop up, simply send it.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
If you wish to recommend this list to a friend, send the following link to
them.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
We hope that you're enjoying this list.
www.for-the-people.com



_______________________________________________
PC-Audio List Help, Guidelines, Archives and more... 
http://www.pc-audio.org

To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to