LimeWire Settles Copyright Infringement Case 47
An anonymous reader writes "LimeWire LLC has settled the copyright infringement case brought against them by the National Music Publishers Association. The music publishers, which include Sony and Warner Music Group, sued LimeWire for copyright infringement last June. However, today all claims brought against LimeWire LLC and Chief Executive Mark Gorton were dismissed following a filing in a New York federal court. LimeWire have so far made no comments in relation to the settlement and the figure was not disclosed, but it is understood that each side will pay its own costs incurred including attorneys' fees. The music publisher's are (as always) pleased with the outcome and said 'We are pleased this litigation is over... the parties worked hard to achieve a settlement that is a good result for all involved.' LimeWire will fight on as the case brought against them by 13 record companies is due on May 2."
Why not sue everyone else? (Score:4, Interesting)
Cisco, Broadcom, Intel... hell even Darpa! Without the internet, piracy would be less of a problem. Sue everyone.
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Re:Why not sue everyone else? (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, there's always the parable of the loaves and the fishes [biblemeanings.info].
We could call it "Jesusing" or "Jesusery" instead of "Piracy."
If nothing else, it'd get the fundie xtians' panties in a wad.
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Taking this a step further, let's say we can freely copy housing as well. There goes my number 1 and number 3 largest monthly expenses: shelter and food. Take those expenses away, and I almost don't need a job anymore. That doesn't sound so bad to me...
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I'm sure there is a dystopian science-fiction novel in this concept somewhere. Replication renders all resources plentiful but energy, causing the collapse of governments - and in their place rise feudal societies in a constant struggle for land.
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Calling it Jesusing is probably not the way to go [hyperlogos.org], but it would be great if we the people of the internet could agree on an alternative term.
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DON'T COPY THAT FLOPPY! "Copy" has its own negative connotations due to the efforts of the copyright lobby.
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I like it conceptually, but I don't think it could be separated from larnin' you somethin'.
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Wait. Do you have ears?
Get in the lawsuit.
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They would if they could.
Any bets that every penny of the settlement not going to the lawyers is divvied up between the labels and applied directly to their coke and whore budget, with exactly $0 going to all their oh-so-important artists?
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Al Gore too. J/K. ;)
Hard to believe... (Score:1)
That with all their money and supposed talent... The music industry can't PAY someone to give them a clue.
Altho to be fair that would be a tough job in this case... The music industry seems to be willfully stupid.
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No the industry is smart. There is allot of money to be made in litigation.
Money (Score:5, Interesting)
Where do outfits like this get their cash? Did they really sell many copies of Limewire Pro? Their potential customer base is people that don't want to pay for music, so I wouldn't think they would be all that inclined to buy software either (especially when the free version works just fine).
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Limewire was really a pet project run by a guy who has a hedgefund and a stock trading company, i doubt cashflow was ever a worry.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Gorton [wikipedia.org]
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Gorton [wikipedia.org]
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Google mark gorton tower research capital. I'd say that's where his money came from. The lime empire is pretty big and no doubt why the record companies have fought so hard. If they can't make good music they might as well get money from people who make money.
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Not only the free version worked fine but the stuff was free software, too. Many forks existed and still exist -- not to mention LimeWire Pirate Edition. Basically, they made money practicing what they preach -- the mafiaa should have tried to learn from them instead of trying to kill them but hey...
And yeah, I had paid for the PRO version. I didn't have to, I could have grabbed a pirated version (or get stuff done with other Gnutella servents, I really like gtk-gnutella) but I just liked the idea of suppor
Re:Money (Score:5, Interesting)
Not all are too bright and the ads were pretty deceptive. I do remember reading an interview with some soccer mom that had so barely caught that this free downloading thing was illegal, so she had bought the kids Limewire Pro (or maybe one of the others, my details are vague) and thought that this was for pay, so this is legal and all that. Of course she'd gotten some copyright nastygram and was very upset and all that, couldn't understand how they were allowed to sell such a thing etc. so yes they made some sales. Funny how 30$ doesn't buy you a license to all the music and whatnot in the world, eh? Never underestimate the gullibility of many people, they might not be Nigerian scam victim-class but pretty bad anyway. The kind you see on rent-a-coder who think they'll get an iTunes clone for 200$ and such.
Reminded me of something I said before (Score:2)
"Great! Let's advertise on ThePirateBay, a site whose users are often there because they can't or won't pay for stuff."
You've read the fine article (Score:2, Informative)
Settle with what? (Score:3)
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It's not what limewire has, it's what Lime Group has and that includes a hedge fund company (Tower Research Capital LLC), a medical software company (Lime Medical), and a stock brokerage (Lime Brokerage LLC).
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1) Go to Limewire and offer them $20M in cold hard cash, an iron-clad settlement for $0 and the ability to dissolve their business peacefully in exchange for them releasing a version of Limewire that contains code that actually tracks user transactions with audio and video files. Stuff like sending back to the RIAA a list of "Windows/Mac user johnqsmith from IP address A.B.C.D successfully sent file 01 - Top Hit.mp3"
I'm sure there would be (more if there are not already) people re-naming random files to "01 - Top Hit.mp3" even if they actually are "01 - CC Song.mp3" (or "Nasty Visus.mp3.exe")
Business model (Score:2)
Good read. (Score:1)