eDonkey Succumbs To RIAA

jlbenedict

Banned
Jul 10, 2005
3,724
0
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It seems to me the RIAA and entire music industry is making out more with these cases, than if they were to actually sell records.
At $30 million a pop, I'm sure that type of revenue easily exceeds what would have been music sales, if downloading never existed.

eDonkey / Record Industry Reach A Deal

"One of the last of the popular peer-to-peer music sharing sites has been defeated, with eDonkey's agreement to settle its copyright infringement case with the record industry.

In documents filed with the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York on Monday, eDonkey founders and parent company MetaMachine said they'll pay $30 million to record companies to settle the case. They also agreed to refrain from conducting any further business that might involve copying, distributing, or otherwise infringing copyrighted works.

The settlement follows just more than a month after Sharman Networks, developer of the file-sharing software Kazaa, said it would pay the entertainment industry $100 million to settle similar lawsuits. Other file-sharing companies to succumb include Grokster, which shut down last year after losing a case in front of the U.S. Supreme Court.

The eDonkey Web site now features a statement, similar to one on the Grokster site, informing visitors that illegal downloaders can be prosecuted and ominously warning visitors that they aren't anonymous by displaying and claiming to log their IP address.

The eDonkey settlement will be paid to Arista Records, Atlantic Recording, Capitol Records, Elektra Entertainment Group, Sony BMG Music Entertainment, and UMG Recordings.

Lime Wire is one of few the remaining popular file-sharing software companies, although in August a group of record companies filed a suit against it in the U.S. asking for damages that could amount to as much as $476 million.

End of P-to-P?
Late last year, eDonkey's founder predicted the demise of the file-sharing industry.
During a speech in front of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, he warned that U.S. P-to-P companies would all cease to exist because they would lack the resources to defend themselves against the record companies under the ruling he characterized as vague in the Grokster suit.

The record companies and movie studios have spent the last couple years carrying out attacks against the creators of file-sharing software, contending they should be held liable for copyright infringement by their users.

The file-sharing software developers have largely failed in their arguments that they warn users not to illegally transfer materials and so shouldn't be held responsible for how people use their products."
 

dighn

Lifer
Aug 12, 2001
22,820
4
81
damn it. I don't even use that for music. I wonder if the network will survive.
 

jlbenedict

Banned
Jul 10, 2005
3,724
0
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Originally posted by: Spikesoldier
Originally posted by: jlbenedict

End of P-to-P?


hardly.


Thats what I thought.. I'm sure P2P will not change too much. There will be other players in the game. I guess the writer of this article isn't too versed in this sort of thing :) (Nancy Gohring, IDG News Service )
 

Journer

Banned
Jun 30, 2005
4,355
0
0
this is retarded....

first goes napster...up comes big p2p...shut some down...more get popular...shut more down...torrents get popular...shut torrents down...something else gets popular...god i hate RIAA/MPAA >(
 

Spineshank

Diamond Member
Jun 8, 2001
7,728
1
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They cant beat the system, theres always gonna be something else popping up. But edonkey was great for random stuff.
 

jjones

Lifer
Oct 9, 2001
15,424
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I wonder what's going to happen with the network. The eD2K network is great for finding all kinds of general stuff, not music. I don't think I've ever used it to d/l any music.