RIAA hit with civil suit
RIAA hit with civil suit
R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

P2P company wants RIAA to face the music

Altnet accuses US trade body of patent infringement

Dinah Greek, vnunet.com 10 Sep 2004
ADVERTISEMENT

The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) is being given a taste of its own medicine by peer-to-peer (P2P) company Altnet, which has launched a civil suit against the trade body alleging patent infringement.

Altnet is partly owned by Sharman Networks, which developed the Kazaa P2P site, and sells music, movies and video games through P2P sites.

It has accused the RIAA and a number of other companies of infringing its copyright as they try to enforce copyright laws regarding P2P sites.

Altnet and its parent company Brilliant Digital Entertainment allege that every time the RIAA or its contractors post spoof versions of songs in P2P sites they violate Altnet's patented technology for identifying files on the networks.

"Altnet alleges that some of the defendants infringe on its patents to spoof P2P users with bogus or corrupted media files," the company said.

"Altnet alleges that this has inhibited the growth of P2P for legitimate file sharing that benefits copyright holders (which Altnet advocates), and thereby has injured its business."

Kevin Bermeister, chief executive at Altnet, said in a statement: "We have exhausted every means of trying to work with these defendants and those they represent to patiently encourage and positively develop the P2P distribution channel.

"We cannot stand by and allow them to erode our business opportunity by the wholesale infringement of our rights."

The RIAA did not respond to request for comment for this article.

See also:

RIAA targets 761 alleged file sharersHundreds of alleged downloaders hit with lawsuits  19 Nov 2004
Legal action loomingBritish Phonographic Industry targets 'hardcore' UK uploaders  04 Oct 2004
RIAA court challengeISPs will now have to match IP addresses to people  30 Jul 2004
New laws to fight piracyArt Act and Pirate Act provide sweeping new powers to imprison offenders  28 Jun 2004
Legal music downloadsThe music industry has finally worked out how to make money out of internet music downloads. But will legal online music services be as popular as P2P sites?  18 Jun 2004
Half a million tracks legally downloaded  07 Jun 2004

All Ecommerce

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story
R E A D E R   C O M M E N T S

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
Maidstone, United Kingdom | Kent Police
  Assistant Forensic Computer Analyst - Police Headquarters, Maidstone, £20,164 - £23,632 Permanent Contract Digital devices and information communication technology are present in almost every investigation the police service undertakes. Kent Police Digital Forensics Unit ... more >
United Kingdom | London School of Economics and Political Science
  London School of Economics and Political Science The Library Analyst Programmer (fixed term 24 months) Salary: £30,201 - £36,563 pa incl The Library is at the heart of LSE, one of the world's greatest ... more >
York, North Yorkshire, United Kingdom | MyKnowledgeMap Ltd
Web Developers, York, North Yorkshire, Up to £28,000 depending on experience and pension A fantastic opportunity has just opened for enthusiastic Web Developers. Successful candidates will join the company's expanding team of developers, working on ... more >
United Kingdom | MI5 Security Service
Network and Systems Engineers Working for MI5 you will use your expertise to protect the UK from terrorism, espionage and other threats to national security. You'll be joining a team that provides essential technical analysis ... more >
More job opportunities