GAMES: GameSpot: Best of 2008 | GameFAQs | SportsGamer MUSIC: Last.fm | MP3.com MOVIES: Metacritic | Movietome TV: TV.com
Click Here
LimeWire bites back in P2P war
By Jim Welte - MP3.com
September 26, 2006 at 11:52:00 AM | more stories by this author

Unlike most of its P2P counterparts, file-sharing service files a countersuit against the music industry, alleging anticompetitive practices and consumer fraud.

In the 15 months since the US Supreme Court's landmark decision on peer-to-peer file sharing, most of the major P2P outfits have either paid settlements to the RIAA and folded or gone legit.

LimeWire CEO Mark Gorton LimeWire CEO Mark Gorton

All but two, that is.

While Morpheus operator Streamcast, one of the named defendants in that landmark case, continues its legal battle with the music industry, another P2P giant is fighting back.

LimeWire, sued by the major record labels last month for copyright infringement, filed a countersuit yesterday in US District Court in New York, alleging antitrust violations, consumer fraud, and anticompetitive practices.

In the complaint, LimeWire doesn't address the copyright infringement claims against it. Instead, the suit argues that the major record labels "have unreasonably and concertedly refused to do business with LimeWire," in an attempt to "prevent the use of decentralized peer-to-peer technology for the secure distribution of licensed, copyrighted content."

The complaint based its anticompetitive practices charges on digital music ventures that the major labels have or have had stakes in, such as digital retail platform maker MusicNet and failed online retailer pressplay, which eventually became the latest version of Napster.

The countersuit also points to the labels' relationship with Mashboxx and iMesh, two of the industry-supported legal P2P services. The claim says that P2P firms seeking to go legit have been forced to adopt the model used by iMesh, which uses acoustic fingerprinting technology developed by Audible Magic to police its networks of illegal files.

"The [labels] have concertedly promoted the distribution of licensed content through companies in which many of the [labels] and business affiliates have or had direct equity interests, such as MusicNet, pressplay, and Roxio, or through business entities that they have a relationship with, such as iMesh or Mashboxx," the counterclaim reads.

But in an email, Mashboxx CEO Wayne Rosso told MP3.com that although securing licensing deals from all four major labels has been "an extremely thorough" process, his firm hasn't been forced to adopt one particular solution.

"As far as I know, neither the RIAA or any of the labels have insisted or even suggested that Limewire or any other P2P use a specific solution if they desired to become an authorized service," Rosso wrote.

"This case is but one part of a much larger modern conspiracy to destroy all innovation that content owners cannot control and that disrupts their historic business models," the counterclaim alleges.

Back to Today's News »

12 Comments

Oldest First | Newest First
very clearly expressed information
Posted 05/29/2009 2:21am
they have a great cms here
Posted 05/24/2009 10:26pm
this is just what i was looking for
Posted 05/22/2009 5:02pm
GO GO Limewire
Posted 10/05/2006 10:50am
Props to them...LimeWire has balls.
Posted 09/29/2006 9:05pm
go limewire!!! screw the music industry
Posted 09/27/2006 10:49pm
I agree with FallenOneX, they supply all the products, I have a sony mp3 player and guess waht it plays? Mp3s! How? If ripping cds is illegal? I do understand how the artist take time and effort to make this music, but I do buy CDs of people I REALLY like, I can't in my wildest dreams afford to buy everything I feel like checking out, so I download it... I buy albums of artists I like to support them, and if I was an artist I would appreciate others to do the same. If someone really cares for my music, they will buy the disc. They will never really stop the music sharing online, it's ridicilous... and it's not like the artist lose some really big money from it, most people who download might not bother buying a CD anyway...
Posted 09/27/2006 5:16pm
Can someone explain this to me? I've asked this question and received no answer. How can Sony sell me a computer with CD ripping programs (pre-installed),with a DVD/CD burner, sell me the blank discs, and then try and sue me when I copy and burn music? Oh, BTW, they'll also sell me a portable CD player that'll play burned MP3 discs. I know that stealing is wrong , but that's like having a known drug addict in charge of guarding evidence for the DEA. What did they think was going to happen!
Posted 09/27/2006 11:24am
FINALLY. Somebody's fighting back. Good for you, Limewire--keep those ridiculous lawsuits down.
Posted 09/26/2006 3:57pm
I dont get whats the big deal if you use LimeWire isnt it the same as sharing a cd with someone
Posted 09/26/2006 3:53pm
Go LIMEWIRE! Show them who's boss!
Posted 09/26/2006 1:36pm
I hope it goes well for them, but the bottom line is that the RIAA is a **** and theyre probably not going to let this one go. Heck they bought the supreme court.
Posted 09/26/2006 1:20pm
Sign up now to post a comment!

Tags

add
Data Warehouse Clear Gif