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Neteru
07-03-05, 13:06
http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/40890000/jpg/_40890719_downloadbbc_203.jpg

The UK music industry has claimed victory in its first battle with illegal file-sharers after 23 people paid £50,000 to settle out of court.

The UK internet users, ranging from a student to a local councillor, have admitted putting out up to 9,000 songs each for other fans to download.

"These settlements show we can and we will enforce the law," the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) said. The BPI has launched a second wave of cases, pursuing 31 more file-sharers. BPI general counsel Geoff Taylor said: "We are determined to find people who illegally distribute music, whichever peer-to-peer network they use, and to make them compensate the artists and labels they are stealing from."

From the first wave, 17 men and six women aged between 22 and 58 have signed High Court undertakings admitting they illegally shared files and promising not to do it again, the BPI said. The average compensation payment was £2,200 each, with one person paying £4,500. Fifteen of the 23 used the Kazaa peer-to-peer network, four used Imesh, two used Grokster, one used WinMix and one was on BearShare.

Deterrent

The BPI said some were parents and it was "highly likely" they settled on behalf of their children. "Some parents have been genuinely shocked to discover what their children have been up to," the organisation, which represents major record companies in the UK, said.

The compensation payments will go back to music copyright holders. The music industry sees illegal downloading as theft and has blamed it for falling CD sales. The BPI said its cases were more about "deterrence than compensation". The UK action follows thousands of lawsuits against "pirates" in the US.

The BPI said the global campaign led to a 45% decline in activity on the most popular file-sharing network, Fast Track, which is used by Kazaa, since its peak in April 2003. Since then, legal alternatives such as Apple's iTunes and the new incarnation of Napster have also sprung up and become popular with fans.

Full story bbc.co.uk (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/music/4318765.stm)

Chug a Bug
07-03-05, 19:58
It's interesting that the majority of the people caught were using Kazaa. Most people deserted that network a long time ago due to the RIAA prosecutions in the US. Anybody sharing 9000 files on Kazaa is simply asking for trouble!

[ 07. March 2005, 21:06: Message edited by: Chug a Bug ]

Thorn
07-03-05, 20:40
That's a lot O' money! :eek: