Another 230,142 Napster members have become temporary casualties in the battles between the record industry and the music-swapping software company.
Published:
5 June 2000 y., Monday
Rap artist Dr. Dre submitted a list of hundreds of thousands of usernames to the software company last week, alleging that all of them had illegally made his songs available as free downloads online. Like hard rock band Metallica before him, the artist demanded that Napster block these people from its service. Friday morning, when these rap fans tried to log in to the service, they found themselves banned. "The artist Dr. Dre has requested that your access to Napster be terminated for alleged copyright infringement," read a statement from the company that appeared in place of the service itself. Napster went down this same road with more than 300,000 Metallica fans several weeks ago, risking the anger of many members to comply with federal copyright laws it hopes will protect the company in court. The company is fighting several
lawsuits that say it is contributing to massive copyright violations. It is claiming legal protections ordinarily extended to
traditional Internet service providers, which are not responsible for material hosted or transmitted over their services. But to keep
these protections, the company must respond quickly to the concerns of copyright holders such as Dr. Dre and Metallica.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
The Pakistan government claims India has shut down local Internet access in the troubled region of Kashmir and is policing Internet cafes in an effort to restrict communications between Pakistan and Kashmir.
more »
A US man is being sued for allegedly posting a misleading financial information on Yahoo's! Finance bulletin board last October.
more »
Reservations company hopes technology can help identify suspected terrorists
more »
As leasing increases, company boosts earnings by giving second life to used PCs, selling returned items on the Web or stripping them for their parts.
more »
Some stores ignore security, putting consumer funds at risk
more »
All Hong Kong's 6.8 million residents will be offered free digital IDs for use in secure online transactions when a new "smart" national identity card is introduced in mid-2003.
more »
Yahoo Japan Corp said Tuesday the news most frequently searched for this year on its Web portal site was about the Sept 11 terrorist attacks on New York and Washington.
more »
Online auction leader eBay has quietly ended its much publicized Auction for America, launched as a charitable mechanism to raise $100 million in 100 days for the families of those who died Sept. 11.
more »
This week's Cybershake outlines how tourists can take a virtual tour of the White House's holiday decorations
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »