LimeWire digital music store launches
digg_url = "http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2008/03/17/limewire-digital-music-store-launches/";
About half a year after announcing plans to open an online music store, LimeWire has followed through on its threat promise to go at least partially legit. The LimeWire store features about half a million tracks from a diverse set of mostly independent or minor label artists that you may or may not ...
Before BitTorrent was all the rage in peer to peer file sharing, you may remember that the easiest way to illegally obtain music, movies, and other files was through file sharing programs like Lime Wire, BearShare, Morpheus. You know, the children of Napster. Of course, now Napster's gone legit and sells music. It looks like Lime Wire is looking to follow suit. The company has announced plans to ...
Another one bites the dust folks, well not yet. Morpheus, the p2p file sharing network owned by StreamCast, lost its case in court. The network, like many others is now in danger of being shut down because of copyright infringement charges. LimeWire was similarly sued by the RIAA in August, as well as Grokster, Napster, Kazaa, and many others. Some of these networks have been shut-down, had to ...
Lime Group LLC, the company behind peer to peer application LimeWire, sued today in federal court by the RIAA for damages including $150,000 per occurance of copyright infringing files. The complaint seeks damages on the grounds that LimeWire, and thus Lime Group LLC, facillitated the trade of copywritten music between users and profited as a result of LimeWire's failure to "block" copyright ...
I put a question at the end of that title
because I'm not sure if this is really kosher or not. Let your conscience be your guide. It's pretty obvious that,
using p2p, you can get the Pro version of LimeWire (or
nearly any other app) for free. But using the GPL to allow for the pro version to download for free anyway? Pretty
obvious as well, since the pro version is open source, you could just ...
Slyck News has put
together a list of their picks for the biggest winners and losers in
file-sharing for 2005. File sharing's winners? BitTorrent, Apple, LimeWire, The Pirate Bay, and open source. The
losers? Sony-BMG, Kazaa owners Sharman Networks, Grokster, pay P2P, and, of course, perennial loser the RIAA. I'd
personally add to the winners list Fiona Apple, whose new album, which is being ...





