Activity Stream
48,167 MEMBERS
61099 ONLINE
besthostingforums On YouTube Subscribe to our Newsletter besthostingforums On Twitter besthostingforums On Facebook besthostingforums On facebook groups

Results 1 to 4 of 4
  1.     
    #1
    Member

    Default Rapidshare Fined ?24 Million by German Court

    File-sharing site Rapidshare has been hit with a big fine of ?24 million ($34 million) by the Regional Court in Hamburg, Germany, following a request by GEMA, a German copyright protection group acting on behalf of 65,000 composers and other music industry parties. The court also forbid the file-sharing site from hosting any of the 5,000 tracks from GEMA's collection.

    Rapidshare will have to delete all of the tracks currently hosted on the site and also prevent them from being uploaded again. The site had been using a hash of the files to prevent them from being re-uploaded, but that technique was deemed insufficient by the court. Obviously, the judge didn't mention what methods the file-sharing site should use and it might prove difficult, to say the least, with files being uploaded as archives, sometimes password-protected.

    ?The decision of the Hamburg Regional Court is a milestone in GEMA?s fight against the illegal use of musical works on the Internet,? Dr. Harald Heker, chief executive officer of GEMA, said. ?We are confident that in this way we will be able to reduce the illegal use of the GEMA repertoire on the Internet to a negligible level.?

    Rapidshare is expected to appeal the ruling and is hoping a higher court will restrict its scope. Bobby Chang, the company's COO, downplayed the decision and believed the music companies should offer better online alternatives to Internet users. ?We do not consider the court's decision to be a breakthrough. As other proceedings in similar disputes with GEMA have shown, there is considerable disparity amongst the individual courts in some cases,? he added, according to Billboard.biz.

    ?[W]e think that it would make more sense to work together to provide music fans with the right services at the right price and to open up a new source of income for music-markets on the Internet.?

    zomer86 Reviewed by zomer86 on . Rapidshare Fined ?24 Million by German Court File-sharing site Rapidshare has been hit with a big fine of ?24 million ($34 million) by the Regional Court in Hamburg, Germany, following a request by GEMA, a German copyright protection group acting on behalf of 65,000 composers and other music industry parties. The court also forbid the file-sharing site from hosting any of the 5,000 tracks from GEMA's collection. Rapidshare will have to delete all of the tracks currently hosted on the site and also prevent them from being uploaded Rating: 5

  2.   Sponsored Links

  3.     
    #2
    Member
    ooOPs double sorry

  4.     
    #3
    Respected Developer
    Hope it kills them, though I know it won't.

  5.     
    #4
    Banned
    Website's:
    takedownpiracy.com
    Update: We initially reported that Rapidshare was fined $34 million on the back of this report. This information is wrong, the court only stated that the value of the tracks was estimated at $34 million. The article is updated accordingly and we?re sorry for the confusion.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Similar Threads

  1. Man fined $1.5 million in damages for sharing 10 porn movies
    By Kw3rLn in forum News & Current Events
    Replies: 8
    Last Post: 6th Nov 2012, 08:16 AM
  2. Replies: 1
    Last Post: 15th Jul 2012, 02:39 AM
  3. Canadian BitTorrent User Fined $60,000 By U.S. Court
    By CyberAff in forum News & Current Events
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 16th Jun 2011, 01:06 AM
  4. Rapidshare Loses File Sharing Suit, Fined $34 Million
    By DJGaurav in forum News & Current Events
    Replies: 6
    Last Post: 2nd Aug 2009, 08:22 AM
  5. German Court Says 'Accidental' File Sharing Isn't A Crime
    By DeathKnell in forum News & Current Events
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 12th Jun 2009, 11:34 PM

Tags for this Thread

BE SOCIAL