reuters.com — Nine major record labels filed suit against an online music provider on Monday, accusing Project Playlist Inc of a "massive infringement" of their copyrights to the songs of artists such as U2 and Gwen Stefani. Project Playlist (http;//www.projectplaylist.com) enables its users to easily find, play and share music with others for free.
Apr 28, 2008 View in Crawl 4
Closed AccountApr 29, 2008
NO FOOL, SUE BINARY THAT DAMN BINARY AND HIS 10 terrorist file sharing friends, those two terrorists should be sued !!!!!
sandiegodudeApr 29, 2008
Looks like the spambots have figured out Digg's CAPTCHA... Already reported. Expect to start seeing this s**t spammed all over Digg now until they update their CAPTCHA.
tdmandApr 29, 2008
THEY'RE
brianara3Apr 29, 2008
Yes, and I pay for internet and CD-Rs when I pirate my music. Your point?
johnnyradApr 29, 2008
htttpguidedog + project playlist = filesharing
taintedtuxDec 21, 2008
This is absolutely ridiculous. Project Playlist has in no way committed copyright infringement. They simply provide an index of LEGALLY uploaded music found throughout the web. Therefore they are essentially being sued for me being able to hear a song on someone's retarded ass myspace page without having to visit the page. Basically it provides directions to a location. So, if LA is protected by copyright laws can the attendant at the 7-11 who gave me directions to the freeway to get there be sued? What complete and utter bulls**t. These lawsuits need to end. Piracy is only driven to higher levels by insane attempts to prosecute the only people willing to pay for the product in question. All we are asking is for fairness. A decent price for a CD would be a start, and how about allowing me to rip that CD onto my computer and put it on an mp3 player rather than expecting me to purchase the same album 3 or four times? Record labels are completely out of touch with the evolution of the industry. As technology progresses so must the business that supported by the technology. It's time for everyone to sit down and reach a reasonable and fair agreement. If not, well, the RIAA can kiss their asses goodbye, because short of actually taking down the internet they have no chance to stop piracy. Pirates are two steps ahead of them on technology.