RIAA - Making Friends and Creating Smiles
Published August 28, 2003
Filesharing Service:
1058 KaZaA
28 iMesh
18 Grokster
13 Gnutella (Bearshare)
11 MP2P (Blubster & Piolet)
10 Gnutella (Limewire)
4 (blank)
2 Gnutella (Shareaza)
1 Bearshare
And customers aren't the only people who feel violated by the RIAA: small webcasters hate them too:
- A group of small Webcasters on Wednesday filed an antitrust suit against the Recording Industry Association of America, alleging that the trade association tried to push independent music stations offline.
The Webcaster Alliance has been threatening to sue the RIAA for months, after Congress ratified royalty rates for Internet radio stations that many small operators said will drive them out of business. The existing rates were negotiated between a small, unrepresentative group of Webcasters and the RIAA and are aimed at eliminating competition, the alliance members said.
"We have watched the RIAA's actions...(which) have the effect of wiping out an entire industry of independent Webcasters who represent freedom of choice and diversity for Internet radio listeners," Ann Gabriel, president of the Webcaster Alliance, said in a statement. "It is time for the RIAA to be held accountable for years of manipulating an entire industry in order to stifle the growth of independent music and control Internet content and distribution channels."
....In June 2002, the Library of Congress finally set the rate at about 0.07 of a cent per song, with the fees retroactive to 1998. Small companies protested, saying that rate would put them out of business. Congress intervened, and after several start-and-stop initiatives, passed a bill that's aimed at protecting small Net stations.
....Some Webcasters found the new model better, but others--particularly those who had been left out of the negotiations--cried foul. They sought a new agreement with the RIAA, but the record label group said it had already settled the issue.
Saying they lacked any other avenue, the alliance members threatened to sue, a promise culminating in Wednesday's lawsuit.
The Webcaster Alliance suit alleges that the big record companies and the RIAA conspired with each other and ultimately with the Voice of Webcasters group to eliminate small Net radio stations that play independent music. [CNET]
- RIAA - Making Friends and Creating Smiles
- Published: August 28, 2003
- Type:
- Section: Sci/Tech
- Filed Under: Sci/Tech: Internet, Culture: Media, Music: News
- Writer: Eric Olsen
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The EFF has some great, albeit dated, audio stuff (congressional hearings and the like) on their website for those who want to listen while they work.
I am in the (small?) crowd that has never downloaded or used any of the listed RIAA target applications:
1058 KaZaA
28 iMesh
18 Grokster
13 Gnutella (Bearshare)
11 MP2P (Blubster & Piolet)
10 Gnutella (Limewire)
4 (blank)
2 Gnutella (Shareaza)
1 Bearshare
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Looks like they are pretty much ignoring the IRC fserv channels, huh? (or maybe that is the "blank"?). Some of the heaviest file trading has happened on IRC for years, so I think the RIAA is biased to P2P for it's simplicity to operate.