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BBC News Online: World: Americas


Saturday, 24 June, 2000, 05:15 GMT 06:15 UK

Music giants sue 'pirates'


MP3Board.com
By BBC News Online's Kevin Anderson in Washington

Some of America's biggest recording labels have brought another court case against an internet site which allows users to download popular music for free.

Industry giants such as Sony, Music Entertainment and Warner Brothers Records accuse MP3Board.com of musical piracy.

The law suit alleges that the site links users to illegal copies of copyright-protected music, which they can then download free of charge.

It claims the site has become a centralised and leading resource for pirates seeking illegal copies of virtually any recording and has become one of the most visited music sites on the web.

Music war

MP3Board.com uses compression technology that allows CD quality audio files to be easily stored on home computers and distributed over the internet.

However, lawyers for the company say it merely provides a search service that allows users to easily locate music on the internet.

This is just the latest suit the world's recording companies have brought against sites which allow users to download high-quality copies of popular music.

Earlier this year the recording industry won a suit against MP3.com - another unrelated music site - which agreed to begin paying licensing fees to major recording labels for the copyrighted music it provided.

The industry has also filed a suit against music software company Napster, which makes a programme that allows users to search for and share music files easily over the internet.

The suits come as the music industry is struggling to develop its own online sales and distribution strategy.


Related to this story:
EMI enters digital music arena (10 May 00 | Business)
The music industry's MP3 headache (09 May 00 | Entertainment)
Internet 'transforms music industry' (18 Jan 00 | Business)
Napster closure threat (13 Jun 00 | Business)
MP3.com settles suit (09 Jun 00 | Business)
Metallica's offline request (04 May 00 | Entertainment)


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