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BBC News Online: Business


Wednesday, 11 April, 2001, 06:42 GMT 07:42 UK

Judge threatens to close Napster


Shawn Fanning creator of Napster
A judge in the United States has attacked the efforts of the Napster internet music-swapping service to comply with her order to stop providing copyrighted music.

At a hearing in San Francisco, Judge Marilyn Hall Patel threatened to order the immediate closure of Napster if it did not find a more effective filtering system.



You created this monster, you figure it out
Judge Patel

Napster provides a service used by millions of people around the world, who - until Judge Patel's order - were able to download free copies of almost any music they wanted from the libraries of other music lovers using the system.

Napster told the judge it was doing its best to comply with her order, and had already blocked almost two million copyrighted tracks being offered on its server.

Napster logo
The judge stopped short of closing Napster and said a court-appointed expert would review the claims.

"You created this monster, you figure it out," she told Napster's operators.

An association representing record companies in the US accused Napster of flouting Judge Patel's 5 March ruling that the site was letting its users engage in wholesale copyright infringement.

The site said it has done everything it can to comply, installing filtering software to block out restricted songs.

And it argues that record companies have given it confusing lists of songs.

The record industry has been battling against Napster for months, fearing that the rapidly growing popularity of the system will cut the number of CDs sold, and thus their profits.


Related to this story:
Yahoo joins online music venture (05 Apr 01 | Business) Napster rallies its troops (03 Apr 01 | Americas) Music giants form Napster rival (03 Apr 01 | Business) Napster faces new legal challenge (22 Mar 01 | Business) Record industry attacks Napster filter (28 Mar 01 | Business)


Internet links: Recording Industry Association of America | Artists Against Piracy | Coalition for the Future of Music | Napster |
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