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STUDIOS WIN $111 MILLION FROM BITTORRENT SITE
Thursday, May 8 2008
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The six major studios represented by the Motion Picture Association of America have won a copyright-infringement lawsuit against the file-sharing website TorrentSpy.com amounting to $111 million. The judgment awarded $30,000 to the studios for each of 3,699 illegal downloads. Faced with the legal burden of defending itself, TorrentSpy shut down in March. The fine is believed to be one of the largest ever involving copyright piracy. Last October a disgruntled former TorrentSpy associate, Robert Anderson, told Wired magazine that the MPAA paid him $15,000 for inside information about the website and that he eventually was able to hack into its email system and deliver banking, software, password and other confidential information to the MPAA.
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CANADIAN TV EMBRACES BITTORRENT
Thursday, March 20 2008
BitTorrent,
the
file-sharing
technology
that
is
the
bane
of
the
movie
industry
and
TV
networks,
which
claim
that
it
facilitates
piracy,
has
been
embraced
by
the
Canadian
Broadcasting
Corp.
The
CBC
announced
Wednesday
that
on
March
24th
it
will
become
the
first
major
broadcaster
in
North
America
to
release
a
high
quality,
DRM-free
copy
of
a
primetime
show
using
BitTorrent
technology.
The
Canadian
network
said
that
it
plans
to
make
the
final
episode
of
its
(more)
MPAA WANTS FCC TO ALLOW 'MANAGED' INTERNET FLOW
Monday, March 3 2008
The
Motion
Picture
Association
of
America
does
not
want
the
FCC
to
hinder
Internet
service
providers'
ability
to
"manage"
the
flow
of
bandwidth-heavy
downloads
on
their
systems.
In
a
filing
with
the
commission,
the
studio
group
said,
"Allowing
Internet-service
providers
to
address
capacity
and
piracy
abuses
is
the
best
way
of
providing
consumers
with
a
dynamic,
content-rich
broadband
experience."
As
reported
by
Broadcasting
&
Cable
magazine,
NBCU
said
in
a
separate
filing
that
a
"tidal
(more)
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