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Pastimes : Current Events and General Interest Bits & Pieces

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To: Harvey Allen who wrote (12)11/13/2002 1:49:55 PM
From: Win Smith  Read Replies (3) of 603
 
Music Industry in Global Fight on Web Copies nytimes.com

[ A background article on KaZaA from a month ago. Very interesting. ]

Having vanquished the music swapping service Napster in court, the entertainment industry is facing a formidable obstacle in pursuing its major successor, KaZaA: geography.

Sharman Networks, the distributor of the program, is incorporated in the South Pacific island nation of Vanuatu and managed from Australia. Its computer servers are in Denmark and the source code for its software was last seen in Estonia.

KaZaA's original developers, who still control the underlying technology, are thought to be living in the Netherlands — although entertainment lawyers seeking to have them charged with violating United States copyright law have been unable to find them.

What KaZaA has in the United States are users — millions of them — downloading copyrighted music, television shows and movies 24 hours a day.

How effective are United States laws against a company that enters the country only virtually? The answer is about to unfold in a Los Angeles courtroom.

A group of recording and motion picture companies has asked a federal judge to find the custodians of KaZaA liable for contributing to copyright infringement and financially benefiting from it. If the group wins, it plans to demand an immediate injunction. Sharman would then have to stop distributing KaZaA or alter the program to block copyrighted material, which it says is not possible because of how its technology works.

Sharman asked the court last week to dismiss the case, asserting that because the company has no assets or significant business dealings in the United States, the court has no jurisdiction over it. Moreover, the company said, because the Internet does not recognize territorial boundaries, anything Sharman does with KaZaA at the behest of a judge in Los Angeles would affect 60 million users in over 150 countries. Arguments are scheduled for Nov. 18.

. . .

Nearly three million people typically use the KaZaA Media Desktop software at any given time, collectively providing access to half a billion files, Sharman said, roughly double Napster's usage at its peak. In addition to music, KaZaA makes it possible to trade other digital files, including pictures, text and video.
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