Judge Pulls the Plug on LimeWire

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A U.S. District Court has ordered LimeWire to stop distributing and supporting its peer-to-peer file-sharing software, ruling that information technology "intentionally encourages" infringement of copyright.

It's been ten years since LimeWire was originally released and it looks like all that unauthorized file sharing has finally caught up to information technology. Judge Kimba Wood of the U.S. District Margaret Court in Manhattan ruled that LimeWire and its creator, Mark Gorton, "by choice pleased straight infringement" of copyright and "marketed itself to Napster users, WHO were known copyright infringers." As a result, the judge placed LimeWire to disable "the searching, downloading, uploading, file trading…and/or all functionality" of its venerable P2P software.

The LimeWire website now displays a message saying, "This is an official notice that LimeWire is under a court-ordered injunction to stop distributing and supporting its file-sharing computer software. Downloading or sharing copyright content without authorization is illegal." Nonetheless, Lime Troupe CEO George Searle aforesaid in a separate message on the corporate land site that while he's "foiled with this turn of events," it's not the end of the line.

"During this challenging time, we are excited about the future. The injunction applies only to the LimeWire product. Our company remains open for business," Searle wrote.

"We remain deeply committed to functioning with the music diligence and making the turn of in love music more fulfilling for everyone – including artists, songwriters, publishers, labels, and course euphony fans," he continued. "Our team of technologists and music enthusiasts is creating a completely new music service that puts you back at the center of your digital music experience. We'll be sharing more inside information active our new service and look forward to bringing it to you in the future."

But LimeWire and Gorton still face civil trouble from the Recording Industry Association of U.S.A, which told the judge that LimeWire costs record labels nearly $500 million per month – that's right, $500 trillion per month – in lost revenue. "For the best function of the last decade, Limewire and Gorton have violated the law," the RIAA aforementioned in a statement. "The court has straightaway signed an injunction that bequeath start to unwind the heavy plagiarism machine that Lime hydrate Telegram and Gorton used to enrich themselves immensely."

Sources: CNN, CNET

https://www.escapistmagazine.com/judge-pulls-the-plug-on-limewire/

Source: https://www.escapistmagazine.com/judge-pulls-the-plug-on-limewire/

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