May 8, 2008

Entertainment Industry Wins a Round on Piracy

torrentspy_logo.png In what was seen as a victory for entertainment companies, a federal judge in Los Angeles issued damages totaling $111 million against an Internet company that helped users find copyright material free. The Wall Street Journal reports.

The defendant, Valence Media LLC's TorrentSpy, was one of the Web's largest "torrent trackers," meaning it helped people find movies and other material they might want to download. TorrentSpy closed in March, telling users on its site the legal climate was "simply too hostile." It didn't store the video files on its own site but directed users to other locations.

The dollar value of the award -- which Judge Florence-Marie Cooper said she calculated by assigning a value of $30,000 to each of the 3,699 infringements shown -- should get the attention of people running similar sites. But they are largely based overseas and out of reach of U.S. law.

It is unlikely the movie companies that sued will get nearly the total damages. Valence Media's principals have declared bankruptcy. Valence is based in Nevis, a Caribbean island, and has filed for bankruptcy protection. The defendants plan to appeal, their lawyer, Ira Rothken, said."

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emily | 7:57 AM | Copypright Issues | Add this this entry to your del.icio.us bookmarks. Digg This Technorati search results for this Entry
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