RIAA files more suits
Industry targets users of Grokster, LimeWire, Kazaa
 http://www.variety.com/VR1117925317.html

By WILLIAM TRIPLETT

WASHINGTON -- Despite Monday's Supreme Court decision allowing copyright
holders to sue peer-to-peer services wholesale, the recording industry
launched yet another round of litigation against individual downloaders
Wednesday.

The Recording Industry Assn. of America announced 784 lawsuits filed in
federal district courts across the country, including California, Colorado,
Georgia, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia and
Washington, D.C.

Suits specifically target people who are "illegally distributing copyrighted
music on the Internet via unauthorized peer-to-peer services such as Kazaa,
LimeWire and Grokster," according to the RIAARIAA statement.

The Supreme Court ruled Monday that P2P services Grokster and StreamCast
could be sued if they "actively induce" their users to illegally swap
copyrighted material. Lower courts had blocked the entertainment industry's
attempt to sue.

Immediately following the high court ruling, industry officials and
executives said the Grokster-StreamCast suit was just one piece of a
multipronged attack on online piracy. The RIAA has been suing individual
downloaders since 1999. Wednesday's suits bring the total to 12,575.

The RIAA said it launched fresh suits "as part of its continued efforts to
promote legal online services, educate fans about the right and wrong way to
enjoy digital music and enforce its rights through the legal system."



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