Napster Sued For Offering Songs It Has No Rights To
from the whoops dept
Roy writes "MCS Music America, a Nashville-based company that administers copyrights for about 45,000 songs, claims Napster has put hundreds of songs controlled by MCS and its publisher clients on Napster.com without obtaining the proper licenses for paying royalties. Napster sent MCS a form seeking a licensing agreement, but neither party signed it, the suit states. After getting the inquiry, a MCS employee subscribed to Napster and found the songs were being used without permission." While the original article refers to Napster being sued "again," it's worth noting that this is a completely different Napster. It's Napster in name (and logo) only -- and has nothing else to do with the original (sued out of existence) Napster. Still, for a company that's preaching the "respect intellectual property" mantra, you'd think they'd be a little more careful about actually obtaining the rights to the songs they were selling.
3 Comments | Leave a Comment..
- Schrödinger's Download: Whether Or Not An iTunes Music Sale Is A 'Sale' Depends On Who's Suing
- We Don't Have A 'Wild West' Internet Now, But We Will If SOPA Or Similar Is Passed
- One Nation, Under Guard
- Supreme Court Denies Appeal For The Pirate Bay Founders
- White House Says It Can't Comment On Possible Chris Dodd Investigation





Reader Comments (rss)
(Flattened / Threaded)
everyone is a cocksucker
MCS: Hey you are letting people download songs you didn't buy a license for.
Napster: I'll be damned. We'll stop
or
Napster: Ok, how much are the licenses.
but no. it's straigt to sue sue sue.
[ reply to this | link to this | view in thread ]
Re: everyone is a cocksucker
[ reply to this | link to this | view in thread ]
Re: everyone is a cocksucker
It's true, I know some who are in law school for that very reason. They want to be hi-priced, rich attorneys and buy their big mansions. They've decided to cash in on the bonanza. I call it the donut effect.
1. The more attorneys there are the more litigous we become, and
2. The more litigous we are the more would-be attorneys are attracted to the field (repeat step 1)
I doubt anyone goes to law school anymore for the sake of the practice.
[ reply to this | link to this | view in thread ]
Add Your Comment