Music Publishers File Suit To Shut Down LimeWire
After RIAA Success, Publishers Demand $150,000 Per Song
Eight members of the National Music Publishers' Association (NMPA) have filed a massive copyright infringement lawsuit against LimeWire. The suit follows a recent action filed by the RIAA that resulted in a
court decision holding LimeWire liable for inducing copyright
infringement leaving and leaving the company just days to show why the
service
should not be shut down. The publishers’ suit is filed as a
related case.
The music publishers filed the lawsuit against LimeWire and its top executives in US District Court for the Southern District of New York. They are asking $150,000 for each song illegally distributed by the company which could bring total damages to hundreds of millions of dollars.
"Pervasive online infringement...
has consequences for everyone in the music chain."
The eight plaintiffs come from the ranks of North America's top
music publishers including companies affiliated with all four major label groups: EMI Music Publishing, Sony/ATV Music Publishing, Universal Music Publishing Group, Warner/Chappell Music, Inc., Bug Music, MPL Music Publishing, Peermusic, and The Richmond Organization. Named as defendants are LimeWire LLC, Lime Group LLC, LimeWire CEO Mark Gorton, former COO and CTO Greg Bildson, and M.J.G. LimeWire Family Limited Partnership.
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