The Recording Industry of America sucks!

The Recording Industry Assoc. of America can kiss my ass! They killed Napster, Audio Galaxy and Kazaa. Now, I have to find a new file-sharing program. Free music will never be stopped!!

The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) won a victory in court after it had the peer-to-peer LimeWire file sharing service shut down. US District Judge Kimba Wood issued a permanent injunction against LimeWire, so users will no longer be able to search, browse, and download/upload files through the LimeWire P2P client.
LimeWire first drew the attention of the RIAA in 2006, which is when the lawsuit was first filed against the file sharing service. After being launched, the service grew into one of the most popular P2P services while also proving to be a pesk for copyright holders.
Here is the notice LimeWire.com visitors are now greeted with:
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Since a court ruling in May, LimeWire was unsure how much longer it would be able to stay open as a functioning service. Company programmers even included a kill-switch in the program just in case a ruling was handed down before the end of the year.
This ruling isn’t overly shocking because the RIAA won a temporary injunction against the service in June. Shortly after the injunction, an attorney said LimeWire would technically owe a whopping $1.5 trillion fine for 200,000,000 counts of alleged copyright infringement carried out through the service.
LimeWire already is liable for millions of dollars to the RIAA and copyright holders, while company CEO Mark Gorton allegedly hid money.
The injunction focuses on the file-sharing service only, but company officials admitted they are unsure what step is next. Earlier in the year, it was disclosed LimeWire could be looking for a legal alternative to its P2P service, but details have remained quiet.
Each time the RIAA and other copyright trade groups have a service shut down, it becomes clear that there is no viable answer to stop P2P piracy, as multiple new clients and services spring up to take the place of the shuttered services.
 
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It's been going on for years, back in the 80's/90's people used to record the darn chart show so they could have the songs on tape instead of buying them. Illegal yes. Hard to control yes. Ditto those file sharing websites, I mean when Metallica sued Napster in.....I want to say 2000, it was after Flair/Steamboat at COTC, I know that much, anyway that paved the way for these to become more apparent, for every successful lawsuit there'll be five other programmes of this type ready and willing to suck you in and download music illegally, you filthy pirate you. As I said, I use Spotify to listen to music, which is 100% legal. I mean I don't actually pay for it but there is absolutely no obligation for me to do so, only the odd advert I have to put up with, but it beats paying £10 a month or whatever. I use Frostwire to download to my MP3 because A/ I can't do it on Spotify and B/ I'm not paying. Why should I when I don't have to? What I'm saying is the file sharing industry has become that big, that huge, that there is no obligation for people to pay. Sure some do out of either guilt or the fact that they like paying. Nothing against that, knock yourself out. So despite the recent shutting down of Limewire, I don't for one reason believe that they will ever be fully shut down, because it didn't happen years ago.
 
I still can't find any user-friendly, free music sites. The last torrent I tried only sent me a bunch of spyware and pissed me off.

Also, as far as recording artists losing any money because of shareware programs, it just isn't true. If Metallica lost any money before spear-heading their Napster campaign, it's because their music died. Don't blame the fans.
 
the music industry sucks?

they pay an artist £100.000,000 and they're not going to give the music away


Artists actually make very little on the sales of CD's. The vest majority of revenue from CD sales goes to the record label, the producers and the songwriters. Artists generally make their money by touring, which the record labels have almost no financial ties to.
 
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