Search for: "Downloader 24" Results 3521 - 3540 of 3,699
Sort by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
24 Oct 2007, 3:28 am
A series of raids in Middlesbrough and Amsterdam resulted in the arrest of a 24-year-old man and the closure of Oink, a private website that allowed users to locate and download music, movies and other files. [read post]
23 Oct 2007, 3:05 pm
It sells you and your services and operates 24/7, at almost no cost to you. [read post]
23 Oct 2007, 4:20 am
[…] British police said they arrested the 24-year-old on suspicion of conspiracy to defraud and infringement of copyright law. [read post]
19 Oct 2007, 1:07 am
Instead, he said that because the songs could have been purchased online for about $24, the $222,000 verdict was disproportionate and amounted to punitive damages. [read post]
16 Oct 2007, 10:44 am
A Duluth, Minnesota jury ordered Jammie Thomas to pay the RIAA $222,000 for pirating 24 songs on the Kazaa system in 2005. [read post]
16 Oct 2007, 8:48 am
The 24 songs were downloaded to MediaSentry'' â€â [read post]
14 Oct 2007, 3:29 pm
Castaneda" 11/30/08"Motions to Quash After Judge Gertner's November 24, 2008, Decision in London Sire Records v. [read post]
13 Oct 2007, 10:38 am
Posted October 12, 2007 | 11:15 AM (EST)Last week the RIAA won its lawsuit against Jamie Thomas, a Minnesota woman who put 24 songs in her Kazaa shared folder. [read post]
10 Oct 2007, 3:18 pm
Thomas):EFF to Weigh in on First RIAA Downloading Trial AppealBy David Kravets October 08, 2007 | 6:07:32 PMThe Electronic Frontier Foundation, which is litigating the government's secret wiretap program, said Monday it will lend a legal hand to Jammie Thomas, the nation's first pirate to lose a federal jury trial in a case brought by the Recording Industry Association of America.Thomas and her attorney, Brian Toder, said Monday they would appeal the $222,000 verdict a Duluth,… [read post]
10 Oct 2007, 10:41 am
I missed the news about a music downloading trial in Duluth which this post covered.According to Hegg (who, by the way, says he has never been on the Internet), at least two of the jurors wanted to award the maximum damages of $150,000 for each of the 24 songs at issue, while one adamantly held out for the minimum, $750 per. [read post]
9 Oct 2007, 11:17 am
District Court in Duluth would have found her liable even if the plaintiffs had been required to establish that Kazaa users had actually downloaded the music. [read post]
8 Oct 2007, 4:07 pm
Jurors were not required to find that somebody else downloaded the 24 songs at issue in the Thomas case. [read post]
8 Oct 2007, 1:42 pm
Had the 24 songs been downloaded via iTunes or Napster at 99 cents a pop, they would have cost $23.76. [read post]
8 Oct 2007, 3:55 am
(I'm actually surprisingly bold from the sidelines).Oh yeah, the 24 tracks Ms. [read post]
5 Oct 2007, 10:04 am
In a major victory for the music industry, a jury has ordered a Minnesota woman to pay a whopping damages award for copyright violations after downloading music files using the Kazaa file-sharing programme.Wall Street Journal Law Blog has the story:The jury found a Minnesota woman named Jammie Thomas liable for willful copyright infringement, awarding the music companies a total of $220,000, or $9,250 for each of the 24 works the music industry said the woman uploaded. [read post]
5 Oct 2007, 6:10 am
Jammie Thomas, a single mother in northern Minnesota, was found liable for illegally downloading 24 songs via Kazaa, and the jury awarded damages of $222,000, or $9250 per song. [read post]