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MP3.com vows to fight court order

The chief executive of music download resource MP3.com vowed that the company would fight last week's court order for it to pay $118m in damages to Universal Music Group.

John Geralds in Silicon Valley, vnunet.com 13 Sep 2000
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The chief executive of music download resource MP3.com vowed that the company would fight last week's court order for it to pay $118m in damages to Universal Music Group.

In a statement issued yesterday, Michael Robertson said MP3.com is working to reconnect users to its controversial My.MP3.com service.

A US federal judge ruled that MP3.com wilfully violated Universal Music Group's copyrighted works and ordered the company to pay $25,000 per CD.

At question is My.MP3.com, which enabled consumers to listen to the CDs they already own from MP3.com's database of music. Users were required to prove they owned a copy of the music by inserting a CD into their CDRoms.

The service was suspended after MP3.com received lawsuits from the US's five largest record companies. Robertson said he was pleased to have settled with four of the companies - Sony, BMG, EMI and Warner. However, reaching a resolution with Universal continues to be a long-term legal process.

"It's important to note that at this point no final judgment is entered in the case and we intend to pursue an appeal of all appropriate issues related to this lawsuit," said Robertson.

He pointed out that Universal has produced about 4740 copyright registrations in the litigation and that the company expects this phase of the case to end by the middle of November.

Each day some 200 digital artists post more than 1500 songs and audio files to MP3.com, according to Robertson. He said the company is working with several legislators in Washington to review current copyright laws and possibly revise them to clarify consumers' right to listen to the music they buy.

"There continues to be confusion about what a consumer can and cannot do with a CD once purchased. We feel that clarification of this aspect of the various copyright provisions should be addressed at the legislative level," he said.

Separately, independent labels Zomba Recording Company and Zomba Music Publishing yesterday sued MP3.com for copyright infringement.

See also:

MP3.com has unveiled a music system designed to connect various segments of the music industry and provide interoperability among retailers, labels, music players and hardware and software tools.  05 Jan 2001
MP3.com's controversial online CD storage facility has re-emerged as a subscription-based service with backing from the major US recording companies.  06 Dec 2000
Pop superstar David Bowie has signed a deal to allow fans to store and listen to his songs online using MP3.com's controversial My.MP3.com service.  28 Nov 2000
MP3.com has agreed to pay Universal Music Group $53.4m to settle its copyright infringement lawsuit.  15 Nov 2000
An overwhelming majority of US internet users believe that they should be allowed to listen to legally purchased music on all devices, including across the internet.  05 Oct 2000
Universal Music Group plans to digitally encode thousands of its music and video titles so they can be licensed by third-party internet music distributors.  25 Sep 2000
The music industry is still fretting about MP3-based websites and is accusing them of causing irreparable damage to its business. But the revolutionary technology is here to stay.  21 Sep 2000
A US federal judge ruled yesterday that music swapping resource MP3.com wilfully violated Universal Music Group's copyrighted works and ordered it to pay approximately $118m.  07 Sep 2000
Music swapping company MP3.com has settled its copyright lawsuit with Sony in a move that will require users to show that they have paid for CDs accessed using the service.  22 Aug 2000
The music industry has been shaken up by the emergence of MP3-based music websites such as Napster. Critics accuse them of facilitating piracy while advocates say they make it easier for unsigned musicians to have their music heard. We look at what all the fuss is about.  08 Aug 2000

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