electricsheep    
border
border
 

April 5, 2003

 

pixel RIAA Seeks Estimated $97.8 Billion From MTU Student
Lawsuits against four college students accused of trading copyrighted songs are the biggest punch yet by the recording industry against its core audience, and has experts worried that the next step will be suing the colleges themselves.

The Recording Industry Association of America filed the suits Thursday in three federal courts, naming one student each at Michigan Technological University and Princeton University and two others from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute who ran Napster-like file-sharing services on their campus computer networks.

The damages sought by the suits are astronomical: $150,000 per song, the maximum allowed by law. Multiply that by the 652,000 or so songs the RIAA alleges student Joseph Nievelt offered to other Michigan Tech students on his service, and the scope of the suit is clear.

That total? About $97.8 trillion -- yes, trillion with a T -- Lawsuits against four college students accused of trading copyrighted songs are the biggest punch yet by the recording industry against its core audience, and has experts worried that the next step will be suing the colleges themselves.

The Recording Industry Association of America filed the suits Thursday in three federal courts, naming one student each at Michigan Technological University and Princeton University and two others from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute who ran Napster-like file-sharing services on their campus computer networks.

The damages sought by the suits are astronomical: $150,000 per song, the maximum allowed by law. Multiply that by the 652,000 or so songs the RIAA alleges student Joseph Nievelt offered to other Michigan Tech students on his service, and the scope of the suit is clear.

That total? About $97.8 trillion -- yes, trillion with a T -- (Editor's Note: 150k X 652k = $97,800,000,000 which is nearly 98 Billion) or enough money to buy every CD sold in America last year over again for the next 120,000 years, according to RIAA statistics. And that's just Nievelt's case.or enough money to buy every CD sold in America last year over again for the next 120,000 years, according to RIAA statistics. And that's just Nievelt's case.

» READ | 5 April 2003 | » Top


 

pixel 50 million historical documents posted on Web
Researchers, genealogists and the plain curious can now use the Internet to check more than 50 million historical records at the National Archives, from Civil War battles to family immigration files.

Before the system became available, people had to either visit the Archives and spend hours combing through documents or request the files by phone and pay to have them mailed.

"Now, people can pull these electronic records at their own convenience," said Michael Carlson, electronic and special media records director for the archives. "It's totally self-service from your desktop."

The records available on the database system represent a small fraction of the archive's electronic holdings. They were selected because of their analytical and statistical nature -- most deal with information that easily can be looked up based on specific names, dates, organizations, cities or states.

» READ | 5 April 2003 | » Top


 

pixel Iceland Plans to Catch Hundreds of Large Whales
Whale conservationists around the world have condemned Iceland's proposal submitted this week to the International Whaling Commission to begin whaling under the convention's scientific research provisions.

The plan would allow Iceland to catch 100 fin whales, 50 sei whales and 100 northern minke whales each year. Both fin and sei whales are classified as endangered by IUCN, the World Conservation Union.

Although Iceland has declared that the "research proposal" is confidential, details were leaked in the Reykjavik newspaper "Morgunbladid." The paper quotes Fisheries Minister Arni Matthiesen as saying that the aim of the research is to investigate the cetaceans' diet, their distribution and numbers, and their interaction with other marine species. These are the same justifications used by Japan which takes almost 900 minke whales a year under the guise of scientific research.

» READ | 5 April 2003 | » Top


WinTasks 4 Pro

Wintasks 4 Professional Review


Matrox Parhelia

Microsoft Optical Mouse Gallery


Matrox Parhelia

Icemat Mouse Pad Review


Antec SX-1040B Case

Antec SX 1040 B (Black) Case Review


Microsoft Wireless IntelliMouse Explorer

Microsoft Wireless IntelliMouse Explorer Review


Replace Wireless IntelliMouse

How to Replace A Broken Microsoft IntelliMouse


Plextor Drive Bezel Black

Plextor Black Drive Bezel Review


Microsoft Office Keyboard Black

Microsoft Office Keyboard Review


Razer Boomslang 2000

Razer Boomslang 2000 Review


Clean Your Keyboard

How To Clean Your Keyboard


Mushkin PC2100 RAM

Mushkin PC2100 CL2 Review


Silver Rounded ATA Cables

Rounded Silver ATA Cables Review


Razer Boomslang 1000

Razer Boomslang 1000 Review


 

border