MPA sues authors of Chinese p2p application
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Mon Feb 18, 08 05:06 PM
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The
world-conquering antipiracy organizations took strike to clear the mess
also in wild (in terms of piracy) China now. All six members of the
Motion Picture Association (MPA) have filed copyright infringement
suits in China against Shenzhen Xunlei Networking Technology (Xunlei),
a popular peer-to-peer file sharing network operator, the MPA said
Friday. The companies are seeking damages and legal fees in excess of 7
million renminbi (US$975,000) in the cases. The MPA members are also
seeking a public admission to the alleged copyright infringement and a
pledge from Xunlei to refrain from future infringements. The civil complaints were filed in the Shanghai Pudong District Court.
Xunlei offers downloads of popular peer-to-peer file sharing software Thunder5 and WebThunder
from its Web site. The names of the two downloads have been translated
to English from Chinese. Xunlei means Thunder in Chinese. Early last
year, the New York Times reported
that Xunlei attracted a US$5 million investment from U.S. search giant
Google, in return for a 4 percent stake in Xunlei. The MPA members
allege Xunlei’s software is responsible for the unauthorized trading of
hundreds of MPA member movie titles, and listed 32 titles on the
complaint, including ‘Spiderman 3,’ ‘War of the Worlds’ and ‘Miami
Vice.’ Legal counsel for the MPA sent 78 notices of infringement to
Xunlei over a five week period before starting the suit, the MPA said.
Xunlei could not immediately be reached for comment. Damn, why do these
bloody organizations stick their noses into foreign countries?
Source: PC World

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Link:
http://blog.bitcomet.com/belemoih/post_17337/
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