P2PVideo Service Joost Sells Assets to Adconion Media GroupAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on November 24, 2009 - 8:26am.
Santa Monica,
Calif. - Adconion Media Group,
the operator of an online ad and content network, announced on Tuesday that it
has acquired Joost, the streaming TV service founded by the creators of Kazaa
and Skype. Financial terms of the transaction were not disclosed. Founded in
2007 by Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis, Joost has raised about $50 million in
funding for its peer-to-peer-based video distribution service.
tags: Deals | Video | Advertising | P2P | Acquisitions | Joost | Adconion Media Group | Janus Friis | Niklas Zennstrom |
Studios Sue Swedish ISP, Demand Closure of OpenBitTorrentAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on November 18, 2009 - 11:54am.
Los Angeles - Several Hollywood movie studios have filed suit against a Swedish
ISP that is hosting OpenBitTorrent, an independent BitTorrent file-sharing
tracker site that was launched in the wake of the The Pirate Bay's announced
sale to Global Gaming Factory, TorrentFreak reported. The studios sued hosting
provider Portlane, demanding that it shutter the OpenBitTorrent website.
tags: Video | Law | Lawsuits | P2P | Music | Copyright | The Pirate Bay | OpenBitTorrent | Portlane |
The Pirate Bay Permanently Shutters File-Sharing TrackerAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on November 17, 2009 - 8:41am.
Stockholm, Sweden - Marking "the end of an era,"
the operators of file-sharing hub The Pirate Bay on Tuesday shut down their
BitTorrent tracker, which grew over six years to become the largest hub for
finding copyrighted materials for download in the world, TorrentFreak reported. "Now that the
decentralized system for finding peers is so well developed, TPB has decided
that there is no need to run a tracker anymore, so it will remain down! It's
the end of an era, but the era is no longer up2date," the Pirate Bay
wrote on its blog. "We have put a server in a museum already, and now the
tracking can be put there as well."
Verizon to Begin Forwarding RIAA "Copyright Notices"Authored by Mark Hefflinger on November 13, 2009 - 9:17am.
San Francisco - Mobile operator Verizon Wireless will this week begin
sending "copyright notices" on behalf of the Recording Industry
Association of America (RIAA), to subscribers suspected of illegally
downloading songs, CNET News.com reported, citing sources with knowledge of the
agreement. The letter reportedly urges the recipient to delete the content they
distribute, but does not include threats of potential service interruptions as
a penalty.
Swedish ISP Black Internet Appeals Pirate Bay Shutdown OrderAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on November 10, 2009 - 10:36am.
Stockholm,
Sweden - The
Pirate Bay's former bandwidth supplier, Black Internet, has been given leave to
appeal a Swedish court's order to disconnect the file-sharing hub, TorrentFreak
reports.
Norwegian Court: ISP Telenor Need Not Block The Pirate BayAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on November 6, 2009 - 9:57am.
Oslo, Norway - International record label trade group IFPI
has lost its court case that sought to compel Norwegian ISP Telenor to block
its subscribers' access to file-sharing hub The Pirate Bay, TorrentFreak
reported.
Report: Skype Creators, eBay, Investors Near SettlementAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on November 4, 2009 - 9:29am.
San Francisco - Litigation between the inventors and former
owners of Internet phone service Skype, current owner eBay (NASD: EBAY), and an investor
group looking to acquire Skype from eBay, could be nearing a settlement, The New
York Times reported, citing several people who have been briefed on the
situation. Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis -- the inventors of Skype and the
peer-to-peer technology behind file-sharing service Kazaa and video portal
Joost -- sued the investor group in a bid to block their acquisition of Skype
from eBay.
Survey: Among Consumers, File-Swappers Spend Most on MusicAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on November 2, 2009 - 8:30am.
Swedish Court: Pirate Bay Operators Must Stop Running SiteAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on October 29, 2009 - 7:45am.
Stockholm,
Sweden - A
Swedish court has ordered two of the operators of file-sharing hub The Pirate
Bay to cease their involvement in operating the site, or else face fines of
$71,000 each, TorrentFreak reported. The story notes that neither Gottfrid Svartholm
nor Fredrik Neij currently reside in Sweden,
nor is The Pirate Bay itself currently hosted on servers within Sweden.
tags: Law | Lawsuits | P2P | Copyright | The Pirate Bay | Peter Sunde | Gottfrid Svartholm | Fredrik Neij |
U.K. Parliament to Consider "Three-Strikes" P2P BillAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on October 28, 2009 - 10:14am.
London - The U.K. government plans to introduce a bill
mimicking France's
recently enacted "three-strikes" legislation on file-sharing, which
authorizes the suspension of the Internet accounts of those warned repeatedly
they are violating copyrights, according to published reports. The bill will
"make technical measures available, including account suspension," U.K.
business, innovation and skills minister Peter Mandelson said at a meeting of
government and entertainment industry heads, according to PaidContent's
coverage.
Report: Pirate Bay Being Courted by Four New SuitorsAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on October 28, 2009 - 9:45am.
Stockholm, Sweden - In the wake of the unraveling of Global
Gaming Factory's unsuccessful attempt to acquire The Pirate Bay, as many as
four new suitors have emerged with an eye towards purchasing the file-sharing
hub, TorrentFreak reported, citing Sweden's Dagens Industri. Reservella, the
Seychelles-based holding company that currently owns the Pirate Bay,
is reportedly currently in talks with GamersGate, a Swedish online games firm.
tags: Deals | Video | P2P | Music | Acquisitions | Copyright | The Pirate Bay | Global Gaming Factory | Hans Pandeya | Reservella | GamersGate | Theodore Bergquist |
Dutch Court Orders Pirate Bay to Remove Torrents; Block AccessAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on October 22, 2009 - 10:51am.
Amsterdam
- The Amsterdam Court
on Thursday gave the operators of file-sharing hub The Pirate Bay three months
to remove a list of copyrighted torrents, and block access to portions of the
site from Dutch users, or else face penalties of $7,500 each per day,
TorrentFreak reported.
France Approves "Three-Strikes" Law on File-SharingAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on October 22, 2009 - 9:59am.
Paris - France's Constitutional Court
on Thursday approved the country's "three-strikes" law, which will
sever the Internet connections of those found to have been repeatedly
infringing copyrights on file-sharing networks, The New York Times reported. An
earlier version of the law approved by France's Parliament was rejected by
the court, because it did not include a judge's approval before a user's
Internet connection was suspended.
Pirate Bay Appeal Postponed Until Summer 2010Authored by Mark Hefflinger on October 19, 2009 - 9:20am.
Stockholm,
Sweden - The
appeal of the copyright infringement convictions of the four operators of
file-sharing hub The Pirate Bay has been delayed, likely until at least next
summer, as questions over potential conflicts of interest of several judges
assigned to hear the appeal are considered, TorrentFreak reported.
Pirate Bay Four Appeal Judge Bias Claims to Supreme CourtAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on October 16, 2009 - 8:49am.
Stockholm, Sweden - The four operators of file-sharing hub
The Pirate Bay have taken their conflict of interest challenge against two of
the judges assigned to hear their appeal of a conviction on copyright
infringement charges to the Supreme Court in Sweden, TorrentFreak reported.
Skype Creators Seek Injunction Against Former Joost CEO VolpiAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on October 15, 2009 - 9:00am.
Wilmington,
Del. - The creators of
peer-to-peer services Kazaa, Skype and Joost have asked a federal court for an
injunction against former Joost CEO Mike Volpi and Index Ventures, where he is
now a partner, to prevent them from using trade secrets in their bid to acquire
Skype from eBay. Developers Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis allege that Volpi
breached his duties to Joost while employed there by dangling a prospective
workaround -- that would eliminate the need for Skype to use Zennstrom's and
Friis' peer-to-peer technology -- to investors looking to acquire Skype from
eBay (NASD: EBAY).
tags: Deals | Law | Lawsuits | P2P | eBay | Acquisitions | Skype | Joost | Index Ventures | Mike Volpi | Joltid | Janus Friis | Niklas Zennstrom |
Pirate Bay Buyer: Deal in Doubt; Operators Deny OwnershipAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on October 8, 2009 - 9:39am.
Stockholm, Sweden - Hans Pandeya, the CEO of would-be Pirate
Bay buyer Global Gaming Factory (GGF), has admitted in a statement that the
company is unsure whether the deal will be completed, Sweden's The Local
reports. Pandeya recently saw some of his assets seized and is facing
bankruptcy proceedings; the GGF executive had previously said he would secure
the acquisition with his own shares, but the company was recently deslited from
a Swedish exchange. "At present, GGF cannot discern whether the acquisition
will be completed regardless of the outcome of the trial," the company
said in a statement.
tags: Deals | P2P | Music | Movies | Acquisitions | Copyright | The Pirate Bay | BREIN | Global Gaming Factory | Hans Pandeya | Reservella |
Report: Studio Attorneys Targeting Pirate Bay Hosting ProvidersAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on October 6, 2009 - 10:17am.
San Francisco - The website
for file-sharing hub The Pirate Bay was down most of Monday, the result of the
efforts of local attorneys in Sweden
for the Hollywood movie studios to go after
the site's hosting providers, CNET News.com reported, citing Tweakers.net. The
site's current hosting provider, NForce, reportedly complied with the legal
requests to shut the site down. In recent weeks, The Pirate Bay has also been
moved from sites hosted by a Ukraine-based ISP, and Netherlands-based Black
Internet as a result of legal threats, according to the reports. The site is
currently back online.
Google: Pirate Bay Homepage Removal Was "Internal Error"Authored by Mark Hefflinger on October 5, 2009 - 10:41am.
Mountain View,
Calif. - The homepage of the
website for file-sharing hub The Pirate Bay was removed from Google's (NASD: GOOG) search
index on Friday as a result of "an internal error and not part of a DMCA
request," Google said in a statement. Reports last week indicated that Google
had received a takedown notice for ThePirateBay.org under the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act (DMCA). The Web page does not itself host any copyrighted
content, but allows users to search out links to bits of files that may be
downloaded from third-party locations.
Google Removes Pirate Bay Homepage from Search ResultsAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on October 2, 2009 - 7:39am.
Mountain View,
Calif. - Google (NASD: GOOG) has removed the
homepage of file-sharing hub The Pirate Bay from its search results after
receiving a takedown request under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA),
TorrentFreak reported. Users searching for "The Pirate Bay" no longer
see the site's homepage (ThePirateBay.org) in search results -- although the
site's "Browse" and "Movies" pages still come up. The top
result is now PirateBay.com, while the second link is to a Wikipedia entry.
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