IRMAIrish ISP Eircom Agrees to Block The Pirate BayAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on August 20, 2009 - 10:46am.
Dublin, Ireland - Irish ISP Eircom has
agreed to demands from copyright holders to block access to file-sharing hub
The Pirate Bay, TorrentFreak reported.
Record Labels Sue Irish ISPs to Force 'Three-Strikes' P2P PolicyAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on June 22, 2009 - 11:39am.
Dublin, Ireland - After suing Ireland's largest ISP Eircom
and getting the company to agree to voluntarily implement a
"three-strikes" policy on file-swappers, the four major record labels
have now sued the country's second-largest telco, BT Ireland, and cable
operator UPC, to get them to follow suit, the Irish Times reports.
Irish ISPs Rebuff Record Labels on 'Three-Strikes' P2P PolicyAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on March 18, 2009 - 10:48am.
London
- A group of Irish ISPs has stated its opposition to efforts by the major
record labels, represented there by the Irish Recorded Music Association
(IRMA), to have the ISPs implement a "three-strikes" policy that
would terminate the accounts of repeat music file-swappers, The Register
reported.
Irish ISP Eircom to Block The Pirate Bay, Other P2P SitesAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on February 24, 2009 - 1:10pm.
Dublin, Ireland - Eircom,
Ireland's
largest Internet service provider, has complied with a request from the Irish
Recorded Music Association (IRMA) trade group to block access to file-sharing
hub The Pirate Bay, according to published reports. Eircom has also agreed to refrain from mounting any legal objections to IRMA efforts to have it block access to other
sites deemed to be infringing by the IRMA.
Irish ISP Eircom Sued by Record Labels for Aiding PiracyAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on April 25, 2008 - 8:58am.
Dublin - Ireland's largest Internet service provider, Eircom, has been sued by the major record labels under the Irish Recorded Music Association (IRMA) on charges of aiding copyright infringement, RTE Business reported. IRMA: Eight of 17 Accused Music Uploaders cAuthored by Mark Hefflinger on August 5, 2005 - 5:10am.
Dublin -- The Irish Recorded Music Association (IRMA) announced that eight of the 17 people it has accused of being among Ireland's worst offenders for illegally uploading music have agreed to settle out of court. The IRMA said the eight people agreed to pay damages of up between $2,470 and $7,400, and to never again swap music illegally over the Internet. The IRMA's action against the file-swappers began in April as part of a global campaign led by the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI), which filed more than 960 cases against file-sharers in Austria, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Iceland, Finland, Ireland, Japan and the U.K. IRMA Director Dick Doyle said that his organization had additional information on other alleged file-swappers and that it may target more individuals in the coming months.
|
Upcoming DMW Events
April 29, 2010 | Los Angeles, CA lagamesconference.com
June 25, 2010 | Washington D.C. digitalmediaconference.com
September 21, 2010 | NYC nygamesconference.com Events Calendar Submit a Speaker To receive event updates & announcements:
NavigationUser loginAds |
Daily Newsletter and NetworkingLatest Top Stories
DMW Widget - Grab it and embed!Latest Briefly Noted
PollOther Ads |
Recent comments
7 hours 54 min ago
11 hours 53 min ago
12 hours 31 min ago
18 hours 37 min ago
1 day 13 hours ago
1 day 21 hours ago
1 day 22 hours ago
1 day 22 hours ago
1 day 23 hours ago
1 day 23 hours ago