Recording industry drops amnesty program
The music industry’s trade group has ended a program that offered to prevent people from being sued by recording companies if the downloaders admitted to illegally sharing music online, according to court documents. The Recording Industry Association of America launched the "Clean Slate" program in September, when it embarked on a strategy of suing individual computer users for copyright infringement.
Read the Share:
SUSE CTO takes issue with 'backporting'
- Performance lead in desktop graphics may shift towards Nvidia
- Microsoft agrees to settlement in Minnesota class-action antitrust lawsuit
- Silicon Valley pioneer sees potential future in silicon-less chips
- Daily news brief April 19
- Microsoft to acquire Bioware - announcement at E3, sources say
- RFID becoming billion-dollar market
- Rumor of Internet 'super' exploit
- Ebay runs into problems with billing system
- Intel Dothan to debut on 10 May
AMD starts 90-nm Opteron manufacturing in Germany
- HP delivers Opteron-powered ProLiants
- SCO investor wants out of deal
- Microsoft touts High-Definition video production tools for Windows XP
- Mars rovers get long-distance OS updates
- Intel, top rival set for US Supreme Court showdown
- DDR2 plans for Taiwan DRAM makers
- DVD war looms as advancements get closer
- Apple demos new high-quality video codec at NAB
- Microsoft updates OneNote
Sponsored
See more
Latest news
Miscellaneous Previous news
Partners




