The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on Wednesday filed a new series of complaints against US-based users of peer-to-peer software distributors Kazaa, Grokster and LimeWire.
Supreme court ruling
The move came two days after the US Supreme Court ruled networks such as Grokster may be held liable for infringement if they encourage people to make unauthorized copies of copyrighted songs, films or other content.
Some 784 users were targeted in the RIAA's complaints, for violation of copyright.
The ruling in the closely watched "MGM versus Grokster" case gives a powerful tool to Hollywood and the music industry to crack down on distributors of technology designed to skirt copyright protection and make illegal copies.
`Clarity of debate'
Mitch Bainwol, chairman and chief executive of the RIAA, which represents the US recording industry, said the ruling "provided a real shot in the arm to legitimate online music services and unanimously injected moral clarity into this debate."
"If there was any doubt left, there should now be none -- individuals who download music without permission are breaking the law," Bainwol said.
The RIAA has filed thousands of suits against music pirates since the September 2003 launch of its legal offensive.
An Emirates flight from Dubai arrived at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport yesterday afternoon, the first service of the airline since the US and Israel launched strikes against Iran on Saturday. Flight EK366 took off from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) at 3:51am yesterday and landed at 4:02pm before taxiing to the airport’s D6 gate at Terminal 2 at 4:08pm, data from the airport and FlightAware, a global flight tracking site, showed. Of the 501 passengers on the flight, 275 were Taiwanese, including 96 group tour travelers, the data showed. Tourism Administration Deputy Director-General Huang He-ting (黃荷婷) greeted Taiwanese passengers at the airport and
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