The Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT), a consumer rights group, has published a list of 30 MP3 download sites that sell music but do not have licensing deals with major U.S. music labels.
The sites, which mainly charge $20 to $35 USD for unlimited subscriptions claim they offer music from artists signed to the major labels, which they do, none of which is actually licensed however.
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Originally posted by fta: The sites, which mainly charge $20 to $35 USD for unlimited subscriptions claim they offer music from artists signed to the major labels, which they do, none of which is actually licensed however.
hey, does this sound just like media defender (MPAA Lap Dog) up to their old tricks again, as they need all the cash they can get their hands on after the news of them with the media mafias full knowledge hacked ppl's pc's, set up entrapment sites sharing newly released media and committed terrorist acts by launching DDoS attacks on tracker sites, don't you love hollywood! ;-)
Quote:Customers using the software could possibly face a lawsuit from the RIAA even though they wouldn't know they had done anything wrong.
Yeah, like that's never happened before. What a crock of crap. Here comes the media mafia again, looking for someone...anyone they can bury. What a group of corporate barbarians.