More Trouble For The Wiggles As Three Members Abruptly Quit
Are you ready for a wiggly, wiggly bombshell? The Beatles of children’s music are about
South Australian Government Launches Financial Assault On Music Venues After Lock Out Defeated
The South Australian government will be introducing new fees to venues with liquor licensing looking
Jack Black Says His Album Is Better Than Jack White, Foo Fighters, & Gotye Combined
Think you’re Tenacious D’s biggest fan. Well, unless your name is Jack Black, you’d be
Written by Jim Murray on 24 March 2011
Yep, you read it right. That wasn’t a typo. The Recording Industry Association of America, representing, 13 leading record companies in their lawsuit against Limewire which saw the file sharing website shut down in December, has now filed a damages claim for $75 trillion dollars. (cue Doctor Evil voice). Yep, that figure is $75,000,000,000,000 when you put it in numbers. Just to give you an idea, the whole US national debt is about $14 trillion, or one fifth of the amount the record companies are asking for. US Federal Court Judge Kimba Wood has handed down her ruling on the claim, which she has agreed is outrageous, being based on the number of downloads that the many users of Limewire could theortetically have made. S
Calling it ‘absurd’, she wrote “If plaintiffs were able to pursue a statutory damage theory predicated on the number of direct infringers per work, defendants’ damages could reach into the trillions,” she wrote. “As defendants note, plaintiffs are suggesting an award that is ‘more money than the entire music recording industry has made since Edison’s invention of the phonograph in 1877.’”
Limewire’s lawyers responded by saying “We were pleased that the judge followed both the law and the logic in reaching the conclusion that she did.” Joseph Baio of Willkie Farr & Gallagher, representing the company further opined, “As the judge said in her opinion, when the copyright law was initiated, legislatures couldn’t possibly conceive of what the world would become with the internet. As such, you couldn’t use legislative history. Instead, the overarching issue is reasonableness in order to avoid absurd and possibly unconstitutional outcome.”
See more related content
Share This With Your Friends
Like Tone Deaf On Facebook
You May Also Be Interested In
Think you’re Tenacious D’s biggest fan. Well, unless your name is Jack Black, you’d be...
5 hours ago
With a new album in the pipeline, Summertime Heavy, and a brand new single from...
1 day ago
Funding for the arts and music is set to have a major shake up with...
2 days ago
Subscribe To Tone Deaf
Today's Popular News
It seems that Australian Festivals are well and truly cursed. With 2012 already seeing the...
9 hours ago
Popular Right Now
Man Surgically Attaches iPod To His Wrist, Brain Still Missing
Local Live Music Venue Shattered After Brazen Theft
‘Emo Haircuts Are Bad For Your Health’ Says Australian Doctor
Man Breaks World Record For Longest Guitar Solo
More Trouble For The Wiggles As Three Members Abruptly Quit
Coldplay Australian Tour 2012 Announced
Slash Australian Tour 2012 Dates Leak News
Features
Tone Deaf TV
Corporate