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Russia agrees to shut down Allofmp3.com
#1
http://news.com.com/Russia+agrees+to+shu...39350.html


Russia agrees to shut down Allofmp3.com
By Greg Sandoval
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
Published: November 29, 2006, 11:43 AM PST
Last modified: November 29, 2006, 4:04 PM PST
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update Russia has agreed to shut down Allofmp3.com and other music sites based in that country that the U.S. government says are offering downloads illegally.

The nation has struck the agreement with the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative as it seeks entry to the World Trade Organization. The U.S. has suggested that it would hold up Russia's acceptance in the WTO unless leaders there took action against digital piracy.

"Russia will take enforcement actions against the operation of Russia-based websites," according to a press release issued November 19 by the U.S. Trade Representative. "(Russia will) investigate and prosecute companies that illegally distribute copyright works on the Internet."

On Wednesday, Allofmp3.com was still operating. Gretchen Hamel, a spokeswoman for the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, said that she didn't know when the deal requires the Russian government to begin taking action.

"AllofMP3 doesn't expect the Russian government to take any action against the company since it operates within the current law," said Rory Davenport, an Allofmp3.com spokesman. "The company is fully committed to its business."

Allofmp3.com is one of many internationally based download sites that the U.S. and several other countries are trying to close down. Music labels and movie studios say that such sites are not authorized to sell music and don't compensate copyright holders.


The move is a setback for Allofmp3.com, which has come under continued U.S. pressure in recent months. In October, Visa announced that it would no longer process the company's credit card transactions.

Allofmp3.com has denied charges of piracy by pointing out that the company is compliant with Russian copyright law. It says it is careful to pay royalties to artists via the Russian Multimedia and Internet Society, which claims to represent copyright holders.

The U.S. has never recognized that organization as legitimate and, as part of the agreement, requires Russia to stop such groups from "acting without right holder consent."
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#2
The "Poison" downloads weren't seeing so well :-?
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#3
Maybe we can get the Russian military to attack the U.S. Entertainment industry. I'd sign off on that.
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#4
A friend of mine downloaded some music from there, they said the quality was bad and never went back.
They even had to pay to download.

Carm
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#5
>>they said the quality was bad and never went back.

I don't understand how that would be the case seeing as how you could download uncompressed audio.

I used it a few times and I really believe that they're closer than anyone else to the ideal music download site.

I'll miss it.
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#6
[quote vision63]Maybe we can get the Russian military to attack the U.S. Entertainment industry. I'd sign off on that.
That would be a fair fight, to be sure...
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#7
[quote mattkime]>>I used it a few times and I really believe that they're closer than anyone else to the ideal music download site.
Except that it was a) illegal* and b) did not seek nor obtain permission from the copyright holders, nor compensate the non-Russian artists.

*Legal under Russian law, perhaps, but still in violation of international copyright agreement.

If that's your idea of "an ideal music site," you must really hate people who spend their time and money to create music.

Look, I don't like the record-company model of business either, and the RIAA are bunch of thugs. HOWEVER, under their system the artist does, in fact, see some of the profit and has agreed to be represented there. AllofMP3 never bothered with that, and neither do the other "stealing music" sites/services most of us are familiar with.
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#8
How about downloading the cheap Russian music while pirating some WiFi and drinking a ghetto latté at Starbucks?

Trifecta!
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#9
Now that's America!
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#10
>>Except that it was a) illegal* and b) did not seek nor obtain permission from the copyright holders, nor compensate the non-Russian artists.

If you're actually concerned for the artists then its really splitting hairs. From an illegal website they get nothing, from a legal site they get very little more than that.

Also, I do really really like keeping money from the RIAA.

I really don't see a strong moral angle to it. The whole system is broken.
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