AfterDawn: Tech news

IFPI loses P2P case in Taiwan

Written by James Delahunty @ 01 Jul 2005 9:34 User comments (4)

IFPI loses P2P case in Taiwan The Shihlin District Court in Taiwan has dealt a blow to the IFPIM's international fight against P2P file sharing. An operator of a P2P file-sharing network called ezPeer was found not guilty of infringing intellectual property rights. The P2P service is subscription based and requires users to pay a fee before they share their files with each other. The court said Weber Wu, President of ezPeer did not engage in the reproducing or distributing copyrighted material.
The court also stated that no limitations are placed on P2P file sharing by the current laws and regulations. "We will keep negotiating with record labels to find a way that would create benefits for us, the copyright holders and consumers," Wu said after the verdict. The IFPI is devastated and shocked with the decision. "This is the darkest day for the music industry," said Robin Lee, secretary-general of IFPI in Taiwan. "We will appeal to the end."



So now that the case is so far lost against the operator of the P2P service, the IFPI will is set to do what it's best at - sue individual users for copyright infringement. Another case against kuro.com.tw, Taiwan's largest file-sharing site is yet to be decided. According to Lee, this decision could batter the music industry mentioning the failure of the nation's first legal online music distributor, iBIZ Entertainment Technology Corp, which lasted just 15 months.

Sources:
Taipei Times
p2pet

Previous Next  

4 user comments

11.7.2005 09:53

I would say this is really good news, glad to read that some countries governments are not biased by the commercial industry in this section (yet). Hopefully more courts in different countries around the world will follow their example. Cheers for this victory!

21.7.2005 11:09

hi all Well would you adam and eve it! GO GO GO Taiwan Ave it............

31.7.2005 22:51

Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't the penalty for growing marijuhana in Taiwan the death penalty?

42.7.2005 02:55

Quote:
bomber991 (Newbie) 2 July 2005 2:51 Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't the penalty for growing marijuhana in Taiwan the death penalty?
Hi yes its weird how laws differ in different countries... i wonder if you can download marijuhana? ;-])

Comments have been disabled for this article.

Latest news

The era of cheap AI is about to end - consumers and companies may experience a harsh reality very soon The era of cheap AI is about to end - consumers and companies may experience a harsh reality very soon (19 Apr 2026 12:58)
AI companies have allowed both consumers and businesses to use their developed AI models at a significantly lower cost than their actual expenses. A clear change is now coming to this, which could significantly alter the market.
Defunct companies started selling their former employees' email and Slack messages to AI companies Defunct companies started selling their former employees' email and Slack messages to AI companies (18 Apr 2026 12:27)
Technology companies that have gone bankrupt or have simply been shut down have found a new way to make a little more money at their final gasp. The companies are selling their employees' Slack, Teams, and email messages as training material for AI compan
Google starts penalizing sites that hijack the browser back button Google starts penalizing sites that "hijack" the browser back button (18 Apr 2026 2:35)
Google has announced that starting from June 2026 it will begin penalizing websites that hijack the browser back button.
Installing a fresh Windows 11 is now up to half an hour faster Installing a fresh Windows 11 is now up to half an hour faster (17 Apr 2026 11:11)
The update to Windows 11 released in April 2026 changes the way Windows is installed on a computer for the first time. User can now skip the previously mandatory updates during the installation phase.
EU age verification app humiliated: Researcher bypassed protections in two minutes EU age verification app humiliated: Researcher bypassed protections in two minutes (17 Apr 2026 9:57)
The official EU age verification app released this week is reportedly easy to crack. Security researchers claim that it can be circumvented within two minutes.

News archive