IMMEDIATE RELEASE
If
you have a Contaminated P2P Network Program on your computer you have Violated
US Copyright laws - Landmark Case in
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“This landmark
case means that anyone who has contaminated P2P network programs on his computer
is committing copyright infringement, since the only reason to have them installed
is to make copyrighted files available to all other P2P users,” said Pasquale
Giordano, President/COO, SafeMedia Corp
“This
landmark case means that anyone who has P2P programs on their computer, which
connect to a contaminated P2P network (even without downloading files) is
committing copyright infringement since the only reason to have the programs
is to make copyrighted files available to all other users,” said Pasquale
Giordano, president & COO, SafeMedia Corp.
SafeMedia
is the leading provider of P2P Disaggregator (P2PD) technology. P2PD is the
only technology that completely isolates and stops contaminated P2P networks
even if they use encrypted transmissions.
The
latest court victory involves the case Atlantic v. Howell, where Judge Wake, in a summary judgment,
shot down the Howell's arguments and handed the RIAA $40,500 in statutory
damages, $350 in court costs, and a permanent injunction against future copyright
infringement by the Howells.
"Several
cases suggest that users commit direct copyright infringement by employing
Kazaa ( a contaminated P2P program) to
make their collections of copyrighted sound
recordings available to all other users," Judge Wake wrote, naming
three other cases as well as Howell's deposition in which he admitted ownership
of the software in question.
Recent
studies and Congressional hearings have shown that contaminated P2P network
users often do not realize they are involuntarily sharing their files with
the world. A March 2007 United States Patent & Trademark Office report,
which analyzed Kazaa, LimeWire, BearShare, eDonkey, and Morpheus discovered
that all five “repeatedly tricked users into uploading infringing files inadvertently.”
In
another RIAA lawsuit, Elektra
v. Santangelo, AOL has been enjoined as a third party defendant
and sued for $1 million. The lawsuit against AOL is based on information and
belief that, AOL failed to use its controls to prevent illegal downloading
(from Contaminated P2P networks) of copyrighted music, even though it had
the information, superior knowledge, ability, skill, techniques, tools, power
and authority to prevent such downloading.
“We believe universities and campuses across the country
will take notice,” said CEO Safwat Fahmy, SafeMedia Corp. “A university, based on the AOL lawsuit may be found liable
for allowing the infringing conduct of staff and/or students where the university
has provided access to the equipment used to carry out the infringing conduct
and not taken reasonable steps to ensure that their network infrastructure
is not used to infringe copyrighted material.”
“SafeMedia provides the only solution on the
market guaranteed by a hold harmless agreement from any lawsuits related to
copyright infringement on a network where their products are properly installed,”
said President Giordano. “We have successfully installed our technology on
a
“If each campus installed our technology at each
department, including the libraries and wireless networks, they would never
have to worry about the RIAA,” explained Fahmy. “Our P2PD technology embedded
in Clouseau™ is the only cost effective scaleable complete solution that prevents
all illegal downloading; encrypted and non-encrypted; from contaminated P2P
networks; Clouseau™ never invades user privacy and allows legal P2P such as
open source bit torrent files and all other Internet traffic to pass unencumbered
at network speeds.”
SafeMedia’s
P2PD technology is embedded in DSL and Cable modems in the home or work environment
or as a standalone subnet appliance. The strategy of subnet implementation
eliminates any network latency; control darknets between subnets and reduce
exposure to backbone failure. “The end result is a safer, faster Internet
experience for all users and a network that consumes less bandwidth,” explained
Giordano.
Editors:
For more information about SafeMedia Corp.’s new product
line visit: www.SafeMedia.com.
For media interviews contact: George McQuade, at MAYO Communications,
818-340-5300 or
818-618-9229 or PR@MayoCommunications.com.]
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