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Senate bill would ban P2P networks

Popular file-trading networks such as Kazaa and Morpheus would be outlawed under a new bill that enjoys broad support from top Democrats and Republicans in the U.S. Senate. Their legislation says “whoever intentionally induces any violation” of copyright law would be legally liable for those violations, a prohibition that would effectively ban file-swapping networks and …

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College P2P use on the decline?

A combination of authorized music services and lawsuits is helping to control illegal file swapping on campuses, a joint entertainment industry-university group said Tuesday. In the last year, more than 20 schools have signed up for deeply discounted access to music services such as Napster, MusicNet and RealNetworks’ Rhapsody, the Joint Committee of the Higher Education and Entertainment Communities said …

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RealNetworks: One week, 1 million songs

RealNetworks said Tuesday that it sold more than 1 million songs in the first week of its half-price online music promotion. The company cut its price to 49 cents per song last week, down from the 99 cents charged by most stores including Apple Computer’s iTunes, in part to advertise its new Harmony technology that allows songs to be played …

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CD on one side, DVD on the other

A group of record labels announced on Tuesday plans to introduce a new disc format later this year that combines CD and DVD technology. The consortium, which includes major labels EMI Music, Sony BMG Music Entertainment, Universal Music Group and Warner Music Group, said the DualDisc product has a full album on a CD side of the disc and the …

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More colleges get cheap online music

Another group of colleges is getting access to cut-rate digital music subscriptions, care of MusicNet and partner Cdigix. Cdigix, which offers packages of video, music and educational services to schools, said it will distribute MusicNet subscriptions to students at Marietta College, Ohio University, the Rochester Institute of Technology, the University of Denver, Wake Forest and Yale University beginning this fall. …

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Kazaa owner takes heart in P2P ruling

Sharman Networks, Australian parent company of the file-sharing software developer Kazaa, is rejoicing at the U.S. court ruling that two similar peer-to-peer programs, Grokster and Morpheus, do not violate copyright law. However, the company concedes that the ruling is unlikely to have any effect on a music copyright-infringement case currently going through the courts in Australia. News.blog Our reporters’ take …

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Can Glaser and Jobs find harmony?

RealNetworks CEO Rob Glaser has survived longer than most in the Internet business, largely by pulling rabbits out of his hat when the competition least expects it. Glaser’s latest surprise came a few weeks ago when RealNetworks announced it had figured out a way to re-create Apple Computer’s proprietary technology for digital rights management–without Apple’s permission. This allowed RealNetworks to …

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Real takes aim at Apple

roundup RealNetworks aims to build up the audience for its musical offerings with a half-price sale and the release of its Harmony software. Also: Rob Glaser wants to bring compatibility to Apple. Company offers 49-cent tunes and releases Harmony, the software that has Apple up in arms. August 17, 2004 newsmaker RealNetworks CEO Rob Glaser has big plans for his …

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RealNetworks slashes song prices

RealNetworks on Tuesday kicked off a high-profile digital music marketing campaign, highlighting the new iPod-compatible technology that has swung the company into conflict with Apple Computer. For a limited time, RealNetworks will offer song downloads from its music store for 49 cents, along with half-price albums. A nationwide print, radio and Web marketing campaign will promote the offer, along with …

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Readers speak: Who’s right in iPod fight?

reader feedback RealNetworks created a dilemma for Apple Computer fans when it “reverse engineered” Apple’s iPod digital music player, putting two of the tech community’s most passionate loves–for Apple and interoperability–at loggerheads. CNET News.com asked: Which side wins out? The responses came down fairly heavily on Apple’s side, though it was hard to tell whether that reflected agreement with the …

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