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Sony BMG settles suit over CDs

Tom Warren   on 20 December 2006 - 11:41 · 4 comments & 2665 views

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Sony BMG Music Entertainment will pay $1.5 million and kick in thousands more in customer refunds to settle lawsuits brought by California and Texas over music CDs that installed a hidden anti-piracy program on consumers' computers.

Not only did the program surreptitiously monitor users' behavior, but the method Sony BMG originally recommended for removing the software also damaged computers.

The settlements, announced Tuesday, cover lawsuits over CDs loaded with one of two types of copy-protection software -- known as MediaMax or XCP.

Under the terms of the separate settlements, each state will receive $750,000 in civil penalties and costs.

View: Business Week

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#1 ahhell on 20 Dec 2006 - 11:56
$1.5 million??? What a joke. It should have been billions.
#2 Ravi on 20 Dec 2006 - 13:07
Bastards...got away cheap!!!
#3 Atmos42 on 20 Dec 2006 - 14:12
They may have gotten off cheap, but part of the settlement was that aren't allowed to include anything like this on CD's again.
#4 Davo on 21 Dec 2006 - 01:55
They invaded the privacy of legitimate buyers of music without their knowledge and they only have to pay 1.5 million? Very ridiculous.

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