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Moscow Judge Dismisses Music Download Case

Bezhou Feng   on 16 August 2007 - 01:29 · 4 comments & 2666 views

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Just today, a Cheryomushky District Court judge in Moscow, Russia, threw out a legal case against Denis Kvasov, former head of Mediaservices, the company behind the now defunct online store AllofMP3.com. The store, which was closed in late June but reopened later under a similar rubric, has been cast as the epitome of Russia's shoddy copyright enforcement and repeatedly held up by U.S. trade negotiators as imperiling Moscow's bid to join the World Trade Organization. According to Igor Pozhitkov, the Russia representative for the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, EMI Group PLC, Vivendi SA's Universal Music Group, and Warner Music Group Inc. sought $587,000 in damages against Kvasov; the judge ruled against the three media groups on the basis that a legal loophole that allowed the online distribution of music was only closed in September 2006, while Kvasov ended his involvement in December 2005.

Two more cases against allofmp3.com are pending, including one against Mediaservices' current head, Vadim Mamotin, Pozhitkov said. However, Mamotin has insisted that by paying royalties to a Russian licensing group, allofmp3.com was in compliance with Russian laws. Recording companies contend, on the other hand, that the licensing group never had the permission of music industry to collect and distribute royalties on its behalf.

View: Full Story on SiliconValley.com

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#1 PatrynXX on 16 Aug 2007 - 02:03
calling allofmp3 defunct is absurd as far as I understand.
Mediaservices is still alive and well. it's just a name... Vonage is more dead than allofmp3
#2 +mrbester on 16 Aug 2007 - 09:24
Quote -
...repeatedly held up by U.S. trade negotiators as imperiling[sic] Moscow's bid to join the World Trade Organization
== economic blackmail. What else is denying a country that has more than just a contentious website membership of WTO?
#3 Croquant on 16 Aug 2007 - 17:07
What the RIAA fails to understand is that Putin doesn't actually want his Russia to join the WTO. He's running his own little empire and he doesn't wan to have to play by someone else's rules.
#4 +Zhivago on 16 Aug 2007 - 20:40
Quote -
Recording companies contend, on the other hand, that the licensing group never had the permission of music industry to collect and distribute royalties on its behalf.
So sue the Russian licensing group (Russian version of RIAA), NOT the companies who pay them royalties!

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