Russian copyright cracker faces international crackdown

Life

17 July 2006

The British Phonographic Institute (BPI) is preparing to sue Allofmp3.com after a High Court judge ruled that the action could be brought in the UK.

The Russian music site sells copyrighted material for as little as 4c per track and claims to pay licence fees to the Russian Multimedia and Internet Society.

 

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However, the BPI said that the Russian body is not officially recognised and that UK copyright holders receive no fees for the tracks that are sold.

“The Russian Multimedia and Internet Society is not an officially licensed body and is not recognised as a trade association, so it is completely illegal, ” BPI spokesman Matt Phillips told PC Live!.

“If you are selling music and it is on-demand, such as a stream or a download or a tethered download, you need to go to the copyright holder and get a licence.”

Phillips explained that Allofmp3.com is already under investigation in Russia and had been targeted by the US.

“Our equivalent body in Russia has brought a case against the directors of the site which is an ongoing criminal prosecution as I understand it. I think the US is putting quite a bit of pressure on the Russian authorities to enforce the law,” he said.

The BPI will serve Media Services, which runs Allofmp3.com, with a writ later this week.

“The High Court is now working with the Russian court to ensure that those proceedings are issued,” said Phillips.

The BPI represents firms producing 95% of British music, including EMI, Warner Music, Virgin Records, and Polydor.

PC Live! also understands that the Irish trade body IRMA has no plans to take legal action against AllofMP3 at this moment in time.

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