Topic: Kimba Wood
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The operators of LimeWire agreed to pay record companies $105 million, ending a federal trial over damages after the once-popular file-sharing service had been found liable for copyright infringement.District Judge Kimba Wood in Manhattan had ruled last May ...
There's joy in Federal Judge Kimba Wood's courtroom - but it has nothing to do with a verdict.. . Defense lawyer Bennett Epstein stood in court on...
The move came a little more than five months after a US judge ruled in favor of 13 music companies in a copyright infringement and unfair competition case brought against LimeWire.LimeWire.com featured a legal notice on its home page on ...
Lime Wire founder Mark Gorton during the past decade made millions of dollars helping people share billions of pirated songs. In court papers last week, the Recording Industry Association of America once again asked the court to freeze Lime Wire's and ...
11 in Russian spy case formally charged in indictment handed down in NYC federal courtThe 11 people accused of spying for Russia were formally charged in a federal indictment unsealed Wednesday, more than a week after the FBI announced their arrests.The ...
New York judge sends man convicted in real estate fraud to prison for 85 yearsA man with a history of fraud has been sentenced to 85 years in prison for his latest conviction — a real estate fraud that prosecutors say swindled 250 ...
While YouTube managers do victory dances following their massive courtroom win in the copyright case brought against the video service by Viacom, the triumph appears to have done little to buoy file-sharing service Lime Wire. Lime Wire, the Web's largest and ...
A group of music publishers on Wednesday filed a copyright complaint in federal court against LimeWire's parent company and founder Mark Gorton, according to documents obtained by CNET. They accuse Lime Group, parent of software maker Lime Wire, and Gorton with ...
Lime Wire managers have plans to transform the nation's largest file-sharing network into a legal music service, company representatives told CNET. For starters, Lime Wire has yet to show the new service to the top labels: Then, there's the fact ...
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Thirteen big record companies want to freeze assets of the provider of popular file-sharing service LimeWire, accusing its founder of fraudulently trying to evade hundreds of millions of dollars in damages over copyright infringement.U.S. District Judge Kimba ...