The British Phonographic Industry (BPI) has filed High Court claims against
five people alleged to have ‘uploaded’ copyrighted music to internet sites.
The BPI is seeking injunctions against the five, three men and two women, who
live in Kings Lynn, Crawley, Port Talbot, Brighton, and South Glamorgan. The
recording industry body claims the five are responsible for making more than
8,900 tracks available to others without permission.
The action represents the most high profile activity in a sweep of such
activity which began in October last year when it launched the first lawsuit
actions in Britain with 28 cases pursued.
These five cases resulted from a court order in March which required internet
service providers to name holders of accounts which were suspected of being used
for file-sharing.
The BPI agreed out-of-court settlements of up to £6,500 with 60 illegal file
sharers over the past year. It is pursuing a further 20 cases.
Peter Jamieson, the BPI chairman, said: "Music fans are increasingly tuning
in to legal download sites for the choice, value and convenience they offer. But
we cannot let illegal file sharers off the hook. They are undermining the legal
services, they are damaging music and they are breaking the law."
The BPI blames illegal file sharing for a worldwide fall in sales of 22 per
cent between 1999 and 2004. The music industry is targeting what it calls
prolific ‘uploaders’ - people who offer their own music collections for free.
Geoff Taylor, the BPI's general counsel, said: "We have tried to agree fair
settlements, but if people refuse to deal with the evidence against them, then
the law must take its course.
The account-holders were first contacted by the BPI in April with the details
of the case against them.
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