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Grokster Ltd., which lost a Supreme Court fight over file-sharing software
used for stealing songs and movies online, agreed Monday to shut down and pay
$50 million to settle piracy complaints by Hollywood and the music industry.
The surprise settlement permanently bans Grokster from participating, directly
or indirectly, in the theft of copyrighted files and requires the company to
stop giving away its software, according to court papers.
Executives indicated plans to launch a legal, fee-based "Grokster 3G"
service before year's end under a new parent company, believed to be Mashboxx
of Virginia Beach, Va. Mashboxx, headed in part by former Grokster president
Wayne Rosso, already has signed a licensing agreement with Sony BMG Music Entertainment.
"It is time for a new beginning," Grokster said in a statement issued
from its corporate headquarters in the West Indies.
Grokster's Web site was changed Monday to say its existing file-sharing service
was illegal and no longer available. "There are legal services for downloading
music and movies," the message said. "This service is not one of them."
The head of the Recording Industry Association of America, Mitch Bainwol, described
the settlement as "a chapter that ends on a high note for the recording
industry, the tech community and music fans and consumers everywhere."
It was unclear whether Grokster can afford to pay the $50 million in damages
required under the agreement. The head of the Motion Picture Association of
America, Dan Glickman, said the entertainment industry will demand full payment
unless Grokster satisfies all its obligations under the settlement.
Grokster's brand will survive. The new fee-based version of its software will
be available within 60 days, according to one executive involved in the deal.
This executive spoke only on condition of anonymity because the sale of Grokster's
assets is pending.
Grokster's decision was not expected to affect Internet users who already run
the company's file-sharing software to download music and movies online, nor
was it expected to affect users of rival downloading services, such as eDonkey,
Kazaa, BitTorrent and others.
Glickman said Grokster will send anti-piracy messages to existing users, and
the company is forbidden from maintaining its software or network. "Without
those services, the system will degrade over time," Glickman said.
Grokster lost an important Supreme Court ruling in June. Justices ruled that
the entertainment industry can file piracy lawsuits against technology companies
caught encouraging customers to steal music and movies over the Internet.
The decision, which gave a green light for the federal case to advance in Los
Angeles, significantly weakened lawsuit protections for companies that had blamed
illegal behavior on their own customers rather than the technology that made
such behavior possible.
The court said Grokster and another firm, Streamcast Networks Inc., can be
sued because they deliberately encouraged customers to download copyrighted
files illegally so they could build a larger audience and sell more advertising.
Writing for the court, Justice David H. Souter said the companies' "unlawful
objective is unmistakable."
"They're out of business," said Charles Baker, a lawyer for Streamcast.
"It's over for them. There was a lack of desire to continue to fight this
thing going forward." Baker said the settlement does not affect Streamcast,
the co-defendant in the entertainment industry's lawsuit.
The Supreme Court noted as evidence of bad conduct that Grokster and Streamcast
made no effort to block illegal downloads, which the companies maintained wasn't
possible.