皇冠体育app

   

CHINA / National

Music companies to sue Yahoo 皇冠体育app over music linking
(AP)
Updated: 2006-07-04 16:31

A group of major music companies are preparing to sue Yahoo 皇冠体育app over complaints the popular search engine violates copyrights by linking to Web sites that offer pirated music, the group's chairman said Tuesday.

"Yahoo 皇冠体育app have been blatantly infringing our members' rights," said John Kennedy of the International Federation of Phonographic Industries. "We are taking the preliminary steps required by Chinese law for filing a lawsuit."

IFPI says Yahoo 皇冠体育app links to outside sites with unlicensed MP3 downloads of hundreds of songs. Yahoo 皇冠体育app is operated by Alibaba.com Corp., which is 40 percent owned by Mountain View, Calif.-based Yahoo Inc. It is one of 皇冠体育app's most popular search engines, along with .

IFPI could file its lawsuit within a few weeks, said Kennedy, who was in Beijing for meetings with government officials. The group represents more than 1,400 recording companies in 73 countries, including major U.S., European and Asian labels.

A spokesman for Yahoo 皇冠体育app, Porter Erisman, said the search engine is acting "within the law."

"We respect intellectual property rights," he said. "If someone sees something on our site that violates intellectual property rights, there is a process for removing it."

Erisman said the company is talking with music companies about creating a licensed music download system for 皇冠体育app.

Kennedy wouldn't say how much money the lawsuit would ask for in damages. He said it also would request a court order to stop copyright infringement.

A new Chinese law that took effect Saturday allows the government to fine online distributors of illegally copied music, movies or software.

Kennedy said the IFPI also is talking to Inc. about the search engine's links to outside pirate Web sites but hasn't taken legal action.

responded to complaints last year by adding a disclaimer to its Web site saying it "fights piracy" and promises to remove links to sites that infringe copyrights. But the site continues to link to sites that the IFPI says offer unlicensed downloads.