Thursday 30 January 2014

Singer Prince Sues Facebook Fans For $22m For Posting Links To His Concerts

Prolific US singer/songwriter, Prince has instituted a lawsuit
against 22 Facebook fans for posting links of his live concerts
on their Facebook page and blogs without express
authorization from him or his label. If found guilty in court,
the fans would face a damage claim of $22million. He filed
the law suit at the Northern District of Carolina, USA.

Although the actual names of most of the defendants in the
lawsuit haven't been revealed and the websites named in the
suit can no longer be accessed, the usernames identified in the
lawsuit (like "PurpleKissTwo") indicate that at least some of
the targets are Prince die hard fans.

In the lawsuit, Prince listed his performances from 2011 in
North Carolina, 2002 in Oakland and 1983 in Chicago as his
private materials that have been copyrighted by the accused or
defendants.

The suit went further to state that the circulation of a 31-year-
old live set damages Prince's earning capability, with the
singer leveling charges of direct copyright infringement,
'unauthorized fixation and trafficking in sound recordings',
contributory copyright infringement and bootlegging.

"Prince has suffered and is continuing to suffer damages in an
amount according to proof, but no less than $1 million per
defendant," the lawsuit reads.

Prince has a history of suing anyone who uses his material
without permission, but most times doesn't follow through on
his threats. A 2007 effort to sue The Pirate Bay went nowhere. This new lawsuit is likely to go much further.

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