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By John Borland
Posted on ZDNet News: Jun 2, 2005 11:36:00 PM

One of the oldest Web sites offering inexpensive music downloads has closed, after years of legal battles with record labels.

Weblisten.com, which has operated in Spain since 1997, offered subscribers the ability to download an unlimited number of songs for about $40 a month. It also offered shorter, cheaper windows of time that lasted a week or a weekend.

The company had long contended it had permission to offer major-label songs, without any kind of copy protection, after negotiating with Spanish licensing agencies. Record labels around the world disagreed and spent years in court suing the company.

This week, the legal battle ended. The site now contains a terse note in four languages saying it has been shut down, and the trade group representing international record companies says the company finally admitted to criminal copyright infringement in court.

"Despite the long delay in the Spanish court system, this result makes it clear that you cannot offer music online without permission from all of the people that created the music," Allen Dixon, executive director of the International Federation for the Phonographic Industry, said in a statement.

The record industry has had mixed success against companies that have pointed to local licensing authorities as legal shields for unconventional business models.

Another Spanish site similar to Weblisten, called Puretunes, shut its doors not long after being sued by the record labels. However, a Russian site called AllofMP3.com, which offers downloads for just pennies per song, remains open despite pressure from the music industry.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 28 Talkback(s)
Simplifing the process would be great
I believe folks like Weblisten.com didn't want to jump through the hoops and infringed anyway. This was wrong on their part. A lot of businesses have to jump thru a ton of hoops. What makes them entit... (Read the rest)
Posted by: osreinstall Posted on: 06/03/05 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
How pathetic.. allofmp3 is still up...  Xunil_Sierutuf | 06/02/05
Not for long...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/02/05
LOL.. That's pretty funny..!  Xunil_Sierutuf | 06/02/05
You can run, but you can't hide !  realitycheck101 | 06/02/05
Not sure Weblisten or the RIAA are the criminals  peter.koopman@... | 06/03/05
You have to get permission or there is no forgiveness...  osreinstall | 06/02/05
It was a spanish site.. wink  Xunil_Sierutuf | 06/02/05
Here you go Amigo  osreinstall | 06/02/05
Thanks.. according to Bitty, get ready to make a Russian version..  Xunil_Sierutuf | 06/02/05
Здесь вы идете камрад  osreinstall | 06/02/05
Zdnet has non-western ascii filters on  osreinstall | 06/02/05
ROTFLMAO.. I wonder if it will get deleted..?  Xunil_Sierutuf | 06/02/05
Getting permission is not all that straightforward  tic swayback | 06/03/05
You better clarify stuff first  osreinstall | 06/03/05
Easier said than done  tic swayback | 06/03/05
You have to take on what you can handle  osreinstall | 06/03/05
Lock outs  tic swayback | 06/03/05
You think lockout is only in content  osreinstall | 06/03/05
This has nothing to do with govt or copyright  tic swayback | 06/03/05
They have the right to commit suicide  osreinstall | 06/03/05
I'm not talking about copyright!  tic swayback | 06/03/05
I don't see copyright helping the little guy  voska | 06/03/05
Simplifing the process would be great  osreinstall | 06/03/05
Any Form of copy protection of any kind is simply illegal  Mectron | 06/02/05
They acted the same way when VHS came out..  Xunil_Sierutuf | 06/03/05
Finally  Jimmy Jello | 06/03/05
You hinted at the true solution....  critique | 06/03/05
WOW!!!!!!!  Jimmy Jello | 06/03/05

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