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Kazaa a 'blight on users' machines'
News Morle continued saying that these two issues could be reasons why Kazaa "loses users by over-stepping the mark" and that the company should base this by looking at how many employees at Sharman Networks refuse to install the p2p software.
[February 4, 2005, 10:35]
Filtering Kazaa 'impossible' - Sharman
News Sharman Networks has rejected claims from the music industry that it can identify the difference between copyright-infringing and legitimate file-sharing on its network, which is a crucial step towards the company gaining the capacity to block...
[February 9, 2004, 7:35]
Kazaa plans defensive ad campaign
News Kazaa parent Sharman Networks plans to unveil its first offline advertising campaign next week, in which it will exhort computer users to defend file swapping and tell entertainment companies they can make money too.
[November 13, 2003, 11:50]
Kazaa exec declares child porn unstoppable
News Philip Morle, Sharman Networks' chief technology officer, told the Federal Court in Sydney yesterday, during the trial of the peer-to-peer software provider over alleged copyright-infringing behaviour, he did not believe Sharman could actually...
[December 10, 2004, 7:50]
Kazaa fires back at Hollywood, labels
News Sharman Networks, owner of the popular Kazaa file-swapping software, has launched a legal counterstrike against the major record labels and Hollywood studios, asserting they have "obscenely" abused their copyright powers.
[January 28, 2003, 7:56]
New Kazaa likely to raise labels' ire
News The new software shows clear ambitions on the part of Kazaa parent company Sharman Networks to spread beyond its file-swapping origins, while expanding the utility of basic file-trading functions. Sharman, along with Streamcast Networks and...
[September 23, 2002, 7:51]
Kazaa owner denied office-raid appeal
News Sharman Networks and Brilliant Digital Entertainment (BDE) have been denied application for leave to appeal the Anton Piller orders that facilitated raids on the companies' premises. The chief executive officer of Sharman Networks, Nikki Hemming...
[October 8, 2004, 12:20]
Kazaa owner takes heart from US copyright ruling
News Sharman Networks, parent company of the peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing software Kazaa, is rejoicing at the US court ruling that found two similar P2P programs, Grokster and Morpheus, do not violate US copyright law.
[August 20, 2004, 10:00]
Kazaa's owner breaks silence
News With 2.3 million downloads last week alone, and up to 1.82 million users online at any one time, the ongoing secrecy surrounding Kazaa's antipodean owners, Sharman Networks, doesn't appear to have affected the software's popularity.
[April 24, 2002, 10:17]
Aussie Kazaa case heads for November trial
News Sharman Networks, the parent company of controversial file-sharing service Kazaa, could face the music in Sydney by the end of the year following a Federal Court ruling. A range of procedural matters were raised in court regarding access to...
[July 2, 2004, 12:05]
Sharman offices raided by piracy investigators
News Music Industry Piracy Investigations this morning raided the offices of P2P companies Sharman Networks and Brilliant Digital Entertainment, along with the homes of key executives and several ISPs. In addition to the offices of Sharman Networks and...
[February 6, 2004, 8:35]
Labels reel Kazaa owner into lawsuit
News A federal judge said on Monday that record labels and film studios could expand an ongoing copyright lawsuit to include Sharman Networks, which distributes the popular Kazaa software. But in February, Kazaa BV sold the Kazaa file-swapping software...
[July 10, 2002, 7:40]
Sharman challenges raids' validity
News Lawyers representing Sharman Networks on Tuesday informed the Federal Court of Australia they intend to challenge the validity of the court order that resulted in raids at several locations across Australia last week.
[February 10, 2004, 7:25]
Sharman continues file-sharing evidence fight
News Sharman Networks and the Music Industry Piracy Investigation (MIPI) will be back in the Australian Federal court later this week for yet another legal contest over access to evidence that was confiscated in raids last February.
[May 12, 2004, 10:50]
Sharman clamps down on Kazaa Lite K++
News Sharman Networks -- owner of popular peer-to-peer software Kazaa -- has succeeded in eliminating a hacked version of its software. Sharman Networks, according to reports, has contacted the Internet service provider of every Web site that hosted...
[December 8, 2003, 9:30]
Universal tries to expose Kazaa backers
News Lawyers for Universal Music put the hard word on Sharman Networks -- the company responsible for popular peer-to-peer application Kazaa -- in the Federal Court today, attempting to force the company to reveal its corporate structure and anonymous...
[October 14, 2004, 11:35]
Sharman's mystery owner 'must be revealed'
News Sharman Networks' lawyers have been asked to reveal the identity of the company's owner for the first time, as the parent company of the file-sharing software Kazaa faced copyright infringement allegations in the Federal Court in Sydney today.
[July 27, 2004, 9:20]
Kazaa's man in Washington speaks out
News That's not a trivial task for Corwin, the lobbyist for Kazaa's parent company Sharman Networks. Australia-based Sharman Networks hired Corwin almost three years ago to be its lone representative in Washington DC Since then, Sharman has been fending...
[December 6, 2004, 10:25]
Altnet to pay Kazaa users for file-swapping
News Later this week, Kazaa parent Sharman Networks and Altnet will jointly release a new bundle of file-swapping software that will include components of a new high-security peer-to-peer network and a programme that will pay users to be a part of it.
[June 2, 2003, 7:36]
Swappers log off Kazaa as alternatives emerge
News When a federal judge shut down Napster in 2001, Kazaa parent Sharman Networks quickly stepped in as the replacement of choice, signing up millions of users and even surpassing its predecessor in some respects.
[July 1, 2004, 11:15]
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