Mp3.com Marches to Support Net Music Bill

ByABC News
September 29, 2000, 10:14 AM

L O S   A N G E L E S, Sept. 29 -- MP3.com Inc. is launching a politicalcampaign to support a bill that would make it legal to store musicdigitally and listen to songs over the Internet.

The bill could end a legal battle the company is facing overcharges of copyright infringement.

Revisiting Copyright Laws

Dubbed the Million E-mail March, the campaign supports abill introduced this week by Rep. Rick Boucher, D-Va., and threeRepublican co-sponsors.

The bill would amend federal copyright laws to make it legal tocreate a digital copy of a recording, known as an MP3 file, afterfirst proving ownership of the music. Consumers would then be ableto send that file over the Internet and listen to the digital copyfrom a remote location.

Its just that activity that resulted in a landmark legal casebrought by the five major music labels against San Diego-basedMP3.com. The company introduced its My.Mp3.com listeningservice earlier this year, which allowed a listener to brieflyinsert a compact disc into a computer to prove ownership of the CD,then listen to a digital copy of the music already stored on acomputer at MP3.coms headquarters.

Mp3.com argued it should only have to buy and store one copy ofa CD on its computers and allow multiple users to listen. Therecord companies argued the system shortchanged them and violatedtheir copyrights because MP3.com was allowing millions of people tolisten to one CD.

My.Mp3.com vs. Napster

The My.Mp3.com service differs from the music-sharing Web siteNapster, which faces legal challenges of its own, because it merelysends the music to listening devices, such as a computer or awireless music player. Napster lets users download an actualcomputer file and make copies of it.

Four of the five record labels settled the case and grantedMP3.com licenses to continue the service. The fifth, UniversalMusic Group, pursued the case.

Earlier this month, a federal judge in New York ruled thatMP3.com violated copyrights of music companies and awardedUniversal $25,000 per CD a penalty that could reach as much as$250 million. The company plans to appeal, and the case is likelyto reach the U.S. Supreme Court.