MediaBytes - Friday June 19, 2009 - 1 Comment
Thomas-Rasset to pay RIAA $1.92 million.: MediaBytes with Shelly Palmer June 19, 2009
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Jammie Thomas-Rasset, the mom who was caught file-sharing by the RIAA, has been charged with infringing 24 copyright laws during a retrial. Thomas will be forced to pay the recorded music company’s a total of $1.92 million, roughly $80,000 per song shared. After the verdict was delivered, Jammie Thomas-Rasset said “Good luck trying to get it from me… it’s like squeezing blood from a turnip.”
NBCU and Microsoft have joined forces to sell television ad spots through the Internet. NBCU tested the Microsoft owned Admira ad platform in the spring and is now ready to bring it out nationally, selling inventory to advertisers of all sizes on both cable and broadcast networks. Unlike Google’s TV ad platform, NBC’s will not auction ad space.
The Senate Commerce Committee confirmed the appointment of Julius Genachowski and Robert McDowell to the FCC. Sources say the committee fast-tracked the process by holding the vote off-the-floor. Julius Genachowski will take over as Chairman of the FCC for Kevin Martin who served during the Bush Administration.
The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien topped the Late Show with David Letterman in ratings this week. While O’Brien lost viewers from his first week, he averaged a 1.5/6 rating and was able to hold off Letterman and CBS. However, while Conan beat Letterman in total viewers (3.8 million vs. 3.7 million), Letterman beat O’Brien in household ratings, garnering a 2.7 over Conan’s 2.6.
Hillcrest Labs has introduced a mouse for your living room. If your PC’s hooked up to your TV, now you can navigate sites like Hulu or YouTube the way they’re supposed to be navigated. The Loop Pointer, which looks like something out of Star Trek, is an easy to use, highly functional and much needed tool for browsing on TV.






Comments
One Response to “Thomas-Rasset to pay RIAA $1.92 million.: MediaBytes with Shelly Palmer June 19, 2009”James Bressi June 19th, 2009 7:25 am
I would love for the artists music that she shared to be made
public and then ask for comment from those artists about the
verdict. Is stealing music wrong? Yes. Is sharing wrong? No. The
RIAA, labels, and artists can thank the days of mix tapes and
sharing to the thousands — if not tens-of-thousands — I have
dished over for music. This doesn’t count the halo created which
pushes fans to concerts, t-shits, etc. Meh. This has all been said
before, but the part that killlllllllllls me on this case in
particular is the number of songs. If they wanted to make an
example of someone, it may have been advantageous if they busted
someone with THOUSANDS of “shared” tracks.