Kazaa owner gets OK to sue record labels
A U.S. federal court has cleared the way for Kazaa file-sharing software owner Sharman Networks to sue the entertainment industry for copyright infringement, Sharman said on Friday.
Sharman, targeted by studios and record companies because its software is used to trade music and video files, has sought to turn the tables on the industry, accusing it of misusing Kazaa software to invade users' privacy and send corrupt files and threatening messages.
Studios and record companies had asked the court to throw out Sharman's countersuit, but U.S. District Judge Stephen Wilson in Los Angeles declined to do so.
Sharman, headquartered on the island nation of Vanuatu in the South Pacific, said it would pursue the case.
A spokesman for the Recording Industry Association of America said that "the court does not appear to want these claims to proceed at this point. If they ever proceed, Sharman will have a very difficult time providing evidence to support their allegations."
Story Copyright © 2004 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.

-
Napster's Fanning has Snocap-ped vision
January 23, 2004 -
Kazaa blasts Hollywood 'conspiracy'
September 23, 2003 -
Kazaa strikes back at Hollywood, labels
January 27, 2003 - Get this story's "Big Picture"