"This is all procedural maneuvering. The court has not ruled on the merits in any way. We're confident that when the court does rule on the merits, the rights of copyright owners will be upheld."
——Matt Oppenheim, RIAA VP, Legal Affairs

AIMSTER SCORES FIRST
IN RIAA LAWSUIT

Judge Refuses To Discard Copyright Infringement Suit, To Press Seersucker Suit
A judge’s refusal Friday (6/22) to discard Aimster’s copyright infringement suit against the major record companies is being widely viewed as a victory for the file-sharing service.

Further, U.S. District Judge Lawrence "Wrath Of" Kahn also decided not to transfer the case from Albany to Manhattan, where 36 companies filed two subsequent copyright infringement suits against the computer service. This, too, is seen as an Aimster win, albeit a minor one.

Aimster is seeking a declaratory judgment that it does not violate recording copyrights. "Everybody we've named in Albany either has sued us or said they're going to sue us," said Aimster attorney "Curious" George Carpinello. He plans to file motions to have all the cases consolidated in Albany, according to the Associated Press.

"This is all procedural maneuvering," said "Stark Raving" Matt Oppenheim, VP, Legal Affairs for the Recording Industry Association of America. "The court has not ruled on the merits in any way. We're confident that when the court does rule on the merits, the rights of copyright owners will be upheld."

Aimster, which lets users exchange files via instant messages, says its system simply provides private channels of communication and does not monitor or control what users send each other. The RIAA, however, says Aimster, like Napster, allows users to search for copyrighted music.

Abovepeer, which owns Aimster, sued first on April 30 in Albany after receiving a warning letter from RIAA threatening "additional legal remedies." On May 24, major recording companies struck back, claiming Aimster's parent company is helping customers infringe upon the copyrights of millions of sound recordings throughout the world.

"A HIGH-WIRE ACT": BEN WINSTON ON PRODUCING THIS YEAR'S GRAMMYS
A different kind of challenge (1/28a)
HITS LIST: L.A. STORIES
...and other trending topics (1/28a)
A GRAMMY WEEK GATHERING FOR A GOOD CAUSE
Arm in arm (1/28a)
ON THE COVER: DOECHII
Just in time for Music's Biggest Night (1/27a)
TRUMP TALKING TO ORACLE ABOUT TIKTOK TAKEOVER
The roller-coaster ride continues. (1/27a)
GIVING BACK
FireAid, other benefits prove artists want to be part of the solution.
MEET THE RESISTANCE
Music fuels the fight as our rights come under attack.
BEST NEW ARTISTS
Grammy's BNA batch proves its mettle.
AFTER THE FIRES
How can the biz help restore L.A.?
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