The RIAA, and their cohorts, the American Society of Composers and the Gospel Music Association, wrote an angry letter to the CEO of PCMag.com, attacking them for daring to publish an article about the demise of LimeWire, and alternatives to the music sharing service.
It also attacked another article which references a TorrentFreak article about a secret plan to resurrect LimeWire. But the the problem is that PCMag.com didn't actually write that particular article, it was written by IDG's PC World, even though PCMag.com received the blame for it.
Regardless, the RIAA accuses PCMag.com of supporting piracy and encouraging people to steal music, but PCMag.com believes they were only doing their job of "covering all aspects of technology". "We have, obviously, written about many online and offline services, including some that these groups might consider legitimate or "legal." However, the fact is that some users store and manage illegally gained content in music applications like iTunes. We would not stop covering these utilities simply because some users place illegal or even inappropriate content in them," PCMag added in an email reply to the RIAA.
And PCMag.com vowed to continue their coverage and not be silenced by an increasingly desperate RIAA, seeking a scapegoat for the industry's piracy problem.
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It also attacked another article which references a TorrentFreak article about a secret plan to resurrect LimeWire. But the the problem is that PCMag.com didn't actually write that particular article, it was written by IDG's PC World, even though PCMag.com received the blame for it.
Regardless, the RIAA accuses PCMag.com of supporting piracy and encouraging people to steal music, but PCMag.com believes they were only doing their job of "covering all aspects of technology". "We have, obviously, written about many online and offline services, including some that these groups might consider legitimate or "legal." However, the fact is that some users store and manage illegally gained content in music applications like iTunes. We would not stop covering these utilities simply because some users place illegal or even inappropriate content in them," PCMag added in an email reply to the RIAA.
And PCMag.com vowed to continue their coverage and not be silenced by an increasingly desperate RIAA, seeking a scapegoat for the industry's piracy problem.
More:
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