Rest easy file-traders. The long, drawn out copyright wars are now over. No longer will you need to worry about the RIAA or the MPAA filing a lawsuit against your 83-year-old grandmother. No longer will you need to worry if Peer Guardian really works or is just a pile of binary fluff. RazorPop is here to save the day.
In a bold statement in their press release, RazorPop has declared victory in the great file-sharing wars, “The File Sharing Battle Is Over: RazorPop Opens P2P Networks and Software To Major Consumer Entertainment And Marketing Companies.”
RazorPop, who also functions as the parent comapny of DiaRIAA and P2PFiles, owns TrustyFiles. TrustyFiles is a P2P application that accesses multiple networks. Users of trusty files can access other Trusty file uses, in addition to Kazaa, Grokster, Morpheus, Limewire, Bearshare, Shareaza, and other Fast Track, Gnutella, Gnutella2 and Bit Torrent network users. RazorPop belongs to the P2P trade group DCIA (Distributed Computing Industry Association.)
In an apparent end to P2P hostilities, TrustyFiles is welcoming the copyright industry’s embrace of file-sharing. While some may display concern at the RIAA’s lawsuit campaign, the upcoming MPAA crusade, 13 year old girls being sued, the constant legal battles, the consumption of bandwidth, the threat to anonymity and Internet freedoms, TrustyFiles views these as mere trivialities.
“The recording industry is finally done battling P2P technology,” announced RazorPop founder and CEO Marc Freedman. “RIAA (The Recording Industry Association of America) has proclaimed ‘P2P technology is great’ and multiple industry-approved P2P networks will be available in the near future.”
Full Story: www.slyck.com/news.php?story=601
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