Touting findings from the Pew Internet and American Life Project and other Internet use researchers, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) has credited its controversial strategy of suing individual file-sharers with cutting the number of illegal trades in half. TechNewsWorld talked with Optisoft CEO Wayne Rosso, whose P2P application, Blubster, is among those dreaded and sometimes persecuted by the recording industry. Rosso talked about the RIAA’s aggressive strategy, the alternatives to litigation and the enduring potential of P2P networks.
Optisoft CEO Wayne Rosso on File-Sharing Frontiers
Posted by: Jay Lyman March 2, 2004 06:47 AMTouting findings from the Pew Internet and American Life Project and other Internet use researchers, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) has credited its controversial strategy of suing individual file-sharers with cutting the number of illegal trades in half. TechNewsWorld talked with Optisoft CEO Wayne Rosso, whose P2P application, Blubster, is among those dreaded and sometimes persecuted by the recording industry. Rosso talked about the RIAA’s aggressive strategy, the alternatives to litigation and the enduring potential of P2P networks.