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TorrentSpy ordered to pay the MPAA $110 million

8 May 2008 | 10:10 BST

By INQUIRER Newsdesk

Copyright, wrong

A JUDGE IN a Los Angeles Federal court has awarded the MPAA some $110 million in compensation from Torrentspy operator Valence Media.

The MPAA has been pursuing Torrentspy for a couple of years and the site was closed in March after being hounded by the MPAA and running out of money

Now the judge has ordered the outfit to pay compensation of $30,000 per copyright infringement and reckons the fee applies to some 3,699 films and TV shows. That comes to some $110,970,000.

Torrentspy was also accused of hiding or deleting data that might have led the autrhorities to individual file-sharers, a charge the outfit denied.

For Dan Glickman, Chairman and CEO of the MPAA, “The demise of Torrentspy is a clear victory for the studios and demonstrates that such pirate sites will not be allowed to continue to operate without facing relentless litigation by copyright holders.”

Torrentspy said it will appeal against the damages. µ

© 2007 Incisive Media Investments Ltd. 2007

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