Word: i2hubã
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...Monday. The i2hub website contained no details about the closure of the service, displaying only a blank page with a graphic containing the words “Remember i2hub,” accompanied by a caption reading “R.I.P.” and the dates of i2hub??s launch and demise (“03.14.2004 - 11.14.2005”). No contact information for the operators of i2hub was made available on the website. The shutdown seemed to have come in response to fears of legal action. Users of i2hub, including several Harvard students, had already been...
...part of its anti-music-piracy efforts, the organization announced late last month. Defendants in the new round of litigation include 64 users of university networks including the three from Harvard, RIAA spokesperson Jenni R. Engebretsen said. The lawsuits accuse all of the university-network defendants of using i2hub??a software program that allows users to upload and download files over the intercollegiate network Internet2—to illegally share copyrighted music. “These lawsuits are part of our ongoing enforcement efforts, and part of our overall efforts to encourage students and music fans everywhere...
...April defendants, who attended 18 colleges and universities around the country, were accused of using a program called “i2hub?? to illegally share copyrighted material through high-speed uploading and downloading over Internet2. According to an RIAA press release, they were responsible for sharing an average of over 2,300 “mp3” music files each. Some users, it said, have shared up to 3,600 such files...
While the RIAA suits focused on cases of alleged music piracy, the MPAA targeted users who it believed were responsible for illegally sharing movies online. Like the RIAA, the MPAA cited “i2hub?? as especially problematic...
According to the April 12 RIAA press release, a file-sharing application known as “i2hub?? allows students to upload and download files at very high speeds via Internet2. The press release states that “i2hub?? is especially attractive to students because they tend to wrongly believe their illegal file-sharing activities will not be detected in the “closed environment” of the Internet2 network...