Reuters bericht dat Duitse mediagigant Bertelsmann voor het lieve sommetje van 17 miljard dollar wordt aangeklaagd, vanwege de sterke banden die men had met peer-to-peer programma Napster. Het bedrijf was namelijk tijdens de hoogtijdagen van de file-sharing service - toen zo'n 60 miljoen internetters illegaal onderling muziek uitwisselden - de grote financiele steun achter Napster. De aanklacht is dat de lening van zo'n 100 miljoen dollar die men aan de organisatie achter het programma ter beschikking stelde, ervoor zorgde dat de illegale praktijken doorgang konden vinden. De aanklager in deze rechtszaak is een verzameling van 27.000 eigenaars van auteursrecht over muziekstukken, waarbij opvallend is dat ook de eigen muziektak van Bertelsmann, BMG, tot de tegenpartij behoort:
BMG could opt out of the suit, but one lawyer familiar with such cases said it would risk separate lawsuits by its own songwriters if it did so. Plaintiffs include songwriters Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, who ruled the R&B and pop charts in the late 1950s and early 1960s with such hits as "Hound Dog" and "Stand By Me." Among other plaintiffs, the case named publishers Frank Music Corp. and Peer International Corp.
[...] Under the helm of former chief executive Thomas Middelhoff, Bertelsmann was one of Napster's biggest funders, investing 103 million euros ($111 million) in Napster in the form of a secured loan, including some $83 million related to technology licensing. As other music companies questioned Bertelsmann's relationship with Napster, the German company has tried to shield itself from liability by insisting the investment was just a loan. Bertelsmann's plans to launch a legitimate service were scotched last year after Napster filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and a U.S. court ruled the German group could not buy the assets due to objections by Napster's creditors.