death of limewire

In honor of the death of LimeWire we have stolen a "brief history of some of the biggest events in file sharing over the past ten years" from Gearlog. (warning: annoying pop-ups)
LimeWire went dark today, thanks to a court-ordered injunction. The Manhattan-based site is just the latest in a long line of file-sharing sites to rise and fall in the past decade or so.

In honor of the death of LimeWire, here's a brief history of some of the biggest events in file sharing over the past ten years.

1999: Napster Released
An 18-year-old student at Boston's Northeastern University launches a file sharing service, branding it with his childhood nickname. The service catches fire quickly and almost immediately catches the attention of the Recording Industry Association of America and vocal anti-file sharing musicians like Metallica's Lars Ulrich.

2000: Gnutella Launches
This popular peer-to-peer network was initially launched by AOL-owned Nullsoft. AOL shut down the program, thanks to file sharing concerns, but it was too late--the client was already out.

2000: LimeWire Launches
The site is launched by Mark Gorton, a former Wall Street trader with degrees from Harvard, Yale, and Stanford. Like many other P2P creators before and since, Gorton has long insisted that the existence of his site is well within the confines of the law.

2001: Napster Shuts Down
A heated legal battle between Napster and the RIAA ends in March with an injunction against the site. Napster shuts down its network in July, declares bankruptcy, and is later reborn as a legal music subscription service in 2001.

2001: Kazaa Launches
Designed by programmers in Estonia, this service is quickly snapped up by Niklas Zennström and Janus Friis, the duo who, three years later, will help launch Skype. Kazaa is the target of legal battles in a number of countries and a number of users are subjected to heavy record industry fines.

2001: BitTorrent is Released
This popular file sharing protocol fills in the void for users seeking a Napster replacement, accounting for nearly half of Web traffic at the height of its popularity, and giving rise to a number of popular services: The Pirate Bay, and isoHunt

2003: The Pirate Bay Launch
Swedish anti-copyright organization Piratbyrån (The Piracy Bureau) launched this BitTorrent indexer. It becomes one of the most popular sites on the Internet, and is subsequently subject to various police raids. In 2007, it attempted to by its own tiny island nation to avoid litigation.

2006: Kazaa Fined, Goes Legit
In July, the site is ordered to pay $100 million in damages to the record industry. Like Napster before it, the site is purchased by new owners and re-launched as a legal service.

2010: Court Ordered Pirate Bay Injunction
Once again, Pirate Bay is taken down due to a court-ordered injunction, only to return again shortly after, earning its slogan, "The world's most resilient bittorrent site."

2010: LimeWire Closes
Thanks to a permanent injunction issued by a New York-based federal court, LimeWire becomes the latest P2P casualty.

- sally mckay 10-28-2010 2:21 am

remember hotline? not p2p but it was my intro to "sharing" .it's still going ( i think). anyone still use this?
- r.e.c. (guest) 10-28-2010 6:07 am


Limewire's whole business strategy was based on the poor idiots who chose to pay for the "pro" option. I knew someone who knew someone who worked there. Apparently the "pros" were a laughing stock, even within the company.

- joester (guest) 10-29-2010 5:47 am


As I understand it, Limewire hadn't been very good for awhile. Not enough people using it and tons of spam files.
- sally mckay 10-29-2010 2:53 pm


It was always a great place to pick up a virus or two.
- joester (guest) 10-29-2010 6:22 pm


exactement
- sally mckay 10-29-2010 6:37 pm





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