(Associated Press via NewsEdge) The operator of a Russian Web site that sells music cheaply went on a media offensive to deny accusations that it violates copyrights on songs by major artists.
In an online exchange with reporters, representatives from Moscow-based Mediaservices, which owns the AllofMP3.com Web site, asserted that it was running a legitimate business.
'The company has been unfairly characterized as a pirate Web site,' Vadim Mamotin, the firm's director general, said through a translator. 'Nothing could be further from the truth.'
AllofMP3.com typically charges under $1 for an entire album and just cents per track. By contrast, an album at Apple Computer's iTunes Music Store and other licensed services typically costs about $10 and a song $0.99 cents.
Mediaservices maintains that it pays taxes in Russia and that 15% of every sale is sent as royalties to the Russian Multimedia and Internet Society, a licensing body it claims is responsible for compensating copyright owners.
The society had 'offered to pay the record companies the royalties they collected but (has) been rebuffed,' said Mamotin, who asserted that the recording industry was trying to gain leverage before entering direct negotiations with Mediaservices or the licensing group.
By paying royalties to the licensing group, Mediaservices claims AllofMP3.com is in compliance with Russian laws.
However, the company has never had a license from major recording companies to sell music in the first place, a requirement under US copyright laws.
The music industry also contends that the Russian licensing group does not have the authority to collect and distribute royalties.
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