Times Online has news that five developers, Atari, Topware Interactive,
Reality Pump, Techland, and Codemasters, are serving notice to 25,000 UK
families demanding they pay a settlement, or risk being taken to court over
software piracy (thanks
Edge Online). Here's a portion:
The computer games industry has
launched an unprecedented assault on illegal downloads, demanding payment from
thousands of families who obtained the latest releases over the internet without
paying.
Five of the world’s top games developers will serve notice on 25,000 people
across the UK, requiring each one to pay £300 immediately to settle out of
court. Those who refuse risk being taken to court. The companies will target
their initial legal actions on 500 people who ignore the letters.
The companies involved – Atari, Topware Interactive, Reality Pump, Techland and
Codemasters – make some of the popular games, including The Lord of the Rings,
the Colin McRae Rally series and Operation Flashpoint. It is estimated that as
many as six million people in Britain share games illegally over the internet.
The aggressive action marks a dramatic change in the approach to copyright on
the internet. The British music industry, hit hard by illegal file-sharing, has
taken action against just 150 people in ten years.
The game makers have appointed the law firm Davenport Lyons. This week Isabela
Barwinska, an unemployed mother of two, became the first person in the UK to be
ordered to pay damages to a manufacturer. She must pay more than £16,000 to
Topware after downloading Dream Pinball through a file-sharing site.