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PayPal unveils micropayments, Facebook integration

LimeWire file-sharing service shut down by US court
New York (AFP) Oct 26, 2010 - Popular online file-sharing service LimeWire was shut down by a US federal court on Tuesday following a lawsuit filed by the music industry. The move came a little more than five months after a US judge ruled in favor of 13 music companies in a copyright infringement and unfair competition case brought against LimeWire. LimeWire.com featured a legal notice on its home page on Tuesday stating it was "under a court-ordered injunction to stop distributing and supporting its file-sharing software."

The legal notice linked to the court order from US District Court Judge Kimba Wood ordering the closure of the service. LimeWire chief executive George Searle said in a statement he was "disappointed with this turn of events." "We are extremely proud of our pioneering history and have, for years, worked hard to bridge the gap between technology and content rights holders," Searle said. "However, at this time, we have no option but to cease further distribution and support of our software." Searle thanked users of the service and said "our team of technologists and music enthusiasts are creating a completely new music service that puts you back at the center of your digital music experience."

"We'll be sharing more details about our new service and look forward to bringing it to you in the future," he said. The 13 music companies filed their complaint against LimeWire in 2006 and Judge Wood ruled in their favor in May. In June, eight members of the National Music Publishers' Association filed a separate copyright suit against LimeWire. LimeWire software was released in August 2000 and uses peer-to-peer, or P2P, technology to allow users to share music or other files over the Internet. LimeWire is owned by the Lime Group, a New York-based company.
by Staff Writers
San Francisco (AFP) Oct 26, 2010
PayPal unveiled a new micropayments service on Tuesday that makes it easier to buy digital goods and announced an integration with social networking giant Facebook.

PayPal said the new micropayments system "lets consumers pay for digital goods and content in as little as two clicks, without ever having to leave a publisher's game, news, music, video or media site."

It described the service, which will be available later this year, as the "online equivalent of dropping a quarter in the slot to buy a newspaper or play a videogame."

"PayPal's new solution solves a key problem for the digital goods industry by offering a faster, safer and more cost-effective way to send and receive micropayments globally," the online payment giant said.

"Every time a customer purchases content, publishers and merchants get paid quickly, giving them fast access to their funds," PayPal said in a statement released at its two-day developers' conference here.

PayPal said its fee structure for micropayments was five percent plus five cents for purchases under 12 dollars -- "lower than the fees typically charged by payment processors in the digital goods industry."

Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg said the social network will integrate PayPal's new digital goods payment service to make PayPal the way to make purchases on Facebook.

PayPal, which is owned by online auction giant eBay, said a number of other companies have also signed up for the service including Autosport.com, FT.com, GigaOM, Justin.tv and Ustream.

"The decision to purchase digital goods and content usually happens on impulse, so the act of paying needs to be as quick as that impulse," Sam Shrauger, PayPal's vice president of global product strategy, said.

"PayPal for digital goods is an ideal solution for game developers, newspapers, bloggers, media companies, and anyone who is looking to monetize premium digital content around the globe," Shrauger said.

EBay chief executive John Donahoe said meanwhile in an interview with financial news network CNBC that he expected PayPal to eventually be a bigger business than eBay.



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