Music-sharing service Grooveshark announced on Thursday that it was shutting down after 1o years. The controversial free streaming site, which once boasted 35 million users, is in the midst of a ...
The music-sharing service Grooveshark was sued by major record labels in 2011, and yesterday the hammer blow finally came down. A New York federal judge has ruled in favor of the music companies on ...
The music streaming service agrees to settle with the major labels and is "wiping its servers of all the record companies’ music, and surrendering ownership of its website, mobile apps and ...
Streaming music service Grooveshark has closed down as part of a settlement with major record companies that had sued it for many years for copyright infringement. The music service, which started in ...
The music streaming application Grooveshark is available again for Android devices 16 months after it was removed by Google from its application market. Grooveshark, which is run by Escape Media Group ...
Groveshark has faced a series of court cases over alleged copyright infringement, with record labels accusing the service of being uncooperative, sometimes even of uploading tracks, and seeking to ...
Last week, after a protracted court battle with music rights holders, the illegal online streaming service Grooveshark went dark. But an ambitious, and mysterious person named “New Grooveshark” ...
Remember Grooveshark, the magical website that let you stream any song you wanted, in high quality, for free? Did you ever wonder how such a thing managed to avoid legal annihilation? Trick question!
Grooveshark was one of the first online services that let you play almost any song you wanted, on demand, with no restrictions. It closed down Thursday and it won't be coming back, according to a ...
Grooveshark employees, up to the CEO, are alleged to have uploaded copyrighted songs; potential statutory damages could be in the billions of dollars. By Eriq Gardner Former Legal Editor-at-Large ...
People have been trying to come up with a legal way to share music since the heydays of Kazaa and Napster. Record labels weren’t ready to relinquish control, though, and arguably, consumers weren’t ...