Skype Boys Chip In For Sharman Settlement Print E-mail
Written by Adam Gosling   
Monday, 31 July 2006
Founders of tear-away broadband phone success stories, Kazaa and Skype, have chipped in for a US$100 million settlement with the music industry according to reports.

Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis, who sold off the file sharing network used to illegally pirate millions of copyrighted songs sold off their Kazaa brainchild when legal problems began heating up. They then turned and created another pee-to-peer Internet sensation, developing Skype, the broadband phone system they subsequently sold on to eBay for billions of dollars.

The downside to the duo's success is that they couldn't travel to the United States for fear of getting embroiled in the legal dispute that has raged around Kazaa since they sold the company to a Vanuatu company which subsequently established the business under the company name Sharman Networks based in Sydney, Australia.

Now the way seems clear for them to venture to the U.S. after all defendants in the copyright infringement lawsuit brought by the record labels and music studios have agreed to settle for US$100 million plus.

The settlement clears Zennstrom and Friis to travel to the States without fear of being served and detained.

In a Reuters story, it has now been revealed that the billionaire duo have contributed their own money to the settlement.

A spokesperson for Sharman Networks confirmed the two were among those contributing to the settlement payment, though it's unlikely the amount will do much to dent their personal fortunes.

However the legal woes resulting from Zennstrom and Friis' involvement with Kazaa are not entirely over. The tow are named in a racketeering suit bought against themselves and eBay.

The lawsuit alleges the two reneged on a deal they had with Morpheus network operator, StreamCast, to sell it the Kazaa peer to peer technology, FastTrack.

StreamCast claims the FastTrack technology is the basis for the peer-to-peer system used in the Skype software Zennstrom and Friis sold to eBay.

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