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The 26 were the first cases to be tackled after the BPI won a High Court order forcing internet service providers to hand over details of people alleged to have repeatedly given away tracks for free. The file-swapping services allow people to swap copyrighted music, and other files, between computers.Īnother three cases are still in negotiation with legal action remaining a possibility. The filesharers illicitly made thousands of popular songs available online over what are known as file-swapping networks. Two of the illegal filesharers are paying more than £4,000 to settle their cases with the British Phonographic Industry (BPI), the record companies' trade association. In the first cases of their kind, 17 men and six women have paid more than £2,000 each on average to settle the claims which would otherwise have gone to court in a crackdown on the filesharing which is costing record companies millions in lost revenue. Twenty-three British internet users have agreed to pay record companies a total of £50,000 compensation after admitting distributing music illegally through filesharing on the internet. The Independent:Music fans pay £50,000 for illegal filesharing /īy Louise Jury, Arts Correspondent / 05 March 2005