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Message: Microsoft attacks Google on copyright

Allegedly you can pay your dedicated Google Account Team $20,000 a month and receive advice from your Google Rep on how to obtain web traffic to your pirated movies, software, music, etc...including Microsoft XP.

 

By Elise Ackerman
Mercury News
962 words
Feb 15 2007
San Jose Mercury News
English

(c) Copyright 2007, San Jose Mercury News. All Rights Reserved.
For nearly a year, Google employees aided a Missouri-based company that provided software and tech support to people who downloaded pirated software and movies.

Among the victims were Microsoft, Symantec, Adobe and Intuit, according to a sealed affidavit filed late last year in the Southern District of New York and obtained by the Mercury News.

The affidavit provides new details regarding Google's alleged role in promoting piracy in a lawsuit involving two Missouri men and seven of the country's largest movie and TV studios.
 
Google declined to discuss the allegations. In a statement, Google said it was looking at steps to screen out ``potentially problematic ads.'' Google said it prohibits advertisers from using Google to promote the sale of copyright-infringing materials.

But Luke Sample, 26, a guitarist from Cape Girardeau, Mo., and his business partner, Brandon Drury, 26, who owns an independent recording studio, maintained in the lawsuit as one of their defenses that a Google employee suggested they advertise the availability of pirated copies of movies such as ``Batman Begins'' and ``Cinderella Man.''

Heavy advertisers

``The movie names were never requested by Internet Billers,'' the men stated in court papers, referring to an off-shore company they had established on the Caribbean island of Nevis. ``They were suggested by Google.''

The affidavit also states that Google recommended an advertising campaign built around key words referring to pirated software.
The men's statements are embarrassing for Google, which has been trying for months to get permission from the studios to legally distribute their content on its YouTube subsidiary. Last week, Viacom, which owns Paramount Pictures, requested that YouTube take down more than 100,000 unauthorized video clips. Paramount Pictures is a party in the suit against Sample and Drury.

According to a sealed affidavit submitted by Sample on Dec. 22 and obtained by the Mercury News, Sample and Drury paid Google more than $800,000 for advertising to promote Web sites offering people software for downloading, playing or burning copies of films, television programs and software they found on the Internet.
Sample and Drury, who are representing themselves in court, did not respond to repeated requests for interviews.

According to the affidavit and other documents, Sample and Drury launched a business in June 2003 operating four Web sites: thedownloadplace.com, easydownloadcenter.com, directdownloader.com and themp3place.com. In exchange for a $29.95 one-year membership, customers got a copy of a popular file-sharing program and step-by-step instructions on how to use it. A ``lifetime'' membership cost $39.95.

An ad complaint

For an additional $14.95, customers could purchase a ``Pro Movie Pack,'' which made it easy to watch pirated movies uploaded in a variety of formats.

In his affidavit, Sample said he first contacted Google through its automated AdWords program that lets advertisers bid on ``key words'' or search terms, which trigger advertisements that run alongside Google's search results.
 
Beginning in April 2004, however, Sample said he began communicating directly with individual Google employees. ``I contacted Google at that time to complain that while we were paying Google large amounts for sponsored links -- more than $150,000 -- [we] were unhappy with the `conversion rate,' '' Sample wrote in the affidavit. While people were clicking on Sample's ads, they were not buying memberships at his Web sites, he explained.

By the summer of 2004, Sample and Drury were spending about $20,000 a month on Google advertising. ``In the fall, apparently due to the amount we were spending, Google assigned employees to be our personal account representatives,'' the affidavit stated.
Sample said the Google representative ``expressed familiarity with our business and the content of our Web sites'' and, in November 2004, he offered to have Google optimize their advertising campaign.

Sample said Google suggested sponsored links referring to the names of specific artists: Ryan Cabrera, Usher, Nellie and others, whose music was available on illegal file-sharing networks. According to the affidavit, ``In January 2005, Google suggested and we agreed to an `optimization' for another campaign for the same website, geared toward downloads of software programs.

`Serious allegations'

``Among other things, Google proposed that we buy sponsored link advertisements such as: Microsoft XP Software, Download Unlimited Top Software, Join Now -- See Our Special Offer!
``Google proposed, and we agreed to run, similar sponsored links for other popular software companies, none of which we were authorized to distribute, including: Microsoft Word, Norton Anti-Virus, Photoshop and Quicken. The keywords associated with these advertisements combined with software titles with the words `free' and `download.' ''

Microsoft, Symantec and Adobe said they hadn't heard about Google's role until they were contacted by a Mercury News reporter. ``If it is true and not an isolated incident, then these are very serious allegations, and we will be following them closely,'' said Whitney Burk, a Microsoft spokeswoman.

Intuit, which sells Quicken, and which is one of Google's close partners, did not comment.
 
Sample and Drury shut down their business in October 2005 after they were sued by the studios. In total, the men estimated, they sold more than 30,000 memberships and took in about $1.1 million, virtually all, they said, from Google searches.

In a Jan. 2 letter to the federal judge overseeing the case, an attorney representing the studios said the studios were negotiating a settlement with Sample and Drury. A hearing is scheduled for Friday. ``We expect that, prior to that date, the parties will finalize their settlement papers, file the consent judgment and terminate the action,'' Becker wrote.
 

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