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L.A. blogger sentenced for Guns N' Roses leak
A LOS Angeles blogger who leaked new Guns N' Roses songs on the Internet before their official release on the band's first new album in 17 years, was sentenced to two months of home confinement yesterday.
Kevin Cogill also received one year's probation and must appear in an anti-piracy commercial under the terms of his plea deal with federal prosecutors.
He pleaded guilty last December to a single misdemeanor count of violating federal copyright laws, and agreed to help authorities identify the original source of the leak.
Cogill posted nine tracks from the Guns N' Roses album "Chinese Democracy" onto the Web site antiquiet.com (http://www.antiquiet.com) five months before the CD came out last November. The tracks were widely circulated, diminishing some of the anticipation surrounding the long-awaited album, which was a disappointing seller.
Cogill's public-service announcement for the Recording Industry Association of America, the trade group for the major US music labels, is expected to air during the music industry's Grammy Awards on Jan. 31.
Cogill had faced a maximum of one year in federal prison, a US$100,000 fine and five years' probation. But US Magistrate Judge Paul L. Abrams said there was no profit motive, the tracks were posted on the blog for a short period, and his cooperation proved useful.
A US Dept. of Justice spokesman said the government was still investigating the original source of the tracks.
Kevin Cogill also received one year's probation and must appear in an anti-piracy commercial under the terms of his plea deal with federal prosecutors.
He pleaded guilty last December to a single misdemeanor count of violating federal copyright laws, and agreed to help authorities identify the original source of the leak.
Cogill posted nine tracks from the Guns N' Roses album "Chinese Democracy" onto the Web site antiquiet.com (http://www.antiquiet.com) five months before the CD came out last November. The tracks were widely circulated, diminishing some of the anticipation surrounding the long-awaited album, which was a disappointing seller.
Cogill's public-service announcement for the Recording Industry Association of America, the trade group for the major US music labels, is expected to air during the music industry's Grammy Awards on Jan. 31.
Cogill had faced a maximum of one year in federal prison, a US$100,000 fine and five years' probation. But US Magistrate Judge Paul L. Abrams said there was no profit motive, the tracks were posted on the blog for a short period, and his cooperation proved useful.
A US Dept. of Justice spokesman said the government was still investigating the original source of the tracks.
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