- 2010). "Idea Man of
LimeWire at a Crossroads". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
Retrieved October 7, 2022. "What was
Limewire? Here's its fascinating...
- example, Frost
Wire, a fork of
LimeWire created in 2004 that
carries neither the remote-disabling code nor adware. On
November 9, 2010,
LimeWire was resurrected...
-
WireShare (formerly
known as
LimeWire Pirate Edition) is a
revival of the
LimeWire software, a
gnutella p2p-network client. The
original LimeWire Pirate...
-
permanent ****ction, the
website www.
limewire.com was
effectively shut down and
displays a
notice to that effect.
LimeWire also shut down its
online store...
- Frost
Wire is a free and open-source
BitTorrent client first released in
September 2004, as a fork of
LimeWire. It was
initially very
similar to
LimeWire in...
- is the
creator of
LimeWire, a peer-to-peer file
sharing client for the Java Platform, and
chief executive of the
Lime Group.
Lime Group,
based in New...
- 2010). "RIAA and
LimeWire Both are Offline". Slyck.com.
Archived from the
original on
November 2, 2010.
Retrieved October 30, 2010.
Wired (August 10, 2000)...
-
alternative decentralized methods of P2P file-sharing emerged,
including LimeWire, Gnutella, Freenet, FastTrack, and BitTorrent. Napster's ****ets were eventually...
-
Gorton of
LimeWire vowed to stop
distributing his file
sharing program. A
lawsuit was
brought against LimeWire in 2010. In
Arista Records LLC v.
Lime Group...
- it
would later inspire other file-sharing
sites such as The
Pirate Bay,
LimeWire, Gnutella, Kazaa, Morpheus, BearShare, and ΜTorrent 1999-2010
period which...