From the RIAA website:

In the ninth wave of this initiative, the RIAA this week sent letters in the following quantities to 19 schools including: Drexel University (17 pre-litigation settlement letters), Indiana University (23), Northern Illinois University (25), Occidental College (19), State University of New York at Morrisville (18), Texas Christian University (20), Tufts University (15), University of Alabama (14), University of California, Berkeley (19), University of Delaware (18), University of Georgia (13), University of Iowa (18), University of Michigan - Ann Arbor (20), University of Nebraska-Lincoln (13), University of New Hampshire (30), University of New Mexico (17), University of South Florida (43), University of Southern California (37) and Vanderbilt University (32).

 I spent a few moments on the phone recently with John Wanzung of Mytracks.com;  their site partners with musicians to allow unlimited listens to new and emerging artists with social networking features customized for each university campus.  This means students have access to free and legal music;  -and unlimited streaming.  Mytracks charges for downloads, but it’s a monthly or annual fee and unlimited downloads.  All perfectly legal!

 Schools need to educate students that you can’t take other people’s songs without paying for them. 

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