Remember LimeWire? Shuttered File-Sharing Service Is Back with NFTs

File-sharing website LimeWire is relaunching in the form of a marketplace for NFTs. (LimeWire)
File-sharing website LimeWire is relaunching in the form of a marketplace for NFTs. (LimeWire)
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Remember LimeWire? Shuttered File-Sharing Service Is Back with NFTs

File-sharing website LimeWire is relaunching in the form of a marketplace for NFTs. (LimeWire)
File-sharing website LimeWire is relaunching in the form of a marketplace for NFTs. (LimeWire)

File-sharing service LimeWire, which shut down in 2011 under fire from the music industry, is making a comeback as a digital collectibles marketplace for art and entertainment, initially focusing on music.

Launched in 2000, LimeWire became the world's biggest outlet for people to share music, movies, and TV shows free of charge over the internet, attracting 50 million monthly users at its peak popularity.

Blaming piracy as one of the main reasons for declining music sales, record companies sued LimeWire in 2006, forcing it to shut down five years later. But now LimeWire plans to jump on the latest internet bandwagon: NFTs.

A non-fungible token (NFT) is a crypto asset which uses blockchain to record who owns a digital file such as an image or video.

While NFTs would allow artists and musicians to have more control over digital copies of their work — repairing the damage caused by illegal streaming — the nascent market is rife with scams, fraud and market manipulation.

It was a complex process for the new team - led by co-CEOs Paul Zehetmayr and Julian Zehetmayr - to own LimeWire intellectual properties after 12 years of inactivity.

LimeWire said it will partner with the music industry and the artists, who can sell pre-release music, unreleased demos, graphical artwork, exclusive live versions, as well as digital merchandise and backstage content.

The new LimeWire team, spread over Austria, Germany and the UK, plans to launch the service in May that would allow music fans and collectors to buy and trade a variety of music-related assets.

"We want to open up the gates for small, medium and big artists with a lot of moderation and curation," Zehetmayr said.

It plans to give up to 90% of the revenue to the artists and looking to onboard one million users within the first year.

"LimeWire kind of laid the foundation for music streaming ... it's a piece of internet legacy and we are thankful that we can turn it around at something for the music industry," Zehetmayr said.



Meta Faces Italian Competition Investigation Over WhatsApp AI Chatbot 

The Meta logo is seen in this illustration taken, August 22, 2022. (Reuters)
The Meta logo is seen in this illustration taken, August 22, 2022. (Reuters)
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Meta Faces Italian Competition Investigation Over WhatsApp AI Chatbot 

The Meta logo is seen in this illustration taken, August 22, 2022. (Reuters)
The Meta logo is seen in this illustration taken, August 22, 2022. (Reuters)

Italy's antitrust authority said on Wednesday it had launched an investigation into Meta Platforms over allegations the company abused its dominant position by installing its artificial intelligence tool on messaging service WhatsApp.

The watchdog said Meta may have violated European Union competition rules by integrating its Meta AI assistant into WhatsApp without user consent, a move that might harm its competitors.

The company said it was cooperating with the Rome-based authority and that its AI service benefited customers.

“Offering free access to our AI features in WhatsApp gives millions of Italians the choice to use AI in a place they already know, trust and understand,” a spokesperson said in an emailed statement.

The authority, known as AGCM, said it acted "in close cooperation with the relevant offices of the European Commission".

Meta AI, which provides chatbot-style responses and virtual assistant functions, has been part of WhatsApp's interface since March 2025, and was included in the app's search bar, the authority said.

The regulator said inclusion could unfairly steer users toward Meta's AI services, potentially harming competitors and locking users into the platform.

"By pairing Meta AI with WhatsApp, Meta appears to be able to steer its user base into the new market not through merit-based competition, but by 'forcing' users to accept the availability of two distinct services, potentially harming competing services", the authority said.

Companies that breach EU competition rules by abusing a dominant position can be fined up to 10% of their worldwide turnover.

The authority said its officials carried out investigations at the offices of Meta’s Italian subsidiary with the assistance of Italy's tax police special antitrust unit.