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26 September 2002
In this morning's High Court hearing the music industry did not obtain an injunction
against easyInternetcafé from discussing the extortionate amounts of money
that the music industry is trying to get from easyInternetcafé. The judge
did not see any urgency in the matter and postponed the hearing of the injunction
until next week.

25 September 2002
The easyGroup orange boiler suit brigade, lead by Stelios, will be protesting
in front of the High Court at 10.30am tomorrow Thursday September 26th. This is
the time scheduled for the High Court hearing when the music industry will apply
for an injunction against both easyInternetcafé and the easyGroup from
publicly discussing the ongoing battle between the two parties. The music industry
is represented by the BPI (British Phonographic Industry), the trade body representing
Sony Music, EMI, Polydor and the other members of the cartel holding copyrights
on music.
Originally the BPI had warned easyInternetcafé that it would get "bad
PR" if it became public knowledge that easyInternetcafé customers
had been downloading music files protected by copyright onto CDs in easyInternetcafé
stores. easyInternetcafé disagreed with this point of view and felt that
it had nothing to hide. Now the BPI have done an about-turn and are attempting
to gag easyInternetcafé from discussing anything further, presumably because
they are embarrased that it has become public knowledge they have tried to extort
as much as £1 million from easyInternetcafé.
Stelios and the orange boiler suit brigade will have three main banners at
their protest ouside the High Court. The first will defend their right to free
speech and will protest against the requested injunction being heard in the High
Court, "We will not be gagged". What is the BPI so worried about that
it wishes the whole matter to be kept secret? The second reads, "Stop the
CD rip-off" as the music industry cartel has for too long been milking the
consumer with their over-priced products. The third banner suggests a way forward,
"Legalise music downloads".
"The music companies are operating an outdated business model," said
Stelios the serial entrepreneur, founder of easyGroup and easyInternetcafé.
"They are creating costs and complications for themselves by producing CDs,
wrapping them in expensive packaging, incurring the costs of distribution and
then allowing retailers to take their cut of the cake. If they allowed online
music downloads for a fee they could reduce their own costs and still make money
by offering consumers lower prices," continued Stelios. "Just because
they have a stranglehold on the consumer today does not mean they should maintain
their outdated and inefficient business model. As soon as some real competition
is introduced into their industry they will be undercut by someone who can offer
a distribution system that benefits the consumer and not just their own pockets."
easyInternetcafé stopped their in-store CD burning service a year ago.
When it was available the terms and conditions of the stores stated that the use
of easyInternetcafé for illegal reasons was not permitted. However, since
the CD burning service was stopped the BPI contacted easyInternetcafé to
say that the downloading of music files protected by copyright had been taking
place in their stores. easyInternetcafé invited the BPI to examine the
hard disks in their stores that had been used to hold music files. The BPI then
claimed £1 million damages from easyInternetcafé who completely disagreed
with the BPI's calculations and also refused the amount of their claim. The BPI
then tried to claim £380,000 from easyInternetcafé which was also
refused. At the beginning of August 2002 the BPI asked for £100,000 but
told easyInternetcafé that they had to pay by mid-August. This was also
refused as easyInternetcafé found all of the BPI demands excessive, even
if they did vary by a factor of 10!
easyInternetcafé has offered the BPI a global settlement of £50,000
to avoid the costs to both sides of litigation but the BPI response has been to
try to gag easyInternetcafé from discussing the matter.
Photo opportunities with Stelios and the orange boiler suit brigade as well
as interviews with Stelios will be available in front of the High Court by 10.30am
on Thursday September 26th.

12 December 2001
Following a ruling published today by the Advertising Standards Authority,
the self regulating body funded by the print media industry, Stelios, the easyGroup
chairman, has called for the responsibilities of the Advertising Standards Authority
(ASA) to be taken over by a government body because the ASA is obviously unwilling
to stand up to 'big media'. The ASA has upheld a complaint made by AOL Time Warner,
the world's largest media company, against easyEverything, the chain of internet
cafes owned by Stelios which are now known as easyInternetcafé. The ASA
ruled that a monthly pass offered by easyInternetcafé cannot be compared
fairly with the services of an internet service provider like AOL as the location
of the service is "fundamental".
Stelios said, "The ruling is clearly protecting the interests of the incumbent.
It is as absurd as saying that hiring a video cannot be compared fairly with going
to the cinema or that buying membership to a gym cannot be compared fairly to
owning your own exercise bike. To use an analogy from another industry I know
extremely well, it's the equivalent of if back in 1996 comparative advertising
between British Airways and easyJet had been banned on the basis that one flies
from Heathrow and the other from Luton. As a matter of fact the High Court has
actually ruled in favour of Ryanair against British Airways over a comparative
advertisement even though the airports involved were different at both ends. In
order to substantially reduce prices to consumers in an industry you have to completely
re-engineer the process and that in most cases involves altering the location
of the service. I feel sorry for the people at the ASA because if they believe
that the only place that you should be accessing the internet from is your own
home they are clearly not in touch with reality. We may call for a judicial review
of the situation."
Stelios continued, "easyInternetcafé has no intention of complying
with the demands of the ASA. In fact we are presently running an advertising campaign
on Virgin radio which makes reference to AOL. Like our last radio campaign which
also made reference to AOL, this met with no objection from the relevant regulator."
easyInternetcafé is the cheapest way to get online and competes with
internet service providers such as AOL to get consumers online. 30 day passes
to any one of the internet cafes in the UK costs £15 if it is purchased
today. If purchased a month in advance, the 30 day pass costs £7, two months
in advance costs £5 and six months in advance costs £1. Thus 30 days'
internet access at easyInternetcafé costs between £15 and £1
where the computers are also provided and maintained, as is high speed, broadband
access which would cost an independent user £40 a month from BT. A month's
internet access subscription from AOL costs £15 and subscribers have to
provide their own computers and telecommunication lines.
easyInternetcafé introduced 30 day and 1 day passes last August which
have proved very popular with consumers, so much so that approximately half the
computers in any easyInternetcafé now form the 'pass zone', the other half
form the 'pay as you go' zones where the price of internet access varies according
to store occupancy. When the 30 day pass was introduced, easyInternetcafé
accompanied its marketing with the slogan, "Tear up your AOL account"
and with an image of stelios tearing up his 'AOL subscription'. Both the slogan
and image were used in-store, in press advertising and on advertising vans. A
similar message was also conveyed in radio advertising. A high resolution image
of Stelios tearing up his AOL account, as used in the advertising, can be viewed
at the photo gallery.
AOL complained to the ASA about the easyInternetcafé advertising and
the complaint has been upheld. This ruling is at odds with the Radio Advertising
Clearance Centre which approved the easyInternetcafé radio advertisements
that carried a similar message. The main point of the ASA ruling is that the offer
of internet access is fundamentally different in terms of physical location from
the two providers and is therefore unfair. The full ruling can be viewed at www.asa.org.uk.
easyInternetcafé totally disagrees with the ASA ruling which does nothing
to uphold the ASA's stated aim of protecting the consumer. No member of the public
complained about the easyInternetcafé advertisement, the only complaint
was from AOL themselves. The easyInternetcafé advertisement left no doubt
in the mind of the consumer that they needed to go to one of the easyInternetcafé
stores in order to avail themselves of this offer. easyInternetcafé, like
all easyGroup companies, reduces the price of services to consumers by re-engineering
industries. One of the principal ways in which easyInternetcafé provides
faster, cheaper internet access to the public at large is by getting consumers
to come to its stores, as opposed to bringing internet access to their homes or
offices.
To download a high resolution image of Stelios tearing up his AOL account...click
HERE

11 April 2001
easyInternetcafé, the chain of the world's largest Internet cafes,
has signed a franchise agreement with Germanos, the leading mobile phone retailer
in Greece that is listed on the Athens stock exchange. Under the terms
of the agreement Germanos has taken on the right to franchise the easyInternetcafé
Internet cafes in Greece, Cyprus, Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania and Yugoslavia.
This is the first time that an easyGroup business has given a franchise of
its name to a third party. The agreement commits Germanos to opening a minimum
of 10 easyInternetcafé Internet cafes within their region within the next
three years.
Not yet two years old, easyInternetcafé already has 20 cafes throughout
western Europe and one in New York, receiving a total of almost 2,000,000 visitors
a month. In order to continue this rapid growth on a global
scale easyInternetcafé is forming franchise agreements with companies that
have relevant experience and profile within their own regions of the globe.
Germanos have a chain of more than 250 shops in Greece and the Balkans.
Established easyInternetcafé cafes provide customers not only with
fast and cheap Internet access but also gives them access to the latest Microsoft®
software and webcams on a 'pay as you go' basis. Creating franchise agreements
will spread these services to more and more countries of the world. "We are
doing our bit to consign the digital divide to the history books," said Stelios
Haji-Ioannou, the easyGroup chairman and founder of easyInternetcafé. "Demand
for fast and cheap Internet access is universal. As more and more people use the
Internet on the move, through our stores, we will use franchising to reach more
parts of the globe, faster, in order to become a ubiquitous solution for Internet
access to all travellers. In other words, next time you travel, check our website,
we may have a store where you are going!"
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