RALEIGH, North Carolina -- The Fyre Festival was the greatest party that never happened. Some people say it was doomed from the start and now, the event is the subject of two dueling documentaries.
LimeWire, the filesharing service that set the internet ablaze in the 2000s before being shut down for copyright infringement, said Tuesday that is acquiring the rights to Fyre Festival. And it ...
LimeWire has announced that it's acquired the rights to Fyre Festival, the disastrous, influencer-fueled 2017 music festival. The newly revived company — which now acts as a NFT music marketplace ...
The streaming service, which became popular in the 2000s, paid $245,000 for the festival naming rights. It’s unclear what exactly it plans to do with the embattled brand. By Sopan Deb Get ready for a ...
Here’s a mash-up you didn’t see coming: It turns out that LimeWire was the mystery buyer of the Fyre Festival’s brand assets back in July, when it spent $245,300 to acquire the failed music festival’s ...
It’s a match made in meme heaven. LimeWire purchased the Fyre Festival brand for $245,300, the former file-sharing company announced Tuesday. Fyre Festival’s branding was sold on eBay back in July, ...
The early 2000s music sharing software company LimeWire — now resurrected as a crypto company by new owners — won rights to the infamous Fyre Festival in an auction that was held on eBay, reportedly ...
The name synonymous with a failed music festival, fraud, and bland cheese sandwiches has been sold on eBay. A bidder purchased Fyre Festival's notorious brand, trademarks, and social media accounts ...
LimeWire, an early music file-sharing service that was shuttered then relaunched, acquired the Fyre Festival brand – bringing together two formerly infamous names under one roof. “Once synonymous with ...
LimeWire, the filesharing service that set the internet ablaze in the 2000s before being shut down for copyright infringement, said Tuesday that is acquiring the rights to Fyre Festival. And it ...