The Fyre Festival went viral on the internet for being a failure. Now, LimeWire has acquired the brand. - LimeWire / Mashable edit "What could possibly go wrong?" That's the question posed by LimeWire ...
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 ...
The Fyre Festival saga just won’t stop with its pass-the-popcorn plot twists and turns. The latest: it was revealed today that the name and intellectual property, such that it is, was acquired ...
The Fyre Festival has a new owner. The long, strange journey of notorious music festival now has a new chapter that will include another famous band — LimeWire. That's right! The 2000s-era free ...
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 ...
LimeWire, once known as the filesharing service where you could illegally download music and risk hearing the dulcet tones of Bill Clinton insisting he “did not have sexual relations with that woman,” ...
Aaron McDade is a breaking news reporter for Investopedia. He is an experienced journalist who has covered everything from the latest in business and tech news to sports and international news like ...
LimeWire has acquired the infamous Fyre Festival brand on eBay. As we reported in July, convicted fellon and Fyre founder Billy McFarland announced that the brand and all of its IPs had been sold to a ...
As we speak, wealthy wannabes with cash to burn are being subjected to the horrors of folding chairs and plain cheese sandwiches at Fyre Festival. Pitched as an upscale experience in the Bahamas full ...
It’s 2025. The world often feels like it’s on fire; nothing makes that much sense anymore, and everywhere the ceremony of innocence is drowned. (That’s a bit of romantic poet humor for your morning.) ...
"What could possibly go wrong?" That's the question posed by LimeWire, the file-sharing service turned NFT marketplace turned file-sharing service once again, after announcing that it has acquired the ...