A Korean cafe in Palisades Park is asking its customers not to use its free wi-fi to download copyright-protected music and video files. Verizon briefly disconnected the Internet line at Caffé Bene, citing illegal file sharing from its IP address, according to The Korea Times. The shop’s mother/daughter owners later posted their plea in both English and Korean in a notice on their wall. “VERIZON has given us many warnings, and it will [take] legal actions for the next illegal downloader…,” the notice says, in part. The music and movie industries have sued the owners of IP addresses through which files are illegally shared for tens of thousands of dollars. Major chains responded by requiring customers to provide email identification and agree to accept full responsibility for illegal activity — a system that would prove costly for smaller businesses. Experts say those owners could block certain websites, among other less-expensive measures. The Caffée Bene chain launched in South Korea in 2008 as a direct competitor to Starbucks and Dunkin Donuts and has since grown to 1,600 stores. It entered Bergen County with the Palisades Park franchise on Broad Avenue in late 2012 and followed with a Fort Lee store, with plans for Edgewater and Paramus locations. Others are in Jersey City, Hoboken and Little Falls.