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HotDogWater
pantsaddict



Registered: May 2005
Location: somewhere in CA
Judge to RIAA: You can't sue over songs 'made available' via P2P

http://www.news.com/8301-13578_3-99...ml?tag=nefd.top
quote:

Judge to RIAA: You can't sue over songs 'made available' via P2P
Posted by Declan McCullagh | 10 comments

A federal judge in New York has dealt the Recording Industry Association of America a setback in its thousands of lawsuits over piracy on peer-to-peer networks.

In a widely anticipated decision, U.S. District Judge Kenneth Karas ruled Monday to reject the RIAA's claim that a Kazaa user who merely "made available" copyrighted music necessarily violated the law. Rather, he said, the RIAA would have to demonstrate that unlawful copying actually took place.

"Plaintiffs' allegations--insofar as plaintiffs wish to hold defendant liable for acts of infringement other than actual downloading and/or distribution--fail to state a claim," Karas wrote.

This is not necessarily fatal to the RIAA's lawsuit against Tenise Barker (referred to as Denise Barker in some court documents) that will continue in the Southern District of New York. That's because the music labels also have alleged that she actually did distribute copyrighted works--meaning that if they can prove that happened, which is more difficult, they can still win.

A few characteristics make this case unusual. First, New York federal judges are viewed as well-versed in copyright law, so Karas' decision is likely to be influential. Second, an unusually large number of outside groups filed briefs, including the U.S. Internet Industry Association, the Motion Picture Association of America, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and the Computer and Communications Industry Association, meaning the court benefited from a range of views and increasing the importance of this week's decision.

Finally, the Bush administration jumped into the case on the part of the RIAA. The Justice Department's brief calls EFF's arguments "misleading" and says that the World Intellectual Property Organization treaty--signed by the United States--covers "making available" copyrighted works.

The "making available" argument is the same legal theory that the RIAA's attorneys relied on in the Jammie Thomas case, which led to $222,000 in penalties in October. The jury instructions said that "the act of making copyrighted sound recordings available for electronic distribution on a peer-to-peer network, without license from the copyright owners, violates the copyright owners' exclusive right of distribution"--meaning all they had to do was claim that Thomas left the songs in a publicly accessible directory where they could have been downloaded.

Thomas has said that her appeal to the 8th Circuit will center on whether or not "making available" copyrighted works--on the theory that they could have been downloaded--should be unlawful even if there's no evidence any transfers took place.

Other courts have considered this topic in lawsuits filed by the RIAA, but more briefly. In a pre-trial motion in UMG Recordings v. Lindor, the court ruled that: "At trial, plaintiffs will have the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that defendant did indeed infringe plaintiff's copyrights by convincing the fact-finder, based on the evidence plaintiffs have gathered, that defendant actually shared sound files belonging to plaintiffs." (Emphasis added.)

As I wrote last fall, there are some dangers if the RIAA's "making available" theory is widely adopted by courts. If my mother accidentally shares her computer's entire hard drive with the world by clicking the wrong button in an OS X setup menu, is that "making available?" Should she be held liable for $222,000 in damages, and lose her house, for accidentally making two CDs of music available to the world?

If I don't upgrade to a newer version of my operating system even though I know there's a security glitch that opens my hard drive to the Internet, does that mean I'm "making available" my music collection? Do Internet service providers "make available" access to Kazaa? Do search engines "make available" links to infringing files?

These are not all easy questions to answer, especially because intent doesn't matter much in copyright law. It's what lawyers like to call a strict liability offense--meaning that even accidental "making available" can slap you with a $222,000 penalty. This might make sense for corporate defendants, but it gets bizarre quickly when applied to hundreds of millions of Internet users.

No appeals court--that I know of, at least--has ruled on exactly this point. Now it's teed up for the 8th Circuit (the Thomas case) to consider this year, and the 2nd Circuit (the Barker case) to hear sometime later. The outcome will be worth watching.

Update 8:01 p.m. PDT: While the judge rejected the RIAA attorneys' "making available" argument, he did provide them with a road map showing a detour that might still allow them to arrive at their destination. Specifically, he ruled that an "offer to distribute" can amount to a distribution. The RIAA needs to, he wrote, "affirmatively plead that defendant made an offer to distribute, and that the offer to distribute was for the purpose of further distribution, public performance, or public display." Look for the RIAA's revised complaint--it has 30 days to resubmit it--to argue just that.

(Note: This is not an April Fools' joke, by the way. News.com published three April Fools' articles--I wrote one--and we clearly labeled them. Sometimes you can trust what you read on 4/1.)


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Old Post Apr-02-2008 21:05  Sweden
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|Thrax|
nightmoves.me



Registered: Sep 2005
Location: Sherman Oaks, Ca

Interesting.. also, I'm going to just add to this post, rather then make a thread for every stupid news story that comes along.

http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/pos...it-express.html

quote:
Students at the University of Maine School of Law's Cumberland Legal Aid Clinic are continuing their fight against the RIAA's legal tactics. A motion filed earlier this week on behalf of two "John Doe" University of Maine students sued by the RIAA seeks to not only have the John Doe lawsuit filed against the 27 U of M students thrown out, but to bar the RIAA from bringing any such lawsuits in the future.

Related StoriesOregon Attorney General criticizes RIAA's conduct in P2P cases
Previously, the students had sought to have the lawsuit dismissed for what have become "the usual reasons," including the RIAA's use of a boilerplate complaint without specific facts to support its case. US Magistrate Judge Margaret J. Kravchuk denied the motion, but expressed concerns that the RIAA was "intentionally flouting" Rule 11, which covers "factual contentions" made to the court by attorneys.

At issue is the RIAA's practice of clumping a number of Does into a single lawsuit for the sole purpose of serving subpoenas on a single school or ISP. The only relationship between the Does is that they attend the same school or all subscribe to the same broadband provider. The RIAA argues that's a sufficient relationship for the purposes of its lawsuits, but once it obtains names and addresses, that relationship suddenly disappears as individual lawsuits are filed.

Judge Kravchuk suggested that the court look into the possibility of sanctioning the RIAA's attorneys for violating Rule 11, and the law students are now asking the presiding judge to do exactly that. In their motion, the students argue that the sanctions are appropriate because the RIAA has "no good faith evidentiary support" for its joining the 27 University of Maine law students into a single lawsuit. The law students are also playing the educational record privacy card, arguing that the RIAA is trying to improperly obtain "confidential educational records."

The confidential education records argument is unlikely to fly, given the lack of success other college defendants have had in arguing that their names, addresses, and e-mail—so-called "directory information"—are covered under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act. But the law students do once again raise the improper joinder issue, pointing out that the RIAA has been using Doe lawsuits to make an end-run around the legal system since its legal campaign began.

The law students conclude by asking for sanctions against the RIAA. Those would include not only dismissing Arista v. Does 1-27 with prejudice, but barring the RIAA from bringing similar lawsuits anywhere else. "Defendants ask that the Court order Plaintiffs to refrain from filing additional copyright infringement complaints against other unnamed and unconnected defendants for the sole purpose of obtaining expedited discovery," reads the motion. "An appropriate sanction should not only dismiss the present Complaint but it also should chill the type of 'litigation' involved. An injunction barring Plaintiffs from filing Complaints against unconnected defendants and/or for the sole purpose of obtaining an ex parte order to take immediate discovery will achieve this objective."

The fact that the tactics being criticized by the law students (and the judge) are routine for the RIAA is unquestioned. Indeed, the RIAA's 25,000+ lawsuits would be nigh impossible without Doe lawsuits. But such lawsuits are problematic not only for the reasons outlined above, but because the Does usually never find out that they have been sued and discovery has been taken against them until after the Doe case is dismissed and individual lawsuits are filed. Many observers believe that's fundamentally unfair, and the judge in Arista v. Does 1-27 has the opportunity to put a stop to it.


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"the night moves me" NIGHTMOVES.ME nightlife+lifestyle photography

Old Post Apr-02-2008 21:25  United States
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TranceAddict Forums > Local Scene Info / Discussion / EDM Event Listings > USA > USA - West Coast / Las Vegas > Judge to RIAA: You can't sue over songs 'made available' via P2P
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