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Taking a Closer Look at the P2P Subpoenas

An anonymous reader writes "Cnet is reporting a federal appeals court on Tuesday scrutinized the details of a 1998 copyright law, wondering whether it permits the wide-scale unmasking of alleged peer-to-peer pirates by the music industry." The issue, of course, is the constitutionality of the DMCA subpoena process which is among the more evil components of the often-criticized law.

276 comments

  1. Slashdot ... by MisanthropicProggram · · Score: 2, Funny
    News for Legal Nerds.

    On the other hand, I am Interested in the legal ramifications of IT. Oh, never mind...

    I guess the legal shit does affect us all.

    --

    There is no spoon or sig.

    1. Re:Slashdot ... by Googol · · Score: 1

      Haven't you heard? Software is Law.

    2. Re:Slashdot ... by michaeltoe · · Score: 3, Funny

      All this time I thought Sylvester Stallone was the law...

    3. Re:Slashdot ... by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      No, he's the cure. Crime just happens to be the cancer.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    4. Re:Slashdot ... by Roark+Meets+Dent · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Has anyone wondered why it is necessary for ISPs to keep such detailed records of everyone's connection activity in the first place? Hmmm? Think librarians shredding records to avoid Patriot Act --- apply to this situation.

    5. Re:Slashdot ... by zakezuke · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      In the 1940's a number of american scientists went missing to go work on secret projects. This is perfectly normal and nothing to be ashamed of, however people became curious where some of these people went, either loved ones, reporters, and perhaps the odd spy or two.

      The easy way they found out where they were going was to go to the respective person's local library and either see the last book they checked out, or just comb the shelves for books on the states. And behold, it was easily established the last book checked out by all the people on the Trinity project were books on the state of Nevada.

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
    6. Re:Slashdot ... by 3dr · · Score: 1

      If he's the cure, then the cancer must be good acting.

    7. Re:Slashdot ... by mad_dog3283 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As far as I know, all they keep track of is the DHCP logs, i.e. "John Q. Filesharer had IP 55.27.185.96 from 10:04 Wednesday through 9:47 Saturday."

      There is no law requiring ISP's to keep these logs, so if the subpoenas ever became a major problem for them, they could simply delete the logs after a period of time (like 24 hours-- I doubt that the RIAA could get a subpoena sent that soon after discovering copyrighted material.) Of course, deleting the logs after they have been subpoenated is probably contempt of court, but as long as they haven't been subpoenated yet, they can delete them, and when the RIAA asks for the information, the ISP can say "go fuck yourselves, we don't have it."

      As for why they do keep the logs, I don't know about you, but if someone on my ISP was spamming, cracking, or uploading kiddie porn, I would certainly want them TOSed in the first two cases, and prosecuted in the third.

      --
      Reprise the theme song and roll the credits!
  2. The problem with "John Doe" lawsuits... by sixteenraisins · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...is that the RIAA can file thousands of them arbitrarily, then assign individuals to those lawsuits once they're properly identified. At this point, I wouldn't put this strategy past them.

    William

    --
    When you're not looking, this sig is in Latin.
    1. Re:The problem with "John Doe" lawsuits... by TopShelf · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Maybe so, but the burden of identifying the users gets much more complicated under that scenario. By going after the ISP's like they have been, they can scoop up name, address & phone number all in one place.

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    2. Re:The problem with "John Doe" lawsuits... by turnstyle · · Score: 4, Interesting
      If they file "John Doe" they don't know who they're actually suing until they've already won (if they lose, end of story).

      So, in that scenario, expect a higher percent of sympathetic defendents, rather than fewer...

      --
      Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
    3. Re:The problem with "John Doe" lawsuits... by David+Hume · · Score: 5, Informative

      If they file "John Doe" they don't know who they're actually suing until they've already won (if they lose, end of story).


      This is incorrect. The RIAA can obtain a subpoena to the relevant ISP immediately after it files the "John Doe" lawsuit against the unknown defendant. The purpose of the subpoena would be to identify the defendant. After the defendant was identified, the complaint would be amended to add or substitute the defendant, and the legal action would proceed. The court would not allow the action to proceed to judgment against an unidentified defendant who never received notice of the action or an opportunity to respond.

    4. Re:The problem with "John Doe" lawsuits... by ninewands · · Score: 4, Informative
      Quoth the poster:
      If they file "John Doe" they don't know who they're actually suing until they've already won (if they lose, end of story).

      Actually, no ...

      If they sue "John Doe" whom they suspect is a customer of RandomInternet due to the IP address recovered from Kazaa/Gnutella/whatever, they can issue a third-party subpoena against RandomInternet for its DHCP server logs to find out who had that IP address at the time in question. This is basic discovery under most jurisdictions' Rules of Civil Procedure. Then, having discovered the name/address/telephone number of "John Doe," they can amend their pleadings to name that individual as the party defendant.

      However, it protects users' privacy and due process rights by requiring the plaintiff (RIAA) to file suit alleging a specific incident of infringement rather than allowing them to go on a "fishing expedition," which is what they (the RIAA) CLAIM the current law allows.

      Of course, it's no better for the RIAA from a PR point of view, but I just don't think they give a great hairy damn what their customers and potential customers think of them. For this reason, I will continue to not buy new CDs.
    5. Re:The problem with "John Doe" lawsuits... by turnstyle · · Score: 1

      If all they have to is file a "John Doe", and then they immediately have the same subpoena access to subscriber info anyway, then how much of an pracitcal barrier is filing the "John Doe"?

      --
      Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
    6. Re:The problem with "John Doe" lawsuits... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If all they have to is file a "John Doe", and then they immediately have the same subpoena access to subscriber info anyway, then how much of an pracitcal barrier is filing the "John Doe"?

      That depends on how good a case they have. They would have to convince a judge that their was a case to proceed with, not just have 10,000,000 subpoenas rubber stamped.

    7. Re:The problem with "John Doe" lawsuits... by Damn_Canuck · · Score: 2, Interesting

      By filing a lawsuit as well, would they not have to pay an initial filing fee with an appropriate judge/jurisdiction? If so, this could end up being costly for the industry should they lose a majority of the cases. Then who knows what kind of monetary settlement they would want to demand from the sued individuals.

      --
      Given that God is infinite, and the Universe is also infinite, would you like some toast?
    8. Re:The problem with "John Doe" lawsuits... by kilgortrout · · Score: 1
      However, it protects users' privacy and due process rights by requiring the plaintiff (RIAA) to file suit alleging a specific incident of infringement rather than allowing them to go on a "fishing expedition," which is what they (the RIAA) CLAIM the current law allows.
      I don't think this provides any protection against a fishing expedition; John Doe suits are frequently just that. It just makes them more costly since you have to hire an attorney and file suit.
    9. Re:The problem with "John Doe" lawsuits... by DeepRedux · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The filing fees typically are only about $150.

      There is also no reason to think that the RIAA will lose most of the cases. In fact, Copyright law is unambiguously hostile to people who swap music files over the Internet. Even worse, according to Fred von Lohmann, an intellectual-property attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation: "The remedies are so terrifying that even if you have a good defense, you have to think twice."

  3. Political Appointees by Brahmastra · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Judges are political appointees. If the political parties are paid off by RIAA, MPAA, etc the rulings will be in favour of the RIAA and MPAA. There are a lot of good judges out there, but $$$$ unfortunately wins

    1. Re:Political Appointees by I+am+Kobayashi · · Score: 5, Informative
      "Judges are political appointees. If the political parties are paid off by RIAA, MPAA, etc the rulings will be in favour of the RIAA and MPAA. There are a lot of good judges out there, but $$$$ unfortunately wins"
      But federal judges are lifetime appointees, and are fairly well protected by Article III from direct political influence. So while the judge's ideology and judicial temperment is largely decided by the party in power at the time of the appointment, the judge will be a judge whether her decision is popular or not with her party. Once they are appointed it is very difficult to remove a federal judge(thankfully).
      --
      --Kobayashi--
    2. Re:Political Appointees by __aagmrb7289 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Most judges are voted for, and if not directly, then indirectly (by voting for those who appoint them) - so VOTE! and stop whining...

    3. Re:Political Appointees by Iparadox · · Score: 3, Insightful

      U.S. Federal District Judges are political appointees -- essentially for as long as they want the job. I fear few people, but District Court Judges top my list. They owe no one. You should be much more concerned about judge shopping - the plaintiff selecting the district and date and time, so that he gets the justice of his choice.

    4. Re:Political Appointees by fermion · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Actually, the opposite is true. For the most part appointed judges, especially those appointed for life, tend to try very hard to interpret the law in a fair and consistent manner. Their political bent only influences the base assumptions and on which side they will err. The number of judges that will ignore the law and rule purely on their own prejudice are few and far between. Unfortunately we have a couple on the US Supreme Court, but we knew they would be when they were appointed.

      This has caused problem for more than one president who had hoped to stack the court only to find that the appointed judge did in fact have ethics.

      OTOH, the elected judges tend to be the ones that might rule more often on the basis of personal prejudices and personal gain. These judges, like all politicians, have war chests to fill.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    5. Re:Political Appointees by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, whoever modded this up as "Insightful" needs to re-take their high school Government class. As does the original poster.

      Judges influenced by money? By no means are judges fair, but I don't think money is their thing.

    6. Re:Political Appointees by KUHurdler · · Score: 1

      Yes, and in our current political climate, its even more difficult to appoint one

      --
      Fix Your Own TV - RiddledTV.com Avoid the Landfill
    7. Re:Political Appointees by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But federal judges are lifetime appointees, and are fairly well protected by Article III from direct political influence.

      Judges can be, and are, bribed. Nearly all are "honest enough" that you can't buy a decision for a couple of thousand. But when a corporation can offer $1,000,000 for a favorable decision, there are almost no judges I would trust to be incorruptible.

      As somebody remarked at the time, it will be interesting to see what kind of lifestyle the judge who decided the Microsoft case has when she retires. (The judge who decided that there would be no penalty for violating the law.)

    8. Re:Political Appointees by I+am+Kobayashi · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sadly very true, and both parties are guilty of this... It is really a shame, a lot of good (and very much needed) judges from both sides of the spectrum have been lost to this....

      --
      --Kobayashi--
    9. Re:Political Appointees by sacrilicious · · Score: 2, Insightful
      so VOTE! and stop whining...

      Definitely vote. But don't stop whining, because voting will not be enough. Keep making noise and reaching out to people.

      --
      - First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
    10. Re:Political Appointees by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "udges are political appointees. If the political parties are paid off by RIAA, MPAA, etc the rulings will be in favour of the RIAA and MPAA. There are a lot of good judges out there, but $$$$ unfortunately wins"

      In the US now, the law says a group can't contribute more than $2500 to a politician. Your arguemnt that laws are paid for by companies is antequated. The fact that opinions on the issues hasn't changed significantly from last year is a testament to the fact that politicians make laws based on beliefs, not money. They simply take the money from those who support their beliefs.

    11. Re:Political Appointees by computerlady · · Score: 3, Informative

      A little about the judges in this article...

      Judge John Roberts is a Bush appointee. He's only in since May 2003. According the the article, he "questioned the RIAA's expansive interpretation of the controversial Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), which allows copyright holders to glean the identity of alleged infringers without filing a lawsuit first. Roberts said that if he left the door to his library ajar and someone entered, "that doesn't make me liable for copyright infringement."

      Judge Douglas Ginsburg is best known for having his nomination by Reagan for the Supreme Court thwarted when he admitted to smoking pot at Harvard. He has protested what he calls "insane drug laws." In 2001, he accused Microsoft of using "saturation bombing" tactics against Netscape.

      Does anyone know the name of the 3rd judge? I haven't found it yet.

      --
      computerlady - a brand new Slash-daughter - alone, but no longer invisible, in the /. world
    12. Re:Political Appointees by bm_luethke · · Score: 1

      Great point - look at the Clinton appointee's - they ended up being the most conservative of the group though at the time they were expected to be very leftist, much to the chargin of many who approved them.

      It is the single most important piece to our judicial system - they do what they think is correct, regardless of the political fallout and money changing hands in the parties (or, though this is sometimes bad, even if the majority of people disagree with them), at least for the most part.

      It is good that the balance of power can tell those they balance to screw off.

      --
      ------- Sorry about the spelling, I suffer from two problems. Dyslexia makes it difficult to spell well, lazy makes it
    13. Re:Political Appointees by I+am+Kobayashi · · Score: 1

      Absolutely, I couldn't agree more. My favorite example is Souter - a Bush (the first Bush) appointee. He is probably the most solid liberal vote on the Court.

      --
      --Kobayashi--
    14. Re:Political Appointees by KUHurdler · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure how you can say that both parties (in general) are guilty of this. the democrats are the ones blocking all the nominations, and preventing the actual votes on judges. The republicans are crying because its not fair, since they actually voted for candidates they didnt like before. In hindsight, I think they are wishing they had dug in their heels on all those clinton nominations.

      --
      Fix Your Own TV - RiddledTV.com Avoid the Landfill
  4. So are the RIAA on the road to... by Osrin · · Score: 1

    ... making a small number of people very rich indeed? First they made a small number of musicians rich, now they're just making random internet users wealthy. I'm starting to like them, I just need to work out how to get on their list.

    1. Re:So are the RIAA on the road to... by hexdcml · · Score: 1
      Sign up HERE

      --
      Fight Crime - Shoot Back!
    2. Re:So are the RIAA on the road to... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No not really. I think maybe a few musicians got rich despite them, but they seem to be mainly a tool for making record company execs rich(er).

    3. Re:So are the RIAA on the road to... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      THe RIAA is not making anyone rich they are ripping of recordign artists Orson Scott Card (author of Enders Game) has an amazingly realistic view on file sharing http://www.ornery.org/essays/warwatch/2003-09-07-1 .html

  5. New Bill In Congress by slutdot · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I just read an article about a bill introduced by Sen. Brownback which would "require owners of digital media to file a John Doe lawsuit to obtain the identifying information of an Internet user, rather than simply requesting a subpoena. Currently, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act permits copyright holders to subpoena an Internet service provider for the name and address of a person they believe is violating a copyright. The one-page subpoena request can be issued by a court clerk and doesn't require a judge's signature."

    "'There are no checks, no balances, and the alleged pirate has no opportunity to defend themselves,' Brownback said when introducing the bill. 'My colleagues, this issue is about privacy, not piracy. 'This will provide immediate privacy protections to Internet subscribers by forcing their accusers to appear publicly in a court of law, where those with illicit intentions will not tread, and provides the accused with due process required to properly defend themselves.'"

    1. Re:New Bill In Congress by ehiris · · Score: 1

      While this bill would be great for protecting citizens form evil "Trusts" such as the RIAA or indivudual very rich corporations, it would make it harder for individuals to protect themselves from real criminals and borderline sociopaths.
      There should be different guidelines on the reasons for wich a subpoena can be issued. Removing it completely isn't the best thing to do.

    2. Re:New Bill In Congress by DickBreath · · Score: 1

      ...this bill.... would make it harder for individuals to protect themselves from real criminals and borderline sociopaths.

      Could you please explain your reasoning? I simply don't see how that is so?

      Do you think that I (or you) have turbocharged subpoena powers under the DMCA? Especially in regard to a minor issue such as a mere stalker, molester, or rapist vs. a dangerous copyright thief?

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
    3. Re:New Bill In Congress by mike77 · · Score: 1
      ...by forcing their accusers to appear publicly in a court of law, where those with illicit intentions will not tread...

      HA! oh, he's funny!

      --

      --Keeping the flame wars alive, one post at a time

    4. Re:New Bill In Congress by theskipper · · Score: 1

      Quick check:


      SBC, Verizon, IDT, BellSouth, Qwest, no RIAA members.

    5. Re:New Bill In Congress by swillden · · Score: 2, Informative

      it would make it harder for individuals to protect themselves from real criminals and borderline sociopaths.

      Huh? How often do individual copyright holders use the DMCA's expedited subpoena provisions to order a service provider to disclose the identity of real criminals and borderline sociopaths?

      The law under discussion is *very* specific, and it's hard to see how individuals would make use of it for personal protection. The law in question (which is in US Code Title 17, section 512) says:

      (1) Request. - A copyright owner or a person authorized to act on the owner's behalf may request the clerk of any United States district court to issue a subpoena to a service provider for identification of an alleged infringer in accordance with this subsection.
      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    6. Re:New Bill In Congress by ehiris · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I missread the post. I just couldn't compile the fact that protecting corporations is more important then protecting individuals.

    7. Re:New Bill In Congress by gsfprez · · Score: 4, Funny

      those rat bastard rich-loving Republicans will do anything to stop this....

      wait, Brownback is a Republican?

      --
      guns kill people like spoons make Rosie O'Donnell fat.
    8. Re:New Bill In Congress by shepd · · Score: 2, Funny

      >it would make it harder for individuals to protect themselves from real criminals and borderline sociopaths.

      Yes, because all software developers spend their lives in fear that Johnny might be using a pirate copy of their software to murder people with.

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
  6. It-Doesn't-Matter-To-Them Dept. by phlyingpenguin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Scott McIntosh, an appellate lawyer with the U.S. Justice Department, assured the court that "we don't think the constitutional questions are substantial ones."

    That sounds extremely accurate to the RIAA's view. Nobody has rights, but they have copyrights!

    1. Re:It-Doesn't-Matter-To-Them Dept. by gothicpoet · · Score: 3, Interesting
      And you're surprised that someone from the Ashcroft in-Justice Department would think that increased powers for... well... anyone who claims to be "punishing evil-doers"... is a GOOD thing?

      I mean, these are the guys who aren't happy with the over-reaching Patriot Act -- they want a second act that goes even further. And according to recent press they've begun giving the nudge to prosecutors to find ways to get non-terrorists nailed on terrorist charges to radically increase the penalties for other violations of the law.

      But of course, all those of us who think that the government would ever transgress our liberties are just paranoid terrorist supporters...

      --
      Quoth he ::
      "It's all academic anyway..."
    2. Re:It-Doesn't-Matter-To-Them Dept. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody has rights, but they have copyrights!

      All your copyrights are belong to us!

  7. Put your hands on the wall... by winstarman · · Score: 5, Funny

    I just want to see more 12-year-old girls get sued. I mean, you can't BUY publicity like that!

    "How can we attract attention??? hmm... I dunno.. I've got it! Let's inadvertantly sue a pre-teen-daughter-of-a-single-mom!"

    Brilliant. But so very stupid at the same time.

    --
    Hard loop..... huh?

    Dynamic Designs
    1. Re:Put your hands on the wall... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      "How can we attract attention??? hmm... I dunno.. I've got it! Let's inadvertantly sue a pre-teen-daughter-of-a-single-mom!"

      Yeah. Too bad it wasn't an honor student. Or better yet an honor student living in a city public housing project.

      Muhahahahaha!

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    2. Re:Put your hands on the wall... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An honor student at a -Private-School- nonetheless.

  8. poor guy by contrasutra · · Score: 4, Funny

    the RIAA could be forced to file thousands of "John Doe" lawsuits instead

    You KNOW this is someone's actual name. I feel so bad for him.

    Then again, Mr.Doe has probobly gotten this all his life, maybe we should help him out? www.savejohndoe.com?

    1. Re:poor guy by Frymaster · · Score: 4, Informative
      You KNOW this is someone's actual name. I feel so bad for him.

      yes. he played guitar for the band "x" who were quite popular in souther california during the 1980's. (the band is still together, btw, and you can catch them nov 21 and 22 in l.a. at the "house of blues").

      here is a photo of mr. doe

      poor sucker.

    2. Re:poor guy by ikkonoishi · · Score: 1, Interesting
    3. Re:poor guy by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      nah, Brad Pitt took his ass out in the late 90's.

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    4. Re:poor guy by El · · Score: 1

      I don't feel half as sorry for Mr. John Doe as for the smartass who requested the vanity license plate "NONE", then received every parking ticket issued for which the plate number could not be found...

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    5. Re:poor guy by blibbleblobble · · Score: 1

      "You KNOW this is someone's actual name. I feel so bad for him."

      On the bright side, if your name was John Doe, you'd get filtered out of all the spam-lists and marketing databases:

      "Huh, another joker with false info? Toss it out."

      Of course, you might end up having to defend 57 million lawsuits with your name on them, but it would probably crash the court's computer if they convicted you.

    6. Re:poor guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Darn. www.savejohndoe.com is already registered. I was hoping to see the Verisign search page.

      DAV

    7. Re:poor guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gosh.
      I thought it was just Joe Bloggs changing his name when he came to the US to make a better life for himself :-)

    8. Re:poor guy by Zimm · · Score: 1

      yes. he played guitar for the band "x" who were quite popular in souther california during the 1980's. (the band is still together, btw, and you can catch them nov 21 and 22 in l.a. at the "house of blues").

      You must be thinking of someone else. John Doe is dead. I saw it on the news, they said there is a John doe in the county Mourge.

    9. Re:poor guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is one of the few times that snopes has given me a positive response on a story like this. Wow.

    10. Re:poor guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      unfortunately, that domain seems to be registered by a group called verisign?

  9. Thank god for the 3 branches of gov... by jimi1283 · · Score: 0

    Whenever idiots in DC pass some sweeping law, it's nice to know the courts have a decent chance of overturning it.

  10. Promising? by __aagmrb7289 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There were a few promising, and some other, less promising, statements made in this article. So I'll summarize what I like/dislike:

    1. Looks like there are some politicians listening to us, a little. And a republican! 'Course, the senator is looking to defend ISPs, but the byproduct is defending the users of that ISP from having their privacy violated for no reason.
    2. Looks like there may actually be some traction happening on this issue - all prior "looks" by judges at this issue has been a quick dismissal of the concerns.

    Don't Like:
    1. The judges are not bothering to consider whether the DMCA is constitional, nor if the way it is being abused is constitional, but whether or not it was intended to be used the way it is - this is NOT a good sign. It isn't going to help on the larger issue, but maybe it'll clean up the smaller one.
    2. Ginsberg doesn't seem to understand the difference in usability for the average user between an FTP site and a P2P file sharing network. Not that his comments are invalid, but certainly the scope is very different. How do we educate our judicial system?

    Anyway, some thoughts... take them as you will (I'm sure there are things I missed here).

    Main thing I think we need to remind our congressman about - the RIAA is NOT a law enforcement agency, and should be slapped the hell down if they think they can step into that role.

    1. Re:Promising? by _avs_007 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not that I pirate or condone piracy, but I'll never understand why:

      If I record a song/tv show off the radio or TV, then let a friend borrow and copy it, why this is illegal.

      This friend could've recorded the song/tv show off the radio/tv themselves.

      I suppose you could make an argument over different markets, but lets face it. For pretty much all the popular songs floating around p2p these days, they pretty much play in every market, as every market has a "popular" radio station. All probably owned by ClearChannel too.

      I know people have been making arguments about perfect copies and such. But MP3s are lossy. And many of the songs are floating on P2P before the CDs are even released, so they were probably recorded off the radio anyways. Besides, I heard that most of the MP3s floating around P2P are only 128kbit/sec recordings anyways...

    2. Re:Promising? by stratjakt · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The judges are not bothering to consider whether the DMCA is constitional, nor if the way it is being abused is constitional, but whether or not it was intended to be used the way it is - this is NOT a good sign. It isn't going to help on the larger issue, but maybe it'll clean up the smaller one.

      Wow, judges doing their job? Handing down rulings based on law and precedent, rather than trying to legislate from the bench based on politics and personal agendas?

      I'm not shocked. These are District of Columbia judges, not Californias.

      Ginsberg doesn't seem to understand the difference in usability for the average user between an FTP site and a P2P file sharing network. Not that his comments are invalid, but certainly the scope is very different. How do we educate our judicial system?

      He understands it perfectly. FTP is not the super-hard 1337 h4x0r tool you think it is. It's dead simple.

      P2P is just FTP with a centralized list/searching tool.

      Main thing I think we need to remind our congressman about - the RIAA is NOT a law enforcement agency, and should be slapped the hell down if they think they can step into that role.

      What does that have to do with anything? The RIAA like anyone else has the right to sue in civil court to resolve grievances. This has nothing to do with criminal law enforcement. There's a big difference between a subpeona and a warrant, or a civil judgement and a fine.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    3. Re:Promising? by stratjakt · · Score: 2, Informative

      If I record a song/tv show off the radio or TV, then let a friend borrow and copy it, why this is illegal.

      It isnt.

      Let 1,000 friends borrow and copy it, you cross the line between personal use and distribution.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    4. Re:Promising? by __aagmrb7289 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hmmm... catch up please:

      1. Part of a judge's job is to determine whether a law is constitutional or not. Please take a Civics course.
      2. P2P is just FTP with a centralized list/searching tool. My point exactly. Please try to comprehend the issue before throwing your forehead against it. How much easier is it for people to use P2P than FTP? Well, for the reason you pointed out, the ease of use difference is significant.
      3. Sorry if you aren't following the news - I was referring to the "amnesty" that the RIAA has offered. "Amnesty" is misleading, and positions the RIAA as a law enforcement agency. Obviously, before you slam your head in a wall again, the RIAA meant amnesty against their own lawsuits, but that is not what is implied.

      I appreciate a good rant as well as anyone else, but hell, let's think before submitting, shall we?

    5. Re:Promising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you're new here. stratjakt is always wrong. Best to ignore him.

    6. Re:Promising? by Planesdragon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The judges are not bothering to consider whether the DMCA is constitional, nor if the way it is being abused is constitional, but whether or not it was intended to be used the way it is - this is NOT a good sign. It isn't going to help on the larger issue, but maybe it'll clean up the smaller one.

      Has a defense lawyer put forth a reasonable notion that the DMCA is unconstitutional? Heck, have any of these cases gone against a defendant with the funds to pursue an appeal all the way to the Supreme Court?

      Main thing I think we need to remind our congressman about - the RIAA is NOT a law enforcement agency, and should be slapped the hell down if they think they can step into that role.

      RIAA isn't trying to enforce the law--they are trying to press claims on behalf of their members. They're acting more akin to a collection agency than a police department.

    7. Re:Promising? by __aagmrb7289 · · Score: 1

      Danke schon - I wasn't aware of that.

    8. Re:Promising? by Erik_the_Awful · · Score: 1

      "How do we educate our judicial system?"

      Take and pass a federal bar exam, file a well written brief that the justices can understand... and prepare "educational" oral arguments :>

      -eTa

    9. Re:Promising? by __aagmrb7289 · · Score: 1

      That's one good way - thanks!

    10. Re:Promising? by __aagmrb7289 · · Score: 1

      Glad there are some people who agree with the RIAA, since we need someone to hone our arguements against. 'Course, you are wrong to support them, but that's besides the point :)

      1. Yes, several lawyers have put together some good arguements, and I've read quite a few commentaries that talk about how the DMCA violates the intent of copyright law. And no, these haven't made it to the Supreme Court. But seriously, not making it to the Supreme Court is hardly a litmus test on whether something is right or wrong... that a good case hasn't made it yet just means that it hasn't happened yet. Hardly the best arguement against the point. But keep trying!
      2. A collection agency doesn't prosecute people for stealing things. And the RIAA isn't attempt to recupe losses from products that they sold. And damn, as Orson Scott Card said, there isn't even a good arguement that they are losing the kind of money they claim to be losing over these file sharing networks. When any non-goverment agency can violate my privacy on a "hunch", that is when they are stepping over the line. And when they pretend they can offer "amnesty", then they need to get nailed.

    11. Re:Promising? by DickBreath · · Score: 4, Interesting

      So why exactly is letting my 1 friend borrow a taped TV show "personal use" and letting 1000 friends borrow it not personal use?

      Where exactly is the line? 2 friends? 20 friends? 100 friends? The line needs to be clearly spelled out when we're talking about something being legal vs. illegal. Just imagine fuzzy speed limits. Or fuzzy amounts of weed that constitute "intent to distribute". This is the whole reason the judge doesn't accept arguments like "but I was only going 2 MPH through that stop sign, which was perfectly safe". And the next guy, "...but I was only going 3 MPH".

      Exactly why do you seem to believe that loaning a taped TV show to a friend is legal? Is there some chapter and verse of US law which says so? (i.e. an exception to the general mechanisms of copyright law.)

      So the original poster's question remains quite valid in my mind. Why is such a ridiculous thing illegal? Which reinforces my (many times repeated) statement that this whole nonsense about "Intellectual Property" is going to implode in upon itself.

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
    12. Re:Promising? by tyllwin · · Score: 1

      IIRC, back in the pre-DMCA days, there were several large search sites that specialized in taking the name of an artist (well, of a performer at least) and returning dozens of anonymous FTP sources for .mp3's in the form of hyperlinks. I think that's the mechanism that Ginsburg is referring to. It wasn't as simple as Kazaa, but certainly easier (if less reliable)for Joe User than something like eMule or DirectConnect.

    13. Re:Promising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuzzy weed is the best kind of weed!

    14. Re:Promising? by JVert · · Score: 1

      I know damn well that I have not had 1,000 people download every one of my songs that I share. maybe 10 people and they let 10 people download from them. Frankly I havn't sent more then 50 a complete song in years, only fragments. So i'm liable for the actions of people who get the song from me?

      Really now...

      How is this different then radio stations broadcasting music to hundreds of thousands and 1,000 people tape it and share it with their friend? Radio stations who often even say that you should get your tape recorders ready for new unreleased music.

    15. Re:Promising? by Bartab · · Score: 1

      Looks like there are some politicians listening to us, a little. And a republican!
      A little more bias please. It wasn't a Republican that signed the DMCA into law after all.

      The judges are not bothering to consider whether the DMCA is constitional
      The test for constitutionality is the -last- test. Only if a law cannot be interpreted in a constitutional fashion in any manner is it stricken.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    16. Re:Promising? by sjames · · Score: 1

      Let 1,000 friends borrow and copy it, you cross the line between personal use and distribution.

      OK, so I loan it to two friends. Each does likewise, etc.

    17. Re:Promising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, sir, are you aware that your name is, "DIckBreath?" Just curious.

    18. Re:Promising? by Jenolen · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Well, on the Fox network's website, they have an FAQ which asks if copies of older programs are available for purchase. They respond, No... Try asking your friends if anyone has a copy they recorded. So as long as I only download material that was at one time played on the Fox tv network (shows, movies, music that was in the soundtrack...), and i call everyone on the kazaa network my "friend"... Then I shouldn't have a problem. Right?

      Or is that left?

      See for yourself. Fox's FAQ:
      New Window/Tab
      Current Window

      --
      Karma is like sex. I can't remember the last time I had either of them.
    19. Re:Promising? by bluejeans · · Score: 2, Interesting
      TV and radio are truly strange delivery mediums for copyrighted work. If some salesperson walked up to your door, knocked, and then handed you a ten dollar bill without any sort of agreement, you'd own the bill. A salesperson might do that if they wanted to make sure you'd listen to their pitch, but you wouldn't have to listen. You could just close the door because no agreement was made.


      Television and radio networks offer TV shows and music in the hope that people will then listen to a sales pitch. As a result, when they deliver a show or song to your house, you own that copy of the show or song. Because you own that copy, it is legal for you to make a backup of it, or format shift it, or time shift it, and hand that exact copy to a friend. All of that is legal because of the right of first sale. The fact that time shifting is legal has been affirmed in several court rulings.


      Don't get me wrong though. You only own the exact copy that was broadcast. If you duplicate it, then hand an extra copy to a friend, you're illegally distributing a copyrighted work. Of course, that brings up the whole ludicrous nature of the beast beccause the network really gave you an undefined number of copies, since you could have any number of recording devices in the house. But, if you try real hard to ignore artificial nature of the boundaries, it all kind of makes sense.

    20. Re:Promising? by Rone · · Score: 1

      Just imagine fuzzy speed limits.

      At the risk of veering slightly off-topic, what exactly do you think we have now? Cities and states set speed limits artificially low, then allow the cops to pick and choose who gets slapped with a speeding ticket.

      Changing every speed limit sign in the country to "We'll let you know" would hardly be any fuzzier than the current system.

    21. Re:Promising? by Above · · Score: 1

      Re point #2: Note, 5-10years ago the "average" Internet user had no problems using FTP. While I agree it is harder to use, and is not widespread today, at the time it was the way everyone online transfered files. If you say 80% of users today can use Napster, I'll say 80% of users 5-10 years ago could use FTP.

    22. Re:Promising? by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      In many US states, even this speed limit (any limit under the state's maximum) is "soft" in that if you can convince a judge that you were exceeding it safely, such as a temporary excess when passing, or when no other traffic is present, you can avoid being found guilty.

      But I totally agree and don't care for any law designed to allow the executive branch to enforce it discriminately.

    23. Re:Promising? by DickBreath · · Score: 1

      Um, sir, are you aware that your name is, "DIckBreath?" Just curious.

      Yes I am quite aware of this.

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
    24. Re:Promising? by DickBreath · · Score: 1

      and i call everyone on the kazaa network my "friend"

      I have a more limited definition of "friend". I define friend as anyone who sends an IP packet to my machine.


      on the Fox network's website, they have an FAQ which asks if copies of older programs are available for purchase. They respond, No.

      One plausible explanation for this is that showing quotes and clips from old episodes would prove to be way too embarrasing to the network. Why would they turn down a source of revenue on selling old episodes? By not selling old episodes, they can at least make certian claims about copyright infringement when something comes back to haunt them.

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
  11. pre-internet days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    how many of us in the pre-internet days went to the library to photo copy a text book for a paper and then after the paper was done threw out all the copies?

    is this copyright infringement???? probably.

    so drawing from this it seems like the RIAA is only interested in short term profit. i mean i use kazaa and i can never find a good selection of Carol King or Arthra Franklin songs. does the RIAA itself feel that their artist have no long term value????

    1. Re:pre-internet days by gatzke · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I have heard fair use for copying out of a book is around 10% of the content. Handing out a chapter might be ok, but handing out copies of the entire book would be a bit much.

      Of course, you can get your indian friends (dots not feathers) to bring back LEGAL copies of $100 scientific texts that run for a couple of bucks in india. This is similar to DVD region encoding, but the cheap version is paperback on bad paper.

    2. Re:pre-internet days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      10% ok. so if i download one song for every 10 on a CD then i'm not infriging. :) thxs.

      i guy the RIAA will have to limit the number of songs on a CD to 9

    3. Re:pre-internet days by clonebarkins · · Score: 2, Insightful
      i mean i use kazaa and i can never find a good selection of Carol King or Arthra Franklin songs. does the RIAA itself feel that their artist have no long term value????

      What? These two sentences are non-sequiters. Not finding Carol King or Aretha Franklin on KaZaA has nothing to do with how the RIAA views the long- (or short-) term value of their artists. Not finding them in a CD store would, however, say much on the subject.

      --

      "The evil of the world is made possible by nothing but the sanction you give it." -- Ayn Rand

    4. Re:pre-internet days by kawika · · Score: 4, Funny

      i can never find a good selection of Carol King or Arthra Franklin songs

      That's because Kazaa doesn't have a filter that will find misspelled words. Carole King, Aretha Franklin. Go forth and plunder.

    5. Re:pre-internet days by forevermore · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm pretty sure that there is a special clause in fair-use that allows a certain amount of copying for educational purposes. Another user mentioned 10%, which sounds about right. I also know that there is a 45-second rule for multimedia clips, though I doubt that any college students bothered to really check this for their presentations.

      --
      Do you really need reason for beer? Wingman Brewers
    6. Re:pre-internet days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > i use kazaa and i can never find a good selection of Carol King or Arthra Franklin songs

      I just searched WinMX, and I found 450 results for "Carole King", and 572 results for "Aretha Franklin". In both cases, the variety looked pretty good. (I.e., it wasn't just their most popular hits; many were sharing full albums.)

      If an artist is even somewhat well know, then WinMX will almost always have a good selection.

    7. Re:pre-internet days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 10% cluase is what Microsoft and other software companies have set as teh limit to copy without permision from their websites.

      Dito on the 45 second rule. These are all BS and are not based on law. http://www.copyright.gov/fls/fl102.html has a good overview of Section 107 "Fair Use". Although there are more exceptions besides section 107.

      Fair use really does not set a limit on how much can be copied nor does it specify that the use has to be non-comercial. The 2 Live crew Case ( Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc ) set that precedent.

    8. Re:pre-internet days by alexq · · Score: 1

      wait.. wasn't this a (sic)...?

    9. Re:pre-internet days by silicon+not+in+the+v · · Score: 0

      I wish I had a mod point today to give you. I hadn't even noticed his misspellings. It's like trying to find a particular piece of hay in the haystack. The eyes tend to gloss over misspellings on /. after a while. He probably couldn't find his "In Sink" or "M and M" songs, either.

      --
      We may experience some slight turbulence and then...explode. -Capt. Mal Reynolds
  12. Brownback's Own Press Release by drpentode · · Score: 5, Informative

    Also of note is a press release from Sen. Brownback's own office. The press release also discusses the senator's plans for the digital TV broadcast flag.

    1. Re:Brownback's Own Press Release by Sphere1952 · · Score: 1

      From press release: "I support strong protections of intellectual property, and I will stand on my record in support of property rights against any challenge..."

      Oh well. Lost my vote.

      --
      Big Brother Bush is doubleplus ungood.
    2. Re:Brownback's Own Press Release by drpentode · · Score: 1

      He stands for property rights, but he also respects consumer rights. I think he's got a balanced view. Sue the big pirates, but do it in such a way that innocent people don't get hurt (like 12-year-old girls).

    3. Re:Brownback's Own Press Release by Sphere1952 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I've written thousands of lines of code and I've never seen one cent in royalty payments. I've always been paid for the code I could write, not for the code I've written. I don't see any value in the notion of intellectual property at all. It's a dumb idea.

      --
      Big Brother Bush is doubleplus ungood.
    4. Re:Brownback's Own Press Release by drpentode · · Score: 1

      However, to a greedy corporation, the code you have written is more valuable than the code you will write because written code is already money in the bag that can be sold again and again.

      That's why the RIAA is so angry. They're not able to sell what their artists have already produced because of P2P, so they're not making any money on them. And they're not about to pay their singers based on potential like big businesses pay their programmers.

      Also, in regular (non-media) business, the value content producers (tech writers, programmers) bring into the company is not tangible. A techwriter or programmer isn't going to directly generate $100 million in sales (although they may help influence that).

      However, the value content producers (singers, writers, producers) bring into the media business is very tangible. Hence this big fiasco. A content producer can bring in $100 million in sales because he is what is sold. His product (songs) is the proprety that generates value for the RIAA. That's why they want to defend their intellectual property so bad.

    5. Re:Brownback's Own Press Release by Optic7 · · Score: 1

      Would you have been paid if everyone was legally allowed to get a free copy of the program you wrote code for? How do you propose that someone make a living out of their artistic creations, be it music, pictures, movies, etc without copyright laws? Donations? So all of a sudden every person that makes a living out of their creativity would be in the same boat as street musicians and performers? Also, remember that most people making a living out of the creative industry get a one time payment or salary (but no royalties) for their work, similar to you. Think studio musicians and engineers, and movie production crews.

    6. Re:Brownback's Own Press Release by Sphere1952 · · Score: 1

      "Also, in regular (non-media) business, the value content producers (tech writers, programmers) bring into the company is not tangible. A techwriter or programmer isn't going to directly generate $100 million in sales (although they may help influence that).

      However, the value content producers (singers, writers, producers) bring into the media business is very tangible. Hence this big fiasco. A content producer can bring in $100 million in sales because he is what is sold. His product (songs) is the proprety that generates value for the RIAA. That's why they want to defend their intellectual property so bad."

      You've got the basic idea, however without the techwriters and programmers there is no product. The RIAA has the problem in a bad way. The rest of business has the problem in a up-and-coming way.

      Corporations cannot write anything. It is people who write things. Perhaps what people write should be inalienable.

      --
      Big Brother Bush is doubleplus ungood.
    7. Re:Brownback's Own Press Release by Sphere1952 · · Score: 1

      Linux is doing pretty well.

      In fact, the people who've spent all their time writing for Linux seem to be doing rather well themselves.

      --
      Big Brother Bush is doubleplus ungood.
    8. Re:Brownback's Own Press Release by j_w_d · · Score: 1

      Copyrights were an idea meant to support the creativity of individual artists "for a limited time." Copyright law these days has been altered away from this to support stupid extensions of the duration of copyright. An institution that was self-evidently NEVER intended to last even the life-time of the artist or other creative worker, now can pass down through generations, or persist as the sole property of a corporate entity that cannot, by any stretch of the imagination "create" anything. The consequence is less creativity, and a loss of art, science, and literature as works go out of circulation yet remain under copyright.

      The RIAA does not represent "artists" though a laughable few do seem to hope that they will. I can see reason in Harlan Ellison defending a copyright on his work - for a time, copyright was never meant as a means of riding on one's laurels - but United, Sony?? One great improvement would be to forbid or severly limit the term that any corporation could hold copyrights (or patents for that matter). THAT would encourage creativity and production.

      --
      ------ The only greater hazard to your liberty than n politicians is n+1 politicians.
    9. Re:Brownback's Own Press Release by drpentode · · Score: 1

      William Gibson's "Idoru" and Neal Stephenson's "Snow Crash" both discussed how what people write should inalienable. I wish corporations saw it that way... /swears to never write for miserable pay again

    10. Re:Brownback's Own Press Release by Sphere1952 · · Score: 1

      What scares me is the way Bradbury got it right in Farenheit 451, not Orwell with 1984. When I read Farenheit 451 as a kid I thought it was an interesting but rather unbelievable story.

      Have you picked your book to become yet?

      --
      Big Brother Bush is doubleplus ungood.
  13. Re:Poor babies.. by lone_marauder · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Still looking to find a legal loophole to avoid being penalized for knowingly breaking the law. Sad.

    That someone knowingly breaks an unjust law imparts it no justice.

    --
    who are those slashdot people? they swept over like Mongol-Tartars.
  14. Re:Poor babies.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    So what percentage of people have to break the law for it to be deemed unjust?

    I see plenty of people driving over the speed limit. It must be unjust. Violent sexual assaults are on the rise, those laws must be unjust.

  15. Re:Poor babies.. by k1llt1me · · Score: 1

    May you remember your post the next time you try to talk your way out of a speeding ticket...

  16. Oh Canada! by grub · · Score: 5, Funny


    Phew!

    I hope the appeals court rules in favour of the file sharers. The thought of all those American P2P evil-doers moving up here to Canada was scaring me.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:Oh Canada! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, and apparently we can get better pot down here too, according to CNN.

    2. Re:Oh Canada! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not from your government :)

    3. Re:Oh Canada! by McPLUR · · Score: 1

      HAH, better pot, I don't think so... The pot out in BC was being traded pound for pound with heroine from Seattle for a while.
      When I was at the Rolling Stones concert here in Toronto me and my girlfriend met these three guys from Florida. They smoked us one of their joints and it didn't do a thing to me or my girlfriend. And I am not exagerating here, not a thing. Then we smoked a Canadian joint, about 10 minutes later one of the American guys passed out on the ground. That is not the only time I have smoked American weed either, I have smoked it multiple times well in various parts of the States. It has never gotten me nearly as high as the stuff we have up here.
      I used to know a dealer that lived in NYC. Every couple months he would make his way to Toronto and take a bunch of weed back with him. He said that he could sell it for around 1/3 more than his regular stuff and it sold like crazy.

      -----------

      --
      If you don't stop reading this right now you owe me $1,000. Send check or money order too...
    4. Re:Oh Canada! by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Maybe that explains the techno version of "O Canada" MP3 that I found a while back!

      (It's actually quite good. I was suprised.)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  17. Threats from the record industry side by slavitos · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Perhaps, on a relevant note, yesterday's article in the "Internationa Herald Tribune" (reprinted from NYT) mentioned several reasons why these subpoenas may be counter-productive. One of them was that they will encourage people to move to more secure and anonymous networks (either Freenet-type or so-called "darknets").. It was interesting to hear the response to this argument from the "other side":
    "The thing about darknets is that the users show more culpability than people who simply use peer-to-peer," said Randy Saaf, chief executive of MediaDefender, a music technology company that does work for the record industry. "When people are found to be using them, they will face stiffer penalties".
    Now, from where I stand, this sounds like a threat. Also, I don't think there's any legal basis to threaten anyone with "stiffer penalties" simply for using a better technology to do the same thing.. What do you guys think?
    1. Re:Threats from the record industry side by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you can't hit what you can't see. them's my two bits.

    2. Re:Threats from the record industry side by Teflonatron · · Score: 1

      It does sound like a threat.

      This is also pretty much the same argument the anti-terrorism movement is using. (i.e., if you are attempting to protect your privacy, you are automatically assumed to have something to hide...)

    3. Re:Threats from the record industry side by squiggleslash · · Score: 2, Interesting
      It's not that they're using a "better technology", it's that the choice of technology seems to be orientated towards not being caught, and if your reason for choosing a technology is that you're less likely to get caught, then it shows you know that what you're doing is wrong.

      The 12yo claimed that she thought nothing that was being done was illegal, that her (or her mother's) payment to Kazaa meant she was entitled to the services Kazaa advertised and that she had no reason to believe those services may, in some way, be illegal to make use of in the majority of circumstances.

      That defense may well have gotten her somewhere, a court, while finding her guilty of copyright infringement, would almost certainly have slapped the most token damages it could find. We'll never know for sure, as she settled for somewhat less than it would have cost her in legal fees to fight the above.

      If someone is seeing a service advertised, paying money for it, and utilizing it, and the service's advertised feature is "Music by the ton", there's a reasonable chance the user doesn't realise that an offense is being committed. Ignorance of the law, or in this case that the authorization you might expect to exist does not, may not be a defense, but it can be a mitigating factor.

      If someone is seeing a service advertised where the service's advertised feature is "Music, and the RIAA can't catch you!", then it's pretty safe to assume the user knows an offense is being committed.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    4. Re:Threats from the record industry side by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A good friend of mine plays baseball in a very special league, he bats .218 and has been blind sense birth! YOU may not be able to hit what you can't see, but he sure can hit what he can HEAR!
      (the ball beeps)

      How is this on topic? Make enough noise buddy, and just maybe you just might get hit!

    5. Re:Threats from the record industry side by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      I still can't figure out who exactly she was giving money to.

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    6. Re:Threats from the record industry side by narftrek · · Score: 1

      Using Freenet & the like has one problem which many may or may not realize: Once you DL the file then it can be found. The network may be encrypted but most of us do not have encrypted hard drives. Play one of your kiddie porn movies in MS Media Player-chances are it phones home to let MS know what you're watching. Same thing with the MP3's you play. Noticed that "update ID3 tags" feature the new player has. Also someone could drop a trojan horse to open your PC to an HDD scan....look what we have here. Looking back at the RIAA past I wouldn't put it past them to figure some way of doing this or paying for MS media player stats & info. So really the only way to cover yourself is to keep you computer off the Net.

    7. Re:Threats from the record industry side by Sphere1952 · · Score: 1

      What's "MS Media Player"?

      --
      Big Brother Bush is doubleplus ungood.
    8. Re:Threats from the record industry side by Swanktastic · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Also, I don't think there's any legal basis to threaten anyone with "stiffer penalties" simply for using a better technology to do the same thing.. What do you guys think?

      I think the RIAA is signaling that in this sort of situation, they won't be willing to settle for the "small" amounts that they're currently settling for. I think under law they can claim damages far in excess of what their settlements have actually been. As some have pointed out, when you use a darknet and indicate you know what's going on is illegal. In this case, the RIAA may just say "we don't feel like leaving you with your house and car, we want everything." Since the courts aren't handing out the fines, there's no legal basis really for any of this. In a sense, this kind of posturing may backfire in that people may feel more comfortable going to the court system and rolling the dice instead of taking the more severe known outcome of a settlement.

    9. Re:Threats from the record industry side by Sphere1952 · · Score: 1

      If I'm ever taken into court my defense is going to be that I can't tell what is out there as an expression of free speech and what is out there because someone ripped off someone else's copyright protected material.

      Ignorance of the law might not be a defense, but ignorance of the facts is.

      (Besides, I'd rather there was only stuff out there expressing people's free speech opinions. Let the copyright crap die in obscurity.)

      Band-of-the-week who?

      --
      Big Brother Bush is doubleplus ungood.
    10. Re:Threats from the record industry side by narftrek · · Score: 1

      Ya know it's that "thing" that comes with Windows that is SO important to the functionality and stability of the OS that you can't remove the damned thing. Ya know that thing you use to watch moving pictures of people humping.

      Or maybe you're one of those lucky(?) Linux users that doesn't have to be tied down to Media Player.

    11. Re:Threats from the record industry side by Sphere1952 · · Score: 1

      What's Windows? ;)

      --
      Big Brother Bush is doubleplus ungood.
    12. Re:Threats from the record industry side by bobbyque · · Score: 1

      I think you'd better not open the door.

    13. Re:Threats from the record industry side by Lehk228 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      IANAL: The other side of the coin is that often darknets have encryption and other access controlls which spying on would surely require hacking/cracking which is a criminal offence (and using a password disclosed by someone not authorized to give out passwords is also illegal) so as long as the people in charge are careful about who they give the passwords to the RIAA would be in a tough spot to sue anyone based on information that they would have had to commit federal crimes to obtain.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    14. Re:Threats from the record industry side by tychorose · · Score: 1
      Slavitos,

      You are right in the sense it is a threat and it is ridiculous, however - I will repeat the point made by others - this piece of information will definitely allow them to more effectively argue one knew what his/she was doing..

      Another thing makes me curious about this, personally. If RIAA or somebody like them were to investigate Freenets or "Darknets", how would this change the subpoena process itself? Wouldn't it be much harder to get one?

    15. Re:Threats from the record industry side by geoffspear · · Score: 1
      Well, if you really think all copyrighted music is crap, you won't download it, and therefore you won't be sharing it. If you're sharing a bunch of public domain stuff, RIAA's not going to drag you into court.

      The problem is that people actually want to listen to music that's professionally produced by engineers in studios paid for with record companies' money more than they want to listen to something someone recorded in their basement. Otherwise, there's be no reason to use P2P to trade music; people who give their music away are happy to upload to mp3.com, where their potential fans can download it at high speeds for reliable servers instead of having to search for it.

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    16. Re:Threats from the record industry side by Sphere1952 · · Score: 1

      You make too many assumptions, all of them wrong. I know for a fact that people put together good music and release it onto the P2P networks.

      Furthermore, I'm not going to conceed the P2P networks to the copyright folks. P2P is a free and open marketplace. Free speech has every right to be there.

      Also, just because the band is willing to share it on the P2P networks doesn't make it public domain. It can be copyrighted, and therefore not legally available for sale, and still be given away.

      --
      Big Brother Bush is doubleplus ungood.
    17. Re:Threats from the record industry side by Alsee · · Score: 1

      who exactly she was giving money to

      I'm not sure, but I think they were reffering to ISP fees. Yes, I agree that makes her statement quite rediculous, but considering that most people are completely clueless about computers and the internet I gues it is a "reasonable" confusion.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    18. Re:Threats from the record industry side by Alsee · · Score: 1
      What's Windows?

      I'm not sure, but I think they have something to do with the black blinds on my walls. Hmm, now that I think about it, I wonder if there's anything behind the blinds.

      ...

      GAHHHH! The LIGHT! The PAIN! I'M BLIND!
      Owwwwww! So that's why they call them "blinds"!


      Note to self: Never try to look behind blinds again!

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  18. The issue is ... by JSkills · · Score: 4, Insightful
    ... that the RIAA is looking to circumvent standard legal prodedure by being able to determine the identity of someone they're interesting in suing for copyright infringement before actually filing the lawsuit. This is a privelege typically enjoyed by District Attorneys and the like - certainly not by a private firm looking to file civil suits. If someone is breaking the law, the path should be simple for them: file a lawsuit against them. If the person turns out to be a 12 year old girl or a grandfather, it really shouldn't matter to them. Justice is blind remember?

    What their tying to do is (a) use an aggressive interpretation of a new law to their advantage while (b) circumventing standard legal procedure for filing of civil suits.

    Throw in the fact that there is a related article on cnet about how the RIAA is claiming that P2P networks are "rife with child porn" in order to make P2P seem like more of the devil's work.

    1. Re:The issue is ... by phorm · · Score: 1

      RIAA is claiming that P2P rife with ch*ld porn

      Realistically, this is true. However, this is a half-truth due to omision, because if you s/P2P/the internet/ the statement still rings true. Hell, you could argue the same against the www protocol, but in the end it's not the fault of the protocol, just a portion of people using the net in general.

    2. Re:The issue is ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "What their tying to do"

      "tying" - obviously typo. "their" - obviously wrong!

      Their = possessive; They're = abbreviation of "they are". I don't care about color/colour, etc but this is so plainly wrong, it has to be highlighted!

  19. Re:Poor babies.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    So what percentage of people have to break the law for it to be deemed unjust?

    How about we base such judgements on an objective assessment of the laws' fairness rather than how many people break it?

  20. Legal Perspective? by -Grover · · Score: 2, Interesting
    All three members of the appeals court appeared to accept the RIAA's contention that peer-to-peer networks are rife with piracy. "This case is about a fellow who made available 600 copyrighted works," Roberts said. "Is there any legitimate purpose for making available for copying 600 copyrighted works?"


    Maybe someone has answered this legitly elsewhere, but I would love it if there could be a little light placed on this question since IANAL.

    If P2P networks such as KaZaA (et. al) share files in a directory that you have previously downloaded by default, can you truly be held liable for making them available without your knowledge?

    Imagine this situation:

    I find a friend to OCR scan a copy of a book (which I own legal copy of) to my word processor for "backup" so I can read it if the original is destroyed. Following that, someone comes over to my house, and finds the file which is aptly named and copies it to a disk, and is subsequently caught possessing his "illegal copy". Can I be held accountable for giving him access without my knowledge?

    To me it seems these P2P networks automatically make these files available with little knowledge to Joe User trying to find someone who Ripped and Encoded the latest Jay-Z song for use on his new iPod, which he could possibly own, and have a right to possessing a backup.

    I know that just because you don't understand a law doesn't mean you can't be held accountable for it. I know distributing files is illegal, but if I don't know they are being distributed via my PC because I'm not "technically adept" is that a crime?

    1. Re:Legal Perspective? by KanshuShintai · · Score: 1

      Couldn't you also argue that since only people who are downloading the files for backup are allowed to download the files, you should be able to expect that sharing the files is no more than a public service to the people who need backups?

    2. Re:Legal Perspective? by El · · Score: 5, Funny
      This case is about a fellow who made available 600 copyrighted works," Roberts said. "Is there any legitimate purpose for making available for copying 600 copyrighted works?"

      Hey! I know of a guy who made available over a million copyrighted works! His name is Andrew Carnegie, and he started this lending service called "The New York Library"! Maybe the RIAA should go after him, as he's obviously a notorious pirate!

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    3. Re:Legal Perspective? by telstar · · Score: 1
      "Hey! I know of a guy who made available over a million copyrighted works! His name is Andrew Carnegie, and he started this lending service called "The New York Library"!"
      • The difference is that each book can only be checked out by one person at a time. The irony is that virtually every library has a photo-copier available for use.

    4. Re:Legal Perspective? by Jaysyn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, but the librarians sure do look at you funny when you're walking out with a stack of 8 1/2" x 11" photocopied paper.

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    5. Re:Legal Perspective? by demonbug · · Score: 1
      Hey! I know of a guy who made available over a million copyrighted works!


      I think you missed the important part here - a file on a P2P network is not available for borrowing, as items in a library are, but they are available for copying. When you download something it does not disappear from the hard drive of the person you got it from. Now, you could copy an item you borrow from the library, but the act of borrowing the item does not in itself create a copy of that item. Comparing P2P networks to libraries in this way is a fallacy - there is a definite difference (note - this does not mean that I support the RIAA in this in any way, I just think that if you are going to try to argue against what they are doing you should use valid arguments - and yes, I realize the post was a joke, but I'm sure there are a lot of people thinking or saying the same thing who do not think it is a joke).

    6. Re:Legal Perspective? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that's the biggest fucking lie

      librarians could give a rat's ass about photocopied material.

      general public libraries...pshawwww...whatever...they ain't payed enough to care?

      university libraries? duh....par for the course.

      mod this lying sack of shit into the ground.

    7. Re:Legal Perspective? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      In fact, librarians love photocopiers. Before they were commonplace in libraries, *sshole patrons would either steal books or use a razor to cut out pages they wanted, and steal them. Photocopiers mean the library gets fewer books stolen or damaged.

    8. Re:Legal Perspective? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easy there .... check out the definition of the word "sarcasm" when you get a chance.

    9. Re:Legal Perspective? by El · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And how is getting an electronic copy and promising "cross-my-heart!" that I'm going to delete it when I'm done with it really any different than borrowing a book from a library and promising I won't scan the whole thing in with my scanner into OCR software? Why do we take it as a given that just because digital information is easier to copy, it's subject to different rules? Art has always been subject to copying, and it always will be. For thousands of years, if your performed your song in front of another musician, or told your story in front of another storyteller, they could "steal" it and claim it as their own! Now we have a small group of people insisting the government protect their income streams by forcing other people not to sing their songs or tell their stories... doesn't this violate the equal protection clause of the constitution?

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    10. Re:Legal Perspective? by Trent_Alkaline · · Score: 1

      Still how is this any less "illegal" than downloading an e-book on kazaa? Or in this case, an mp3?

    11. Re:Legal Perspective? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AC cause you're such an Ass Captain?

  21. Re:Poor babies.. by Trolling+for+Profit · · Score: 1

    So would you rather not have speeding laws? It's been tried before.. nevertheless the locals got sick of it. You'd rather shift the money making from CDs to concerts, turning music distribution into a loss leader? Great, but the greater the costs of loss leaders in a market, the greater the barrier of entry. The greater the barrier of entry, the fewer choices and a market ruled by one or two megacorporations. By legalizing the trading of copyright works many jobs will be eliminated and new artists will have a hard time making money because they will be forced to provide their music free of charge. You could also tax blank CD-Rs, but that'd suck if you bought them to hand out Knoppix for free. Now with the American jobs going oversea, you will also see a loss of music industry jobs. Yay for unemployment! Be careful what you wish for, it just might come true.

  22. Re:Poor babies.. by deltadav · · Score: 1

    'Just'ness is not based on percentages and/or whether or not the law is broken.

  23. I think it was Kierkegaard ... by burgburgburg · · Score: 1
    or perhaps Judas Priest who put it best:

    Breakin' the law, breakin' the law!
    Breakin' the law, breakin' the law!

    I'm pretty sure it was Kierkegaard.

    1. Re:I think it was Kierkegaard ... by Optic7 · · Score: 1

      It was Judas Priest. :)

  24. Re:Poor babies.. by grub · · Score: 3, Funny


    That someone knowingly breaks an unjust law imparts it no justice.

    Which is exactly why I don't free my slaves.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  25. Re:Poor babies.. by FileNotFound · · Score: 1

    Well it just so happens that

    As far as the assults, the percentage is tiny and NOBODY is out trying to lobby for a change in that area.

    --
    In Soviet Russia, the television watches YOU!
  26. Re:Poor babies.. by KanshuShintai · · Score: 1

    It's unjust because it's unconstitutional and immoral, not because many people are breaking it.

  27. Re:Poor babies.. by FileNotFound · · Score: 1

    I ought to REALLY preview my posts...
    What I meant is :

    Well it just so happens that speeding laws are unjust

    As far as the assults, the percentage is tiny and NOBODY is out trying to lobby for a change in that area.

    --
    In Soviet Russia, the television watches YOU!
  28. Not John Doe... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...that was Joe Black, you insensitive clod!

    1. Re:Not John Doe... by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      Somebody's never seen se7en

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
  29. RIAA has to connect ISPs to infringement... by Not_Wiggins · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It seems that the crux of this issue comes down to who's really infringing on the copyright.

    It boils down to how the RIAA is trying to obtain the names and if the ISPs are a participating member of the "theft."

    They have the right under the law to get the names of the offenders before they bring suit.

    This seems reasonable.

    They've chosen to go after the ISPs because they'd have the easiest (if only) way of identifying which people are the "thieves."

    HOWEVER, just because the RIAA has the right to go after the names doesn't automatically mean the ISPs have to give them up.

    I think this will boil down to deciding who is culpable in the pirating of music. If the RIAA can prove in court that the ISPs are actively infringing on the copyrights, then they'll be open to be sued to get the names of their "accomplices" (ie, Joe Downloader).

    However, if the RIAA can't connect the ISPs with the downloaders, then they might be SOL.

    It is a similar question faced by gun manufacturers. People would like to see them be liable (responsible) when someone dies from a gunshot wound. I believe it has been held up in court that simply providing the means to commit the crime *isn't* a crime when that wasn't the intention. Put more plainly, if the gun makers intended people to use the guns in crime, then they would be liable. However, since they provide guns for other legal uses, the fact that they can be used for evil isn't a strong legal point.

    To make the point more obvious, it would be like making car manufacturers liable when people use cars to run people over. Absurd, I think you'd agree.

    I'm hoping the courts will make the similar connection and stop the RIAA subpoenas. To this point, just because the ISP provides the network connectivity that makes P2P pirating possible, it wasn't the original intention. Hence, they aren't delivering a service for the purpose of supporting illegal activity... they're not directly culpable... so they should be able to tell the RIAA, "find your names on your own."

    --
    Diplomacy is the art of saying, "Nice doggie!" until you can find a rock.
    1. Re:RIAA has to connect ISPs to infringement... by Easy+as+1-2-3 · · Score: 1
      I beleive that the RIAA's argument is that once you have participated in a P2P network, you are no longer anon. Therefore when the RIAA asks for the name behind a certian IP addy, the IP cannot cry "privacy"!

      Plus simply by using a system that allows users to get into your computer you kind of lose the argument that privacy is important to me.

    2. Re:RIAA has to connect ISPs to infringement... by telstar · · Score: 2, Insightful
      "To make the point more obvious, it would be like making car manufacturers liable when people use cars to run people over. Absurd, I think you'd agree."
      • Actually, it'd be more like the cops going to the DMV to get the identity of the registered car owner. The difference is that the DMV is a state entity while the ISP is a private entity. I hate the fact that the ISPs are being put in the middle of this, but if the COURTS decide that somebody's identity should be revealed, the ISPs are really the only ones that can do this. What I think the courts need to address is that currently there is no regulation surrounding the RIAA filing suponeas. The DMCA and a lower court seems to have given them carte blanche access to whoever's identity they wish. That's what needs to be fixed.

    3. Re:RIAA has to connect ISPs to infringement... by El · · Score: 1

      How often do you talk to someone on the phone and hear copyrighted music playing in the background? Clearly the phone networks are rife with piracy! SHould the phone company be made to detect music being played over the phone, and block it? Shouldn't the phone company report to the RIAA all customers that are using the phone network to illegally distribute copyrighted music? Isn't that exactly what the RIAA is asking the ISPs to do?

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    4. Re:RIAA has to connect ISPs to infringement... by alexq · · Score: 1
      m hoping the courts will make the similar connection and stop the RIAA subpoenas. To this point, just because the ISP provides the network connectivity that makes P2P pirating possible, it wasn't the original intention.

      but, didn't the courts _not_ see things this way when the issue was napster? that defense didn't work, apparently because it was "mostly used" for doing something illegal...

    5. Re:RIAA has to connect ISPs to infringement... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The quality of a recording made over a telephone line often does not have the quality of a ripped MP3.

    6. Re:RIAA has to connect ISPs to infringement... by kbonapart · · Score: 1

      The problem that the people have with the gun manufacturers is that they know al large percentage(60ish) of thier profits comes from illegal gun sales. Trade shows, gun shows, people paying cash for handguns, without having to wait five days. Since the gun industry is a multi-billion dollar indusrty, those percentage points are huge amounts of money.

      The problem is that, even though they *know* that a large amount of money is coming from illegal sales, they do nothing to stop it. Because they don't want to lose the revenue.

      So what *would* you need an unregistered illegal gun for?

      --
      There are no gods but ourselves.
    7. Re:RIAA has to connect ISPs to infringement... by El · · Score: 1

      So it should be ok to distribute photocopies of a copyrighted book, because the photocopies do not have the same quality as the original book? Quality is a technical problem, it should not be a legal one. Should FM stations pay higher royalties per song played than AM, because the sound quality is better? The fact the a 64kbit/s ISDN channel does not not have the same sound quality as a 64kbit/s MP3 because it's not using decent compression could change tomorrow... what if the phone company started using a better codec than the MP3? Why are the bits going over the ISDN line ok if it's a dialed point-to-point virtual circuit, but not ok if it's a connection to a server streaming live audio over the internet? Isn't it basically the same bitstream? If I call someone from my digital cellphone while sitting in a Steely Dan concert, am I infringing on their IP by allowing my friend to hear the concert?

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    8. Re:RIAA has to connect ISPs to infringement... by echomorphia · · Score: 1

      What I don't understand about any of this is, why are the ISP's just sitting there taking it? Why are they allowing their customers (spending $30-$50 for broadband) to be subjected to this scrutiny?

      One would think that it would be in their best interests to find a way around this, ensuring their continued success in this market.

    9. Re:RIAA has to connect ISPs to infringement... by Not_Wiggins · · Score: 1

      Actually, the ISPs have been defending their customers... or, at least, have been trying to.

      The article is really about a potential reversal of a lower court's decision to force the ISPs to give up the names of the customers associated with the IPs accused of uploading.

      Bear in mind (as some other thoughtful posters have noted), *downloading* isn't a violation... it is the people who upload that are distributing archival copies (and, thus, breaking the fair-use backup protection).

      All in all, this is just highlighting how broken the whole copyright system is... actually, the whole IP protection systems (I'll include patents in there) are broken. Further more, I can't say these problems are unique to areas where money is concerned; with the rapid development of global communication, almost all systems (including social ones) are suffering because they're not prepared to handle this change in technology.

      As a society, we're simply not ready to handle the connected-ness we've achieved.

      --
      Diplomacy is the art of saying, "Nice doggie!" until you can find a rock.
    10. Re:RIAA has to connect ISPs to infringement... by bm_luethke · · Score: 1

      I'm going to assume that you think everything posted is truth.

      Trade shows, gun shows, people paying cash for handguns, without having to wait five days.

      Not illegal. First off, gun manufactureres get no money off this (no more than used CD sales give money to the riaa). There is no five day waiting period - there is a thing called instant check, though private individuals do not have to go through the system (and the gun manufactuars do not get money from them, and it is perfectly legal). There is no special provisions for gun shows - gun dealers still have to follow the same rules and so do private individuals (hint - look up "the yellow sheet" to find the minimum needed for sale).

      The problem is that, even though they *know* that a large amount of money is coming from illegal sales, they do nothing to stop it.

      Even given that what you imply is actually true - that 60% of thier profits come from known illegal arms sells - what would you have them do. In order for them to sell to a person you must have a FFL (Federal Firearms Liscense - that is the Federal Govt has declared that you are capable of selling legal firarms), at what point are they liable. If the *FEDERAL* govt says you are trusted to resell firarms what shoudl the manufacturers do? It seems that the federal govt is liable for telling the manufacturers that those people are trustworthy when they are not, assuming that what you imply is true.

      --
      ------- Sorry about the spelling, I suffer from two problems. Dyslexia makes it difficult to spell well, lazy makes it
    11. Re:RIAA has to connect ISPs to infringement... by Pofy · · Score: 1

      >They've chosen to go after the ISPs because
      >they'd have the easiest (if only) way of
      >identifying which people are the "thieves."

      An interesting step missing here is the one going from "the owner of the account used" and the "actual person using it" which most definately do not have to be the same one.

      Imagine a normal family with several members or a few students/friends sharing a flat. One of them have signed up with an ISP. So it would be his name that is given away. The obvious defence for him would then be to say "It was not me, must have been someone else in my family/houshold or perhaps some friend that visitied me". There is no way to actually prove which person was the one actually using the account. And it is the use of the account that was possibky infringing on copyright, not the account owner.

  30. Law is like Microsoft by segment · · Score: 1

    All three members of the appeals court appeared to accept the RIAA's contention that peer-to-peer networks are rife with piracy. "This case is about a fellow who made available 600 copyrighted works," Roberts said. "Is there any legitimate purpose for making available for copying 600 copyrighted works?"

    Ever notice how Microsoft software tries to take over everything you do on the system, and do it for you... Kind of like a dictator... Seems like the judge is doing the same thing with the statement Is there any legitimate purpose for making available for copying 600 copyrighted works?. Yes there can be a reason. Say someone is part of a study group who has an itinerary to read 600 different works to improve themselves. Should not matter how many works someone is sharing as long as they have permission to do so.

  31. Wireless networks by Transfan76 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've been curious how it's going to work with all these open wireless networks hanging around. if someone uses your wireless networks, unbeknown to you, and the RIAA comes after you for copyright infringement, can they hold you legally responsible? Since copyright infringment isn't a criminal offence, and from what I know, there is no law requiring me to secure my wireless network, how can I be held responsible for what some stranger did?

    1. Re:Wireless networks by narftrek · · Score: 1

      While I see your point, I really don't know how that would hold up in court. Just for your sake & a little CYA you should probably secure that network.

    2. Re:Wireless networks by WalterSobchak · · Score: 1

      I posted this before on a slightly different subject...
      I wanted to keep an open AP for everyone to use. After a casual talk over a few beers with a lawyer friend of mine, I secured my AP tightly. This of course is for German laws, but I imagine US laws are similar

      Alex

      --
      Absinthe makes the heart grow fonder
    3. Re:Wireless networks by Sabalon · · Score: 1

      Here are my DHCP logs which show the MAC of the user using that IP at that time. Have fun tracking them down.

      Sure...it probably wouldn't fly much better than a brick, but it'd be worth a try. Step B would be to forge your MAC to be different than the one in your machine to prove that it couldn't have been you since it's a fact that MAC's are unique to cards ;)

  32. Boy, the Slash Mods Missed This One! by jbottero · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Still looking to find a legal loophole to avoid being penalized for knowingly breaking the law. Sad. /b>

    Under regular Slash Mod rules, isn't the parent a "troll" or "flamebait"? I mean, it attacks one of their babies with (Good Lord!) witty truth!

  33. Re:Poor babies.. by dan501 · · Score: 1

    and damn that rosa parks for knowingly breaking the law.

    --
    my livejournal is interesting and worth reading - I swear. I know everyone thinks their blog is interesting. mine is.
  34. Alleged by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    Sure, alleged pirates.

    These guys should be punished for violating the copyrights of the music industry.

  35. John Doe: Renaissance Man by burgburgburg · · Score: 2, Informative
    Along with being a guitarist, John also co-wrote and co-sings most of the songs with former wife Exene Cervanka.

    He also has had a varied acting career, having been in "Great Balls of Fire", "Georgia", the TV show "Roswell" and of course, the classic "Roadhouse" with Patrick Swayze.

    I'm glad to hear that the band is back together.

    1. Re:John Doe: Renaissance Man by great+om · · Score: 1

      Isn't he the bass player?
      (source http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&uid=CASS7 0309171736&sql=Brifxlfde5cqi)

      --
      ------- Oh damn.... the Sigfile escaped... -Great OM
  36. Re:Poor babies.. by FileNotFound · · Score: 1

    Trying to live up to your username?

    As far as speeding laws, way to strawman the argument. But if you must know, yes speeding laws are absurd.

    I bought plenty of CDs at Half.com EVEN when I had the mp3s, why? Because having the official CD was worth the $7-12 to me. I even bought new CDs for $20ish when I had mp3s of it, but I did so feeling ripped off.

    There is NO reason that CDs couldn't sell for $5. If they did I swear I'd buy one a day.

    Nobody said anything "has to be free". You're just strawmaning and screaming unemployment and whatever other BS you can come up with.

    I dare say that if CDs were $5 that the industry would grow and would create jobs. Don't try to tell me that RIAA is doing sales analysis and that $18 is the best cost/demand ratio. If they did such great market research then people wouldn't be trying to boycott them.

    --
    In Soviet Russia, the television watches YOU!
  37. Re:Poor babies.. by nairnr · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The courts decide what laws are just or not. The problem is that people would like to empower themselves this right. I can't go to court and fight a speeding ticket because I didn't think the speed limit matched the speed I thought the road is capable of and expect to win.

  38. Re:Poor babies.. by 91degrees · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You'd rather shift the money making from CDs to concerts, turning music distribution into a loss leader?

    What makes you think this is the only viable mechanism? There may well be a way to allow a certain amount of file sharing without completely destroying CD sales. Sure, a lot of people say they want copyright law abolished, but most people are reasonable, and will accept a compromise whereby they can get some free music.

    File sharing will eventually be dealt with, one way or another, whether it is eliminated or legalised, I have no idea. We just have to wait for whoever has the solution.

  39. The sad thing is... by DroopyStonx · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The vast majority of these Judges are uneducated when it comes to technology.

    You kidding me? I could walk up to any judge and ask him the difference between FTP and P2P and receive nothing but blank stares.

    Of COURSE the uneducated are easily manipulated. If you know nothing about cars and you take your car in to get the brakes fixed and they come back and make some BS story up about how your exhause pipe is cracked, how would you know if it's valid or not? The majority of people would just nod and accept that it needs to be fixed rather than checking the validity of the problem. Much like the RIAA is trying to sway judges by saying it's now a medium to trade child porn or whatever bullshit story they come up with.

    These people are making decisions on things they know NOTHING about. Why don't people question *that* instead?

    --
    We have secretly replaced these Slashdot mods' sense of humor with a rusty nail. Let's see if they notice!!
    1. Re:The sad thing is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Much like the RIAA is trying to sway judges by saying it's now a medium to trade child porn"

      Like the Post Office?

  40. counter claims? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So say the RIAA takes me to court.. and I have a legal copy of every song that i downloaded .. and made them available for people who also had legal copies but didn't know how, or couldn't be bothered to rip/encode them so that they could have a copy.

    Could you then counter-sue the RIAA? I say we make a library of legal "loaner" cd's for people that they can purchase at the courthouse before trial for $0.01 per CD, just because it's a used cd, doesn't mean you have any less rights to the content on it.

    I'd imagine if you entered a stack of 600cd's as evidenece that a) the court clerk would be pissed, and b) the RIAA would start to look pretty stupid.

    What am i saying.. i'm canadian.. i'm just timeshifting.. plus i pay for piracy with every blank CD that i buy.. it's a right the lobby has in-advertently given me :)

    1. Re:counter claims? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. You haven't actually made them available for those that own the tracks, but pretty much for the whole globe. Moreover, you have allegedly decided to use a non DRM-enabled medium to do so. Finally, you have not being assigned any reproduction rights, that permit you to traffic the purchased content -regardless if the receiver party own a copy.

      So have a cold bath and wake up. Pirate your own work, not others.

    2. Re:counter claims? by Sloppy · · Score: 1
      I have a legal copy of every song that i downloaded .. and made them available for people who also had legal copies but didn't know how, or couldn't be bothered to rip/encode them so that they could have a copy.
      Remember the my.mp3.com case: mp3.com transmitted music to people they had proven (within a reasonable degree, via a challenge-response) already had a copy of the music. It was still ruled copyright infringement by a judge.

      The catch is whether or not the 1992 law (I forgot the name.. er.. audio home recording act, or something like that) causes the situation to be different, since you're just some amateur guy, whereas mp3.com was a business.

      What am i saying.. i'm canadian.. i'm just timeshifting.. plus i pay for piracy with every blank CD that i buy.. it's a right the lobby has in-advertently given me :)
      Oh good grief, a Canadian. Now you're just making things complicated. ;-) Let's solve the simpler case (USA guy transmitting to USA guy) first.
      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  41. Re:Poor babies.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bet if Rosa Parks knew you were comparing the civil rights movement to the "I want it all for free free free!" movement she'd probably bus' a cap in yo' ass.

  42. Re:Poor babies.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, artificially lowered speed limits that are a product of the 1970s' oil embargo are unjust.

    Oh, and what percent of everyone commits violent sexual assualt according to your statistics, anyway? I bet it's ALOT lower than the percentage of those who speed..

  43. Rhetorix by GillBates0 · · Score: 1
    "This case is about a fellow who made available 600 copyrighted works," Roberts said. "Is there any legitimate purpose for making available for copying 600 copyrighted works?"

    "This case is also about a corporation which wants to sue millions of people," GillBates0 said. "Is there any legitimate purpose for suing millions of people?"

    But what was the answer to that question, dammit! I'm dying to know.

    --
    An Indian-American Hindu committed to non-violent thought/speech/action alarmed by the global explosion of radical Islam
    1. Re:Rhetorix by SnowWolf2003 · · Score: 1

      "This case is about a fellow who made available 600 copyrighted works," Roberts said. "Is there any legitimate purpose for making available for copying 600 copyrighted works?"

      Surely that question is for another court to decide, after the name has been released by the ISP through the subpeana process and the trial is in front of a jury - whatever happenned to innocent until proven guilty?

      The question before this court is whether it is constitutional for the RIAA to issue the subpeana without being required to file a suit first, and whether it is constitutional for the RIAA to have that power, rather than a law enforcement agency.

      I think the whole issue is that the RIAA is not a law enforcement agency and shouldn't have the powers of one. They should have to follow the same process as everyone else.

    2. Re:Rhetorix by linuxbikr · · Score: 1
      Yes, there is a reason: to let the 600 other people out there who own the CDs who want an MP3 of a track from it but lacks the time/energy/skill to rip it themselves.

      Isn't it only infringement if someone downloads a file that they don't have a legal right to? And who is the infringer? The person who offered it for download or the person who downloads it? And then, those who own the track in question are not committing copyright infringement. There is a "non-infringing" element here.

      So, technically, it is legitimate. If I could ever stand before a court as an average consumer, that would be my argument. The only question is where is the infringement truly occurring and who is responsible?

      If I listen to a CD in a kiosk at a music store to sample a CD in making a purchase decision, am I not guilty of infringment at that point? I'm listening to music I don't own. I don't see much of a difference between that behavior and P2P sharing except that the P2P version leaves a copy (which could then be erased).

      Something's got to give.

    3. Re:Rhetorix by GillBates0 · · Score: 1
      If I listen to a CD in a kiosk at a music store to sample a CD in making a purchase decision, am I not guilty of infringment at that point? I'm listening to music I don't own.

      If your argument holds, then why just the kiosk at a music store? If that's infringement, then so is listening to musing anywhere, at a friends house, at a party, anywhere. You would be guilty, if you didn't block your ears when driving past your neighbor's house when their music was playing too loud.

      --
      An Indian-American Hindu committed to non-violent thought/speech/action alarmed by the global explosion of radical Islam
  44. Ya'know what sucks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    is that know for a fact that there are lawyers on this forum! It would be nice, even as Anonymous Cowards to explain us the LAW to us ignorant techies!

    Dave..you know who you are!

  45. Not "much more complicated." More expensive. by David+Hume · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Maybe so, but the burden of identifying the users gets much more complicated under that scenario. By going after the ISP's like they have been, they can scoop up name, address & phone number all in one place.


    Forcing the RIAA to first file "John Doe lawsuits" does not make the burden of identifying users "much more complicated." It may, however, make it initially more expensive.

    As stated in the linked article, the RIAA contends that the DMCA allows "copyright holders to glean the identity of alleged infringers without filing a lawsuit first." As also stated in the article, Judge John Roberts, one of the judges of the three judge appellate panel, questioned that interpretation.

    If the RIAA is incorrect, and it is forced to first file "John Doe" lawsuits, it will initially be more expensive in that they may have to pay a filing fee for each lawsuit. (It may be possible for them to file a single lawsuit in each jurisdiction where each such suit names numerous "John Doe" defendants. However, in some jurisdictions they may have to pay more for a large, multi-defendant suit.) Once the "John Doe" lawsuits are filed, the RIAA can subpoena the relevant ISPs to identify the "John Doe" defendants. It is, for an entity as well-funded as the RIAA, at most a relatively minor procedure hurdle.

    The reason why I say forcing the RIAA to first file "John Doe" lawsuits may only be "initially" more expensive is that in many cases the RIAA would have to file a lawsuit anyway -- i.e., in every case where pre-lawsuit subpoena to idenfity the downloader did not lead to a pre-lawsuit settlement.

  46. Re:Poor babies.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    This maybe the case in your country, but in America our laws are based on the will of the people, not arbitrary deemings of "right" and "wrong."

  47. Re:Poor babies.. by kfg · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Nevermind the fact that the Constitution itself, and the Bill of Rights in particular, is a finely crafted document part of whose explict purpose is to allow citizens not only to break a certain class of unjust laws, but to do so with little or no risk of prosecution by denying the government, and by extension anyone else ( because all law is enforced at the point of the government's guns) the power to do so.

    Specificly, with regards to this case, the RIAA is invoking governmental powers ( court orders) to go on a "fishing expedition" to identify people it has only cursory a priori reason to suspect and without judicial oversight and on an assemblyline basis.

    That sort of behaviour is traditionally verboten and shit.

    KFG

  48. Uses for 600 copyrighted works by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or since the length of a copyright varies between countries, those who are in a country that has a lower length of copyright can legally download these tracks because the copyright has expired in their jurstidiction, even though in the US the copyright is still valid

  49. it is not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    in my experience with kazaa, it is not rife with child porn.

    in fact, it is rife only with normal porn named with child porn keywords.

    <humor>
    I only know because I downloaded the internet lastm month and had to review all the P2P files from kazaa.

    don't tell my boss I said anything.

    webmaster@riaa.com
    </humor>

  50. Re:Poor babies.. by Rimbo · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You know, up until recently it was against the law to have anal sex of any kind in Texas. Does that mean that everyone who did that should have been punished for it?

    More to the point, is file-sharing theft? Since the evidence shows a strong correlation between file-sharing and CD sales, I would suggest that file-sharing is marketing, not theft.

    And I'm not the only musician who thinks that way... See story from yesterday's Slashdot.

  51. No, I'm New Here by New+Here · · Score: 1

    No, I'm New Here

    1. Re:No, I'm New Here by __aagmrb7289 · · Score: 1

      Whoops! I'll make sure not to answer to that name then. My apologies!

  52. Good McBride vs Bad McBride by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
    Verizon lawyer Andrew McBride, a partner at Wiley Rein & Fielding, replied by saying that Verizon has inked deals with commercial services that sell music.



    Good McBride: We wants it. We needs it. Must have the $699. They stole it from us. Sneaky little thieves. Wicked. Tricksy. False.

    Bad McBride: No, no.

    Gollum: Yes, precious. False. They will cheap you. Hurt you. Lie.

    Good McBride: But filesharing is my friend.

    Bad McBride, ridiculing: You don't have any friends. Nobody likes you.

    Good McBride, hands cover ears: Not listening.

    Bad McBride: You're a liar. And a thief.

    Good McBride: No.

    Bad McBride: Mur-der-er.

    Good Mc Bride: [sniffling] Go away.

    Bad Mc Bride: Go away!? [laughs]

    Good McBride: I hate you. I Hate you.

    Bad McBride, flabbergasted: What did you say?

    Bad McBride, still in shock from the realization that Smeagol has balls: What?

    Good McBride: Leave now, and never come back.

    Bad McBride: nooo grrrrrr

    [Dance] Gollum gollum gollum. Smeagol is free!!

  53. RTFA troll by commodoresloat · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What are you talking about? The article is about a federal court (not some slashdotter with a 400gig mp3 collection) scrutinizing a law not for loopholes but to see whether the dramatic action taken by the RIAA -- action which infringed on the privacy expectations of all ISP users, not just those downloading mp3s -- was legal. Hell, you didn't even have to read the article to figure that out.

  54. Re:Poor babies.. by Trolling+for+Profit · · Score: 1

    There is NO reason that CDs couldn't sell for $5. If they did I swear I'd buy one a day. Yeah yeah, I'm sure when the prices lower to $5 you'll buy a few more CDs and then change your mind. You will complain that CDs are such a rip off when you can download the music illegally for free. You gotta be kidding that a charity-based system such that will work, i.e. download the MP3s and then decide later whether or not to buy the real thing. When will it stop? How much is enough? Do you want the entire band of Metallic to show up on your doorstep and kiss your toes in order to urge you to donate to them?

  55. Re:Poor babies.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Still looking to find a legal loophole to avoid being penalized for knowingly breaking the law. Sad."

    If there's a legal loophole, they're not breaking the law. Almost by definition, you might say.

  56. The problem is that copyrights are dead by argoff · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I honestly think that the RIAA is out of controll and that copyrights are immoral, but either way these arguments are irrelavent. Right or wrong, good or bad - copyrights are effectively unenforcable on the internet. It is not a matter of if, but when the people backing them will simply run out of steam.

    They can make rules, laws, declarations, assertions, and in IMHO people can ask for the rest of time if people should respect copyrights, but when all is said and done - people can copy whatever they want, and they can more or less do it without any fear of retribution inspite of the occasional highly publisized wich hunt. Even now with all the lawsuits, and trading from publicly viewable IP addresses, the chances are still one in millions of being nailed. You're more likely to get ran over by a bus.

    Sure, if the gov randomly raids 10 million homes per year, and pops a bullet in the head of anyone who posesses unauthorized copyrighted materials on site without trial - then perhaps the copyright regime will be extended a few years longer, but lets get real - copyrights are really dead, and the RIAA, Microsoft, and even the government simply haven't faced that reality yet.

    1. Re:The problem is that copyrights are dead by toddhunter · · Score: 1

      well said, but slashdot would be a lonely place with out the RIAA around to bitch about.

  57. I run a Freenet node, by Sphere1952 · · Score: 1

    and I don't use KaZaa et. al.. It's not that I wouldn't download and fileshare, but I'm too busy protecting my free speech rights to even keep up with Frost postings.

    Culpable? Me? Come here kitty, kitty.

    --
    Big Brother Bush is doubleplus ungood.
  58. this is why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    we all need broadband and 2TB HDDs. if everyone had that, we'd all have all the mp3s we'd need and the whole thing would only be a problem on CD release dates.

  59. Re:Poor babies.. by FileNotFound · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Do you get a cookie for not reading my post?

    As I said, I have in the past bought CDs even when I had the mp3s.

    Who said anything about charity, there you are strawmaning again. Great.

    CDs are still sold, concerts still paid for, Merallica still makes money from their official merchandising etc...

    Oh and even if Metallica showed up on my doorstep and kissed my toes I'd not give them a penny...

    If CDs are $5 it's not worth my time to download them. There is NO reason that they can't cost that.
    CD - .05c
    CD Case - .10c
    CD Booklet - .20c
    Delivery etc -.50c.

    Profit Per CD = $4.15

    --
    In Soviet Russia, the television watches YOU!
  60. Bigger picture by lurker412 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Isn't it beside the point whether the RIAA has to file a John Doe suit first? They certainly have the legal resources to do so. And the intent: the current subpoenas will be followed by lawsuits, or so they claim. Seems to me their methodology of identifying infringers is plausible enough that most judges would grant the subpoena if asked. So what will be different? I am uncomfortable with giving the RIAA the power of subpoena without judicial review, but so far, they have done nothing other than do what they said they would. Regardless of the procedure, I think it is inevitable that file sharing will continue, probably on yet to be developed networks that offer true anonymity. Which will trump the RIAA regardless of the outcome of the current legal spat. The RIAA should stop pissing into the wind and figure out how to make money with new technology. In the meantime, technologists should stop pissing on the RIAA and get those new, anonymous networks up to speed.

  61. Re:Poor babies.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IF dan501 was downloading mp3's strictly as a way of protesting, then I think Rosa would be proud of him! Sometimes breaking the law is the only means left to protest bad laws. Of course Rosa would also expect dan501 to all but demand to be sued! The act of civil disobedance is only of value if the purpatrator faces the consiquences of his or her act.

  62. Re:publicans(!) by sacrilicious · · Score: 1
    there are some politicians listening to us, a little. And a republican!

    I agree with (what I take to be) your implication, it does seem intuitively surprising that a republican would come down on the side of individual/privacy. I think it's noteworthy that - as far as I can tell - democrats have acted outrageously with regard to privacy, drm, copyright, etc. Fritz Hollings being a prominent example, having authored the SSSCA. And guess who co-authored it: Dianne Feinstein. I've been paying attention to similar legislative moves, and the demos have been consistent *ssholes on these kinds of issues. It is in fact this behavior which freed me from seeing much of a diff (if any) between the parties. Not that the repubs are blocking the demos' actions for any more noble reasons, they simply represent different special interests. I now realize that both parties are simply up for sale and will do anything to gain power including sacrificing our country, and that our legislative process is broken on a more fundamental leval than can be fixed by electing people from one party or the other.

    To those for whom this seemed obvious: at least I got here eventually. ;)

    --
    - First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
  63. Re:Poor babies.. by anubi · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I have posted this before.

    Bad law fosters civil disobedience.

    Ignoring this only leads to things like our famous Boston Tea Party.

    Consider substituting "RIAA" for "East India Tea Company", "DMCA" for "Tea Act", and "music" for "tea", and things look awful similar to today's situation. Note how the people involved in the "overthrow" are referred to as "Patriots". You would infer from this the "Patriot Act" would mean something completely different from what it does, ya?

    --
    "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]

  64. Re:Poor babies.. by pyros · · Score: 1
    You could also tax blank CD-Rs


    Have you ever seen the "Music" CD-Rs which cost significantly more tha "Data" CD-Rs?

  65. Re:Poor babies.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "That someone knowingly breaks an unjust law imparts it no justice."

    Before you condemn copyright law, realize that the GPL depends on it to work.

  66. Re:Poor babies.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "There is NO reason that CDs couldn't sell for $5. If they did I swear I'd buy one a day."

    There is a very important reason why CDs aren't selling for $5. It's because the copyright owners don't want to sell them for $5. What right do you have to tell them how to run their business? I could just as easily argue that $5 cds would drive them into bankruptcy. But why bother, since it's their decision to decide what they think their worth. You only have the right to accept or decline their offer. You don't have the right to keep as many illegal mp3s as is necessary to make up for what you thought was an unfair price.

  67. Re:Poor babies.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Since the evidence shows a strong correlation between file-sharing and CD sales, I would suggest that file-sharing is marketing, not theft."

    Ahh, the correlation is that as file sharing goes up, cd sales go down. Note that concert ticket sales went up over the same period of time, so don't bother blaming the economy. So that's a pretty bad marketing scheme. Regardless, it wasn;t the recording members "marketing scheme", and they're the only ones who have the right by law to try such a scheme, and they chose not to. So unless you believe you have the right to trample over someone elses rights just because you don't agree with the way they run their business, you should rethink your opinion.

  68. Re:Poor babies.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Before you condemn copyright law, realize that the GPL depends on it to work."
    That is so ridiculous it's amusing.
    You didn't get a lot of attention when you were a kid, did you?

  69. Aah! My subpoena! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not supposed to get jigs in it!

  70. Re:Poor babies.. by anubi · · Score: 1
    But if a substantial percentage of the town's population is "caught speeding", it sure makes the limit appear ill-chosen. Where I live, the limits posted are just about what most sane people would drive anyway, limit or no limit. Limits are there just to have something substantiative to hang onto those who scream recklessly through our neighborhood. ( Well, everywhere is somebody's neighborhood. )

    If damn near everybody's getting nailed by a 5MPH limit, it means the law is not representing the people. Its now 25MPH, and from my viewpoint just about right. There are times I could go 40 safely, ( like 2AM if nobody is parked along the side ), but those times are rare.

    I have got nailed for speeding before, but that does not mean I want to overthrow the speed limit. What I do insist on is the law represents the will of the public at large. You know, the old "Government of the people, by the people, and for the people" thing. My individual will, along with a corporate will, is not "the will of the people".

    --
    "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]

  71. You've obviously never met some people... by MadAnthony02 · · Score: 1

    P2P programs like Kazza usually automatically find media on your drive, share it, and set themselves up to automatically load when you start your computer. I've seen a ton of students at the college I work at with Kazaa running in the system tray, and when I mention it to them they say they have no idea how to get rid of it.

    So I would say that there is more intent between someone with the knowledfge to be running Freenet or an FTP server than someone who can't figure out how to disable Kazaa from startup. Although I don't know if that has any legal bearing.

  72. Re:Poor babies.. by ahfoo · · Score: 1

    "The act of civil disobedience etc. . ."
    As a child of the 70s, trained in non-violent civil disobedience from a tender age --I think I was about six when I started helping my mom direct traffic at anti-nuclear protests in California-- I can say for sure that this is not true.
    Civil disobedience is something you have to be willing to accept the consequences for, but it's going too far to say that it is of no value if you aren't punished.
    It sounds like you're confusing freudian theories of criminal behavior with non-violent political action here.
    There's a big difference between being willing to face the consequences and having to face the consequences to be of value.
    To take the issue at hand. If I share music and movies as an act of civil disobedience, it is still a valueable act that fullfills my goal of committing civil disobedience even if I'm not confronted for my actions. If you think it's the right thing, just do it. Don't go looking for trouble. You don't have to be a martyr to partake in civil disobedience.

  73. All depends on what you can convince a jury of by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    A civil trial is decided by what is called a perponderance of the evidence. In laymans terms, whoever argues better and has the stronger case. So, if you can convince the jury that it was some random guy and you aren't responsible, you get off. If the RIAA can convince them you should be responsible, you lose.

  74. Re: RIAA's problem with "John Doe" lawsuits... by cryptoluddite · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The RIAA does not want to file actual lawsuits for lots of reasons. There's the higher initial cost, but the real problem for them is that they have to actually come up with evidence.

    They want to be able to write you a letter, DirecTV-style, that says "we know you are a pirate, pay us $3500 or we'll send you to debter's prison" without having to come up with decent evidence (or any evidence at all). They want to send these letters to people who haven't even downloaded/shared music and extort money from them. Preparing an actual lawsuit will cost a lot, and if they screw up they'll get smacked by the counter-suit. Plus anybody can demand a jury trial since the potential damages are large enough. It'll be hard for the RIAA to get a jury without filesharers on it and the courts and congress will not take kindly to lots of jury trials for this kind of thing.

    The next generation of P2P clients, which will provide forms of statistical anonymity, combined with DCMA exceptions, will make it extremely difficult to actually come up with evidence that anybody actually infringed on their copy right. The RIAA is just causing people to use stronger filesharing, which hurts our government's ability to find actual criminals. Not only does nobody benefit from their actions (not users, artists, or the government) but it's actually causing damange to everybody else.

  75. Yeah, they're listening... by infobeing · · Score: 1

    so intently that they're probably searching your hard drive as we speak.

  76. Re:Poor babies.. by Bartab · · Score: 1

    I can't go to court and fight a speeding ticket because I didn't think the speed limit matched the speed I thought the road is capable of and expect to win.

    You can in California.

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
  77. Do you think the RIAA lawsuits will backfire? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The elevators in the office building where I work have little LCD displays that show a mix of ads and factoids from the news. They have a poll up that asks whether the RIAA lawsuits are going to backfire. The last results I saw had 55% voting that the lawsuits would backfire. The remaining votes where split between 'no, it won't matter' and 'no, it will stop some downloaders'

    Cast your vote at Captivate.

  78. RIAA customers *make* CD's not buy them by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

    their customers will be very greatful if they win

    and get no bad PR if they lose

    it isn't "Westlife sues fans" it is "RIAA sues fans"

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  79. IMO the problem isn't the RIAA... by Kjella · · Score: 1

    ...the problem is that there will be corporations and individuals with less scruples, that have no actual intent of filing a lawsuit using this to unmask the identity of innocent people. Think stuff like stalkers etc. Sure, they won't do it now while the ISPs are fighting it, but if the precedent is set, they will.

    Kjella

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  80. I'd like to subpeona.... by greymond · · Score: 2, Funny

    All the default-user@kazaa.com on ip range 64.1.1.1-64.255.255.255

    um.....?

  81. Re:Poor babies.. by Rimbo · · Score: 1

    "Ahh, the correlation is that as file sharing goes up, cd sales go down."

    Actually, as Napster usage went up, CD sales went up; shortly after Napster was shut down, CD sales plummeted. So the correlation is that file sharing improves CD sales. Anecdotal evidence: Every album I've purchased over the past two years was a direct result of having heard the songs on MP3 first -- either because a friend sent me a copy, or because I found the group on MP3.com.

    "So unless you believe you have the right to trample over someone elses rights just because you don't agree with the way they run their business, you should rethink your opinion."

    Upon whose rights am I trampling?

  82. Re:Poor babies.. by lone_marauder · · Score: 1

    The courts decide what laws are just or not. The problem is that people would like to empower themselves this right.

    ...government of the people, by the people, for the people...

    --
    who are those slashdot people? they swept over like Mongol-Tartars.
  83. RIAA guilty of hacking? by Avatar889 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm just curious how the RIAA knows exactly what files I supposedly have and are supposedly trading? Are they monitoring Internet traffic from selected IP ranges? Investigating all large transfers? Flat out looking into people's unsecured harddrives and searching for *.mp3? I want to know what legal right they have to do this search anyway? Do they have a warrent for anything of the sort?

    --
    Nullum magnum ingenium sine mixtura dementia (There is no great genius without a mixture of madness) - Aristotle
    1. Re:RIAA guilty of hacking? by lurker412 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I would guess that they are simply using the browse files function of the P2P programs. It is really pretty easy and anyone can do it.

      1. Do a search on some song that is under copyright.

      2. When you get a list of users that are sharing that song, browse the directory of one of those users.

      3. Check the IP address while you are browsing and take a screenshot.

      It is hard to claim that this is illegal even though none of us like it.

    2. Re:RIAA guilty of hacking? by Avatar889 · · Score: 1

      Honestly, because of beautifully constructed internal networks here at "college", I haven't used Kazaa or any of those progams recently. But I don't recall somebody's IP address being out in the open... that in itself would be a m$ sized security flaw

      --
      Nullum magnum ingenium sine mixtura dementia (There is no great genius without a mixture of madness) - Aristotle
    3. Re:RIAA guilty of hacking? by lurker412 · · Score: 1
      The P2P programs themselves do not show the IP addresses, but anyone can run netstat to see a list of open connections while a P2P transfer is taking place. If you are behind a proxy server, then you would not be vulnerable unless your college decided to cooperate.

      In any event, there's nothing secret about IP addresses, just who some of them belong to.

    4. Re:RIAA guilty of hacking? by Avatar889 · · Score: 1

      But therein lies the conundrum. In order to run netstat on a user, you have to be connected to them. And in a P2P program the only way to do this is to initiate a connection (i.e. download). So wouldn't the RIAA investigators have to be downloading illegal files in order to obtain IP's? Maybe once the lawsuits are over, the RIAA is going to turn on them and sue them too.

      --
      Nullum magnum ingenium sine mixtura dementia (There is no great genius without a mixture of madness) - Aristotle
    5. Re:RIAA guilty of hacking? by lurker412 · · Score: 1
      Yes, you are correct. But the connection needn't be a download necessarily. You establish a connection when you browse someone's files (otherwise, how could this happen?). The key to the whole thing is that the RIAA can just do what any P2P user does and get everything they need other than your real identity.

      Just to make it even more sinister, the RIAA could offer files for you to download. They (presumably) have the permission of the copyright holder. So one could imagine a future escalation in which the RIAA could set up honeypot accounts and bust anyone who downloads from them. Entrapment, you say? Perhaps, but narcs have been busting buyers for years by exactly the same technique.

  84. Re:Not "much more complicated." More expensive. by BitterOak · · Score: 1
    The reason why I say forcing the RIAA to first file "John Doe" lawsuits may only be "initially" more expensive is that in many cases the RIAA would have to file a lawsuit anyway -- i.e., in every case where pre-lawsuit subpoena to idenfity the downloader did not lead to a pre-lawsuit settlement.

    Ahh, but that's the whole point! The RIAA is hoping for pre-lawsuit settlements from the vast majority of subpoenaed people. It isn't even clear if they would follow up with a real lawsuit if the defendant doesn't settle.

    --
    If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
  85. Re:Poor babies.. by Bingo+Foo · · Score: 1

    That a phrase is turned with unusual grammar imparts it no profundity.

    --
    taken! (by Davidleeroth) Thanks Bingo Foo!
  86. Current Supoenas by 555-5555 · · Score: 1

    I'm not a lawyer though i like to keep up with this I was wondering if the RIAA's supoenas were deemed unconstitutional what effect would that have on the supoenas they have already issued and especially the cases they have already settled

  87. Re:Not "much more complicated." More expensive. by Sloppy · · Score: 2, Interesting
    The reason why I say forcing the RIAA to first file "John Doe" lawsuits may only be "initially" more expensive is that in many cases the RIAA would have to file a lawsuit anyway -- i.e., in every case where pre-lawsuit subpoena to idenfity the downloader did not lead to a pre-lawsuit settlement.
    I think that's fine. I'm not really worried about the cases where someone was really infringing and RIAA has a reasonable chance of beating them in court or getting them to settle. What I'm concerned about are the cases where the RIAA would eventually lose, because the sharer wasn't really infringing anything (e.g. he had permission from the copyright holder, or was sharing edited samples as fair use, or was sharing GPLed Gentoo packages or something weird like that). If RIAA can bully somebody without actually having a credible case and without making a legal committment, then liberty is endangered for everyone.

    If RIAA tries to intimidate me and it turns out they're wrong, then when I counter-attack for vengeance, I don't want to just be able to say "well, they sent me a threatening letter and it hurt my feelings and stressed me out," because that will result in a judgement of $0 in my favor. I want to be able to say, "They falsely filed suit against me, and that required me to take expensive actions to defend myself, and here are the damages that I want RIAA to pay me."

    John Doe's ID should only be revealed if RIAA is pretty sure they have a strong case -- and is willing to bet on it! This will deter fishing and gratuitous bullying.

    I don't think that approach should be a problem for them, either. I hear there's a lot of real infringement going on out there, so they won't have problems finding it. Just be careful where you aim that gun, RIAA, because if you point it at me, I'll point something back.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  88. Re:Poor babies.. by lone_marauder · · Score: 2, Funny

    No faith you have. Teach you I will.

    --
    who are those slashdot people? they swept over like Mongol-Tartars.
  89. yeah but.. by phuckauthority · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I like what Moby said, there should be an online service, what with the continued expansion of Broadband, that will allow any low-paid user to listen to an arbitrary number of songs an unlimited number of times possibly for a certain amount of time. They can listen to it all they want, and even a handy desktop client can be given out, and they pay some. Most artists never get royalities anyways, due to some fraudulent RIAA-Companies' accounting policies, so that's why many artists don't give a shit, they know it doesn't effect them because they make more money from the shows and the sales of merchandise. Moby is right, they need to embrace technology or be damned!

  90. "Is there any legitimate purpose for making av... by Crusty+Oldman · · Score: 4, Insightful
    "Is there any legitimate purpose for making available for copying 600 copyrighted works?"


    Yes. It's called a public library, and it's been one of the strengths of American society ever since Ben Franklin instituted the first one.

  91. Welcome to the joys of by guardian-ct · · Score: 1

    Independent Business Ownership.

    P2P: three letters
    MLM: three letters
    Coincidence? I think not.

    1. Re:Welcome to the joys of by sjames · · Score: 1

      I'm not a pirate your honor, I just went direct!

  92. Re:Poor babies.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hear hear. Since when does someone get to play cop like the RIAA is doing?

  93. Re:Poor babies.. by Pofy · · Score: 1

    It is important to notice that correlation does not equal casuality. That is, just because there is a correlation does not mean one of the factors affect the ohter one (and even if they did, which one is affecting the other is not always evident).

  94. Re:Poor babies.. by 4of12 · · Score: 1

    The courts decide what laws are just or not.

    These days, I get the impression that courts are rather strictly focussed on only two things:

    1. Whether some action represents a violation of some law.
    2. Whether the collection of laws is logically consistent.
    but very little at all about what the common person may think is "justice".

    The courts are interpreters; they rely upon the legislatures to enact laws, just or otherwise.

    --
    "Provided by the management for your protection."
  95. ANS: Buy a wireless hub and don't log by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Ok then.
    What would happen if we ALL went out and bought our favourite brand of wireless gear and "left" the ports open (preferably with DHCP enabled. There is no law against this. Wardriving is so common now that half the people in my IRC channel are on through someone elses wireless connection.

    My question is: How would the argument be that:

    1. You have a wireless device that anyone can use
    2. Someone MAY have downloaded 'things' through the connection
    3. You're not an ISP and therefor are not required to log everything
    If this situation became "normal".. especially with unlimited DSL now available would we "get away with it".. or would "they" simple pass a law requiring people to either secure devices or log all traffic.