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Aussie Students Face Jail Over Music Sharing Site

An anonymous reader writes "SMH this morning is reporting that three uni students may be jailed for their creation of a music sharing web site. Ok, piracy is not a good thing, but jail is just a tad extreme, don't you think? I hope ARIA (Australian version of RIAA) are pleased with themselves. What burns me about this article is the quote: 'Counsel for the Commonwealth, Paul Roberts, SC, said Ng was well aware he was acting illegally. Not only was the site camouflaged - the web space had been let to him by a teenage boy in Perth - but Ng had co-written an essay for his information technology law course on "open source software licensing."' Not entirely sure what OS licensing has to do with music piracy."

4 of 448 comments (clear)

  1. Hmmm.... by __aavhli5779 · · Score: 4, Informative
    What's interesting is that while Paul Roberts says charles Ng was "well aware he was acting illegally", opinion on the internet seems to be different. I heard a little bit about the story before, and refreshing my mind with the help of Google rendered this choice post from a message board:


    A similar fate has been met by a couple of university students/amatuer hip-hop deejays in Australia.

    They ran mp3wmaland.net, which was shut down about half a year ago, and they were prosecuted about three months ago and were jailed. The whole story was rather grim ... deejays subpoened at clubs for playing illegal bootlegs, police raids into bedrooms and seizing everything, complete incomprehensibility of the fact they have broken the law and face jail, by the three responsible.


    On a final note, I don't think anything really needs to be said about how his paper on "open source software licensing" is somehow evidence of culpability. A hefty roll of the eyes goes out to the genius who thought that up.
  2. because open source guys are smart by bromba · · Score: 5, Informative
    On a final note, I don't think anything really needs to be said about how his paper on "open source software licensing" is somehow evidence of culpability.
    Just a wild guess, but maybe Roberts just assumed that someone writing an essay about open source licensing must be knowledgeable enough to be aware that sharing copyrighted material without proper permission is a copyrigth infrigement. This just shows that sometimes it is better to be underestimated and considered dumber than in reality ;)
  3. Re:Good by xenobyte · · Score: 4, Informative

    He is a theif. He deserves to be in jail.

    Hello? - He's charged with breach of copyright, not theft. One is a civil offence, the other a criminal offence. They are not the same.

    Get your facts straight, coward. Thank you.

    --
    "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
  4. Re:US vs. AU law on fair use by yerricde · · Score: 5, Informative

    Are you suggesting then that it is illegal to, for example, record a CD that you have purchased onto a Minidisc for personal use? Or to rip it to MP3 for personal use?

    According to this paper published by the Australian copyright office, that's correct: "There is no exception in the Copyright Act that allows copyright material to be reproduced for private purposes without permission from the copyright owner."

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?