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RIAA Grinds Down Individuals in the Courtroom

Iphtashu Fitz writes "The Associated Press recently reviewed many of the copyright infringement lawsuits that the RIAA filed against individuals charged with illegally sharing songs on P2P networks. According to the article over 800 of the targeted individuals have settled for approx. $3000 in fines. One man in California had to refinance his house to pay his $11,000 settlement. Many of the defendants are unwilling to face the possibility of even higher fines by fighting the suits in court despite the fact that it could resolve important questions about copyrights and the industry's methods for tracing illegal downloads. It seems that even some of the judges presiding over these cases question the RIAA's tactics. 'I've never had a situation like this before, where there are powerful plaintiffs and powerful lawyers on one side and then a whole slew of ordinary folks on the other side,' said U.S. District Judge Nancy Gertner, who blocked the movement of a number of these cases in her courtroom for months. She wanted 'to make sure that no one, frankly, is being ground up.'"

680 comments

  1. Once again, protest with your money by secolactico · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let me re-state what I've said before: If you do not agree with what RIAA is doing, stop supporting it. Sadly, this means stop supporting artists affiliated to it. Quit cold turkey. Do not buy their CDs. Do not attend their concerts. Do not request their songs on the radio. And do not download/share their songs on the Internet.

    Go on and protest their actions. The louder, the better. But stop supporting them, or your cries will fall on deaf ears.

    --
    No sig
    1. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They've already noticed and are now trying to compensate falling sales with profitable lawsuits.

    2. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Exactly. I am vociferously opposed to copyright law, and hold that there should be a "doctrine of first communication" that prevents anyone preventing you passing on information.

      But fact of the matter is there are now absurd huge quantities of _really good_ stuff available perfectly legally for free on-line, often from bands in your locality that you can toddle on to live shows for too - there's simply no need to support the old monopolies by continuing to give them mindshare. This is a bit like with software - software piracy _helps_ microsoft and autodesk, because they stay as the "standard". Recirculating the crap that the old monopolies put out preserves their mindshare.

      Stop listening to crap, download http://irate.sourceforge.net/ and start rating. Pretty soon, you'll have a better and more novel and varied music collection than the old companies could hope to provide.

    3. Re:Once again, protest with your money by EpsCylonB · · Score: 5, Funny

      Do not buy their CDs. Do not attend their concerts. Do not request their songs on the radio. And do not download/share their songs on the Internet.

      Yes dad.

    4. Re:Once again, protest with your money by turnstyle · · Score: 5, Insightful
      "Let me re-state what I've said before: If you do not agree with what RIAA is doing, stop supporting it."

      This is the correct approach.

      The Grokster ruling basically reinforces the notion that the only people that rightsholders can sue at this point are the endusers.

      Personally, I agree that you shouldn't generally hold a technology accountable for how some may misuse it. Along those lines, the EFF themselves used to suggest that the RIAA should be suing infringers.

      On the other hand, I think Kazaa is just a scuzzy operation, and I'd rather see them get sued than a bunch of end-users. But the Grokster ruling means that's not going to be the way it works, at least not for now.

      If you don't like the RIAA, don't buy their stuff, and don't copy it. Go find new independent artists, and support them directly.

      --
      Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
    5. Re:Once again, protest with your money by bigman2003 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Do you really think that getting $3,000 is PROFITABLE?

      The only reason they do this is to deter other people from sharing music. I don't think they really care about the awards here...just the publicity.

      --
      No reason to lie.
    6. Re:Once again, protest with your money by SQLz · · Score: 0, Troll

      Yeah, out of the ten thousand+ people that read your post, 1 will actually do it. Assuming he/she spends $500/year on RIAA related stuff, you just cost the RIAA $500. I bet they have more money between the cushions of the couch in the reception area.

    7. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Exactly.

      A concerted effort to totally curtail ALL buying for a single month to send a message to the RIAA.

      There will be one of two outcomes:
      1. There IS NO widespread call for action. [put up or shut up!]
      2. Send a message to the RIAA that there is widespread dissatisfaction and a larger protest will come in the future.

      I agree that people should not steal songs. I don't care that RIAA sues those who do. I DO care that they get laws passed that curtail your ability to perform legal acts on your own equipment.

      That makes as much sense as limiting cars to the lowest speed limit to ensure that NO ONE can possibly exceed the speed. Perhaps, even banning cars to eliminate all those highway deaths.

      Frankly, I doubt that there is even a plurality of users willing to forego their "fixes", even for a month. If so, suck it up!

    8. Re:Once again, protest with your money by PeeAitchPee · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Typical Slashdot holier-than-thou karma-whoring. The issue behind this article is NOT about whether or not you're supporting the RIAA and its artists -- it's that the punishments being meted out don't fit the "crimes" (which in this case don't even have to be proven), and that big media is fucking up normal citizens' lives for no reason other than to buy time for a failing business model.

      (I feel better now. ;-> )

    9. Re:Once again, protest with your money by ZenPirate · · Score: 1

      Right on, man. That's the best answer to this problem.

    10. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Zocalo · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Exactly my view; it's all about the deterance factor and I very much doubt that their lawyer's costs run to less than $3000 per case unless they are on-staff. The RIAA has already shown that they are not afraid to take their blood money from 12 year old girls and grandmothers, just to emphasise that no one is expempt as well. True, the former's costs were actually met by a third party, but that does not change the fact that the RIAA still expected payment.

      What I'm curious about though, is that all the cases I've read about do seem to be very much canted in favour of the RIAA. The defendents are almost always financial unable to fight the case and there is also almost always clear cut copyright infringement. Is this merely media bias, or does the RIAA get to pick and choose its cases once they know who the mark is to better meet their goals of deterrence?

      As I understand it, the RIAA usually files a John/Jane Doe case to subpoena the evidence needed to establish their victim's identity. Supposing that J. Doe turns out to be a very wealthy and outspoken proponent of fair use and realistic copyright laws who quite probably would be prepared to fight them in court. Issues of whether they would or not aside, could the RIAA make some excuses and "opt out" of the case at that point, or not?

      --
      UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
    11. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hit them at the wallet! That's the same thing that we need to do to the spammers. If there is an 800 number, call it! Tie up that operator that's being paid minimum wage. Make that email that only cost them $0.0001 to send cost them $1.25 in operator time.

    12. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go on and protest their actions. The louder, the better. But stop supporting them, or your cries will fall on deaf ears.

      Great idea, until you realize RIAA will just blame the lack of sales on piracy. One would think they would be happy that they are having record breaking sales despite the weaker econmy compared to past years.

    13. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      > And do not download/share their songs on the Internet.

      I've heard this many times before, but it's just not important enough to override my principles.

      I share files to express my political support of free speech through cyber-anarchy. I am demonstrating to the world that file sharing is a totally inevitable and irresistable force that cannot be controlled.

      In order to make my actions maximally effective, I must share popular material -- and that means, in some cases, that I end up sharing RIAA material.

      I know that my actions have the unfortunate (and unintended) side-effect of giving free advertising to RIAA products. But I believe that my political agenda of promoting free speech through cyber-anarchy is more important.

      Cyber-anarchy results in ALL material being free -- even material (such as advertising for the RIAA) that some people don't want disseminated.

      You are calling for people to restrict what they share. Therefore, I must denounce that idea on principle, even though I suspect that your motives are pure and that your heart is in the right place.

    14. Re:Once again, protest with your money by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      With all respect, that is simply not the point of the article. The article questions the tactics of the RIAA with regards to people who have been caught illegally sharing music. You can talk about how those peopel were wrong, WE KNOW!!!. The article questioned oif the methods of the RIAA are right, could we kindof try to discuss that instead of repeating what we already know (how to prevent having to deal with the RIAA)

    15. Re:Once again, protest with your money by ChairmanMeow · · Score: 1

      2. Send a message to the RIAA that there is widespread dissatisfaction and a larger protest will come in the future.

      The problem with that is that the RIAA will not get the message, and only use it as "evidence" that piracy is killing them even though it is their own actions that are at fault.

      --
    16. Re:Once again, protest with your money by jafac · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Same reason rich white guys in their BMWz don't get pulled over for speeding at the same rate as black guys driving old beat up cadillacs.

      Same reason the IRS tends not to audit the high-end white-collar criminals with tax shelters in Barbados as much as Joe Sixpack, who may have done some work on a freind's room addition in trade for some cash under the table.

      Same reason you get your ass handed to you if you drive with a straight-pipe welded in place of your catalytic converter, while the power company belches filth all over your neighborhood.

      The little-guy is always the easier target. It's called "going after the low-hanging fruit".

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    17. Re:Once again, protest with your money by dotwaffle · · Score: 3, Informative

      I found irate today, and have fallen in love with it. There are three things wrong with it though:

      1) There appears to be no main site where you can submit possible new download places, such as MachinaeSupremacy.com (hint hint)

      2) There is no "more from this author" button, just a search that types the artist and title in Google. When I listened to Beth Quist I immediately wanted to buy her album, but couldn't, unless I did research.

      3) Not really irate's fault, but I want the music on CD as well as a download. Fair enough, you can burn your own etc, but it would be nice if they could send you a CD for an extra GBP 5 (about $10) or something. Even if it is a CD-R with a printed cover and track list... Or have I missed the point?

      So essentially, irate radio is a really good idea, needs a lot of work on the interface etc, preferably a Winamp plugin or something, and needs our support!

      BTW, Beth Quist (one of the MP3's I downloaded was from her) is on Magnatune (the non-evil people). If we could only get message out to kids about Magnatune, as I think it's a good lesson to be learnt. The "Why I set up Magnatune" section made me not want to buy any more commercial CD's that have touched the hands of the RIAA ever again...

    18. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tried irate. Unfortunately it was buggy (the stable version, too) and all the "randomly selected" tunes it showed me were awful. Then it started downloading at snail's pace, 1% every minute, and there was no "skip song" button. So I deleted it. Clearly, it has a long, LONG way to go before it'll be fit for general use.

    19. Re:Once again, protest with your money by optimus2861 · · Score: 2, Informative
      As I understand it, the RIAA usually files a John/Jane Doe case to subpoena the evidence needed to establish their victim's identity.

      True, but remember RIAA used to be able to use the DMCA's fast-track subpoena provision, until a couple of ISP's stood up to them and got that procedure blocked in court. We may be seeing the results of the cases from before that happened, when RIAA could get the names without ever having to file a suit (and thus decide whether to pursue it or quietly drop it if a high-profile name came up); the article doesn't say whether or not this is the case.

    20. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > The issue behind this article is NOT ....

      Blah, blah, blah.

      So, any comment tangentially related has no place?
      Oh, but wait, then what the fuck are you whining about karma-whoring? In fact, it looks like you are also acting as a karma-whore, the very thing you bemoan (in " Typical Slashdot holier-than-thou" fasion"). Congratulations.

    21. Re:Once again, protest with your money by zogger · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I started boycotting way back when they got re-busted for I think the third time for industry collusion and driving up prices, etc on cheap recorded media and were engaging in payola (again) to the broadcasters and DJ's. I also got annoyed once albums starting costing more than one hours pay for me, and live concerts went up to three hours pay for me. I just thought "nope, not going to support these millionaires anymore, their crap ain't worth it". I like music, but not enough to make them people multi millionaires. Just like professional sports, enough's enough, they can pay players multi millions per year, but need to use city bond money to pay for stadiums and local property taxes to get kids addicted to professional team sports with the public school farm teams. It don't compute, hence, boycott.

      As another point, I thought the blank media tax was supposed to cover copying anyway, or maybe I am remembering that incorrectly.

      These guys claimed reel to reel would wreck the industry, I read that way back real time when it was happening. Then cassettes would put them all into poverty, just like VCRs would put movies and television into poverty. Funny, it didn't happen, they make more than ever. Seems the courts always forget that.

      anyway, I went from dropping a few hundred a year back in the 60's on concerts and records, to maybe 100 or so in the 70's, then when it hit the 80's I just *stopped*. I've bought some used since then,and some really reduced bargain bin tapes and CDs, and that's it. If I see something at a yardsale for a dollar I might buy it now, but zero new, movies or music. And last pay-to-see anything was girlfriend and made me take her to see Titanic, so that's what, two years now, since last movie at the theater and live concert...sheesh, can't remember, maybe 11 years ago now besides two I worked at, which was enough to make me not want to work them again. A rolling stones gig and a guns n roses gig. I saw what they spent money on, then compared it to what us grunts were getting...buncha elite hosers. screw 'em.

    22. Re:Once again, protest with your money by AndyChrist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Unless you live in a major city, chances are local music mostly sucks, and what doesn't won't be a style you enjoy.

    23. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hey what's wrong with autodesk?!!? they are not a monopoly and they are not agressive at all. and besides they even support open source to some degree.

      p.s. i work for them, but don't get me wrong. i' not defending anybody. just curious as to what your arguments are.

    24. Re:Once again, protest with your money by dasmegabyte · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And the moral of the story is:

      If you don't want to have your life destroyed, don't allow strangers to download works you don't have the copyright for.

      Seriously, I have no pity at all for these immensely stupid people who broke the law and now are being punished financially. I think it's fantastic. I can't wait for them to ramp it up further. Because if the RIAA can stop file sharing, i mean really stop it, without having to lobby to make copyright infringement a federal crime, we all prosper. This isn't an issue of fair use or realistic copyright law...fair use should not and does not include the wholesale distribution of potentially profitable modern works. But there also shouldn't be a criminal penalty to it. Proving that current copyright law is MORE than sufficient to protect holders' rights is way more important than fighting a losing battle in the name of "realistic copyright."

      --
      Hey freaks: now you're ju
    25. Re:Once again, protest with your money by AlphaJoe · · Score: 1

      Stop listening to crap, download http://irate.sourceforge.net/ and start rating. Pretty soon, you'll have a better and more novel and varied music collection than the old companies could hope to provide.

      I like the concept fo iRate, but they need to do something about download times. I have been running it for two days and I have a whopping three songs, one of which stinks, one which gets a Yawn, and then Beth Quist, which is pretty darn good. and there are only three songs on the list that still need to be downloaded. Some more options for the user, and increased download times would be sweet.

      --
      A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing.
    26. Re:Once again, protest with your money by AlphaJoe · · Score: 1

      That should say increased download speeds...

      --
      A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing.
    27. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $3000 is a quite a small punishment considering it's $80k per song according to the law. If you're going to risk getting caught then be prepared to pay the penalty.

    28. Re:Once again, protest with your money by linzeal · · Score: 1

      It also needs the ability to change directories for storing mp3's and should be able to organize them by genre or artist name, one can hope that these suggestions will be heard by someone on the dev team. I'm going to email them I think.

    29. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you can still support them. buy used. theres no double royalty, the labels don't see the money twice for used sales

    30. Re:Once again, protest with your money by tombeard · · Score: 3, Informative

      AFAIK, there is no law that prevents you from storing your music anywhere you want, including in publically available places. It IS illegal for others to copy those files. Funny the RIAA isn't going after downloaders who are violating copyright law but are going after those that have violated no law, as long as they are defenseless. They never want a case to go to court, it would be laughed out. Just because you can't find the violators is no excuse to persicute the innocent.

      --
      The reason we subjugate ourselves to law is to better procure justice. If law does not accomplish this purpose then it m
    31. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Simonetta · · Score: 1

      So essentially, irate radio is a really good idea, needs a lot of work on the interface etc, preferably a Winamp plugin or something, and needs our support!

      Non-Clear Channel or non-RIAA radio will never happen in the USA under the corporate dominated present system.

      I suggest making a CD-R template of your favorite new non-RIAA music. Then make several copies of the CD-R for about twenty cents each. Keep a few in your briefcase or backpack and when you meet someone who agrees that the RIAA is out of control, just hand one to them as an inexpensive but well-appreciated gift. You might want to put OGG or MP3 software like Winamp on this CDR also.

      Corporate media is frozen and stagnant. Ordinary people and slashdotters have to create their own alternatives now.

    32. Re:Once again, protest with your money by mduckworth · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You know, you can sit here and claim stuff like this but the reality is that the rich white guys in their BMWz are probably much better at watching out for cops (because they have an awful lot more to lose), and black guys do really stupid things in their beat up cadillacs which the cops simply cannot ignore. As a Philadelphia resident I can vouch for this. And it's not a racial thing, plenty of white guys in beat up cadillacs do stupid shit and get pulled over too, and plenty of black guys in BMWs do just fine. The IRS probably goes after Joe Sixpack because the tax shelter is legal plain and simple and what Joe sixpack did (maybe not in this instance but others) blatantly violates tax laws. And as for the straight pipe. The noise is a dead giveaway, and the power company... well corporations in the US have something called pollution credits...oh nevermind.. Falling on deaf ears. Yeah I understand there is problems but lots of people get what's coming to them. Act like a victim, become a victim... Use your brain and beat the system. Jealousy is a bitch. I drove a massively beat up car with window tint for a long time and never had a problem and drove a much nicer car when I was younger and had all kinds of problems. Why? Because I did STUPID things that the cops noticed. One thing I learned about people is they don't like to learn from mistakes and they like to play dumb a little too often. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that hrm.. Downloading this music from the internet that I would otherwise have to buy might not be kosher. You have no reason to know that buying cocain down on the corner is illegal but you know it don't you? Not to defend the RIAA. They're wrong every way you can possibly look at it. But people whine way too much these days. Stop whining and do something.

    33. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Mydron · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Wrong again. The issue here is not piracy and its not the evil RIAA. The issue here is plain as day: the inaccessible backwater that is our justice system.

      Democracy and Justice walk hand and hand, if you don't equip citizens with the tools for them to resolve disputes in a fair, organized, open and systematic way then things start to go awry. Its no wonder we're suffering from this kind of corporate tyranny. I doubt many of these people really believe they deserve to pay 3,000-11,000 for downloading a song. Instead I suspect, they are really terrified at the thought of paying tens of thousands of dollars for lawyers to engage in a legal game of chance.

      This begs the question why our legal system has (d)evolved to require such massive amounts of money and why even seasoned lawyers are loath to litigate because of its inherent unpredictability. But those are old questions. Perhaps, in this case we should ask why a private entity is allowed to pursue thousands en mass in what amounts to public policy without some form of legal aid to protect people or at least to resolve the legitimacy of this tactic.

    34. Re:Once again, protest with your money by dotwaffle · · Score: 1

      Please add my name to the email, although leave off about changing directories, you cna do it in the testing version, I just did it!

      Matthew Walster

    35. Re:Once again, protest with your money by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And you know, if only one person out of ten thousand actually cares, perhaps we deserve the RIAA.

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    36. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Jason+Earl · · Score: 0

      Fah, our legal system is working just fine. The problem is that some people don't agree that distributing other people's copyrighted material should be a crime.

      The fact of the matter is that the reason that the RIAA hasn't taken anyone to court yet is that they have been pretty darn careful about only targetting folks that they had piles of evidence on. The copyright infringement laws were designed to stop mobsters from making bootleg copies of records, and now they are being leveled against ordinary citizens because ordinary citizens are now breaking the law in ways that used to require the type of infrastructure only organized crime had at its disposal.

      When faced with the choice of paying a "token" $11,000 and the choice of paying millions, the $11,000 sounds like a pretty benevolent gesture.

      If you don't agree with the law, then you need to get it changed, but you'll find that lots of folks, including most authors, artists, musicians, and other creative folks *like* copyrights. They like being able to control how their work is distributed.

      If you feel differently write your own music, and share it with whoever you want. Or better yet find some artists that *want* you to share their music and listen to them, there's plenty of folks that are more than happy to let you download their songs. Don't take someone else's work and distribute it against their wishes.

    37. Re:Once again, protest with your money by wibs · · Score: 1

      Supposing that J. Doe turns out to be a very wealthy and outspoken proponent of fair use

      Those exist?

      --
      If you get nervous, just remember that there are a few billion other people who don't really give a damn.
    38. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 2, Informative

      Please, have you ever tried to USE iRate? The program is terrible.

      The MacOS GUI (at least, I don't have Windows or Linux) is abysmally terrible. All windows open in the upper left, ignoring the OSes location for new windows. The window contains terribly ugly icons, but no tooltips. The help item in the menu bar does jack crap... of course a confusing GUI wouldn't have any help! It doesn't work together with iTunes at all. It's not smart enough to figure out it's running on OS X and change its default web browser accordingly. Toolbar buttons have unexpected behavior. (The 'Info' button doesn't give info on the selected track, as you'd expect, but on the currently playing track.)

      The program downloads and downloads and downloads and keeps all the files FOREVER and if you try to delete any, it'll just download them again. (The only way to delete a file is to declare that it sucks, which impacts your rankings and makes no sense.) It has only the most basic player controls (next track, last track, pause), lacking fast-forward, rewind, and stop. There's no way to tell it to just download tracks that match your preferences. There's no way to go back and see what ratings you assigned to tracks, much less change them. Once you've rated a track, there's no way to change your mind and set it back to unrated.

      Anyway, the concept is good, but this program just isn't there. Please, PLEASE, recruit someone to at least fix your GUI before you promote it all over the place, and at least fix the glaring problems with the rest of the program. (i.e. let me manage my playlist.)

    39. Re:Once again, protest with your money by NuclearDog · · Score: 0

      So far all the songs I've heard haven't been that good. I've only listened to a couple, though. As for download speed, my guess is your connections might have simply been slow. It takes me about 30 seconds to download most of these songs.

      ND

      --
      This statement is forty-five characters long.
    40. Re:Once again, protest with your money by dotwaffle · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No, you don't get what Irate Radio is. It's not even really a radio station. What happens is that you fire up the player, and it downloads a few MP3's, from Magnatune, mp3.com.au et al, and asks you to rate them. Internet goes down? Doesn't matter - the MP3's have already been downloaded! irate.sf.net

    41. Re:Once again, protest with your money by 0x0000 · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Unless you live in a major city, chances are local music mostly sucks, and what doesn't won't be a style you enjoy.

      While this might seem intuitively correct, I have found it to be largely untrue. Large populations centers have no real advantage when it comes to producing quality music. In fact, much development of style - "new sounds" - comes from rural areas and small towns. The big-city bands tend to re-hash existing styles and sounds, in my experience. There are exceptions, of course, but just because a town is small doesn't mean that the local musicians are not worth listening to. Quite the opposite, imo.

      Also, the principle of boycotting RIAA-owned material remains the same regardless of whether the material you are getting local to you or to the other side of the world. If you like big city bands, you can get local music from NYC using trivially available software and search techniques...

      --
      "The Internet is made of cats."
    42. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right on.

      But what should be happening - media indignation about the powerful pushing around the little guy, isn't. Why? Because the Labels that are owned by the media conglomerates that provide the daily news. So for the news anchor to report objectively on this topic would in fact hurt the company's profits. Ergo, the only people who might talk about this is NPR.

      Most Americans don't listen to NPR.

    43. Re:Once again, protest with your money by maxpublic · · Score: 0, Troll

      Stop listening to crap

      You know, it doesn't make you cool or cutting edge to call popular music "crap". Just annoying, and a bit pathetic.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    44. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you really think that getting $3,000 is PROFITABLE?


      IF $3000 ain't nothing to you, then send me a check fo rthat amount.

    45. Re:Once again, protest with your money by m2bord · · Score: 1

      you guys are exactly right but unless there is some sort of concentrated effort to educate the undereducated, such a plan would never work.

      the riaa and mpaa won't miss my business, nor yours (points left), nor yours (points right) but it would miss the billions of dollars in lost revenue if a global uprising against the industries took place.

      the public needs to get involved.

      this goes beyond riaa and the mpaa basically extorting people out of thousands of dollars at a time.

      this hits at the heart of our constitution and our rights to due process.

      as it stands, the right to due process is being squashed because ordinary individuals do not have the right to the same quality legal representation as do the plaintiffs.

      --
      Is it 5:30 yet?
    46. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > I am vociferously opposed to copyright law,

      I own a small publishing company that produces learning materials for Japanese language learners. Our customers praise our products, and it is very rewarding to know that we are helping people, but I also need to make a living.

      I recently created an audio companion, which can be paid for and downloaded, to complement a japanese flashcard product of ours. I spent over $1000 for the studio time and voice actress' time. If I sell one for $12, and everyone else SHARES it, then I just threw away about $1000 and wasted a lot of my time.

      A copyright grants legal entitlement by which the owner derives the fruits of her labor in connection with her literary, dramatic, pictorial, and or other graphic creations, etc. The artist labors to create a copyrightable work and then he or she receives a paycheck for such work by exploiting that work under copyright. If someone else derives monies or rewards from that work, without the copyright owners permission, he has unlawfully violated the copyright owners rights and actually, in essence, stolen a portion of or all of the copyright owners paycheck.

      Why would you vociferously opposed to that? Don't you think abolishing copyright law would stifle software, music, and printing industries, as well as artistic creativity, by taking away much of the incentive for producing a work? Don't film makers like Errol Morris deserve to be compensated for their documentary? Don't I? Please explain.

    47. Re:Once again, protest with your money by nutbarpsycho · · Score: 1

      Of course, when everybody stops buying thier cds in protest, the RIAA will blame piracy for the decline in sales and launch another round of these lawsuits. You know it's true.

    48. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because if the RIAA can stop file sharing, i mean really stop it, without having to lobby to make copyright infringement a federal crime, we all prosper.

      The only way to stop file sharing is to make it illegal to possess files. Every company or group endeavour that uses computers uses file sharing. Without file sharing, virtually all modern systems would grind to a halt including power distribution, agriculture and transportation systems.

      I think that you should clarify your position to explain exactly where on the slippery slope to complete control of information flow you stand.

      Do you mean that individuals (as oppoed to corporations) should not be allowed to share files or certain techniques for sharing files (p2p, email, web, TCP/IP) should be prohibited or do you mean that every file which is to be shared must be required to pass through an Echelon/Great Wall router.

    49. Re:Once again, protest with your money by FleaPlus · · Score: 1

      It would be nice if instead of artists hosting the actual mp3s on their sites, they had BitTorrent seeds, and the iRate client supported it.

      According to the feature requests on SourceForge, it looks like I'm not the only one to think this.

    50. Re:Once again, protest with your money by geminidomino · · Score: 3, Funny

      You know, it doesn't make you cool or cutting edge to call popular music "crap".

      No, just makes you honest. I used to wonder why my friends' kids loved to listen to my music collection so much. Then I heard the current chart-toppers.

      I stopped wondering.

    51. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      As far as I'm concerned, you should have no right to stop me passing on information. Note that I won't be trying to claim I authored it, so people will know to go to you for more information, and recent history has shown people will pay a premium for information "from the horses mouth" even if it is freely available.

      Frankly, I don't care if your incentive is taken away. I think it's much more important that society be free than you make a profit. Artists often do well under fascist regimes...

      Anyway, art for art's sake, not for money. We might get less art, but it would be better quality.

      I also think that any "art" that advertises should not be subject to copyright even if copyright continues - e.g. music videos hyping pepsi & nike. THEY should be paying US to watch them!

    52. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Cryogenes · · Score: 1

      You are so right. Itunes Music shop users, are you listening? Your money is used by the RIAA to pay all those lawyers blackmailing common people. Stop supporting the RIAA.

    53. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...And do not download/share their songs on the Internet."

      If people stopped doing this, the RIAA would get off their cases, and there would be nothing left to protest.

    54. Re:Once again, protest with your money by maxpublic · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      No, just makes you honest

      An honest arrogant shit. Well, better than a dishonest arrogant shit, I guess.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    55. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Same reason you get your ass handed to you if you drive with a straight-pipe welded in place of your catalytic converter, while the power company belches filth all over your neighborhood."

      Word.

    56. Re:Once again, protest with your money by docbombay · · Score: 1

      "Karma-whoring"? If you agree that the RIAA is "fucking up normal citizens' lives" and that it's actions are driven by "a failing business model", then what exactly is your problem with people taking a stance against the RIAA? The way to fight a corporation (or in this case, a conglomerate of corporations) is to hit them where they live: their pocketbooks. The only way to get the RIAA to stop attacking the average Joe is to get them to realize that it will cost more to fight the filesharing paradigm than it does to adapt to it. But that won't happen as long as they continue to get a steady revenue stream from apathetic consumers who think it doesn't matter whether they support them or not.

    57. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Because if the RIAA can stop file sharing, i mean really stop it, without having to lobby to make copyright infringement a federal crime, we all prosper."

      How old are you? Honestly. If you are so naive as to think that them "stamping out piracy" is going to have ANY fucking effect whatsoever on the retail price of a CD for you, then you'd better put down the crack pipe, junior.

      I have no pity for the RIAA or those who enter into contracts with them. They're dinosaurs who are digging their own graves with artificially high prices and their reign is about to end. I think it's fantastic.

      Fuck 'em.

    58. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And guess what? You're doing the exact same thing by jumping on the bandwagon and attacking the popular opinion.

      There's a lot of annoying and pathetic individuals here who do that out of arrogance.

    59. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Static dollar amounts are an unjust way of determining punishment. $3000 to a large corp is nothing and no punishment at all.

      $3000 to an individual who makes $10/hr? That's crippling, and it's bullshit in this situation.

    60. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Kenardy · · Score: 1

      That's right. Those fines don't pay those attornies, sales of recorded media do.

      I think that a boycot is WAY overdue. We can't beat them in court but we could, conceivably, starve them to death at the music stores.

    61. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Fah, our legal system is working just fine."

      I stopped reading your post after this statement. You live in a little fantasy land where you don't realise how the legal system is currently fucking over many, many people.

    62. Re:Once again, protest with your money by homer_ca · · Score: 1

      It's easy to say boycott all RIAA label music, but there's a balancing act you have to do here. For every sellout like Metallica suing their fans on Napster, there are lots of bands out there fucking with The Man like:

      - Korn's Y'all Want A Single? video where they smashed up a record store. Ironically their anti-single became so popular it's one of the singles now. I'm not sure if they played it on MTV yet though.

      - Offspring wanted to post their whole Americana CD on their website, but their label shut them down. They ended up posting one track. And who could forget them selling Napster logo caps and t-shirts (without permission) from their website?

      - After fulfilling their recording contract the Smashing Pumpkins gave away their last album (a few hundred vinyl pressings to friends) with instructions to share it with the world.

      - Many singers and bands like Bono, Public Enemy and Moby have said they don't mind fans sharing their music for free.

      I know that supporting major label artists is supporting the RIAA lawsuits, but there's a more important issue here. The popularity of a major label recording contract is an unbeatable soapbox for getting the message out. The fact that anti-establishment acts sell mean the record labels won't stop selling them, at least until Clear Channel takes over the other 60% of radio. :-/

    63. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      It's called "going after the low-hanging fruit".


      Lookin at yo girl, you should be really familiar with this strategy.

    64. Re:Once again, protest with your money by homer_ca · · Score: 1

      $3000 is a lot of money to the poor sap getting sued, but it's only worth probably 20 hours of lawyer time. I don't think a $3000 settlement is profitable to the RIAA for what they're spending on lawyers especially after Verizon fought the subpoena. The point is to make an example out of people.

    65. Re:Once again, protest with your money by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      Copyright isn't about preventing the passing on of information, it's about the passing on of a particular representation of that information, a representation that took time and money to produce.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    66. Re:Once again, protest with your money by cammoblammo · · Score: 1
      I also got annoyed once albums starting costing more than one hours pay for me, and live concerts went up to three hours pay for me.

      I know exactly what you mean. Here in Australia it's even more exorbitant. The last hourly wage I got was around $AU15 per hour (McDonald's might pay $12) but a new release CD costs at least $30.

      And a concert can easily cost $100, or more.

      So I don't give them my money any more, because I can't afford it. It's got to be something pretty special for me to pony up those sorts of prices.

      --

      Cogito, ergo sig.

    67. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. I am just going to add that while I do feel sorry for some of the people that have gotten sued either last year or early this year. Most of the people they will target now are just your average bull headed frat kids, who can care less about the world unless something happens to them. Screw it, if you dont like the industry then boycott it, dont buy their music, dont download it either. And if you have no problems with the industry then buy your music.

      I know everyone loves to say that if the RIAA would come after them they would fight it all the way to court. Thats just stupid, they would bankrupt most of your asses. Any of those people that were caught or are going to be caught that settle these things for about $3k a pop are doing the reasonable thing. Fighting this in court sums up to attorney fees, court fees, length in time and the fact that you can loose more than $3k in early settlement. In short, you better have a strong case, not something you pulled out of your rear, but a solid case that shows the IP in question is wrong. If anyone came to my office with a typical industry suit I would advice them to settle and get it over with.

    68. Re:Once again, protest with your money by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      Calling a spade a spade might be arrogant, but some folks don't play the feel-good, "don't insult anybody" game and pretend crap isn't crap so as to not hurt the feelings of those who like said crap.

    69. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Rufus88 · · Score: 1

      I am vociferously opposed to copyright law, and hold that there should be a "doctrine of first communication" that prevents anyone preventing you passing on information.

      So, basically, you think people should be able to make a living by selling things they create with their hands, but you don't think people should be able to make a living selling things they create with their brains?

    70. Re:Once again, protest with your money by dbIII · · Score: 1

      However, since these are civil actions going through a government funded court, your taxes are paying for it too. The music industry is well known for not paying taxes.

    71. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Rakarra · · Score: 1
      Frankly, I don't care if your incentive is taken away. I think it's much more important that society be free than you make a profit.

      No, you're demonstrably wrong here. The past few hundred years speak well of the importance of copyright.

      Anyway, art for art's sake, not for money.

      Art for art's sake is nice until you have to eat and pay the rent.

      We might get less art, but it would be better quality.

      Quality is not somehow improved by the artist receiving less money, unless you're one of the tiring elitists who feel the only art of value is made by those who can't go full-time to support themselves.

    72. Re:Once again, protest with your money by maximilln · · Score: 1

      Let me re-state what I've said before: If you do not agree with what RIAA is doing, stop supporting it

      I'd love to. Where is the check-box for the RIAA on my income tax form?

      Do not buy their CDs

      Poppycock! They have a product for sale. We would like to buy the product. Once a sale is made then it is done. This nonsense about arguing about the terms of ownership and sale AFTER THE FACT is nothing more than children with their fingers crossed. The vendors should be hung from the clothesline and beaten with a wooden breadboard until they grow up.

      Make a sale. Be done with it. Accept the outcome.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    73. Re:Once again, protest with your money by maximilln · · Score: 1

      No, you're demonstrably wrong here. The past few hundred years speak well of the importance of copyright.

      I have yet to be convinced of the importance of copyright. If big industry or big government wants it then the original author has no positive choice. They can either accept the terms of the buyout or they can be harangued to death.

      Art for art's sake is nice until you have to eat and pay the rent.

      I agree. I also feel that the artist should accept the terms of sale at the time of sale. There's no secret that the medium is easily replicated. They may raise the selling price if they must. This constant complaining about terms of sale after the fact is childish. It's not made any better by attempting to hide the terms of sale in a document which nobody reads. The implications of being legally bound by a popularly unknown and unread document are frightening!

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    74. Re:Once again, protest with your money by maximilln · · Score: 1

      This is the correct approach.

      No, it's not. The vendor cannot have it both ways. They cannot say "all sales are final" AND claim to retain ownership after the sale. It's contradictory.

      Go find new independent artists, and support them directly.

      That's a very ideal picture. Now... back to reality...

      All sales are final. Ownership has been transferred. Courts should not tolerate fingers crossed behind backs, toes crossed, hairs crossed, or tongues rolled in a loop. That the courts even pretend to agree with this blatant childishness is no less than a glaring exposition of the mentality of the ruling caste in the US.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    75. Re:Once again, protest with your money by AndyChrist · · Score: 1

      How will they get your attention, though? You aren't seeing their fliers or anything. About the only way you're likely to find non-RIAA music you'll like without having to devote all your leisure time to it (which is something a lot of music elitists seem to think everyone should do) is via browsing file-sharing users who have files you were actually looking for.

    76. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many of us don't oppose all copyright, merely the use of it to extend monopoly powers (e.g. certain provisions of the DMCA) and the fact that the copyright will persist, whether you want it to or not, for something like 70 years after you die... (which is surely an unreasonable term)

    77. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Thomas+Shaddack · · Score: 1
      Seriously, I have no pity at all for these immensely stupid people who broke the law and now are being punished financially. I think it's fantastic. I can't wait for them to ramp it up further.

      Somebody said elsewhere:

      I'm making a deal with you guys. With Webslum 3, I am going to try to find a way encrypt all access logs and user directories. The only people who will ever know what's on your site and what's been downloaded from it is YOU. The feds can subpoena all they like: Ican't give them records I don't keep.
      Oh, and IM me for access to my major elite 150 gigabyte music server. Email me to join my mixology club (one free CD of rocking music in the mail every month, out of consanguine kindness). Gonna get my rocks off before donning these Sennheisers means prison.

      You may like to look.

    78. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The past few hundred years have been a litany of tyranny and repression, often aided by media promoting the tyrant's agenda.

      DEATH TO COPYRIGHT AND DEATH TO COPYRIGHTERS!

    79. Re:Once again, protest with your money by CrosbieFitch · · Score: 1

      You make a good point re accepting terms of sale at the time of sale. If your art is easily replicated, it would be sensible to sell it to a consortium of buyers to obtain total revenue at the time of release. One then might as well embrace this deal by releasing the art under a creative commons license (so no-one gets prosecuted for copying it).
      Check out my site 'DigitalArtAuction' for more info.

    80. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Joe+Tie. · · Score: 1

      I took a look, and I have to say that I'm glad you pointed this out! I'd always wished something like this existed, especially given the horrible selection of radio stations (country,western or country and western) in my area.

      --
      Everything will be taken away from you.
    81. Re:Once again, protest with your money by SQLz · · Score: 1
      And last pay-to-see anything was girlfriend and made me take her to see Titanic..

      Wow, you sound like one fun guy to date!

      For every boycotter, there are 100 teeny-boppers waiting to take up the RIAA cause. So, boycott all you want. The only person you are depriving of anything is yourself and apparently your girlfriend as well.

    82. Re:Once again, protest with your money by zogger · · Score: 1

      we do other stuff for fun. She doesn't like going to the movies all that much either, just that one particular one she wanted to see. We watch a few videos now and then, but really, I only get them used and cheap, whicvh is the price I think those sorts of mass produced copies are worth, a dollar or two. there's no reason for the prices they charge anymore, mass production being what it is. The "industry" could have saved themselves a lot of grief if they had just kept dropping prices as the technology improved, and made it on a higher sales volume. Instead they stuck with absurdly high prices, and file sharing took over as a counter protest of a sorts from that primary reason-because today, making copies is absurdly cheap, whichever format you might mean, a CD or DVD or downloaded. All the industry is trying to do is monopolise technology to keep their profits up artificially, IMO. They want to be able to use the most advanced technology, but they don't want you to be able to do that. According to the way copyright is still realised and enforced, that's the current model, but eventually it will be supplanted, we are in roughly -a poor but adequate analogy- like back during the period of alcohol prohibition. A law on the books and people still getting busted for it, but also violated to such an extent and work arounds developed that eventually it will be removed as a bad idea. Not sure when that will happen but it most likely will.

      As to the boycott, it's what an individual can do, and for me it was more or less spend my extra loot elsewheres, I just don't think those particular entertainments are worth the cost. When I was younger I did, but now I don't, and I outlined my reasons. That industry cartel is too crooked and greedy for my taste, and their products are way over priced-to me-for what they are. I'm just as happy reading a cheap used book or borrowed book from the library for instance.

      As for your teeny-boppers, they are the ones primarily doing the file sharing, not me, never downloaded a single movie,and only downloaded one free-to-copy MP3 once, but it's no longer on my drive. So I don't see that as exactly them "taking up the RIAA cause", they seem to be doing both, spending a lot of money with that industry, and also sharing copies of what they .... I guess "lease to use" from the industry. You can't own it so you can't really call it buying.

    83. Re:Once again, protest with your money by dotwaffle · · Score: 1

      And, although I realise this isn't the place to talk about something so offtopic, you'll also notice that all the MP3's are downloaded unencrypted, so if you want, you can slap them on a CD or MP3 player etc and take them in your car etc. It's that reason why I fell in love with the music of Beth Quist ;)

    84. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Pofy · · Score: 1

      >If someone else derives monies or rewards from
      >that work, without the copyright owners
      >permission, he has unlawfully violated the
      >copyright owners rights

      Not at all. Copyright infringement happens when one do one of the actions that the copyright holder is granted as an exclusive right. The mains ones are copying, distribution and public performance. Making money is NOT such a right given (it do often factor in in the graveness and penalty of the infringement though).

    85. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Eythian · · Score: 2, Informative

      At least one of the devs (me) is reading :)

      Unfortunately, I have a thesis to write so my contributions have slowed down a lot recently, and I think similar real-life interferences have hit the other devs lately.

      I suggest that you don't try the stable version, but get the CVS or unstable versions. A lot has happened since the last stable release. There is also a new server under development, which will allow a few things such as submissions. Hopefully also a search and queue for next downloading function eventually (that's something I'd like to see, and would consider adding myself if need be).

      If you have ideas you'd like to see in it, hop on the devel list and suggest them (or email me and I'll forward them). Coders are also totally welcome!

      Oh, and for the interested, someone has been working on a KDE client for it too.

      Now I'll wander through this thread and reply to other meaningful comments on iRate :)

    86. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Eythian · · Score: 1

      The download speed was a problem with one of the music sites being slow. This has been dealt with in the client by supporting multiple downloads, so that you don't have to wait for one slow file to come down. Check out the latest CVS/unstable snapshot.

    87. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Eythian · · Score: 1

      Give it time, the more songs that you rate, the better it gets at picking out what it thinks you'll like. You have to put up with a bit of crap while it sorts out your tastes, but before too long it'll start getting better. It's pretty hard to get a feel for what you like with only a couple of samples.

    88. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Eythian · · Score: 1

      I've already dealt with most of these points, but just so they're in one place...

      1: Machinae Supremacy should be in there, I suggested it ages ago. However, when the new server is done, there will be a place to submit links.

      2: there is a google search function, get info on the track and then hit 'search'. It may not be in the stable client however.

      3: a CD-R service is somewhat outside the scope of iRate itself. However the (unstable) client supports drag and drop, so I make CDs simply by dragging the ones I want into my burning software.

      Ultimately we hope to split the client into two parts, an interface and a 'back-end' which will make creating plugins a lot easier. Cheers for the comments, they let us make it better :)

    89. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Eythian · · Score: 1

      Get the unstable version and give it a go.

      I won't deal with the mac-specific things, as I don't have a mac. However, someone has been poking at that lately. Also note that the SWT graphics toolkit isn't that mature on Mac which may contribute to some of the issues (e.g. things have had tooltips for ages)

      Keep in mind that the client is still in the very early version numbers, we all know it needs work, and are getting there slowly.

      w.r.t the help, I considered writing a manual for it a while back, but lack of time got in my way. I'll look into it again when time becomes less of an issue.

      w.r.t downloading, there are 'delete file, but keep rating' ideas floating around and they aren't too far away from happening. Most of it is done, except the interface bits. Also, it should only download things that match your preference, however this is hard to work out, especially initially. So you will get crap tracks, but the more you rate the better it gets at getting you good ones next time.

      You can see what you have rated tracks by scrolling to them and looking in the 'rating' column. You can change the rating by right-clicking and picking the new rating. You can't, however set it to unrated. What I do in that case is give it a high rating (which means it comes up more often) and see how it grows on me, and set the rating accordingly.

      The more finely-tuned track controls are hard to do in a cross-platform way, as the player uses external programs to play music. When we get a solution that works across all platforms, we'll work on putting them in.

    90. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Yes, but you should take care of that BEFORE you start promoting it all over the place, otherwise people are going to get a bad taste in their mouth. I had such a bad experience trying to use this program, it'll take a lot of convincing before I try it again.

      One of the things I hate about the open-source community is their habit of releasing 0.0.0.0.0.1 software to the public as if it were finished. Do yourselves a favor, finish the program, THEN distribute it.

    91. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Eythian · · Score: 1

      We're not promoting it all over the place. We're asking people to look at it so we can get developers. If we did it your way, the guy who came up with the idea would have zero help until he came up with a perfect working version. Seems a little silly don't you think?

      The software is released to the public -because- it is of a not-yet-perfect state and we want to get people interested in it who are willing to help rather than complain how we shouldn't put it up for download until it is perfect.

    92. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Travoltus · · Score: 1

      RIGHT ON... do NOT buy their stuff, and do NOT SHARE IT ONLINE.

      Buy things second hand, if you must. The RIAA makes nothing on second hand sales.

      --
      --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
    93. Re:Once again, protest with your money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One comment about copyright. Walt Disney's Steamboat Willy's copyright was extended another 75 years because the US congress was paid by Disney.

      Copyright laws were not designed to be forever. That is why I will copy any DVD movie that I can get my hands on. Take that Hollywood. I know that I will never be able to match the number that is coming out of China every day.

    94. Re:Once again, protest with your money by jbayes · · Score: 1

      I dunno, I tried irate for quite a while, and never found anything I would rate above mediocre (and precious few of those). I don't know if the problem is irate's algorithm, or that there isn't any music out there that I like, or what.

      --

      "It sure was strange to see something on Usenet about me that didn't involve Klingon gang rape." -- Wil Wheaton

    95. Re:Once again, protest with your money by 0x0000 · · Score: 1

      A concerted effort to market on the web as "non-RIAA affiliated" (the first link from the search yeilded 6 different indie labels) or "independant music" should do well. This is was one of the big losses associated with the death of mp3.com as a venue for independant music, and (I feel sure) on of the main reasons the record industry felt the need to control the content that was accessible via MP3.com.

      Browsing shared directories on P2P networks is also a good thing, but it won't (initially) be as quick or productive as web searching.

      The point here is that indy bands need to have web sites. Not just crappy, broken shite that doesn't show up in search engines, but well-constructed, lightweight sites that offer streaming and downloadable music.

      It's all about Marketting. Talent - real talent - needs to be supported by real marketting. That's how the RIAA and the labels seized control to start with: they controlled the marketting and distribution. That situation no longer pertains, but the advocates of non-corporate-controlled Art (music, film, etc) need to step up to the challenge, educate themselves, and get to it.

      I think that is starting to happen, but it would be nice if there were a HOW-TO on it.

      --
      "The Internet is made of cats."
  2. Class-Action Defense? by G4from128k · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I wonder if it is legally possible to mount a class-action defense? The defendants could then pool their resources for lawyerage, expert witnesses, etc. If a class of parties can act as a plaintiff, why can't a similar structure be used in defense?

    --
    Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do.
    1. Re:Class-Action Defense? by Everleet · · Score: 1
      For one thing, the plaintiff decides who is on each side (along with the claims of the suit, etc.). Legally these are all separate cases...I don't know if there's any history to support one or more courts merging (and thus rewriting) a group like that.

      This seems like new territory to me, but IaNaL.

      --
      It's tragic. Laugh.
    2. Re:Class-Action Defense? by lurker412 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't understand what the defense would consist of. An individual might argue that he had been incorrectly identified, but I am not sure you could apply this argument as a group.

    3. Re:Class-Action Defense? by Maul · · Score: 1

      (IANAL)

      This is an excellent idea. Unfortunately, I've never seen legal precedent for large scale defense in this case.

      It would probably take one of the defendents to get a clever lawyer first, and have the lawyer file a motion that all the RIAA lawsuits get combined into one. Not sure if that is really possible, though.

      The RIAA would fight tooth and nail to prevent it, even if it is possible, however. If "class action" defense could happen, it would probably spell the end of their lawsuit campaign.

      --

      "You spoony bard!" -Tellah

    4. Re:Class-Action Defense? by Joffrey · · Score: 1

      As someone already mentioned, there really aren't any defenses... that's why most are settling.

      However, for those who may not have actually done it (maybe had an open wireless connection, or the neighbor kid that you kindly let borrow your computer from time to time, etc.), it must be quite disheartening:

      From the article:

      >>>>> Still, the California consultant who recently agreed to pay the largest settlement in any of the lawsuits, $11,000, urged Internet users not to take solace in rare procedural victories.

      "It scares me," Plank said. "For anyone fighting any of these lawsuits -- unless they have nothing to lose -- the only thing to do is settle. You have no power against these people."

      --
      No, really! I'm one of the *good* lawyers!
    5. Re:Class-Action Defense? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      but IaNaL.

      Then why not shut up?

  3. RIAA targets... by dmayle · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The sad thing, I think, is that those of us who would be brave enough to stand up in court aren't participating in the types of activities likely to get them targeted.

    A lot of the people who are doing this probably don't own copies of the songs to begin with, which makes it tough for them to stand up for themselves.

    What really needs to happen is that someone with an extensive music collection, and the desire to fight this, needs to leave various P2P applications open 24/7 with access to their vast, legal music collection, so that someone will notice.

    1. Re:RIAA targets... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would be legal how?

    2. Re:RIAA targets... by sqlrob · · Score: 1
    3. Re:RIAA targets... by whiteranger99x · · Score: 1

      What really needs to happen is that someone with an extensive music collection, and the desire to fight this, needs to leave various P2P applications open 24/7 with access to their vast, legal music collection, so that someone will notice.

      Umm, isn't that WHY the RIAA is going after people in the first place? That is, I'm assuming you mean leaving the MP3s open to P2P programs that you ripped from your own CDs for others to download.

      --
      Join the TWIT army now!
    4. Re:RIAA targets... by gusgizmo · · Score: 1

      This would be kick-ass thing for a good number of people to do, that happen to have access to large internet connections. Place free music (in terms of liberty of use), free software, and free literature on one of the more popular file-sharing networks that average file-swappers use. This way, it could be shown that p2p has legitimate uses. Of course, this is what bittorrent provides, but only people of moderate skill and experience on the net use bittorrent (as far as I know).

    5. Re:RIAA targets... by LoadWB · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It is a response I have made in the past to their "we are losing money because of the downloads."

      Horseshit, try again.

      The person who has nothing but downloaded MP3s and CD-Rs burned from downloaded MP3s was NOT going to buy the album in the first place. Instead, the person would have bummed a copy off of a friend who had purchased it.

      IMO, downloading MP3s is no different than when we used to trade tapes at the skating rink or youth center. These tapes were often made from the radio (remember sitting with your finger on the PAUSE button?)

      The facts are that MP3s are LOW quality (completely horrid, as far as I am concerned,) and CD-R media has a finite life-span. Anyone who is genuinely concerned about their music is willing to buy the CD/tape/LP/8-track if only for the quality of the sound.

      I started out in digital music back with the music rack that came with some sound card back in early days of Windows 95. I would use a friend's Win95 computer to sample a track mono, 8-bit at 11kHz, then upload that to my Amiga at 2400bps over the phone. I would convert it to IFF with Fibonacci-Delta compression and play the songs back later when I felt like it. I got about 1MB per 1 minute of music. The playback was usable, but still horrrible. To me, a 44kHz 16-bit MP3 at 192kb/s sounds just the same. I would rather buy the CD and listen to it in the CD player. Not quite as portable, but at least hi-hats are not turned into high-frequency slosh, and vocals do not sound as is sung through a fan.

      One big question I have is, for the purpose of non-profitable distribution, can an MP3 even be considered the original product? Because that seems to be part of the argument.

      More questions which could be asked in court, on the record, and give the US legal system a chance to decide once and for all what is allow, and where the limitations lie.

    6. Re:RIAA targets... by Everleet · · Score: 1

      We are talking about copyrights here. It's generally considered that the person sharing the file is the one performing unauthorized copying and distribution. Downloading is probably illegal too, but they don't go after it so much.

      --
      It's tragic. Laugh.
    7. Re:RIAA targets... by Flaming+Foobar · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      What really needs to happen is that someone with an extensive music collection, and the desire to fight this, needs to leave various P2P applications open 24/7 with access to their vast, legal music collection, so that someone will notice.

      What exactly would you achieve with that? I fail to see what's insightful about this.

      People who share files are breaking copyright law. No matter how much you'd like your music for free, it ain't gonna happen before that law goes away, which isn't anytime soon.

      --
      while true;do echo -e -n "\033[s\n\033[u\134_\033[B";done
    8. Re:RIAA targets... by marsonist · · Score: 1

      The problem is, the RIAA isn't suing people for downloading the music. They are suing the people for sharing it. If I had 100 songs on my computer they could, at best, say that each song required the purchase of a separate $18 CD. Meaning a total theft of $1,800. Whereas the same 100 songs shared to the masses could amount to theoretical losses limited only by "cost per song" x "bandwidth" x "time" Regardless of if you own the music or not, sharing it out to the masses is going to leave you scrounging for cash like every other person who got caught.

    9. Re:RIAA targets... by Flaming+Foobar · · Score: 5, Insightful
      The person who has nothing but downloaded MP3s and CD-Rs burned from downloaded MP3s was NOT going to buy the album in the first place.

      That's just silly. A person who has a 1000 downloaded albums clearly loves music and would have VERY PROBABLY bought at least a few of them if that was the only way to get them. And when the users of P2P are calculated in millions, that amounts to a HUGE amount of albums, even if there are some who indeed wouldn't have bought any.

      IMO, downloading MP3s is no different than when we used to trade tapes at the skating rink or youth center. These tapes were often made from the radio (remember sitting with your finger on the PAUSE button?)

      You don't see a difference between a degraded one-off versus hundreds of millions of 1:1 digital copies?

      The facts are that MP3s are LOW quality (completely horrid, as far as I am concerned,)

      320 kbps MP3's are completely acceptable, in my opinion.

      --
      while true;do echo -e -n "\033[s\n\033[u\134_\033[B";done
    10. Re:RIAA targets... by nwbvt · · Score: 1

      I hate to tell you this but the court would rule against him. Owning the CDs does not give you the legal right to give copies out to the rest of the world.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    11. Re:RIAA targets... by LostCluster · · Score: 1

      Just like how most lawyers who are deciding whether to take a civil case or not look for "deep pockets" in the potential defendants to see if there's any money to be had, the RIAA seems like they're doing enough background research to assure that they only sue "empty pockets", people for whom a $5000 loss would drive them into bankruptcy, and most certainly couldn't fund a $20,000 defense.

      If anybody surprises them and mounts a defense that can withstand a RIAA paperwork dump, the RIAA quickly retreats out of fear losing a case in the courtroom would become a model for which other defendants could mount a less expensive defense.

      In short, the RIAA is playing the game to win thousands of small fights, while backing down from any high-stakes challenge.

    12. Re:RIAA targets... by dmayle · · Score: 1

      Okay, everyone seems to be missing the point of my post, so let me try to explain a little more clearly.

      What's really at question here is whether or not having a P2P application open, with access to your files, is considered a violation of copyright.

      It's vaguely akin to leaving a stack of CDs out in the front lawn. (Assuming you trust everyone to not take your CDs, just browse, listen to them, and then return them to you.) If If I want to do it, I feel that should be my prerogative. If someone wants to take those CDs and copy them, I feel that's an entirely different copyright issue, and based entirely on what is considered fair use.

      What I think is a big problem with the targetted users is that many of them probably acquired the majority of their music without purchasing it, and think they are being taken to court for having copies of the songs they haven't paid for.

      Now, you and I both know that what the RIAA is pursuing with these suits are people who are sharing music, and the question is whether that is legal or not.

      So, my original proposition still stands. Someone who has a large music collection, and wants to fight this, should share their music collection on as many P2P networks as they can, so they can get a chance to find out once and for all whether just sharing music you own is considered an infringement of copyright.

    13. Re:RIAA targets... by bezuwork's+friend · · Score: 1
      One big question I have is, for the purpose of non-profitable distribution, can an MP3 even be considered the original product? Because that seems to be part of the argument.

      Although it may seem morally right that the RIAA should not be able to control shitty samplings, legally mp3s would be, at best, derivative works. I say at best as most courts probably don't even consider that mp3s are not the original work, they just count that as fact. Legally, a work is a derivative work if it is substantially similar to the original. Since mp3s would only be valuable to the end user if they resemble the original (even if the resemblence is not audiophile), then it seems that substantial simularity is a slam dunk.

      And the copyright owner has the exclusive right of control over derivative works.

    14. Re:RIAA targets... by W2k · · Score: 1
      The facts are that MP3s are LOW quality (completely horrid, as far as I am concerned,) and CD-R media has a finite life-span. Anyone who is genuinely concerned about their music is willing to buy the CD/tape/LP/8-track if only for the quality of the sound.
      If you think MP3's are of "horrid" quality, then you are probably in the minority. I can't tell a high-bitrate MP3 from the original CD (and yes, I do have a fairly good stereo setup - by non-audiophile standards - at least in my car). A lot of people I know don't give a damn about bitrates, they rip their "old" CD collections to 128kbps, then lock away the discs somewhere never to be used again. Most people aren't audiophiles or even close. CD-R media only has a short lifespan if you treat it badly, and there is archive-quality media you can buy if you think you are really going to need it to last 20/50/100+ years.
      --
      Quality, performance, value; you get only two, and you don't always get to pick.
    15. Re:RIAA targets... by FrostedWheat · · Score: 1

      To me, a 44kHz 16-bit MP3 at 192kb/s sounds just the same. I would rather buy the CD and listen to it in the CD player

      I believe there are hard-drive based media players for the car than can play WAV or FLAC files. Definitly a lot more portible than your setup and you don't risk scratching your CDs to death.

    16. Re:RIAA targets... by Zooka · · Score: 1

      Illegal distribution of copyrighted material is just as bad as downloading/possessing it. Period. Whether you do it willingly or knowingly doesn't likely matter.

    17. Re:RIAA targets... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are you talking about? It's WORSE. It's like comparing a drug user to a drug seller. The seller is the worse person, legally and morally!

    18. Re:RIAA targets... by Nef · · Score: 1

      That's just silly. A person who has a 1000 downloaded albums clearly loves music and would have VERY PROBABLY bought at least a few of them if that was the only way to get them. And when the users of P2P are calculated in millions, that amounts to a HUGE amount of albums, even if there are some who indeed wouldn't have bought any

      Now that's just silly! I'm a music nut myself and have several thousand (read 3000+) albums in mp3/ogg format on my computer. I also had several thousand cd's and any album I owned, I ripped. Where the real rub comes in this whole brouhaha is that the average consumer feels that when they shell out their hard earned money for a CD/Tape/DVD/whatever they 'think' they're paying for the right to listen/watch that content at their leisure in their preferred arena/format.

      What really happens is quite different. We only get the rights to the specific copy of the media we purchased. If it were up to the **AA, we couldn't even backup that one specific copy for protection of our investment. That's where "Fair Use" comes in and saves the day. It says if I payed for it, and I want a backup copy, or copy in another media (that part is still a bit flaky, and could use some bolstering legislation-wise) for a copyrighted work that I payed for, I can do so.

      Now hears that rub I was telling you about. I have less than 10 albums that at some point in my life, I have not purchased on CD. Yet I physically own less than 3000+ albums. In the RIAA's eyes I'm already a pirate, even though I payed for all but a handful of the albums I now possess, I just own them in a different format. (And no, I didn't sell any of them. I may have given a few away, but most have deterioriated beyond playability and now are coasters.)

      You don't see a difference between a degraded one-off versus hundreds of millions of 1:1 digital copies?

      The problem is, not one mp3 EVER created is a 1:1 perfect digital copy. There is no way to argue this. The whole basis of an mp3 is that it uses psycho-acoustics to 'fill-in' the parts that are removed during clipping/compression of the 'perfect' copy.

      320 kbps MP3's are completely acceptable, in my opinion.

      I agree, it still doesn't mean it's a 'perfect' copy, which is the crux of the RIAA's argument. If it's legal to make mix tapes from cd's, it should then be legal to send your friends mp3's of songs from CD's you paid for.

    19. Re:RIAA targets... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, a P2P application is used to transfer files from client A to client B. If you have a P2P client open, and have granted it access to all your music files (let's say they are all RIAA owned), that's pretty damning evidence. However, the burden of proof is on them. They have to prove that you transferred a file. If they can't prove you transferred a file, they can't prove copyright infringement actually occurred. Then again, the whole purpose of P2P is to share files. So couldn't one reasonably argue that it was your intent to transfer files? That's right, soon the RIAA will get you with "Intent to infringe copyright".

      I don't think your analogy (or any other analogy) is accurate. Your CDs are not accessable to everybody with a CD player, it's not anonymous (well, it doesn't provide a false sense of anonymity), and a CD can only be listened to by one person at a time (well, a small group if you have speakers). As long as you are not charging for the service, I think that would be OK (though still sort of a gray area; it could be considered a public performance). In P2P, an mp3 is available to everybody with a computer and P2P client, people feel very anonymous (don't even have to leave your chair), and one mp3 can be listened to by everybody at the same time.

      I just don't think sharing your entirely legal CD collection is a smart idea. Even if they couldn't prove you transferred a single file, they can convince a jury your intended to violate their copyrights. This may not be a law now, but it sure will be. I don't know the legal definition of fair use, but I feel like what you describe would (or should) be wrong. This reminds me of the story about Fahrenheit 9/11 winning an award a while back; somebody posted a torrent of it and was modded -1 Troll or Flamebait. I think this sends a mixed message: "It's OK to infringe RIAA copyrights (they are evil), but it's not OK to infringe on somebody we like." Or maybe the more conservative users just aren't as vocal (for fear of being modbombed by the more liberal majority). Read into that what you will.

    20. Re:RIAA targets... by dougmc · · Score: 1
      The sad thing, I think, is that those of us who would be brave enough to stand up in court aren't participating in the types of activities likely to get them targeted.
      It's also quite possible that the RIAA is picking their victims carefully, only going after people they think are likely to settle rather than fight it. Certainly, I don't think they're going to knowingly sue a lawyer, for example.

      The *last* thing they want is somebody to fight them and win. That would undermine everything they're pushing for.

    21. Re:RIAA targets... by dougmc · · Score: 1
      IMO, downloading MP3s is no different than when we used to trade tapes at the skating rink or youth center. These tapes were often made from the radio (remember sitting with your finger on the PAUSE button?)
      Well, the legal system typically doesn't care much about your opinion, but in this case, the RIAA would have loved to outlaw that too, but never was able to actually do so.
    22. Re:RIAA targets... by horza · · Score: 1

      You don't see a difference between a degraded one-off versus hundreds of millions of 1:1 digital copies?

      I don't think you're average kid has an Internet connection that could serve hundreds of millions of copies. In fact the upload even on DSL is extremely limited compared to download speed. Here in France my DSL provider gives 128kb/s upload, which is 16KB/s. You mention that 320kbps is an acceptable speed. Assuming the kid wants to share a three and a half minute single, that would be a 8.5MB song. This means 8.75 minutes to upload one song. Even with a saturated link and requests queued up indefinately, to upload a 100 million songs would take 1,664 years.

      As technology advances I know that figure will drop, but as it is today that kid at the ice-skating ring isn't pumping out 100 million copies even using what-ever p2p application.

      Phillip.

    23. Re:RIAA targets... by moonbender · · Score: 1

      I agree, it still doesn't mean it's a 'perfect' copy, which is the crux of the RIAA's argument.

      Why wouldn't it mean that? I mean, it's purely a matter of how you define "perfect". It's not a bit-for-bit copy of a CD, no. But how is that relevant? Music production and reception is (typically) analogue to begin with, so you could argue that there is no such thing as a perfect copy, certainly not in the reduced precision of any digital medium. But then the term "perfect copy" would be fairly useless.
      And in fact, I'd probably say there is some merit to this: there is no such thing as a perfect copy of a piece of music. There's always some sort of loss when compared to the original. However, perfection is not a binary state, it's a range, and a subjective one to boot. CDs are considered by nearly all people to be "perfect enough" copies of music. FM radio is less perfect, as are tapes. And of course, MP3 at 320 kbps is also "perfect enough" for nearly all people, while MP3 at 64k probably is not.

      I think it'd be more correct to refer to fidelity in this context instead of whether one copy is perfect or not.

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    24. Re:RIAA targets... by Zooka · · Score: 1

      What exactly is being protected by copyright here? Is it the original copy of 1's and 0's (the digital audio) pressed into a plastic disc? Or is it the music (the song, the art) itself? Sure, a lossy mp3 copy of a song may be considered less valuable than the original copy. But I don't think it matters if it's a 1:1 copy at all. The content/property being protected isn't the physical CD itself, it's the music that is being delivered on the CD.

      I think that the notion that people should be able to freely distribute degraded copies of music is akin to broadcasting music over the radio. Don't radio stations have to pay royalties on every song they play? Or since they have an original copy of the CD, do they have the right to broadcast it over the open airwaves without restriction?

      The root of the issue is that copyright owners want (have?) control of your ability to LISTEN to their recordings, period. When you buy a CD, they are granting you the privilege to unlimited personal use. That personal "use" means listening to the music only. Not re-distribution in any way or form, whether it be less than 1:1 copies or not (mp3 files, FM radio, streaming internet radio, whatever...).

    25. Re:RIAA targets... by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 2, Interesting

      > That's just silly. A person who has a 1000 downloaded albums clearly loves music and would have VERY PROBABLY bought at least a few of them if that was the only way to get them. And when the users of P2P are calculated in millions, that amounts to a HUGE amount of albums, even if there are some who indeed wouldn't have bought any.

      So.. lets say they might buy like 5 out of 1000 albums? That is a whopping 0.5%...

      Don't forget that there are aslo peopel who only buy things after having heard them (due to downloading them).

      So far NOONE has ever provided any proof of the recordign industry losing money or sales on downloads.

      Untill there are reliable, INDEPENDENT studies to this, it is all guess work, and as a result, not soemthign that could serve as valid proof in court. Sadly, due to this all being handled in civil courts, such proof is not needed either.

      > IMO, downloading MP3s is no different than when we used to trade tapes at the skating rink or youth center. These tapes were often made from the radio (remember sitting with your finger on the PAUSE button?)

      > You don't see a difference between a degraded one-off versus hundreds of millions of 1:1 digital copies?

      While there are some high quality mp3 files on sharign networks, most of them are horrible in uqality. Honestly, many of my 20 year old tapes sound better then many of the mp3s you get from hsaring networks (and just in case, where I live it is illegal to share, but perfectly legal to download, so yeah, I can check that legally)

      > The facts are that MP3s are LOW quality (completely horrid, as far as I am concerned,)

      320 kbps MP3's are completely acceptable, in my opinion.

      Yeah, and 320kbit mp3s are not that easy to find on the sharing networks. Most is 128kbit or 192kbit. The later is acceptable for my portable mp3 player, but not for my home sound system really.

      It is so easy to only look at the extremes and then draw a conclusion, but your conclusion is bound to be wrong.

    26. Re:RIAA targets... by Chris+Carollo · · Score: 1
      In the RIAA's eyes I'm already a pirate, even though I payed for all but a handful of the albums I now possess, I just own them in a different format.
      But this is just a straw man -- the RIAA isn't going after people who rip mp3s from CDs they've purchased, they're going after people who accumulate huge mp3 libraries without purchasing any of the CDs. Yes, technically, you're probably right that the RIAA considers those that rip their CDs onto their portalbe mp3 players "pirates" at some miniscule level, but it's clearly not worth their time to go after those people.

      So the original poster's point still stands: that someone who downloads 1000 albums would almost certainly have purchased some portion of those albums had they not been available for free.
      The problem is, not one mp3 EVER created is a 1:1 perfect digital copy. There is no way to argue this. The whole basis of an mp3 is that it uses psycho-acoustics to 'fill-in' the parts that are removed during clipping/compression of the 'perfect' copy.
      Again, you're misrepresenting the original poster's point. Yes, the generation of the mp3 is lossy (though at 256+kbps it's pretty much perceptually lossless). But every generation after that is 1:1 perfect. The thousandth generation tape would be completely unlistenable, whereas the thousandth generation mp3 would stil be indistinguishable from the original CD.
    27. Re:RIAA targets... by linzeal · · Score: 1

      I currently get 512 at SBC for a little under 40 dollars a month. The 6 meg / 608 plan above me is going to 700+ for uplaod and the 128 will be at 256 by year's end. With people using broadband's upload primarily for sharing files and using application both for legal and illegal means the ISPs are taking notice. Once worldwide broadband by consumers becomes sufficiently saturated with these new caps we might start seeing more secure P2P applications that can 'waste' bandwidth in sending meaningless encrypted packets and the like to 'confuzzle the authoritay'!

    28. Re:RIAA targets... by linzeal · · Score: 1

      This man sounds like a self-proclaimed audiophile type. I'm not tone death in fact I can play the piano, many brass instruments, and the viola if the notation is not too complex. Even I cannot tell the difference between most 192 kpbs copies and the CD they came from. I can tune into each instrument and hear it differentiated from the rest of the music just fine in either medium. Just becuase you paid 1000's of dollars to wire your home stereo equipment does not make you an expert, a genius, or even remotely clever. It makes you a jack ass and an idiot but most of all a dupe.

    29. Re:RIAA targets... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's just silly. A person who has a 1000 downloaded albums clearly loves music and would have VERY PROBABLY bought at least a few of them if that was the only way to get them.

      The size of a collection acquired at essentialy zero marginal cost has no bearing on the size of the collection that would be acquired at substantial marginal cost.

      For example, consider the stereotypical college kid with little free spending money, aka broke, but lots of free time on his hands. He may spend plemnty of hours acquiring music for "free" through his "free" school internet connection. Yet, if the school cuts him off and stops him from using the "free" connection to acquire music, he still won't have any more money to spend on purchasing music. Instead he will seek alternate zero-cost routes, like borrowing CDs from people in the dorm and ripping them. Still zero marginal dollar cost, just less time-efficient. But he's got plenty of time, and no dollars, so its obvious he won't paying money for music anytime soon.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    30. Re:RIAA targets... by johnbeat · · Score: 1

      >That's just silly. A person who has a 1000 downloaded
      >albums clearly loves music and would have VERY
      >PROBABLY bought at least a few of them if that was the
      >only way to get them.

      a) the RIAA's studies count every single one of those 1,000 downloaded albums as a lost sale. This is clearly silly.

      b) it is not clear that someone who downloads 1,000 albums "loves music". In my experience, they are "collectors" who want to be able to say that they have all this stuff but rarely listen to it.

      Back when people were still trading VCDs of movies, someone brought me a two-CD copy of Star Wars: The Phantom Menace, and asked if I could make some copies for them. I didn't, but I did borrow their copy just because I wanted to see what the quality was like. I played it on my DVD player, and did what I always do when I buy new DVDs, I put the VCD in and played the first several minutes.

      The quality was crap, but more interesting to me was that the second CD did not play after about three minutes! Further testing on computer VCD players and other DVD players was 100%: the second CD simply would not play anywhere after that same early point in the movie.

      Somewhere in the chain of copiers, the copy had become corrupted, and nobody noticed--until I, someone who "clearly loves movies" thought to actually view the VCD. The collector who brought it to me, and possibly other collectors in the copying chain depending on when it became corrupted, had never done so.

      The people I know who download music in the thousands of albums almost never listen to it, and if they somehow could no longer download those albums would simply, imo, find some other geeky thing to collect and not use.

      (I, on the other hand, have bought hundreds of albums on CD precisely because CD is easily copied to computer where it becomes much easier to listen to and use.)

      Jerry

    31. Re:RIAA targets... by maxpublic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's just silly. A person who has a 1000 downloaded albums clearly loves music and would have VERY PROBABLY bought at least a few of them if that was the only way to get them. And when the users of P2P are calculated in millions, that amounts to a HUGE amount of albums, even if there are some who indeed wouldn't have bought any.

      Two things:

      (1) There is no Constitutional guarantee for profit; and
      (2) There is no Constitutional clause protecting failing business models under assault from technological changes.

      Clearly the practices of the RIAA are outdated and outmoded. We didn't give any special protections to buggy whip manufacturers when Ford's first cars started rolling off the assembling line and we shouldn't be giving any to the RIAA either. Their method of collecting money for themselves and their clients *no longer works*; attempting to enforce artificial scarcity is just goddamned silly all-around, and so far the most obvious abuse is that the patent and copyright clause of the Constitution has been perverted far beyond it's original intent - as have the remedies available to those whose patents/copyrights are being infringed on.

      Sometimes technology changes and shit happens. A business which worked well before crashes and burns. Either it dies out completely (e.g., the guys who sold buggy whips) or is replaced by something which works in the new, changed market. We call this CAPITALISM.

      If actually stood buy and let the free market do it's thing the RIAA and MPAA would be out of business within a few years. They'd probably be replaced by something else, but then again, they might not. And so the fuck what if they aren't? That's the way the ball bounces.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    32. Re:RIAA targets... by Yenin · · Score: 1

      If buying CDs was the only way to get them the person with 1000 downloaded albums probably wouldn't have gotten very interested in misic the first place.

      MP3s have made everyone music fans, even my father has 200+ songs (its a close approximation to the top 200 lamest songs ever produced, but anyways) The music industry's problem is that they rely too in large part on casual music listeners. The type that tends to buy whatever the music industry has hyped up because they've heard a lot about it.

      These days the availability of MP3s means most people know what they want already and most of the time what they want isn't the latest overhyped pop song.

      The worst thing I think is that when the music industry has to start cutting costs, originality is probably going to be the first casualty.

    33. Re:RIAA targets... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      320kbps CBR is a waste. Use LAME apx or if you're nuts, api. Even LAME aps sounds a million times closer to the original CD than anything less than 256kbps CBR.

      And people, please start using CUE/MP3 rips, especially when the source CD is gapless. It fucking sucks to hear a pop when the track changes, every time I hear it I think 'shit, the guy who ripped this is an idiot'. foobar2000 supports them fully, so it'll give you a chance to try a new media player that's actually worth a shit. If you want a single track off the CD, then either get a tool that will split the MP3 by the cuesheet, or burn it and re-rip it as separate MP3s (with a slight loss of quality, albeit minimal in most practical cases).

    34. Re:RIAA targets... by Kwil · · Score: 1

      The person who has nothing but downloaded MP3s and CD-Rs burned from downloaded MP3s was NOT going to buy the album in the first place. Instead, the person would have bummed a copy off of a friend who had purchased it.

      This is equally horseshit. Do you have any type of statistical proof of this?

      You are totally discounting the type of person who says "I could pay for this, but I can get it for free and it's good enough."

      The fact that you're into high-quality doesn't mean everybody else is. Hell, some people still listen to AM radio.

      So, if you combine these two things, then there definitely is some money lost to people who download it as opposed to buying it. Now, the RIAA may be making that back in the increased exposure leading to higher purchases, I don't know.

      But to simply say "People who download wouldn't have bought anyway" is crap.

      --

      That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze

    35. Re:RIAA targets... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The facts are that MP3s are LOW quality (completely horrid, as far as I am concerned)

      Are you using MS Media Player? At one point it was unbelievably bad at playing MP3s. I don't know how much better it has gotten but, if you are using MP, give WinAmp or any other player a shot before writing off MP3.

    36. Re:RIAA targets... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Since you are using LAME, you might be interested to know that LAME --decode knows the length of its gaps, and can chop them perfectly so that will decode an .m3u playlist of - say - LAME 3.90.3 --alt-preset standard to .WAV files which, when concatenated to different tracks of a CD, play totally gaplessly.

      That goes for foobar2000 as well - it uses the same decoding workaround if it sees a LAME header.

      If you want to burn such a rip, use Burrrn, which is incredibly simple to use - drag and drop the m3u. Again... gapless.

      You should of course be using Exact Audio Copy to rip. I recommend 0.9b4, which is no longer available from the official site, because it's too good (Detect TOC Manually is useful for ripping copy-controlled discs).

      And never, ever, make 2nd generation mp3s. They sound like poo.

      If you want to consistently generate quality rips, I suggest using the Überstandard (google for it).

    37. Re:RIAA targets... by recursiv · · Score: 1

      What really needs to happen is that someone with an extensive music collection, and the desire to fight this, needs to leave various P2P applications open 24/7 with access to their vast, legal music collection, so that someone will notice.

      Sorry, but this is illegal, unless they have permission to distribute this music. The RIAA isn't going after people for downloading. It's going after people for uploading, since it's much easier to prove they did it illegally.

      --
      I used to bulls-eye womp-rats in my pants
    38. Re:RIAA targets... by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I see your point, but in the eyes of the RIAA, if you don't have the money, you don't deserve to enjoy the merchendice. What do you think we are, communist? Here it is every man for himself, it will be good for you to suffer, it will motivate you to work and earn money so you can buy the music.

      There is some truth to their argument, but they aren't in it for principle, they just want your money. Greed breeds greed, and they have brought it on themselves.

      --
      Qxe4
    39. Re:RIAA targets... by sindarin2001 · · Score: 1

      I don't think they have to cut costs...they need to cut profits. The amount of money they make off of a CD is pretty scary.

    40. Re:RIAA targets... by maximilln · · Score: 1

      I would use a friend's Win95 computer to sample a track mono, 8-bit at 11kHz, then upload that to my Amiga at 2400bps over the phone

      Ugh. You must've been stuck with an Amiga which didn't have a CDROM or audio in ports. I can only imagine how painful this was...

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    41. Re:RIAA targets... by maximilln · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's just silly. A person who has a 1000 downloaded albums clearly loves music and would have VERY PROBABLY bought at least a few of them if that was the only way to get them

      Not only "a person", but probably multiple people. Why is it that the RIAA only targets the "a person" who has limited financial resources for legal backing? Why don't they go after the yuppie daughter of a rich CEO who, typically, has ten times as many mp3s as any of her threadbare peers?

      The answer to my question is 1) obvious and 2) a glaring demonstration of how lopsided, subjective, and fraudulent the current legal system is.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    42. Re:RIAA targets... by LoadWB · · Score: 1

      At the time I was using an Amiga 500 with no CD-ROM; four hard drives, but no CD-ROM. Later I got ahold of a 2x SCSI CD-ROM which I could use a program to pull the raw audio data from the drive, then use Sox to convert and resample all I wanted.

      The idea then was music on-demand. No swapping CDs, skipping tracks, etc. The quality was tolerable. Once I got a large enough hard drive (2GB,) I wasn't concerned too much about the amount of space the songs were taking and began recording in stereo. That effectively doubled the space used for each song. So long as I didn't turn the audio filter off during playback, everything was fine!

      Even though I was using Play16 which could play back WAV files, I still converted to IFF with F-D compression for the space savings (minimal, really) and the native playback in some programs. An upgrade to OS3 a few years down the road (I think I was in 2.04 until around 96) and datatypes helped allay this scheme.

      Thinking on this time line now, I believe I was actually using his Windows 3.1 machine for my recordings. Yowsa!

    43. Re:RIAA targets... by LoadWB · · Score: 1

      That's not what I said. I said the person who has nothing but downloaded MP3s and CD-Rs burned from downloaded MP3s.

      I make this statement from experience. I have known several people whose entire collection is such. They check out CDs from the library just to rip them and borrow CDs from friends for the same, after having been eventually twarted by retail stores' non-return policies.

      I would like to believe that the ones of us who use MP3 downloads as a "try-before-you-buy" are in the majority. I would also like to believe that we are also the ones who would be able to offer music we like to other for preview. That is how it was when I first started sharing MP3s in the IRCs. At some point the sharing apparently turned more devious.

      I still believe that the RIAA missed the boat. The Internet is probably the greatest medium the world has or will ever see. Its uses far exceed what any of us can imagine, and it is a shame that as a culture we are simply not prepared for it. But in the simplest form, the Internet is a great distribution medium, and if embraced in the proper manner could bring in more wealth than current distribution channels and the lawsuits designed to keep those channels flowing (evolving, even.) The RIAA missed this point, and the 'Net Hippies (free love, man) got to it first. Until proven otherwise, I still stand firm on my conclusion that the problem is not the LOSS of money because of P2P, but because of the LACK of DIRECT INCOME from P2P.

      As far as that goes, I would have never bought some of the CDs I have without having been exposed to them through P2P. Just the same as I would have never gotten into some of the bands which I have had I not been given tapes (*cough* Metallica.)

      But my argument doesn't necessarily pivot on the whole concept of low or high fidelity. I maintain that those who really ARE concerned about their music quality and really want to enjoy it will buy the genuine article. (Other will argue that those who TRULY care about audio quality would stick with LPs and tube amps... but that can be addressed much much later ;) There are plenty of people who, like you say, will put up with lower quality products (especially free) because it is just good enough. This is the same mentality which induces people to pay $5 for something which will wind up lasting 2 years instead of $10 for something which will last 10 years. I honestly do not have a solution in mind for this particular phenomena, but I will wager that such a person's entire collection is not solely MP3s; there are some real CDs mixed in there as well.

      My involvement in P2P has stayed a practice of try something new, try before I buy. If I but a crappy album, I have lost that money. This way I have satisfaction in knowing that I will not be wasting my money. Some albums are just not worth buying, and I do not keep those MP3s on my system for very long. But there are plenty that I have downloaded, enjoyed thouroughly, and gone out and bought if reasonably priced or even available to me. (Those are other arguments into which I might get dragged.)

      Bah. It is 3:00am, and I am losing my train of thought here, so I will end abruptly.

    44. Re:RIAA targets... by maximilln · · Score: 1

      Hell, some people still listen to AM radio

      Perfect example. There is no secret behind a broadcast. Once a broadcast is made it is over and done with. There is no way to control who receives that broadcast. Laws which regulate the redistribution of a broadcast are remnants of a childish naivete about the way the world works.

      So, if you combine these two things, then there definitely is some money lost to people who download it as opposed to buying it

      If you have a product that you know is easy to copy will you 1) raise the price to ensure the product is profitable or 2) waste your time and money whining to your government to track your product for you?

      It's obvious that this whole issue of licensing and ownership is a blatant disregard of reality. All sales are final. Ownership has been transferred. Accept reality and stop this nonsense about trying to change the concept of ownership after the sale.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    45. Re:RIAA targets... by LoadWB · · Score: 1

      Mostly MP. I tried WinAmp in the past and found it too bloated, and admittedly have not tried in quite a while. There was a pretty cool one which I cannot remember which had some neat visuals and used less CPU than WinAMP. I like XMMS on my Solaris boxes, as well as mpg123.

      Mostly I have had to deal with MP3-to-CD encodings. When I have played them on a CD player, the sound is attrocious. But then, that might be the program used to convert the MP3 back to audio. There's about a bazillion out these days, so that's a good deal of experimenting.

      But, nah, I haven't written them off totally. In many cases for me they are "good enough" quality with which to live. But the majority of my listening cases are not.

      Which brings me to a question... has anyone else noticed the dramatic drop in music sound quality on radio stations which have switched to digital files? The music sounds really tin-canny to me, and painfully digital. I have stopped listening to some stations because of this. What is really funny to me is that radio is already low quality, you would think that using MP3s might not be noticible.

  4. huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    'I've never had a situation like this before, where there are powerful plaintiffs and powerful lawyers on one side and then a whole slew of ordinary folks on the other side,' said U.S. District Judge Nancy Gertner

    the honourable Nancy Gertner has presided over, by her own admission, numerous drug related trials. US government vs crack addicts seems pretty similar to me.

    1. Re:huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have got to be kidding me. The US Government does not send in its "A" team against a crack addict. Also, it is not the US Government that prosecutes crack addicts. It is local, either city, county or sometimes state prosecuters.

    2. re: huh? by vena · · Score: 1

      She's apparently a vocal opponent of the drug war. i would say US government vs marijuana smokers though, as it'd resonate more with the audience here :)

    3. Re:huh? by ryanmfw · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      You're right. Those poor poor crack addicts. All they were doing was breaking the law. Really, why does the government have to be so down on them, man? It's not like laws are important. Just let it go man.

      On a sidenote, when was it a crime to preside over drug related trials? With all of this "by her own admission" stuff, you'd think it was.

      --
      Hurricane Ivan: A 17th century prison collapsed. All of the inmates escaped.
    4. Re:huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "by her own admission" == i could find no sources other than her own words to confirm her involvement in numerous drug related trials.

      and for the record, as pointed out by the poster above you, she is a vocal opponent of the drug war and your sarcasm is quite silly in her defense.

    5. Re:huh? by LostCluster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Judges have little to no control over what kind of trials they're assigned to preside over. That decision is usually made by a clerk who strives to maintain a random process of assigning incoming cases to available judges on a random basis.

      If you want to make a statement on her credibility or lack there of, how about saying something about her behavior when presented with such cases in her court...

    6. Re:huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fucking moron. Nobody is saying it's ok to smoke crack. The problem is that people can and do get more time for carrying around a bit of coke than for murder, and that is truly fucked up.

    7. Re:huh? by anagama · · Score: 5, Insightful
      • US government vs crack addicts seems pretty similar to me.

      The context is different. The RIAA cases are civil - drug cases are criminal. A destitute defendant in a criminal case is provided a public defender. A destitute defendant in a civil case is provided jack. This is rooted in a principle that government threats to one's liberty (jail) are more dangerous than the threat posed by plaintiffs seeking nothing but money from a defendant.
      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    8. Re:huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that would be a really good counter-argument if public defenders weren't classicly buffoons.

    9. Re:huh? by anagama · · Score: 1

      Some are / some aren't. There are probably just as many private (expensive) lawyers who are buffoons. It comes down to passion - the good public defenders are the "do gooder" type coupled with a passionate belief in the constitution and an inherent distrust of government grown abusive. Same is true for private expensive ones - equally passionate, just a bit less of the "do gooder" trait.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    10. Re:huh? by ryanmfw · · Score: 1

      I wasn't defending her. How you managed to get that is unimaginable.

      --
      Hurricane Ivan: A 17th century prison collapsed. All of the inmates escaped.
    11. Re:huh? by oolon · · Score: 1

      Pretty warped isn't it, one year in jail would be far easier than losing all my money/property.

    12. Re:huh? by anagama · · Score: 1

      Ahh, but with our (US) warped drug laws, not only do you get to go to jail - you get to donate all your property to Uncle Sam under the forfeiture rules.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    13. Re:huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Civil -vs- Criminal as a differentiation between drug-usage and sharing copy-righted material falls right through Alice's bunny-hole.

      The irony is, that drug-use should NEVER be a criminal offense, where as taking copy-righted material SHOULD be a criminal offense, because it is stealing.

      It doesn't matter if the kid can't afford the music or if he would/wouldn't buy the CD if downloading wasn't available. Theft is theft.

      It's not illegal to tape songs from the radio, because it's in the public domain, once it hits the air-waves. However, sharing that tape is illegal, and obtaining that tape is illegal, because you are DISTRIBUTING copy-righted music.

      As for those who are sued by RIAA, well, stealing their music is NOT a form of protest to their tactics;

      So, if you're that concerned with rights of artists and your own personal rights, do drugs, listen to the Dead/Phish and other independents, and talk to your senators/reps to change the law to disallow artists from giving away the copyrights to recording industries.

      Sorry for the rant, but the real issue of RIAA, is that they RECORD music, but force artists to give up the rights to their own works; This is a form of stealing, and should be deemed illegal. The right of an artist to restrict distribution of their music by greedy recording companies needs to have legal precedent; In the mean time, Prince proved to beat them at their own game, by changing his name to some symbol, until his contract ran out ---hah!

      Lastly, I agree distributing lower-quality copies of music, like MP3's shouldn't be illegal; In fact, the law should force a legal-standard for defining a lower recording quality of copied music as a legally distributeable copy; In other words, a legal differentiation between a lossless direct copy as being owned by the RIAA co's, and a lower-grade version that is public domain, similar to radio-played songs; However, this requires the original law for DISTRIBUTION of such copies to change as well; Good luck.

    14. Re:huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh Good Grief. This is wrong on so many levels...

      You overlook that Public Defenders are generally incompetent. The lowest rung on the food chain. Folks who can't get a better job.

      You overlook that Public Defenders have 4x the case load of prosecutors. They often don't even know the case details before going to trial.

      You overlook that Public Defenders try for plea bargains to reduce their workload. Putting their interests before their client's best interests.

      You overlook that prosecutors get cash bonuses for convictions. Regardless of whether the folks are actually guilty or not...

      You overlook that private counsel will easily set you back $30,000 or more.

      And this doesn't even get into rubber-stamp judges, juries picked for their ability to be swayed by the prosecution, etc.

      Let me ask you this: How many death-row inmates have been freed by DNA testing? What percentage? Do you think that the percentage of innocent people being jailed is higher on death row than in the general prison population? Or are the death row inmates just getting more attention in the press?

  5. Make a reality show out of this... by SledgeHBK · · Score: 5, Funny

    Get some money hungry lawyers (I know, redundant), to start representing these guys and make a show out of it.

    Blech, never mind. It's the diet pepsi talking.

    1. Re:Make a reality show out of this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      maybe pepsi would sponsor such a show. hehe, sounds good to me :)

    2. Re:Make a reality show out of this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And drug cases are criminal, this is not.

    3. Re:Make a reality show out of this... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Actually, that's a good idea. Putting some of these lawsuits in America's living rooms during prime time would give these cases the exposure they need, to make everyone aware of how ludicrously unbalanced the proceedings really are.

      Americans love to root for the underdog, and in these cases, the defendant is clearly the underdog (regardless of whether they've violated copyright law, or whether said law is fair or just). It would certainly raise the level of awareness as to what is legally involved, and of the massive pressure such cases can bring to bear on a defendant who lacks the resources to mount a defense.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  6. Against intellectual property by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    There is a strong case for opposing intellectual property. Among other things, it often retards innovation and exploits Third World peoples. Most of the usual arguments for intellectual property do not hold up under scrutiny. In particular, the metaphor of the marketplace of ideas provides no justification for ownership of ideas. The alternative to intellectual property is that intellectual products not be owned, as in the case of everyday language. Strategies against intellectual property include civil disobedience, promotion of non-owned information, and fostering of a more cooperative society.

    The original rationale for copyrights and patents was to foster artistic and practical creative work by giving a short-term monopoly over certain uses of the work. This monopoly was granted to an individual or corporation by government. The government's power to grant a monopoly is corrupting. The biggest owners of intellectual property have sought to expand it well beyond any sensible rationale.

    There are several types of intellectual property or, in other words, ownership of information, including copyright, patents, trademarks, trade secrets, design rights and plant breeders' rights. Copyright covers the expression of ideas such as in writing, music and pictures. Patents cover inventions, such as new substances or articles and industrial processes. Trademarks are symbols associated with a good, service or company. Trade secrets cover confidential business information. Design rights cover different ways of presenting the outward appearance of things. Plant breeders' rights grant ownership of novel, distinct and stable plant varieties that are "invented."

    The type of property that is familiar to most people is physical objects. People own clothes, cars, houses and land. But there has always been a big problem with owning ideas. Exclusive use or control of ideas or the way they are expressed doesn't make nearly as much sense as the ownership of physical objects.

    Many physical objects can only be used by one person at a time. If one person wears a pair of shoes, no one else can wear them at the same time. (The person who wears them often owns them, but not always.) This is not true of intellectual property. Ideas can be copied over and over, but the person who had the original copy still has full use of it. Suppose you write a poem. Even if a million other people have copies and read the poem, you can still read the poem yourself. In other words, more than one person can use an idea--a poem, a mathematical formula, a tune, a letter--without reducing other people's use of the idea. Shoes and poems are fundamentally different in this respect.

    Technological developments have made it cheaper and easier to make copies of information. Printing was a great advance: it eliminated the need for hand copying of documents. Photocopying and computers have made it even easier to make copies of written documents. Photography and sound recordings have done the same for visual and audio material. The ability to protect intellectual property is being undermined by technology. Yet there is a strong push to expand the scope of ownership of information.

    This chapter outlines the case against intellectual property. I begin by mentioning some of the problems arising from ownership of information. Then I turn to weaknesses in its standard justifications. Next is an overview of problems with the so-called "marketplace of ideas," which has important links with intellectual property. Finally, I outline some alternatives to intellectual property and some possible strategies for moving towards them.

    Problems with intellectual property

    Governments generate large quantities of information. They produce statistics on population, figures on economic production and health, texts of laws and regulations, and vast numbers of reports. The generation of this information is paid for through taxation and, therefore, it might seem that it should be available to any member of the public. But in some countrie

    1. Re:Against intellectual property by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Ultimately, those against copyright law will win in the end - you're fighting physics when you try to oppose decentralised information sharing. The socialist and bureaucratic copyright laws just won't be able to keep up.

      Note that it wouldn't be the first time increased personal freedom has been bitterly faught by those that stand to gain from restriction - see the american civil war and slavery.

    2. Re:Against intellectual property by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are right I can't wait.. When all of the artists that love what they do can't make any money at it and start getting real jobs we won't have to hear about any more of these lawsuits because there won't be any artists to produce the music in question!

    3. Re:Against intellectual property by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Empirical evidence is against you. Plenty of music is available freely now, and many unsigned artists now make 50000 or so a year from live shows alone thanks to mp3-based "advertising" themselves on the internet.

      50000-100000 or so is reasonable, IMHO - presently, we have Britney Spears making millions while a doctor saving hundreds of lives a day earns about 50000-100000. If anything, artists would still be overvalued in the complete absence of copyright, but that's just human nature.

    4. Re:Against intellectual property by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you one of those who are unwilling to await the new calling? Where are you going to be when those who are forward thinking finally win out the final battles? Are you going to be left behind with those who are stubbronly comitted to old notions or are you going to join those who are more intellectually and spiritually advanced to build a more free and more advanced world?

    5. Re:Against intellectual property by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      Thank you for fillin pages and pages with text.. sadly enough your post is entirely irrelevant for the discussion.

      The issue at hand is not wether IP is good or bad, but wether the RIAA should be allowed to use civil courts and the lower standard of proof, and use bully tactics to prevent people from having a fair trial.

      Thatnks for trying tho.. lets see if you can copy/paste as logn a text that is actually on-topic..

    6. Re:Against intellectual property by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "Third World" died when the "Second World" vanished with the U.S.S.R. It's been the "Developing World" since 1992. Update your rant.

  7. Fear of standing up for one's self by LoadWB · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is all to common a theme these days. People are unwilling to stand up against tyranny, which is exactly what this legal campaign is. It's very similar, IMO, to the racketeering of DirecTV against people who had purchased smart card programming equipment.

    If people would take a stand against the RIAA/MPAA when it comes a-knocking, a lot of light would be shed on their lair of demons. As said by the original poster, this would be a great chance to publically question the (RI|MP)AA about their calculations and figured, and tactics, and have the answers on record. Even if the individual being sued had a judgement made against him/her, I do not believe it would be anywhere near what the desired settlement would be, and it would finally set a precedence for limiting what could be sought in future cases.

    If no one stands up against them, they will continue to rape and pillage the consumer. Think about "A Bug's Life,"; the RIAA/MPAA grasshoppers NEED us ants, and they KNOW we are strong and outnumber them, but somehow they are able to bully us into submission.

    1. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by Flaming+Foobar · · Score: 2, Interesting
      This is all to common a theme these days. People are unwilling to stand up against tyranny, which is exactly what this legal campaign is

      No, they're just doing their job. If you aren't happy with their ways, stop buying music. That's the ticket. Soon they'll be bankrupt and the world will be a much better place.

      --
      while true;do echo -e -n "\033[s\n\033[u\134_\033[B";done
    2. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by st0rmshad0w · · Score: 1

      No, not really, its just that the concept of equal justice under the law seems to have gone ight out the window.

    3. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by bradword · · Score: 4, Interesting

      TThere is one major flaw with everyone getting really pissed at the RIAA. Although I think their tactics are low and they are targeting the wrong people, they all have one thing in common. They are all committing illegal activities, and they know it. Although we like to think that just because millions of people are doing it, it somehow makes the action not quite as wrong, stealing music isn't legal.

      I am not saying for a minute that I have never done it, but I would know that if I got caught it would be because I was doing something wrong, not just because 'the man' is after me. Same with this DirecTV thing. Their were cheating them out of programming by getting a smart card that was illegal and getting them products for free. Why is it that people think stealing technology is fine? I still can't go to the store and grab some Twinkies off the shelf and it be ok. And please don't give me this 'it doesn't cost them any money for me to share songs or TV' stuff. 'I would have never bought the CD anyways'. Well I don't think the 'I wasn't going to buy that Twinkie anyways' would work in court. You buy the CD for entertainment, and now you are taking it for free.

      Again, I have done it myself, but at least I can admit to myself that it is wrong and I could get caught. If I did it would be 100% my own fault.

    4. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about all those brave americans who stood up to the all-powerful Iraqi war machine by waving flags and shouting "terrorist" at foreigners?

    5. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How much extra did the store owner have to pay to put the twinkie on the shelf?
      The RIAA? DirecTV?

      I'm not endorsing this activity, but I am tired of it being called theft. To beat a dead horse ... it's copyright infringement.

    6. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by HeyLaughingBoy · · Score: 5, Insightful
      People are unwilling to stand up against tyranny, which is exactly what this legal campaign is.

      Tyranny? Are you out of your mind?
      Tyranny is jamming a spear up your ass and then planting the other end in the ground and leaving you to die (cf: Vlad the Impaler)
      Tyranny is torturing a confession out of you because "we know you're guilty, so just admit to it."
      Tyranny is taxation without representation and quartering soldiers in private homes against the owners' wishes.

      Tyranny is not saying "we can prove you were complicit in violating our IP and we'll sue to recover damages."

      For goodness sake, people die because of true tyranny and you're whining because you can't get free tunes!
      Look, I'm all in favor of slapping the RIAA down when they go after people who haven't done anything, but for the rest of them, well, you play with fire, you burn your fingers.

      If you're so in favor of standing up to them why don't you go share a few million songs and send the RIAA anonymous emails about your activity. Then you can have your chance to stand up for the poor oppressed music listeners.
    7. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by jafac · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And please don't give me this 'it doesn't cost them any money for me to share songs or TV' stuff.

      Why not? Because it's a perfectly valid refutation of your argument?

      Copying is not theft. Yes, it's illegal. Nobody disagrees with you on that. Law is Law. But it's also illegal in Maryland to drive your car at night without a horse preceeding it by at least 90 feet carrying a lantern.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    8. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by horza · · Score: 3, Interesting

      TThere is one major flaw with everyone getting really pissed at the RIAA. Although I think their tactics are low and they are targeting the wrong people, they all have one thing in common. They are all committing illegal activities, and they know it. Although we like to think that just because millions of people are doing it, it somehow makes the action not quite as wrong, stealing music isn't legal.

      When half the country is doing it, from politicians to lawyers to grannies to children, if the majority of people are now labelled criminals then possibly the law needs a rethink. After all the laws are there to serve the needs of the society it is protecting. Laws are not something handed down from God, they are a made-up set of rules which evolve to suit society. For instance, in the UK our society evolved and we decided to remove the law requiring the death penalty. The American economy didn't collapse when slavery was made illegal, despite the increased labour costs. It would be interesting if some people were to write a couple of theory articles on society in 5 years should P2P be made legal for all material today. The music industry wouldn't collapse, it would just adapt, but in which ways?

      Phillip.

    9. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Many physical objects can only be used by one person at a time. If one person wears a pair of shoes, no one else can wear them at the same time. (The person who wears them often owns them, but not always.) This is not true of intellectual property. Ideas can be copied over and over, but the person who had the original copy still has full use of it. Suppose you write a poem. Even if a million other people have copies and read the poem, you can still read the poem yourself. In other words, more than one person can use an idea--a poem, a mathematical formula, a tune, a letter--without reducing other people's use of the idea. Shoes and poems are fundamentally different in this respect.

      Enough with the, 'Thank you Sir, may I have another?" attitude already.

    10. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by The+Unabageler · · Score: 1

      We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. --That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, --That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security. --Such has been the patient sufferance of these United States; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government. The history of the present bicameral legislature is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States. To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid world.

      --
      perl -e '$_="\007/4`\cp%2,".chr(127);s/./"\"\\c$&\""/gees; print'
    11. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

      "Right and wrong" and "legality" are two different things, that's why we have terms like "unjust law". The RIAA bought the body of Bono/Hatch legislation discussed here. Always bear that distinction in mind.

    12. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by teamhasnoi · · Score: 1
      Tyranny is torturing a confession out of you because "we know you're guilty, so just admit to it."

      How about starving to death because you can't afford to defend, and you can't afford to settle?

      It seems to me that the basis for comparison should not be the crime, but the hope of an average person to defend themselves from it.

      When you look at it that way, there's no difference.

    13. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by joepa · · Score: 1

      Although we like to think that just because millions of people are doing it, it somehow makes the action not quite as wrong, stealing music isn't legal.

      Not to split hairs over semantics, but, "illegal" is not necessarily synonymous with "wrong." Whether or not something is illegal depends ultimately on what the majority of the people in the legislature decide to do (e.g., vote for or against a given bill). Whether or not something is wrong, on the other hand, seems to need a more general justification.

      For example, just because a legislative body passes a law making it "illegal" for whites and blacks to intermingle doesn't make it "wrong" for Rosa Parks to sit in the front of the bus. It all depends on her justification for doing so. If she had been doing it solely to annoy the driver, then it probably would have been wrong. Since, however, she was doing it as an act of civil disobedience because she did not agree with the law, we historically regard her as being in the right.

      Now, comparing the sharing of copy-protected music to the civil rights movement is certainly a stretch. But if someone doesn't agree with the US copyright law, it can be just as much an act of civil disobedience to participate in file sharing. As many others have already pointed out in this thread, the major difference with the latter type of disobedience is that you are challenging not only US copyright law but also the RIAA -- an organization that has greater financial and, hence, legal resources than any individual that they are likely to go after.

      Because of this, the copyright law as applied to the sharing of copy-protected music is unlikely to get a fair challenge, as did the laws that represented the "separate but equal" doctrine. What, then, really can be justifiably said to be wrong are the RIAA's bully tactics. In contrast to what they say, they are not interested in what is objectively (or at least more highly inter-subjectively) right and wrong. If they were, they would allow a fair challenge. But if they did that, their entire business model (extort from the poor, lazy, scared and/or ignorant in order to keep their pockets lined -- remarkably like the business models of some folks in Redmond and Lindon, I might add) would fall apart.

    14. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by rajafarian · · Score: 1

      Hey bradword, may I suggest you spend a few minutes of your life learning the difference between wrong and illegal. If you substituted your use of wrong with illegal I would completely agree with your post, but as it is I don't. As an example, if I had never heard of the band in question and would never buy their music, I don't see why downloading it is wrong although I know it is illegal. But that's just me; you probably don't care what others think.

    15. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by Xyrus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You're definition is very narrow. Tyranny does not mean death. Tyranny is represented by any entity threatening punishement in order to accomplish its own gains.

      People aren't "whining" because they can't get free tunes. People are whining because a multi-billion dollar media conglomorate group are targeting and suing everyday people who cannot affor to fight back, even if they are innocent. So through "threatening", they extort what in comparison ios a smaller amount of money as opposed to the amount of money it would take for someone to hire a lawyer and fight them.

      In the US legal system, you don't necesarily have to win, you just have to last the longest.

      ~X~

      --
      ~X~
    16. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If your view of acceptable morals are decided merely by what the majority believes or by the decree of law, your are a sad, sad person indeed. I spit on thee and thy "morals".

      If the artist says "Don't copy without paying me.", copying it anyway is a (im)moral choice.

    17. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      Don't wimp out on me. Your otherwise excellent post says "Now, comparing the sharing of copy-protected music to the civil rights movement is certainly a stretch". It's not a stretch. Not at all. However this turns out, the effects of the "copyright wars" are far-reaching and may well decide whether America remains IF (and I say if) the RIAA had limited itself to simply suing people that copied it's songs I really wouldn't care about this issue ... let them exercise their rights under U.S. Copyright Law and be done with it. However, they've chosen to extend their fingers into Congress and have (along with their soulmates at the MPAA and Disney's legal department) engendered serious and detrimental adjustments to important parts of our laws. So, so far as I'm concerned, if mass illegal copyright infringement serves to bring the seriousness of this matter to the attention of Congress and the bulk of the population, then it is a legitimate form of social protest. What Rosa Parks and others like her did changed the way we live, put America a little closer to the vision of the Founders. Hopefully, those who use P2P will create a similar outcome.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    18. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by clambake · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Tyranny? Are you out of your mind?

      No, and let me tell you why... At the moment they are only prosecuting people who they believe have copied thier music, or so they say, but imagine, just imagine, that one day they realize how easy it is to get people to cough up money when threatened and start to file suits against anyone, regardless of guilt.

      Could YOU defend yourself if a multinational corporation decided to sue your for whatever? Even if you are GUARANTEED to win, you'd still end up paying tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees. Even if you are GUARANTEED to win, you could eat months, even years, of your life in the court room. Do you have that much money under your mattress? Does your job let you take off years of time to prepare a case to defend yourself against false allegations? Does your wife/girlfriend mind being penniless, homeless, probably living with your parents, racking up debt on your credit cards, having the negative stigma of a long, drawn-out legal battl eover your head, for a couple of years while you sort this mess out becuase she knows eventually you'll win and then be free to retrain your skills, find a new job and start your life over from the bottom again?

      Tyranny comes in many forms.

    19. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      Correction: ... decide whether America remains a world economic power. IF (and I say if) ...

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    20. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by clambake · · Score: 1

      I still can't go to the store and grab some Twinkies off the shelf and it be ok.

      Can you go to the store and take a picture of a twinkie? If yes, then what if you had a camera that could make an exact molecule for molecule copy of the twinkie. In that case would you be wrong coping the twinkie and walking out? Are you THAT brainwashed yet?

    21. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by CristalShandaLear · · Score: 1

      Grabbing Twinkies of the shelf of a grocery is not illegal.

      Buying Twinkies yourself and handing them out to whomever you please is legal.

    22. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Well yes, those are all wonderful examples of tyranny.

      Another great example is a large, theoretically illegal confederacy of corporations conspiring to subvert your government in order to rake in money while oppressing distribution of the arts.

      Both clearly qualify as tyranny, or "oppressive power". Open your mind.

    23. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well if you don't comply with the law in this county they will come after you with guns, eg: if you don't have enough money for taxes after paying RIAA. Guns > Spears. If you go to jail, they will stick other stuff up your ass.

      If you don't confess ie settle, you will have to fight a huge court case, so you really have to confess.

      Taxation without representation? see Canada where they have to pay tax on CD-Rs even if they don't buy music. See RIAA lobby control of congress. Do we get representation when RIAA buys our representation?

      Quartering soldiers in our homes, RIAA/MPAA jams music and movies etc into our homes but if we happen to make a machine to look at these things, then we are breaking their "IP".

    24. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      When half the country is doing it, from politicians to lawyers to grannies to children, if the majority of people are now labelled criminals then possibly the law needs a rethink. After all the laws are there to serve the needs of the society it is protecting. Laws are not something handed down from God ...


      I bet you Orrin Hatch, Fritz and Dubya would all disagree.
    25. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a question regarding democracy and law. Morals have nothing to do with it.

    26. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by iwadasn · · Score: 2, Insightful


      You think so? A lawyer showing up one day and saying "We think you did something illegal, so give us 10,000 today or we'll take everything from you tomorrow." when you don't even own a computer and clearly didn't do it (as many of them didn't) doesn't qualify as tyrrany?

      At the very least it's racketeering and extortion. Start just randomly demanding 1/2 a year's wage from random people many of whome never did anything like what you claim, and yet you can force them to pay it because they can't take 6 months off of work or pay 5 million dollars to mount a defense. I think that qualifies.

    27. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by dnaboy · · Score: 1
      Think about "A Bug's Life,"

      Huh... I'll have to remember to download that one...

    28. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you certain that all those Kazaa (or whatever) users are knowingly committing illegal activities? There are the music leechers who share copyrighted works intentionally, and then there are the Joe-users who see a list of song titles on their computer and click them.

      Another post clearly points out - sharing some files illegally equates to what kind of punishment? $3000 fine? $11,000 fine? Who determines the value of these files and/or impact on the industry?

    29. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by HeyLaughingBoy · · Score: 1
      imagine, just imagine, that one day they realize how easy it is to get people to cough up money when threatened and start to file suits against anyone, regardless of guilt.

      So you're saying that they're tyrants because they *could* at some point in the future sue people just because they feel like it?
    30. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by HeyLaughingBoy · · Score: 1
      At the very least it's racketeering and extortion

      For which there are known avenues for protest and legal remedies. The only answer to tyrants is force; that is not the case here.
    31. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by calidoscope · · Score: 1
      For which there are known avenues for protest and legal remedies. The only answer to tyrants is force; that is not the case here.

      In case you haven't got it through your thick head, any time the courst are involved, there is the possibility of deadly force being involved (police, marshalls and bailiffs are known to carry and use guns). People have been killed in police raids based on bogus evidence.

      The other aspect is that with few exceptions (such as the one covered in the article), judges have not paid attention to the issues of racketeering and extortion.

      Case in point, Lewis Kaplan, who ruled against 2600 magazine - refused to recuse himself even though it affected his former employer - something that Richard Nixon had the integrity to do wrt Penn Central's bankruptcy.

      Stupid git.

      --
      A Shadeless room is a brighter room.
    32. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any of you guys ever think one more step ahead? WTF do you think your favorite artist will be doing to pay the rent when he/she sells approximately 10 legit CDs a year and watches them get copied and "shared" a million times each?

      The RIAA is a bunch of shitheels, but don't think that stealing the music (yes, that's exactly what you're doing: taking something of value which does not belong to you) is a noble way to fight back, any more than looting to protest the high cost of TVs would be.

      Hopefully, iTunes or something like it will soon mean that electronic distribution can allow any small band to reach a large audience without getting screwed by the RIAA.

    33. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      Although we like to think that just because millions of people are doing it, it somehow makes the action not quite as wrong, stealing music isn't legal.

      Hmm... by that logic, congress can pass a law that would make it illegal to vote. Who cares if the majority of the population complains... they can't be right... since it's against the law.

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    34. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "They are all committing illegal activities, and they know it."

      No. If what they are doing was illegal they would face criminal prosecution.

      Copyright infringement is not a crime. These are civil lawsuits.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    35. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by dbIII · · Score: 1
      You're definition is very narrow. Tyranny does not mean death.
      It's simple - Tyranny is a system of government imposed by a Tyrant. This has nothing to do with that.
    36. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by dbIII · · Score: 1
      So you're saying that they're tyrants because they *could* at some point in the future sue people just because they feel like it?
      Sounds like a case for a pre-emptive strike for me. Someday that might get some of that vanishing Niger uranium and hide it in the recording studio - let's go get 'em boys!
    37. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by maximilln · · Score: 1

      They are all committing illegal activities, and they know it.

      The only illegal activity going on is changing the terms of sale after a sale. All sales are final. Ownership has been transferred. Accept it.

      stealing music isn't legal

      The music was paid for. There is no theft.

      Same with this DirecTV thing. Their were cheating them out of programming by getting a smart card that was illegal and getting them products for free

      The relevant point is the broadcast of information. There is no secret to the laws of physics. You can control only the transmission of a broadcast. You cannot control the reception of a broadcast. The information has been given away--now live with it. Any further argument is childish.

      To be metaphorical for a moment: Could you sue the aliens because they were listening? More than likely the aliens will vaporize you. The important point is that you would only sue the aliens if you could first enslave them to make them subservient. What does that say about the legal system in today's United States?

      Why is it that people think stealing technology is fine?

      Nobody is stealing anything.

      I still can't go to the store and grab some Twinkies off the shelf and it be ok

      Everyone knows that a Twinkie is consumable. If you share part of your Twinkie with someone else then you have less Twinkie. Everyone knows that information is not consumable. If you share information with someone you both keep a recollection of that information. There is no secret here. This is no surprise for the vendors of information based products. The vendor is well aware that the customer is fully capable of copying and sharing the product. If they think the sale is unfair they can raise the price. All sales are final. Ownership has been transferred. Live with it.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    38. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

      Compared to me borrowing my cousins CD to copy? Sure its 'cheating' but it isnt 'BAD' as in 10 commandmends from the bible bad. It wont be the death of commerce or society.

      RIAA should ignore home downloaders/sharers, and ONLY go after "REAL" pirates that sell their CDS for $5/pop and make REAL TAX FREE MONEY.

      re twinkies, if a million people steal 1 twinkie, thats a lot of $$$$$ lots to the bakery/shop, but if a billion people download one song each, NO ONE HAS LOST ANY $$$$$ at all. Is such a concept so hard to understand?

      I hope RIAAs next victim has a high priced lawyer as an uncle or something.

      --
      Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    39. Re:Fear of standing up for one's self by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      The RIAA is a bunch of shitheels, but don't think that stealing the music (yes, that's exactly what you're doing: taking something of value which does not belong to you) is a noble way to fight back, any more than looting to protest the high cost of TVs would be.

      Suppose that, given one TV, I could wave a magic wand and create a thousand identical TVs at zero cost.

      Supposing that I then gave them out to all and sundry for free... would I be stealing TVs? Would anybody be stealing TVs?

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  8. Will of the People by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Shouldn't it be up to the people to decide the laws, not organizations? When did it come to organizations, companies, being more powerful than the government? The government is suppose to be by, for, and of the People.

    1. Re:Will of the People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That ideal has not been a reality since shortly after the Constitution was written.

    2. Re:Will of the People by nwbvt · · Score: 1

      Don't confuse popular opinions on slashdot with the will of the people. There still is widespread support for intellectual property within the general population.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    3. Re:Will of the People by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 1

      One real issue is the American school system not doing enough to grind in certain principles.

    4. Re:Will of the People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh. Really? I haven't seen it recently. I use taxi drivers as a barometer for the mood of "Joe Average" and here (Ireland) NOT ONE supports current intellectual "property" regimes (and yes, they do understand the issues - Joe Average is either very smart in Ireland or humans are pretty smart anyway (and I go with the latter)).

    5. Re:Will of the People by dirk · · Score: 1

      The law is made by the people. The people elect their congress-critters. Yes, said congress-critters listen to companies a lot, because that is where their money comes from, but the companies do not elect them. In the US, the people get the kind of government they deserve, since they elect them. Unfortunatley, most people in thsi country want a crappy government so they vote for the same people over and over again. It also doesn't help that our election system only works with 2 parties, and any more than that means the least popular person will probably be elected.

      --

      "Information wants to be expensive" - Stewart Brand, the same guy who said "Information wants to be free"
    6. Re:Will of the People by kidgenius · · Score: 1

      Oh...since about 1997

    7. Re:Will of the People by gilroy · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Blockquoth the poster:

      There still is widespread support for intellectual property within the general population


      Oh, I call BS on you. Within "the general population" there isn't even understanding of intellectual property, much less "widespread support". Ask your friends: How many of them realize they're criminals for taping the last episode of Friends and lending it to a friend? How many even know that you have to pay royalties for singing "Happy Birthday" in public, and how many of them think that's a good thing? How many understand that when their high school teacher photocopied articles for them to read, it was illegal? How many think "As long as I don't charge for it, copying is legal?"

      If you're honest in the survey, you're going to find the answer is "a lot" -- indeed, probably most of them.

      I'm a fan of the general population and, unlike a lot, I don't think they're intrinsically stupid or unfit to govern -- indeed, they probably are better than anyone we've got actually doing it. But on this issue, the public is woefully under-, mis-, and ill-informed.
    8. Re:Will of the People by gilroy · · Score: 1
      Blockquoth the poster:

      It also doesn't help that our election system only works with 2 parties

      Historically, this is not true. Third parties have been strong (but regional) in US history. I saw an interesting article somewhere in the past week (and I can't remember where) that argued it is the growth of the federal government (relative to the states) that has channeled political influence into just two national parties.
    9. Re:Will of the People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You ask, "shouldn't it be up to the people to decide the laws?"

      Are you talking about the same "people," ie citizenry, that Slashdot posters regulary mock for being sheep?

    10. Re:Will of the People by swillden · · Score: 1

      I'm a fan of the general population and, unlike a lot, I don't think they're intrinsically stupid or unfit to govern -- indeed, they probably are better than anyone we've got actually doing it.

      Me too. It's a rare point of view here on slashdot.

      But on this issue, the public is woefully under-, mis-, and ill-informed.

      Are they? Or are they dead right? I don't mean they understand the law, I mean they understand what the law *should* say. I think that copyright law has gotten so badly imbalanced, what with the infinite terms, destruction of fair use, addition of criminal penalties to what should be a purely civil matter and general favoritism for the content industry at the expense of the consumer, that the public sees copyright as something inherently one-sided and therefore completely lacking in moral force.

      I don't think it's that the public misunderstands the law (though they do), so much as the law is out of touch with the public.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    11. Re:Will of the People by shark72 · · Score: 1

      "Oh, I call BS on you. Within "the general population" there isn't even understanding of intellectual property, much less "widespread support". Ask your friends: How many of them realize they're criminals for taping the last episode of Friends and lending it to a friend?"

      Not a criminal act.

      "How many even know that you have to pay royalties for singing "Happy Birthday" in public, and how many of them think that's a good thing?"

      I am aware that this is a rhetorical question, but my guess is that most of my friends don't lose any sleep over this one. Own a restaurant and don't want to pay the ASCAP/BMI license to perform copyrighted music in your establishment? Then don't. My friends don't have an "us vs. them" attitude toward songwriters -- songwriting is just a way to make a living, and asking that somebody respect your rights to the song you've written is not oppression in any meaningful context.

      "How many understand that when their high school teacher photocopied articles for them to read, it was illegal?"

      that's actually the classic example of the application of fair use doctrine. It's typically allowed.

      "But on this issue, the public is woefully under-, mis-, and ill-informed."

      You are correct on that point!

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
    12. Re:Will of the People by gilroy · · Score: 1

      Oh. I see now. You don't actually understand IP law either. Whether or not your friends lose sleep over "Happy Birthday" (and my point was, they probably don't), it's still protected and they most likely don't know that. Also, though you might think school photocopies is "actually the classic example of the application of fair use doctrine", it is in fact an infringement and not legal unless the copyright holder explicitly says so. It is typically overlooked as impractical to enforce -- it is not allowed and is not a Fair Use as defined by the courts.

      And that, by the way, was my point. Your "general population" neither understands nor approves of the actual state of intellectual property. They have a fuzzy, common-myth view of it and they go along with that, because they assume it "makes sense". When presented with the examples I offered earlier, every person I have talked to has commented "Well, that's not right" or somethng similar, indicating in fact a lack of support for the intellectual property laws as they actually exist (and are enforced).

    13. Re:Will of the People by maximilln · · Score: 1

      It's typically allowed

      mp3 sharing is typically allowed as well, until the stock market scheme runs its cycle and the industry run government needs to shore up its coffers. Back in '98 the national debt was going to be paid off by '05. Now the Federal Gov't is again looking at a multi-trillion dollar outstanding loan to the Federal Reserve.

      Guess who works to pay that back. :)

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    14. Re:Will of the People by shark72 · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to wag my credentials at you, but it's safe to say that I know a few things about IP law. ;-)

      You're correct that "fair use" is not an ironclad set of allowable activities, but a set of guidelines for determining if an otherwise infringing act is allowed. Often, the fine line between fair use and infringement goes to the court on a case-by-case basis. You can see these guidelines here. Notice that the first guideline references "nonprofit educational purposes." You said that this isn't a use defined by the courts -- did you mean that literally? Can you give me an example of a court finding against a teacher who photocopied an article for his or her students?

      When I stated that photocopying by teachers is "the classic example," I meant just that -- when explaining fair use doctrine, experts typically use the "photocopying by teachers" example quite a bit. This can be shown empirically by talking to any lawyers you know and asking them for some examples of fair use.

      I hope this has helped. You're correct that there's a lot of misunderstanding of fair use doctrine here on Slashdot, although most Slashdotters think that it has more teeth than it does.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
    15. Re:Will of the People by shark72 · · Score: 1

      "mp3 sharing is typically allowed as well, until the stock market scheme runs its cycle and the industry run government needs to shore up its coffers. Back in '98 the national debt was going to be paid off by '05. Now the Federal Gov't is again looking at a multi-trillion dollar outstanding loan to the Federal Reserve."

      That's an astute observation; too bad I've already commented in this thread. The vast majority of unauthorized copying of music is under-the-radar stuff that nobody's bothered with (although it's "typically allowed" more in the sense of the "copying the Friends tape" sense than the "teacher copying article for students" examples that the parent poster gave). This is why the rightsholders are being careful to go after the "whales" -- those who are trading thousands and thousands of MP3 files and thus more likely to be contributing to lost sales.

      Generally speaking, most laws go unenforced, and economics play a vital role in the tipping point. On the local level, the enthusiasm with which your local traffic wardens give out speeding tickets might be driven primarily by the department's budget shortfall, rather than an actual attempt to make the streets safer.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
    16. Re:Will of the People by gilroy · · Score: 1
      Blockquoth the poster:

      Notice that the first guideline references "nonprofit educational purposes." -- to wit,
      the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;

      That's one of the four things courts are to consider in deciding whether a use is fair use. The other three -- nature of the work; amount and substantiality of the copied portion; and effect on the potential market -- influence and can trump the first. For example, it is not legal for a teacher to photocopy an entire article or story for use in a class -- although many teachers (and indeed most people) would think that it was legal.

      From TEN COMMON COPYRIGHT PERMISSION MYTHS by Attorney Lloyd J. Jassin:

      9. Since I'm planning to use my work for nonprofit educational purposes, I don't need permission.

      Not necessarily. The key factor is not the user, but the nature of the material, how it is being used, and whether the new use adversely affects the value of the original work. Since even a nonprofit educational use can undermine the value of a copyrighted work, such organizations are not immune from copyright infringement suits.


      I can't provide a reference for a school being prosecuted, though I suspect it has happened. That doesn't matter. My earlier point is that certain infringements are not, customarily, prosecuted -- but that doesn't render them "legal". Corporations don't pursue schools because (a) it is impractical, in general and (b) the damages won could probably never outweight the bad PR generated.

      But that doesn't mean it's legal. Almost everyone, however, thinks that it's OK to copy for educational purposes -- end of story. Hence my statement that people hardly understand the IP regime and so cannot realistically be considered to "support" it.
    17. Re:Will of the People by shark72 · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the clarification. I agree with everything you've said in your last post. Thank you for bringing up another important point that many Slashdotters don't understand: "under the radar" DNE "legal."

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
    18. Re:Will of the People by maximilln · · Score: 1

      My earlier point is that certain infringements are not, customarily, prosecuted ... But that doesn't mean it's legal

      Doesn't that sort of system lend itself most readily to selective enforcement and abuse by any authority with the funds available to mount a prosecution?

      What of all men created equal and all that? Is there a real justification for why client A and client B are doing the exact same thing but only client A is targeted for prosecution?

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    19. Re:Will of the People by gilroy · · Score: 1
      Blockquoth the poster:

      Doesn't that sort of system lend itself most readily to selective enforcement and abuse by any authority with the funds available to mount a prosecution?

      Obviously selective prosecution is a danger in the legal system and has led to real abuses -- which is why DAs, for example, are watched pretty closely by citizens' groups. But you can't really eliminate it: There are finite resources and they need to be allocated. In civil cases, someone has to suffer damages to activate the law -- and it makes sense, IMHO, to say that only people who find the damages intolerable launch the suits. That is, if you do something which technically damages me but I don't care, why should the court system (or I) waste resources on following up?

      This does, however, allow the legal system to drift out of touch with popular expectation, leading to outrage and confusion if the law is eventually enforced "out of the blue".
    20. Re:Will of the People by maximilln · · Score: 1

      In civil cases

      I hadn't even thought of that. Why is the government subsidizing prosecution of civil cases? Sadly, licensing infringement is a criminal felony. Why is it that the violation of a glorified rental agreement is a felony while the violation of a real rental agreement is a civil case? I'll never know...

      I still don't agree that we rent music. I _BOUGHT_ the CDs. The music (and movies) are advertised as "own it today". The prevailing concept is sale and transfer of ownership. This quibbling by the media industry over "It's not really a sale! We only RENTED/LICENSED it to you!" is childish.

      But you can't really eliminate it:

      True, true. That's why they call this "life" and not "heaven".

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
  9. dear plagiarising bastard. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    if you're going to trumpet Brian Martin's work, do it with a link and a few excerpts.

    Against Intellectual Property, Chapter 3 of Information Liberation by Brian Martin

    1. Re:dear plagiarising bastard. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh. why? That's just stupid, the whole POINT is that you shouldn't have to do that. Personally, I think you should be free to post it so long as you don't claim you authored it (that would be fraud/plagiarism, a separate issue from whether you should be barred from passing on the information) - but in this case, no such claim was made, it was an AC post.

    2. Re:dear plagiarising bastard. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      failing to source is the same as claiming you wrote it.

    3. Re:dear plagiarising bastard. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No its not. The AC didn't sign his name to it.

  10. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    driving above the speed limit is illegal. Just don't do it! Someone, please explain this to the driver of the 18-wheeler tailgating me!!

  11. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If it is illegal, then I would like to see them doing this in criminal court. I would bet that the jury would asked for $20 fine per CD and done with this.

  12. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by volsung · · Score: 2, Informative

    Posting to Slashdot while driving is also illegal in some states.

  13. Case disclosure by failedlogic · · Score: 2, Interesting

    As part of a fair trial, wouldn't the RIAA have to supply a list of the songs it accuses you of downloading? If so, one could go to the store and buy the songs before the trial. Lose the receipts so there's no correlation between the trial date and the date you downloaded the song. Then in court, you prove to the RIAA you already owned copies of the songs.

    Better yet, go to a used record store and save some money in the process!

    1. Re:Case disclosure by rootofevil · · Score: 1

      not to mention buying used gets you older looking discs. if they have any that are cracked/scratched beyond usability thats even better, as it lends credibility to the "i had to encode it lest i not be able to use this crappy medium anymore" defense.

      but seriously, unless you buy them used, you are just adding fuel to the fire by buying from them at all.

      --
      turn up the jukebox and tell me a lie
    2. Re:Case disclosure by mtempsch · · Score: 3, Insightful
      a list of the songs it accuses you of downloading?

      From the article: "lawsuits that the RIAA filed against individuals charged with illegally sharing songs" (emphasis mine)

    3. Re:Case disclosure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      As part of a fair trial, wouldn't the RIAA have to supply a list of the songs it accuses you of downloading? If so, one could go to the store and buy the songs before the trial. Lose the receipts so there's no correlation between the trial date and the date you downloaded the song. Then in court, you prove to the RIAA you already owned copies of the songs.

      What good would that do? They're suing uploaders, not downloaders. However many copies of the song you own, you aren't entitled to make duplicates for random strangers.

    4. Re:Case disclosure by a_n_d_e_r_s · · Score: 1

      Sorry but sharing a song to _anyone_ is a copyright infringement - even if you own the CD. You may however loan it to a very good pal of yours - but letting anyone download it are infringement.

      --
      Just saying it like it are.
  14. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    Don't confuse what is legal and what is right. It would have been illegal for my ancestor's slaves to run away or disobey (I happen to be a distant descendant of a very wealthy slave trader), but that doesn't make it wrong.

  15. Uhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Brian Martin is against Intellectual Property, what is the problem if an AC, who is not going to benefit if he gets modded up or down anyway, posts it? Its hypocritical to say that IP is bad and posting an article about why IP is bad is not acceptable.

    1. Re:Uhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      because Brian Martin isn't against credit where it's due, you ass.

    2. Re:Uhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Glad to see that you have reduced argument down to petty name calling.

      At least we know you still are intellectually hypocritical.

    3. Re:Uhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      every AC isn't the same person, ass. i'm not the person who called out the original poster. regardless, your arguement relies on giving an author credit being the same as Martin's criticisms against IP - a position that holds no water if you have any familiarity at all with Martin's argument. in no way does Martin oppose recognition for your work, he opposes keeping your work out of the public domain to the detriment of those who would benefit most. if your argument had a shred of intelligence, i probably wouldn't have called you an ass, but seeing as it's wholly ignorant and confused, you're an ass.

    4. Re:Uhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      every AC isn't the same person, ass.

      I never made such claim and since you are going to call me names instead of posting logical arguments, I refuse to give you any more of my time.

      Bye!

    5. Re:Uhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      in order for an argument to degenerate, it had to have begun. i came out swinging with insults, you assumed i was the original poster. in any case, i posted quite a logical argument regarding your complete and utter lack of understanding of Martin's argument, it simply requires you to take some time to READ Martin's work. obviously you're not going to do that, so you can't possibly respond to it. thanks for playing.

    6. Re:Uhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what is the problem if an AC, who is not going to benefit if he gets modded up or down anyway, posts it?

      It is better to give credit to the source when sharing information. It avoids the label of plagiarism, and it would provide a way for an interested reader to find out more about the original author (e.g., the remaining chapters of his work, etc.)

  16. Re:Class-Action Defense? Class-Action Defeat. by turnstyle · · Score: 4, Insightful
    er, just about every case so far has either settled for about $3000, or lost for about $5000-$10000.

    Is that the sort of "class defense" you had in mind?

    --
    Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  17. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by nwbvt · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Advising people not to pirate music is modded -1 Troll? Thats just sad mods.

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  18. Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    I've never had a situation like this before, where there are powerful plaintiffs and powerful lawyers on one side and then a whole slew of ordinary folks on the other side.

    I guess she's never worked in criminal court.

    1. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In criminal court she wouldn't encounter any plaintiffs at all, powerful or otherwise.

    2. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The state (or local government entity) is the plaintiff in criminal cases. It tends to be powerful.

      The plaintiff in criminal cases also pays both the prosecutor's and the judge's salary.

  19. Fantastic... settle with coupons by hagbard5235 · · Score: 4, Funny

    And if they loose, the each member of the class could provide a coupon to the RIAA for $5 off a CD...

    1. Re:Fantastic... settle with coupons by glpierce · · Score: 1, Funny

      "And if they loose, the each member of the class could provide a coupon to the RIAA for $5 off a CD..."

      Considering that the case is all about the monetary worth of mp3s, they should have to share precisely $5 worth of mp3s with the RIAA.

      --
      G
    2. Re:Fantastic... settle with coupons by clambake · · Score: 1

      "And if they loose, the each member of the class could provide a coupon to the RIAA for $5 off a CD..."

      Considering that the case is all about the monetary worth of mp3s, they should have to share precisely $5 worth of mp3s with the RIAA.


      Well, that is just about brilliant! Walk in to the court room and make the following case... If a copy of an MP3 is worth real money, and somebody is willing to pay $5 for an mp3 of me singing a song I just made up now (like, say, my brother will), then a DVD full of copied of that song seem like appropriate payment, don't you think? If the case is presented convincingly enough, I have a feeling the judge my agree with a wink and a nod and you'll end up being a hero.

    3. Re:Fantastic... settle with coupons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or go to your local library, and ask for a donation of CDs that are never checked out.

      Let's give them back their 300 copies of "Willenium".

  20. The metacase by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't steal music. It's that simple.

    Don't support artists that support what you don't like.

    Don't be a lame-ass lemming who can't possibly live without the latest 15-minute-hit song.

    Wave the flag all you want but nothing will change unless you hit them in their pocketbooks. But you're too weak to do that, aren't you.

    Americans don't care about their Constitution; we've proved that by the way we act. The Courts, which also don't care about the Constitution, and are too technically ignorant to accurately grasp the nature and scope of the cases brought before them generally decide along this line:

    'Quit disrupting Business. What are you, some kind of fascist?'

    We didn't get here overnight and we're not going to get home overnight either, but if you can't bring yourselves to obey even a bad law because it's inconvenient how are you ever going to see the bigger fight, let alone win it?

    You're becoming the flaccid little sheep that authoritarian governments dream about.

  21. Judge isn't too bright by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'I've never had a situation like this before, where there are powerful plaintiffs and powerful lawyers on one side and then a whole slew of ordinary folks on the other side,' said U.S. District Judge Nancy Gertner

    This judge hasn't seen many cases. The situation she describes is very common in lawsuits & criminal trials (especially death penalty cases).

    1. Re:Judge isn't too bright by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "'I've never had a situation like this before, where there are powerful plaintiffs and powerful lawyers on one side and then a whole slew of ordinary folks on the other side,' said U.S. District Judge Nancy Gertner"

      This judge hasn't seen many cases. The situation she describes is very common in lawsuits & criminal trials (especially death penalty cases).


      Far from being "very common" to have a powerful plaintiff in criminal cases, there is no plaintiff at all in criminal cases.

  22. Bout time by mehaiku · · Score: 5, Funny

    I am so happy to see that fine, upstanding corporate citizens such as the RIAA, are finally having their day in court. Our society will never be able to progress and move forward until the plebeian consumers finally understand their proper place in society. This example serves to prove why corporations should finally be given the right to vote in elections, according to how much money they attribute to the economy. Only when the corporations move forward, can the rest of our society follow.

    1. Re:Bout time by clambake · · Score: 1

      This example serves to prove why corporations should finally be given the right to vote in elections, according to how much money they attribute to the economy.

      I hope they DO pass that law... Considering how many corporations hide thier money in tax shelters and offshore our jobs, they'd be given negative votes...

  23. Equal Protection under the Law by RocketScientist · · Score: 5, Interesting

    OK, here's my little mini-rant on the topic of legal protection and public health care.

    Nowhere in the Constitution of the United States or the amendments thereto is there a guarantee for health insurance. Or a guarantee that the government will take care of your doctor and drug bills when you get old. Nowhere. Go, read it, I'll wait.

    Done? OK, but you'll notice in several places a reference to "equal protection under the law".

    Don't socialize medicine. Socialize the legal profession. There's a constitutional basis for it, or at least more of a constitutional basis for it than socializing medicine. Give everyone equal protection in a court of law, something these people (and people accused of drug offenses) don't have.

    Let's have lawyers like the Canadians have doctors. Let's have Johnnie Chochran representing some rich white kid who downloaded music from whatever kids are downloading with these days, and let's have it cost him absolutely nothing.

    1. Re:Equal Protection under the Law by nwbvt · · Score: 1

      I hate to tell you this, but your idea has already been implemented. Everyone has a right to a lawyer, and if you cannot afford your own the court will apoint you one. No, it most likely will not be Johnnie Chochran, as you don't have a right to a specific lawyer (that would violate Johnnie Chochran's rights).

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    2. Re:Equal Protection under the Law by Draknor · · Score: 2, Funny

      I think this is a wonderful idea! Unfortunately, I don't have much faith that it would ever happen, since lawyers tend to be a very powerful lobby, not to mention that many of our Congress-critters are lawyers, and trying to "socialize" them would produce probably the loudest screams for "free market!" and "capitalism!" that this country has ever heard.

      Still, it's fun to dream about :)

    3. Re:Equal Protection under the Law by LostCluster · · Score: 3, Interesting

      In 1779, the rule was that all criminal defendants were entitled to a trial by jury if they wanted one, and either side of a civil trial was entitled to get a trial by jury if they wanted one and more than $20 worth of property was in dispute.

      Now, in 2004,the rule is that all criminal defendants are entitled to a trial by jury if they want one, and either side of a civil trial is entitled to get a trial by jury if they want one and more than $20 worth of property is in dispute.

      Uhm... wait a second, I think a little inflation set in over the 200+ year span, yet the $20 value has been hard-coded into the Constitution and never revised. The point is that a jury trial is much more expensive for all involved partisipate in than a judge trial. "The People's Court" was a groundbreaking TV show because it showed a concept in courts that most people didn't know about, the Small Claims Court where both parties waive their right to a trial by jury and the entire case can fit into a short presentation to a single judge, with no lawyers allowed. The thing is, however, most businesses that can afford high-priced lawyers will always demand a trial by jury whenever being sued in order to stay out of such an environment... because that environment levels the playing field and makes unequal ability to afford a lawyer worthless.

      It'd be interesting to see what would happen if that right to demand a civil trial by jury was moved from $20 to $20,000... if the RIAA didn't have their advantage-by-lawyer and had to prove each case one-by-one at appointed hours, would they still be able to do what they're doing?

    4. Re:Equal Protection under the Law by rodrigogo · · Score: 1

      Amen to that! Why should the amount of money you have affect the quality of your defense! and against anybody who chooses to accuse you of anything! It might not stop the suing culture in the States but itd be a start.

      Sharing your music for other people probably is illegal anyway tho...

    5. Re:Equal Protection under the Law by TRACK-YOUR-POSITION · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I confess to being woefully ignorant of American law (I'm American), but I don't think you can get a court appointed attorney for civil suits, like these RIAA cases.

      I'm vastly more ignorant of Canadian healthcare, but I was under the impression that when they say "socialized medicine" up there, they aren't pussy-footing around like John Kerry--the fees a doctor can charge are set by the goverment. So "socialized law" would mean all lawyers charge the same rates and serve all clients equally, I suppose. It's a nice idea, and the grandparent is correct that it makes vastly more sense than socialized medicine (though I think socialized medicine itself makes a lot of sense relative to the current double-digit-inflation American system). You could even make a pretty good libertarian (not anarchist) case for it.

      But it breaks down, because the government itself is a party to lawsuits frequently. There's a serious conflict of interest in giving the government that much power over the lawyers who may be called upon to challenge the government.

      On the other hand, the status quo seems completely unworkable as well. Forget whatever views of intellectual property you have--here we have huge corporate interests setting their full legal weight against regular individuals, not just to stop them from doing something, but to make an example of them. That's, well, totally fucked.

    6. Re:Equal Protection under the Law by tjic · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Don't socialize medicine. Socialize the legal profession.

      So then all of us will have legal representation on a par with crack heads and migrant workers? Color me extremist, but if I'm being charged with some serious crime that I didn't commit (or even that I did commit, but under extenuating circumstances), it's my life that's on the line: I'd prefer to be able to shop around and use the resources that I've worked all my life to amass to find a good lawyer, and properly motivate him to defend me.

      Let's pose a hypothetical: I run a light, hit some other car, and put someone into a coma.

      Under a socialized legal system, the prosecutor works for The State, the judge works for the State...and my defense attorney works for the State. Hmmm...this is already troublesome...

      I tell my attorney (who doesn't work for me, and gets paid the same unionized salary for the next 30 yrs no matter how he does on my case) that (a) the light might have been broken: it was definitely green when I went through it; (b) the cop who pronounced me drunk didn't give me a breathalyzer, he merely made me touch my fingers, and I've got a 3 DEXterity; I'm a teetotaler and have never had a drink.

      My attorney has a heavy case load, because the State listens to taxpayers and doesn't fund defense attorneys well (and why should they? they do nothing but defend scumbag criminals!). The cop insists that I was drunk, and the attorney doesn't have the time, energy, or inclination to subpoena a public works guy to testify that the light has been broken years. My attorney's best effort is to plea-bargain my sentence down to 5 yrs in jail, and the loss of my home.

      In the free legal system, I realize that my life is at stake, I mortgage my house and draw down my retirement account, and hire the best attorney I can afford. He's got a 30-and-1 average in court. His firm subpoenas not just the public works guy, but all of the maintenance records on the light for the last 10 yrs. It turns out that the light hasn't been serviced once, and the records contain several other complaints. My lawyer subpoenas the cop, puts him on the stand, and grills him: "back in police academy, you were taught the proper way to test someone for sobriety? Did that course cover people with poor manual dexterity? What did the course say that you were supposed to do? You don't remember?!?! Well, let's refer to the textbook..."

      It's tragic that some folks don't produce enough assets to buy really outstanding legal representation, just as it's tragic that some folks don't produce enough to buy first class platinum-plated super-premium health care...but in neither case are their lots in life going to be improved by outlawing the free market.

      When you outlaw the free market, you outlaw competition, and you outlaw excellence. Money may be corrupting, from time to time, but in the absence of money, the corruption is even worse, and harder to track: things are bought and sold, just like always, but with back room favors, etc.

      In your hypothetical socialized legal system, some lawyers are still going to be better than others. How do you think they're going to get allocated to defendants? The local school district president's son got stopped with a pound of pot in the trunk, but his dad knows the scheduling official at the Ministry of Law, and he can...

      You get the idea.

      The free market isn't perfect. It's just better than all the alternatives.

    7. Re:Equal Protection under the Law by AdrianG · · Score: 2, Informative

      You have a right to legal council in a criminal trial. You are on your on own in a civil trial.

      Adrian

    8. Re:Equal Protection under the Law by dougmc · · Score: 1
      Everyone has a right to a lawyer, and if you cannot afford your own the court will apoint you one.
      That sounds fine and all, but that's only for criminal cases. The court will not appoint you a lawyer if the RIAA sues you.
      No, it most likely will not be Johnnie Chochran
      Actually, (for a criminal case) it'll probably be some overworked, brand new attorney who will not be able to mount anything but the weakest possible defense. Especially if your skin is black or brown.
    9. Re:Equal Protection under the Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, I don't know how it works in other provinces, but here in Quebec, I can choose which doctor I want to visit. Admittedly, if I simply show up at the hospital, it's understood that I'm just going to have to deal with the next available doctor - but this is the same with US hospitals, am I correct?

      In general, though, for medical services there is a certain amount of free choice available - good doctors tend to be swamped with patients, and bad doctors eventually choose a different profession. It's typically understood that if you're having an immediate concern, the doctor will squeeze you in sooner rather than later, and if it's later, well, you're free to go to the hospital or find a different doctor.

      Health care is simply 'socialized' in that doctors are paid by the state. That's it. There's still free choice, and there's still some element of self-regulation, but I can go to any health clinic, hospital, or medical doctor in the province, take out my little medicare card, and still be cared for - without having to pay exorbitant fees.

      If the doctor isn't competant, or can't attend to my medical needs in a timely fashion, well, he'd better shape things up, or his patients will abandon him and he'll have to close his practice.

      I can only imagine that a socialized legal practice could operate on a similar basis.

    10. Re:Equal Protection under the Law by gilroy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      GAH. Accidental return sent the comment before it was done. Shouldn't slashdot set the default to be "preview" and not "submit"? :)

      Just to take the other side:

      Why should you be entitled to a better defense simply because you have more money? What about "equal protection under the law"? And it's very convenient to say, "Oh, but the poor don't produce enough... it's their fault." But maybe you got your money through unscrupulous or even illegal means. Being rich or being poor doesn't really say anything about your moral worth. Even hardworking people sometimes get hit with financial disaster.

      You say "the State listens to taxpayers and doesn't fund defense attorneys well" because "they do nothing but defend scumbag criminals!" But by your own rules, they don't defend only "scumbag criminals" -- and everyone knows it because there are no alternatives. Do you really think that people would allow an unbalanced system to persist when they know that, if they ever get called into court, they will have to use those same lawyers? You see, here the holy "enlightened self-interest" argument of rabid free marketeers comes back to haunt them. If everyone's access to lawyers is only to the same pool of lawyers -- if you can't secure an advantage through material wealth -- then there is strong societal interest in having the system be fairer. It's the whole "veil of ignorance" thing.

      You argue that the system would still be unbalanced since individual abilities are unbalanced (fair enough), and that there could be corruption because a person of influence could swing a better lawyer by suborning the process. Indeed. Of course, the process we actually have is unbalanced by design and leads to the same result -- and equal protection is equally a joke there. Faced with a choice between a system that does evil by a failure of its principles, and a system that does evil by proper execution of its principles... hmm, I think I'd rather the one where the imbalance is a corruption, rather than a feature, of the system.

    11. Re:Equal Protection under the Law by Agripa · · Score: 2, Informative

      In addition, those who practiced law were not licensed in 1779. Lysander Spooner practiced law in Massachussets during the time licensing was added as a requirement state by state and fought against it. Does anybody really think the law will not become more expensive and needlessly complex when licensed lawyers have the opposite interest? That would be like doctors, another licensed profession, advocating access to drugs without perscriptions. It is not in their collective best interest.

      In California you are not entitled to a jury trial for any offence costing less then $1000 and requiring less then 1 year in jail. I imagine it is much the same in other states.

    12. Re:Equal Protection under the Law by rgoldste · · Score: 4, Informative

      $20 in 1789 (when the Constitution was ratified) would translate to $415.22 in 2003.

      Here's the nifty calculator that I used: http://eh.net/hmit/ppowerusd/

    13. Re:Equal Protection under the Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Trial by jury has been eroded by summary judgement rulings. Especially when one seeks to sue the government for wrongdoing.

    14. Re:Equal Protection under the Law by trolledtruth · · Score: 1
      But I don't think that inflation has set in by three orders of magnitude over 200 years. According to this document, if we adjust for inflation from, say, 1802 to 2002, you get:

      $20 1802USD = $333 2002USD

      So, we'd need to adjust for more than inflation; we'd need to adjust for the public acceptance of the insane corporate culture that now pervades our society. Corporations have gotten laws passed that push huge penalties onto individuals. Copy a VHS movie get a $20,000 fine? How can an individual possibly combat that? That would have been about $1200 in 1802, and that's still quite a bit today.

      I do think your point about moving the right to demand a civil trial by jury from $20 to $20,000 is interesting. Fireworks would happen.

    15. Re:Equal Protection under the Law by ptudor · · Score: 1

      Any chance you could point out where that is in the CA code? I'd just like to read about it in context. Wish I'd known that during my four days as a juror. We did realize it was likely a three strikes and ended with a mistrial.

  24. Re: Those who stood up... by turnstyle · · Score: 1
    "What really needs to happen is that someone with an extensive music collection, and the desire to fight this, needs to leave various P2P applications open 24/7 with access to their vast, legal music collection, so that someone will notice."

    Go for it!

    PS: those who stood up (and didn't settle) lost more money.

    --
    Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  25. Gee by nwbvt · · Score: 4, Insightful
    People who broke the law are forced to pay fines. Its almost as if they were not supposed to break the law in the first place.

    Bring it on mods.

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    1. Re:Gee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But these are not fines they're settlements.
      A court fine would take into account the true damage caused with limits not the claimed damage and it would also take into account the ability to pay.

    2. Re:Gee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not a fine, dumbass. Only the govenment can levy fines.

    3. Re:Gee by nwbvt · · Score: 1

      They are taking settlements to avoid fines which would be more expensive.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    4. Re:Gee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Zippy the Pinhead speaks from his black-and-white little universe where everything is crystal clear-cut and unjust laws don't exist.

    5. Re:Gee by st0rmshad0w · · Score: 1

      People who broke the law? Like the record companies' price fixing?

      They paid squat and furthermore got to unload warehouses full of crap on schools and libraries too boot.

    6. Re:Gee by nwbvt · · Score: 1

      And they were forced to pay as well. What do you know? Its almost as if we had some sort of legal system.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    7. Re:Gee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are taking settlements to avoid fines which would be more expensive.

      I strongly suspect that the people settling are in fact liable, but I'm sure you appreciate as well as I do that they are settling as much to avoid the costs, both in legal fees and in time, of fighting the case as to avoid any fines. Pretending otherwise is dishonest.

    8. Re:Gee by kiltedtaco · · Score: 1

      This is the same rediculous logic that's causing so much of the problem. Simply because the record companies are big, bad, and evil, doesn't mean that anyone stealing music is right to be doing so.

      This is essentialy an ad-hominem attack on a company. Slashdot is famous for this.

    9. Re:Gee by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      they're paying settlements..

      because of fearing that the big lawyers of them would get bust them more in court.. ...which means that there's no fair trial or anything, just bullying.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    10. Re:Gee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean a cartel.

    11. Re:Gee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Liability requires a court ruling. None is taking place due to these "settlements." Your argument fails.

    12. Re:Gee by huchida · · Score: 1

      You're obligated to pay a fine to the government if you commit a misdemeanor. You are not required to pay a fine to a corporation because you violated their copyright. How can so many people miss this simple point?

      Not saying downloading is right or wrong, this isn't about that. But this isn't a "fine." It's not punishment, it's either a settlement or extortion depending on what side of the fence you're on.

    13. Re:Gee by st0rmshad0w · · Score: 1

      Yes but they paid far too little and very unevenly, they paid a small sum to ANYONE who purchased music in that timeframe. However I have purchased over $2000 of music in that period. I got about $13. Yeah, seems real fair....

    14. Re:Gee by st0rmshad0w · · Score: 1

      No, if the law is broken then the law should rectify the situation in a balanced fashion.

      They paid far too little and very unevenly, they paid a small sum to ANYONE who purchased music in that timeframe. However I have purchased over $2000 of music in that period. I got about $13. the guy who only bought on CD gets the same. Yeah, seems real fair....

    15. Re:Gee by calidoscope · · Score: 1
      People who broke the law are forced to pay fines.

      What the uproar is about is that people whom the RIAA suspects of engaging in copyright infringement are being asked to either pay $3,000 now or a lot more in legal fees if they don't cave in. Since the RIAA has a lot more resources to put into the legal case than Joe Sixpack, there is a legitimate concern that "justice" depends more on who has the most money for lawyers rather than the merits of the respective cases.

      There is a legal saying that it is better to let 10 murderers go free than to hang one innocent man. Similarly, it does society a lot more harm to have one innocent person go through the legal hell of being served with a ungrounded lawsuit than to have a dozen file-sharers get off scot-free.

      --
      A Shadeless room is a brighter room.
    16. Re:Gee by nwbvt · · Score: 1

      Well you probably lost $13 because of the "price-fixing". They have stopped the practice and how often do you see CDs advertised for less than what most likely would be the MAP? As Best Buy is learning, CDs as loss leaders isn't that great of a business strategy.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    17. Re:Gee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I gave you my name and address. Now let's hear your vitals, hypocrite. And stop posting at +2 when your comments don't deserve it.
      --
      Sick of pompous windbags? Change "Karma Bonus" modifier (Preferences, Comment Options) to -1 penalty.

    18. Re:Gee by maximilln · · Score: 1

      People who broke the law are forced to pay fines

      This is a democracy. The final authority rests with the individual. I did not agree to that law nor do I consider that law right and just.

      Sadly most judges will dismiss juries if there's any talk of the right to jury nullification of a bad law.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    19. Re:Gee by kiltedtaco · · Score: 1

      if the law is broken then the law should rectify the situation in a balanced fashion

      You just made my argument for me. You can't say "I can commit this crime against party X because party X commited this crime against me, but the court didn't punish them enough."

      These are two seperate issues. The ruling in one is not an excuse for stealing music.

    20. Re:Gee by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      You again? God you are pathetic. Why the fuck would I care about your name and address? Being that we are posting on slashdot, the relevant data is your screenname. Yet you continue to post as an anonymous coward.

      And I'll post at +2 as much as I damn feel like it. Jealous? Build up your own damn karma.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    21. Re:Gee by st0rmshad0w · · Score: 1

      No, I merely stated that the law should be fair and balanced in its application. You know, punishment fits the crime and all that? I never said anyone could commit a crime because someone else wasn't punished enough, I addressed the initial punishment. Consider also that one person who shares a few songs will be subjected to the same 'justice' as a guy sharing TB's of stuff 24/7. The tactics employed seem to say if you're going to share music, you may as well share a lot.
      After all, its not like the law is willing or capable of addressing either the severity of the crime or the extent of victims rightful damage claims.

    22. Re:Gee by st0rmshad0w · · Score: 1

      The instant you say "stealing music" in any debate on this subject you invalidate your entire argument. Learn the proper terminology please, this is about unauthorized publication.

    23. Re:Gee by nwbvt · · Score: 1

      Don't confuse democracy with anarchy.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    24. Re:Gee by kiltedtaco · · Score: 1

      Then i have no idea why that was relevant as a reply to my post. I don't have any opinion on your subject.

      And i'll reply to your other reply to my comment here, just for simplicity. Neither "Stealing" and "Unauthorized Publication" mean anything. There isn't languange to describe the exact nature of this crime. Both are basterdizations. Don't claim my argument is wrong because i'm not using the terms most favorable to your argument.

    25. Re:Gee by maximilln · · Score: 1

      Don't confuse democracy with anarchy.

      Does that really mean anything? What are you trying to say? Are you saying that jury nullification is a right only in an anarchy? Are you saying that an anarchy is the only system where the final authority rests in the people?

      democracy: a government in which the supreme power is vested in the people, the common people especially when constituting the source of political authority, he absence of hereditary or arbitrary class distinctions or privileges.

      So other than just trying to post something with 70s British punk buzzword in it, what do you mean when you invoke "anarchy"?

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    26. Re:Gee by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      From your origional post:
      The final authority rests with the individual.

      That is a pillar of anarchy, not democracy. In a democracy, the final authority rests with the people. Big difference between the two.

      Anarchy is not some "70s British punk buzzword", it is a political philosophy in which there is no central governing power. In such a state, the individual supposedly has all the power.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    27. Re:Gee by maximilln · · Score: 1

      That is a pillar of anarchy, not democracy.

      Are you trolling for fun? I gave you a textbook definition of democracy and you're calling it anarchy?

      Please provide a definition of democracy in which the final authority does not rest with the people.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    28. Re:Gee by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      I said the final authority of a democracy lies in the people. You said it lies in the individual. Do you really need me to explain to you the difference?

      Example 1: The people of the state feels it needs to spend money on what it considers a worthy cause. Bob does not feel the cause is worthy. In a democracy, the government elected by the people can tax Bob and use his money for the cause as the authority lies in the people. In an anarchy, Bob can choose not to support it as the authority lies in Bob.

      Example 2: The people feel Tom should be the ruler of the state. Joe does not feel that Tom should be ruler. In a democracy, the people are free to elect Tom as they have the authority. In anarchy, Joe can refuse to have Tom as his ruler as he has authority.

      Example 3: Jack thinks women are nothing more than objects and thus rape is ok. However, the majority of the population disagrees and thinks rape should be a crime. In democracy, as the authority lies in the people, they are free to enact a law making rape illegal desipte Jack's objections. In an anarchic state, as the authority lies in the individual (Jack), he is free to commit the act if he feels it is ok.

      Get the picture?

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    29. Re:Gee by maximilln · · Score: 1

      In a democracy, the government elected by the people can tax Bob and use his money for the cause as the authority lies in the people. In an anarchy, Bob can choose not to support it as the authority lies in Bob.

      The premise of a democracy is that the government is not doing anything that Bob, or the majority of his community, would disagree with. The government which has produced the RIAA spends billions each year without the approval of the people. In an anarchy Bob can override the majority if he leaves. I am not leaving and the majority of my fellows agree that prosecuting 14-year olds as felons is unnecessary. There is nothing anarchistic about my views.

      In a democracy, the people are free to elect Tom as they have the authority. In anarchy, Joe can refuse to have Tom as his ruler as he has authority.

      We are charged as responsible citizens of a democracy to rise up in insurrection against an unfair government. Sadly, the government has twice the strength and a hundred times the funding. There is nothing anarchistic about disapproving, as an individual, with the government.

      Get the picture?

      It's not about a picture. It's about a definition. I pulled my definition from www.m-w.com and double-checked it with www.dictionary.com. Both sites used the term "individual".

      Before you go reasserting your claims of anarchy, please provide a definition of "democracy" which does not bestow final authority to the individual. There can be no productive debate until we come to agreement on definitions. I agree with you that there is a difference between "the people" and an "individual". Now please provide a definition of democracy which does not include individuals.

      Example 3: Jack thinks women are nothing more than objects

      You obviously wanted to touch off a flame war, or appeal to a demographic, when you used rape as a topic. Even in an anarchist society rape is not acceptable. The community as a whole would see to that. I personally would slash your tires and send you packing if I caught you involved in such a thing. I would leave it to my underlings to dispose of your carcass.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    30. Re:Gee by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      "The premise of a democracy is that the government is not doing anything that Bob, or the majority of his community"

      No, just the majority. If Bob disagrees with the majority, the majority overrules him. In this case the majority of the population supports copyright law (again, do not confuse popular sentiments on slashdot with the majority opinion) even though you do not. Thus the government is free to enact copyright laws despite your personal objections.

      "The government which has produced the RIAA spends billions each year without the approval of the people."

      The RIAA is a trade group, not a government entity.

      "There is nothing anarchistic about disapproving, as an individual, with the government."

      No, but refusing the government is anarchistic by definition.

      "I pulled my definition from www.m-w.com and double-checked it with www.dictionary.com. Both sites used the term "individual"."

      Not in the context that you use it. Neither say the final authority is in the individual, as that would not be democracy. In a democracy, a majority can overrule the individual.
      The term is actually never mentioned in the Merriam-Webster defintion, and in the dictionary.com only in the context that it has "respect for the individual within a community". Thats not the same as authority.

      "You obviously wanted to touch off a flame war, or appeal to a demographic, when you used rape as a topic. "

      No, I was using an extreme example to show the faults of your argument. If you prefer you can substitue murder in there, it doesn't matter. If you are free to nullify a law you disagree with, so can anyone else, including a pyscho like Jack.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    31. Re:Gee by maximilln · · Score: 1

      No, but refusing the government is anarchistic by definition.

      That's leaning towards a dictatorship, don't you think? In a democracy the individual has a right, nay, a DUTY, to refuse illegitimate government requests. In a dictatorship the dissenter is locked away under charges of being an anarchist.

      Let us also get back to the original point:

      Someone else: People who broke the law are forced to pay fines

      me: This is a democracy. The final authority rests with the individual. I did not agree to that law nor do I consider that law right and just.


      This is a democracy. I am not an anarchist. Myself and the MAJORITY of my peers (making us collectively, the people) feel that the alleged violations are only questionably violations and CERTAINLY NOT felonies.

      I also called into question the right of jury nullification. This is the final power of the people: if a jury of your peers can find that the law is overstepping its legal boundaries. I did note in my post that:

      Sadly most judges will dismiss juries if there's any talk of the right to jury nullification of a bad law.

      Where is democracy now except tucked in the pocketbook of artificial personages known as corporations? I make no dance with anarchy. I am willing to see this matter through to the courts but I do allege that the courts are castrated lapdogs due to the absence of common knowledge of jury nullification.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    32. Re:Gee by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      " That's leaning towards a dictatorship, don't you think?"

      Nope. Even in a democracy, if you break the laws that the people put in place you will be locked up.

      "Myself and the MAJORITY of my peers (making us collectively, the people) feel that the alleged violations are only questionably violations and CERTAINLY NOT felonies."

      If true, then you and the majority can vote for new laws. However, in reality every reputable poll taken has shown that the majority of the population do not feel copyright law is unjust. Again, do not confuse sentiments within the slashdot community with the opinions of the general population as a whole.

      This sort of reminds me about the reporter who when she heard about Nixon's electoral victory expressed surprise, saying "None of the people I know voted for him".

      "I also called into question the right of jury nullification."

      First of all, jury nullification does exist in the U.S., so I'm assuming your beef is with the court's right to dismiss jurors with radical views.

      The problem with that is then all it would take would be one radical (not a majority of the population) to cause a mistrial whenever someone disagrees with a law. While you may like that when the radical is on your side, what if he is a neo-Nazi or Jack from the previous post?

      "Where is democracy now except tucked in the pocketbook of artificial personages known as corporations? "

      In the polls voting for the legislators to write the law. Remember civics class?

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    33. Re:Gee by maximilln · · Score: 1

      However, in reality every reputable poll taken has shown that the majority of the population do not feel copyright law is unjust

      Preposterous. The majority of the population has little interest in copyright law. Everyone agrees that a person should be compensated for their labors. This does not equate with copyright law.

      While you may like that when the radical is on your side, what if he is a neo-Nazi or Jack from the previous post?

      There is no such thing as a good law. Every law will inevitably be manipulated primarily with those with the money to fund legal budgets.

      n the polls voting for the legislators to write the law.

      Due to the inequities of the system there is no difference between majority Candidates A and B. Voting for the lesser evil is a common notion. It follows that the laws have not been written with the people as the final authority, but rather with the people as a silent cosignatory. Similar to a battered spouse.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    34. Re:Gee by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      " Preposterous. The majority of the population has little interest in copyright law. Everyone agrees that a person should be compensated for their labors. This does not equate with copyright law."

      How did Nixon get elected...?

      " There is no such thing as a good law. Every law will inevitably be manipulated primarily with those with the money to fund legal budgets."

      Ok, I'm game. What did that have to do with what you had quoted?

      "Due to the inequities of the system there is no difference between majority Candidates A and B. "

      First of all, I don't know about your district but in mine I have seen elections between people of very different political beliefs. Second how is the fact that certain political views are so common within the population that a candidate going against them cannot win an "inequity of the system". You are throwing out catchphrases, but you have no idea what is going on outside your own home, do you?

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    35. Re:Gee by maximilln · · Score: 1

      How did Nixon get elected...?

      You are only agreeing with me by making sport of the current electoral system.

      Ok, I'm game. What did that have to do with what you had quoted?

      Silly troll. In the context of jury nullification you had queried how I would feel about a Neo-Nazi or some other fringe group having such power. My response is that, as long as they're repealing laws, that can only be a good thing for society.

      in mine I have seen elections between people of very different political beliefs

      I'm sure they do. You've demonstrated an enormous wealth of knowledge about the bread and butter workings of politics.

      Second how is the fact that certain political views are so common within the population that a candidate going against them cannot win

      We shall start with the economics of starting a viable candidacy. Then we will proceed through the logistical hurdles of gaining support. For example, Nader will not be on the ballot in many states. Then we will move on to the media misrepresentation of any topics which actually affect the daily lives of the commoner. Finally we will shift our focus to the demographic of people who actually make it to the polling booth. In all cases the wealthy and established ruling class have no reliance on the general public and are not given to considering what is best for the common good.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    36. Re:Gee by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      " You are only agreeing with me by making sport of the current electoral system."

      That was actually a sarcastic remark about... nevermind, you wouldn't get it.

      " My response is that, as long as they're repealing laws, that can only be a good thing for society."

      So repealling rape laws and murder laws when applied to minorities would be a good thing? Wow.

      "For example, Nader will not be on the ballot in many states."

      Yeah, no one wanted him on the ballot.

      " Then we will move on to the media misrepresentation of any topics which actually affect the daily lives of the commoner."

      Thats it, blame the media for everything wrong in the world. Who else could we blame, you?

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    37. Re:Gee by sjoel · · Score: 0

      Spoken like a true moron. Nice website by the way. In your next article, I'll bet you'll tell us all about how you had a bran muffin for breakfast this morning. lol

  26. IHBT. IHL. HAND. by Everleet · · Score: 1

    Because expending our energies coming up with a system that's tolerable to everyone is out of the question. No, we'd rather wear ourselves out arguing "yes or no" long after it's been determined that neither of the positions really work.

    --
    It's tragic. Laugh.
  27. Update by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 1

    I'll clarify what I meant. There seems to be an overwhelming amount of people who see such sharing as okay. To say each and every person is doing something illegal seems contradictory when the laws which make such things illegal are suppose to be for the People.

    1. Re:Update by jafac · · Score: 1

      You're confused about something, and that's okay.

      Here's way.

      Copyright law has been vague since it's inception in the Constitution. From the phrase ". . . For a limited time" - to the current "fair use" exceptions, there's never been a clear-cut definition for Intellectual Property.

      A lot of people would agree that if some inventor, or writer, or artist, comes up with a truly unique idea, that benefits society as a whole, that that person should be able to be rewarded for their ingenuity.
      It's a simple idea that's just plain not so simple to put a solid wall around and define.

      For example, the provisions in the 1996 American Telecom Act spell out Fair Use, which permits someone to copy copyrighted works freely for certain puposes. Parody and Satire, Journalistic quoting, and Educational, I believe as well (and I think that they made exceptions to the last one to prevent people from copying textbooks wholesale to preserve the monopoly-pricing model the textbook industry maintains). Somewhere along the way, it became acceptable to say, loan your freind a CD to listen to. That's iffy, and I'm sure there are record company executives who don't like that idea. But what about loaning the CD to your wife? What about burning a copy for your wife (when that became technically feasible for Joe Sixpack?) - well, it was allowed and accepted, as was rampant taping with cassetted tape, of LPs. As long as these tapes weren't being duplicated and sold en masse for profit, it was accepted. But then came Napster - and suddenly, it became very easy to share your favorite songs with 200,000 of your closest friends online, anonymously, and it was a "perfect" digital copy that did not degrade from generations like analog taping did.

      One could argue as to whether this cut or enhanced record sales (most independent studies support that it enhanced sales - RIAA-funded studies generally blame the economic downturn on P2P file sharing though). That's beside the point. Copyright law made the record industry folks feel ENTITLED to a cut of every song distributed. The fact that music was now being distributed, and they didn't get a cut, made them unhappy. So they turned to "the letter of the law" and complained to politicians that if their currentl industry position was not preserved by law, then "people would become unemployed".

      Back in those days, there was much discussion about "Buggy-whip manufacturers" and new distribution models made possible by the internet, making their old business model (and thus the whole record industry promotion and distribution chain) obsolete. That it was best for the "Free Market" if they were allowed to become extinct.

      The last dinosaurs, I'm sure, fought like hell to survive in the face of a radical change of their environment. They were dinosaurs, ill suited to survival in that environment, to be sure. But they were still huge, strong, and powerful. As the RIAA is today.

      IP laws are a legal fiction, and they tend to not be easy for most people to grasp as a basic right. The loose wording leaves a lot open for interpretation. The obvious answer is to tighten up the legaleese, in a fair and equitable way, which allows Market Forces to work to drive the market in whichever direction the new technology allows.
      But the guys in Metallica still want their gold-plated swimming pool. ANd their lawyers are going to fight like hell to keep the legal environment tilted in their favor.

      The bad news is - neither American political party is at all interested in reforming the situation.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  28. gathering evidence by SQLz · · Score: 1

    I was wondering, even though its P2P, is it legal for the RIAA to gather evidence how they do? Maybe I don't mind some people in my computer but I don't want the RIAA poking around in my files without my permission.

    1. Re:gathering evidence by LostCluster · · Score: 1

      It's right now a legal bit of muddy water because two sets of rights come into conflict. The copyright owner has a right to try to protect their copyright, but the computer system owner also has the right under anti-hacking laws to post a "No accessing if you work for _______" sign and have that stick. So, basically, the RIAA has to comitt a civil tort against person X in order to get evidence to prove that person X comitted a civil tort against them. Two torts however do not offset... it'd be interesting if a group of RIAA lawsuit victims countersued the RIAA claiming illegal system access.

    2. Re:gathering evidence by bhima · · Score: 1

      They are suing people who are sharing files. How do you know the identity of everyone downloading using these P2P programs?

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    3. Re:gathering evidence by anagama · · Score: 1

      If you're going to use P2P, do it naked, outside, near a busy part of town. It will put you the appropriate frame of mind.

      I think many internet problems are due to the fact that computers are usually in private rooms. If people had to keep your computer in the front yard, exposed to everyone in the world, people would have a much better understanding of what being out on the internet really means. Essentially nothing is private at all. If a person is going to violate the law in public, he should understand the risks (and some laws really ought to violated publicly by virtue of their unfairness). But because computers are placed in private places, it feels like a private activity and it is easy for people to misunderstand how open everything they do really is.

      As for the RIAA in your computer, with P2P programs, you are essentially advertising to the entire world that you have something to share - there isn't a way to exclude users (as I understand it). An argument could exist if the P2P program was designed to allow only certain users (something more narrow than "anyone but the cops/riaa/etc"). In that situation, you might be able to call it some sort tresspass if the RIAA browses your files and the hope is, you could use the violation to supress the evidence. Of course, the RIAA isn't the government and this isn't a criminal case so it might be a bit more difficult than in a criminal case.

      Anyway, puting up music on a P2P system is about as open an activity as sitting on a street corner outside a record store burning copies of cds for random pedestrians. Feels more private in the confines of your bedroom at your computer, but don't be surprised if someone calls you on it.

      We all know that the RIAA sucks - why not just stop using their product? Or even temporarily - a five day music strike where nothing was bought and sold. Never happen of course, but it would be interesting to watch. Personally, I haven't bought an RIAA disk since Napster got shut down. Believe it or not, I'm still living.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    4. Re:gathering evidence by ahfoo · · Score: 1

      I wrote to the guy who makes the PeerGuardian P2P firewall for Windows asking him about setting up an additional feature that would make a log file of the break in attempts that could be sent to the offending parties in a series of e-mails that started with a polite request not to violate the network policy and showing the list of IPs that were not accepted on the local network. Subsequent violations would recieve letters showing that the policy had been violated repeatedly and finally compensation would be requested after repeated violations and failures to acknowedge the requests to stop violating network policy. A copy of each user's e-mails would be kept in a central database somehwere like Groklaw or Bluetack and become the basis for a class action law suit. The guy said he didn't want to get in that deep.

  29. The metacase revisited by linuxislandsucks · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Copying an mp3 file to replace a cd that you bought is under the fair use requiremnts set up by court cases RIAA particpated in..its legall!!

    Copying music mp3 files of music you do not own and do not sell is also allowed uner the fair use guidelines for music..

    Warning the 2nd fair use req stated above only applies to music..

    Read the cases and law before you leap not after...

    --
    Don't Tread on OpenSource
  30. This already has started... by ScottGant · · Score: 5, Insightful

    CD sales are down...the RIAA is in panic mode. Many people already HAVE stopped supporting them which is why they're suing people left and right.

    The cat is out of the bag...the horse has left the barn....the _________(insert favorite metaphor here). The MP3 Genie is out and they can't put it back in. Sorry, but it's a losing battle.

    The industry will change...this is a fact. The RIAA doesn't like this because they're basically going to stop making the huge mark-up on the CD/Record Market they had cornered. But their monopoly is crumbling, and it's crumbling more and more as the day wears on. Their trying to plug the leaks but the whole dam is falling all around them.

    Is this good or bad? I honestly don't know, but it's going to be an interesting thing to witness! We've seen it many times in the past here, when a business is failing, the last-ditch effort is to issue lawsuits.

    Want to support a band/artist? Go see them in concert OR send money to them directly...and I mean directly TO them...not to the management/record company. Will people send off a check to Chili-Peppers? Don't know, stranger things have happened.

    --

    "Music is everybody's possession. It's only publishers who think that people own it." - John Lennon.
    1. Re:This already has started... by AaronGTurner · · Score: 1

      " CD sales are down..."

      Fully 6% of recorded music sales in the USA are now in the form of DVD, and another significant proportion is now in the form of legal downloads and even ringtones. That the CD medium itself is suffering is not necessarily significant any more than the lack of sales of pre-recorded tapes would be. What is more at issue is the value of recorded music sales. With the advent of downloads what we might see is people being prepared to down load half a dozen ($6 worth) of tracks from diverse artists rather than wishing to buy a series of CD-based albumbs with 90% of the songs not being of interest to them, and which would cost more like $100.

      Perhaps what we are seeing is the death of the CD as a medium for the single-artist fixed album for a significant proportion of the population. Perhaps in 20 years those of us who like albums of songs by a single artist will be seen as eccentric purists like people who like vinyl are being increasingly seen as?

      In any case it could also represent a shift in interest from music to film/tv/games (DVD and game sales are up, film attendances are up, and maybe music isn't so good as it used to be?) as a form of entertainment, so it would be interesting to see whether Warner sales are down on music, visual media, and the combination of the two. We might be seeing a shift in the medium of choice, in which case it is bad for recording artists and the RIAA, but not necessarily a problem for big companies with wide media portfolios such as Warner, Sony, EMI, etc.

    2. Re:This already has started... by dougmc · · Score: 2, Informative
      Perhaps what we are seeing is the death of the CD as a medium for the single-artist fixed album for a significant proportion of the population.
      Perhaps. Though in at least one case, the figures that the RIAA was using to show that `CD sales were down' was actually that the sale of CD *singles* was down -- which is a format that few people ever cared about enough to buy in the first place. Of course, the RIAA press releases and such didn't quite explicitly state that they were only looking at CD singles, but hid that in the fine print and footnotes.
    3. Re:This already has started... by Simonetta · · Score: 1

      Want to support a band/artist? Go see them in concert OR send money to them directly...and I mean directly TO them...not to the management/record company. Will people send off a check to Chili-Peppers? Don't know, stranger things have happened.

      No. Don't give them money.

      Take the money that you were going to give them and instead use it to buy inexpensive musical instruments like the ones used on your favorite recordings. Learn to play your favorite songs, melodies, and riffs. Teach anyone who asks you how you played a song. Ask anyone that you hear playing a cool piece of music how to play it.
      Learn to play as good as your favorite artists. Try changing the lyrics, melodies, and lead guitar riffs of the songs that everyone knows.

      Avoid expensive vintage name-brand instruments than be stolen by thieves, junkies, RIAA lawyers, or other shit-people. Learn to build your own instruments very cheaply. Bring your instruments to parties and jam. Use super cheap tiny amps or boomboxes as amps. Learn the simple electronics to get distortion, delays, and flanger effects. Get guitar effects programs for your PC where you plug your instrument into the sound card line-in and the line-out into a stereo or boombox amp. Learn from anyone and everyone and teach anyone and everyone what you know.

      A good way to learn how to specific songs and lead guitar breaks is downloading MIDI files of the songs. They sound stupid when played through the 'synth' on the PC sound card, but they will teach you the song's chord structure when studied with a MIDI music notation program. Did I forget to mention learning to read music? Public schools have cut out music education so it's up to you to learn on your own this most-important subject. Forget algebra, master music instead...it's more important.

      It's not going to be easy to shed the RIAA from our souls, but it will be fun.

    4. Re:This already has started... by hackstraw · · Score: 1

      CD sales are down...the RIAA is in panic mode.

      The RIAA does not care about CD sales. Why? They don't make CDs. A majority of what the RIAA does are lawyer games and this new internet file sharing thing is really giving these lawyers that cannot get real law jobs something to do that seems to be justified.

      People, please recognise and treat the RIAA for what they are. They are not a company, they have no business model, they have no products, they are a group of people that a) announce records as gold, silver, etc b) put little warnings on albums that use bad words and c) sue people. Personally, I don't understand how they have any grounds to sue because they do not own the copyrights and they are not loosing any money from copyright violations (in fact they benefit from them).

    5. Re:This already has started... by hwolfe · · Score: 1

      Hard to buy a CD single, when you can't find them on the shelves. It's probably been a couple years since I've seen them at Wal-Mart.

    6. Re:This already has started... by dbIII · · Score: 1
      The industry will change..
      This has been coming for many years - well over a decade ago music stores had the technical ability and the desire to burn CDs to order, but the major music companies didn't let it happen, and mp3 downloads filled the niche. The music industry has been crying poor since the invention of the audio cassette, has got gullible governments to put in parallel import laws to stop competition, and the current laws are just an effort by major music companies to protect their profits without them having to adapt like every other industry.
      when a business is failing
      Their business is a very long way from failing. Real production costs are decreasing all the time, but there is a lot of very strange accounting going on which ensures that musicians don't get to see any money until they sell a very large volume of CDs.
    7. Re:This already has started... by dougmc · · Score: 1
      Hard to buy a CD single, when you can't find them on the shelves.
      Ex-zactly. Well, it was never a popular format to begin with, and now that they've decided to not stock it at all in most places, the sales are down even more. [riaa]All due to illegal downloading![/riaa]
    8. Re:This already has started... by Ben+Hutchings · · Score: 1
      Personally, I don't understand how they have any grounds to sue because they do not own the copyrights...

      The RIAA doesn't sue. Its members do.

  31. False Positives by thermopylae300 · · Score: 1

    How would one go about giving their P2P bots false positives? I don't share any files illegally, but I think it would be amusing to see them accuse someone of doing it that actually wasn't.

    --
    Before the invention of eruptions, lava had to be carried down the mountain by hand and thrown on sleeping villagers.
    1. Re:False Positives by tsotha · · Score: 1
      I think it would be amusing to see them accuse someone of doing it that actually wasn't.

      Amusing and expensive. That's the reason for the outrage: You pay a pretty steep penalty for getting sued even if you win.

      The problem here is two-fold: Getting caught up in the court system is too expensive for normal individuals, and the penalty for this crime is too severe. If I were an enterprising young lawyer defending one of these people I would try to attack it from that angle. This business of considering each separate download a separate crime is what allows them to sue for such eye-popping sums people will settle with any reasonable risk/benefit analysis.

    2. Re:False Positives by thermopylae300 · · Score: 1

      I wasn't really clear with the whole amusing idea... I meant that if a group of people could produce false positives then they could derail the RIAA's efforts. For instance, the RIAA had to apologize after sending a threatening letter to Penn State about one of its Astro Servers. Professer Usher's Usher.mp3 produced a false positive. Of course, this would also produce false positives for illegal file-sharing folks. I know nothing about law, but I would think that some groups would like to produce false positives and be drug into court just to make the RIAA look bad. (like slashdot lawyers ... or people with a lot of money and a bone to pick with the RIAA)

      --
      Before the invention of eruptions, lava had to be carried down the mountain by hand and thrown on sleeping villagers.
    3. Re:False Positives by thermopylae300 · · Score: 1

      oops. Forgot the link: RIAA apologizes to Penn State

      --
      Before the invention of eruptions, lava had to be carried down the mountain by hand and thrown on sleeping villagers.
    4. Re:False Positives by tsotha · · Score: 1
      Well, if they just stuck to suing institutions instead of individuals, that would work. But they'd probably decide it's easier to sue Susie student for $500,000 and settle for half her college money since she can't afford to pay a lawyer $200/hr to defend her for six months. And make no mistake: the old joke about the guy who defends himself having a fool for a client is true. If she tries to defend herself she could lose by missing a filing deadline.

      So she'll pay because it'll be cheaper than paying that lawyer for a week. Even if she's a false positive.

  32. Can I mod this +6? by edremy · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I get so tired of the groupthink whining here at /. about the evil RIAA, the horrible costs of CDs and how piracy really isn't theft anyway.

    Don't like the RIAA's tactics? Don't like how they rip off artists and sue their customers? Then don't buy from them. It's simply not that hard- buy used CDs if you must, get freely downloadable music from any of a dozen sources, go listen to a local unsigned band and buy their CDs. I've bought exactly one RIAA album in the last three years, and that was because I was curious about iTunes. I still get to listen to interesting new stuff all the time.

    As far as file sharing, folks, as the law as written, file sharing of copyrighted works is illegal. No matter how you spin it (It's not theft, it's not wrong...), it's still illegal. If you think this is wrong, you have two options

    1. Don't do it
    2. Do it and take your lumps. That may mean losing your house when the RIAA sues you into oblivion. Too bad- you're engaged in civil disobedience, and that has consquences. If enough people disobey, eventually the laws will change, but that doesn't mean people don't get hurt. For far more serious examples, look up the US civil rights movement or Ghandi's struggle against the British.
    --
    "Seven Deadly Sins? I thought it was a to-do list!"
    1. Re:Can I mod this +6? by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And I get sick of people who blindly repeat their statement regardless of the subject.

      That people who downloaded or shared music that they had no right to are wrong is not being questioned at all here. WHat is beign questioned is how that is dealt with by RIAA and the legal system.

      By going through civil court the RIAA has to comply wuith a much lower standard of proof, and by their tactics they more or less ensure that people will not ghet a fair trial.

      Imho they are definitely right to pursue the people who infringe their rights, but things like proof for that should be held to proper legal standards.

      Saying how people should not be sharing music is not contributing to that discussion, it is redundant, and in fact, off-topic.

    2. Re:Can I mod this +6? by TRACK-YOUR-POSITION · · Score: 1

      Gandhi's struggle against the British was heroic, successful, admirable, and extremely inspiring, but pragmatically America's struggle against the British worked just as well--remember the Boston Tea Party? How the colonists dressed up as Indians to conceal their identity? How they destroyed British property and concealed that destruction? The Gandhi model is not the only model for social change. We Americans tend to prefer the Prohibition era "You pigs can't arrest us all!" method.

    3. Re:Can I mod this +6? by xigxag · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Do it and take your lumps. That may mean losing your house when the RIAA sues you into oblivion. Too bad- you're engaged in civil disobedience, and that has consquences.

      Really, why must people be forced to abide by this "rule" that civil disobedience means you have to accept the punishment for some bogus crime? Would it have been more noble or correct if George Washington et al. had meekly submitted themselves to be executed for treason? Should all those slaves who escaped from their plantations have willingly surrendered themselves and gone back to face the lash to fit these immutable laws of protest that you are subscribing to?

      Being allowed to the pants off of people for garden variety mp3 sharing is a perversion of justice, everybody knows it, and whether or not the act itself is improper, average citizens shouldn't have to fear facing bankruptcy for doing it. No-one expects to be bankrupted for running a red light, and in my book that's a far more dangerous offense, although equally ubiquitous.

      --
      There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
    4. Re:Can I mod this +6? by edremy · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The Gandhi model is not the only model for social change. We Americans tend to prefer the Prohibition era "You pigs can't arrest us all!" method.

      ???? That basically is the Ghandi model. "We're just not going to listen to what you tell us to do. Go ahead, arrest all of us- you'll run out of jails before we run out of protestors."

      Of course, jail construction is a huge growth industry in the US- we jail more citizens per capita than any other democracy.

      --
      "Seven Deadly Sins? I thought it was a to-do list!"
    5. Re:Can I mod this +6? by curious.corn · · Score: 1

      Nota bene the last sentence especially; I agree totally.

      --
      Mi domando chi à il mandante di tutte le cazzate che faccio - Altan
    6. Re:Can I mod this +6? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What nonsense. Do you complain when alleged murderers are sued in civil court for wrongful death because of the lower standard of proof? Frankly, if you want the RIAA to be able to pursue criminal sanctions, then you should be willing to give them full police powers to pursue those sanctions. But somehow I think you'd protest that, too.

    7. Re:Can I mod this +6? by EmperorKagato · · Score: 1

      I agree. There's only so much power the RIAA can have. It cannot have its hands everywhere and scaring your customers into "prohibition" of music sharing will not work.

      Those who do not learn from history will be victims to their own mistakes. The same mistakes that happened in the past.

      --
      ----- You know you have ego issues when you register a domain in your name.
    8. Re:Can I mod this +6? by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > Do you complain when alleged murderers are sued in civil court for wrongful death because of the lower standard of proof?

      Yes I do. They should be brought to justice in criminal court, not civil court. Once that has happened, it can happen that victims use civil court to get compensation, but that has nothign whatsoever to do with pubishing a crime, and it si extremely exceptional that such a thing stands a chance when someone has been found not guilty in criminal court. (exceptions exist, but like I said, EXTREMELY EXCEPTIONAL and as such no proof of the opposite)

      > Frankly, if you want the RIAA to be able to pursue criminal sanctions, then you should be willing to give them full police powers to pursue those sanctions. But somehow I think you'd protest that, too.

      No, it means they'll have to file a complaint with the authorities who will haev to pursue it. That the authorities don't do this does not validate their current tactics.

      Civil court is not the place for criminal; prosecution, no matter which way you want to turn it.

    9. Re:Can I mod this +6? by meatspray · · Score: 1

      So your point is that they're persuing people without proper proof.

      For that argument to have any ground in this conversation, that has to mean that you think they are accusing people who didn't do it.

      I don't think a lot of that is going on.

      If you're unhappy that the guilty people aren't getting a chance to get off. I see a lot of problems with that as well.

      The best course of action is to help the system fail faster. They'll not make enough money in litigation to support their industry. Force them into changing their business model to adapt instead of allowing them to rape the wallets of artists and consumers.

      The old system is failing and the RIAA os gonna go out SCO style. That's all there really is to it. The main difference is that the RIAA actually has some viable legal backing to support them. (people ARE infringing their copyright)

      Until copyright changes, or the RIAA is forced into submission, this will be status quo for years.

    10. Re:Can I mod this +6? by edremy · · Score: 1

      Really, why must people be forced to abide by this "rule" that civil disobedience means you have to accept the punishment for some bogus crime? Would it have been more noble or correct if George Washington et al. had meekly submitted themselves to be executed for treason? Should all those slaves who escaped from their plantations have willingly surrendered themselves and gone back to face the lash to fit these immutable laws of protest that you are subscribing to?

      Who said anything about surrendering meekly? You're free to hire the best lawyers you can afford in the country to defend you in court. The battleground here is legal, and you can fight using any legal means you choose.

      However, whining about possibly losing doesn't do you any good. Washington would have been executed for treason if he was caught. He accepted that risk when he signed the declaration of independence. You accept the risk of being sued if you let people leech your MP3s.

      Being allowed to the pants off of people for garden variety mp3 sharing is a perversion of justice, everybody knows it, and whether or not the act itself is improper, average citizens shouldn't have to fear facing bankruptcy for doing it.

      Ahh, but this is part of how civil disobedience works. Think the RIAA has as good a name as they did before they started suing 12 year olds and grandmothers without computers? The higher the penalties and the stupider the actions, the more people will give up on RIAA music.

      Then again, maybe they won't. People might decide listening to music under the RIAA yoke is better than the alternatives. That's their choice. Civil disobedience only works when enough other people are willing to disobey.

      --
      "Seven Deadly Sins? I thought it was a to-do list!"
    11. Re:Can I mod this +6? by rgoldste · · Score: 1

      The RIAA *is* holding these people to the "proper legal standard."

      Copyright infringement is a civil violation, which means that the burden of proof is "preponderance of evidence" (the accused more likely than not committed the infraction)

      What the parent seems to suggest is that the RIAA should have to prove the accused's guilt "beyond a reasonable doubt." This is the standard for criminal charges.

      I certainly don't want file sharing to be a crime, punishable by jail.

    12. Re:Can I mod this +6? by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      > For that argument to have any ground in this conversation, that has to mean that you think they are accusing people who didn't do it.

      No, all it means is that I consider the possibility of that happening, and wanting to exclude it.

      You REALLY should look a lot more at how law is supposed to work and what this idea of justice is about and how it is supposed to work.

      Then, the amounts being claimed by the RIAA are highly debatable, and yes, that should be decided by someone else then RIAA lawyers.

      There is a lot more to justice then deciding who is rigth and who is wrong, and even when it seems obvious from the start who is right and who is wrong, it is still an extremely good idea to prove it. May sound like a waste of time to you, but ensuring that such thuings are followed is the only protection you have that allows you to prove innocense while most people believe you are guilty.

      > If you're unhappy that the guilty people aren't getting a chance to get off. I see a lot of problems with that as well.

      No, I am unhappy that no proper proof is beign used and that the legal system is being frustrated.

      > The best course of action is to help the system fail faster. They'll not make enough money in litigation to support their industry. Force them into changing their business model to adapt instead of allowing them to rape the wallets of artists and consumers.

      THose are 2 independent issues. We have an issue with the RIAA maybe over their business model and what not.

      We also have an issue with the RIAA over how they are dealing with people who most likely did somethign wrong.

      2 different issues, 2 different answers.

      I agree that peopel should not buy the junk that RIAA members are sellign etc etc. That however is not what the discussion was about.

    13. Re:Can I mod this +6? by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      No, but the RIAA has repeatedly abused and misused both the law and courtroom procedure, and have been bitchslapped repeatedly because of it. The fact that a Federal judge would deliberately delay their proceedings in order to protect the rights of the accused should tell you something. Doesn't matter whether the defendants did (or did not) commit a civil crime, the issue is whether or not they are receiving the proper treatment under the law. The RIAA's attitude is presumptive and punitive: before a judge took away their DMCA-driven ability to issue blind subpoenas, they were perfectly happy to simply threaten individuals and families with expensive lawsuits to force an out of court settlement. In effect, the non-defendants were adjudged guilty and punished by the self-appointed court of the RIAA without ever having had a day in a real court. That, my friend, is an abuse of the law and has nothing to do with whether anyone is guilty of copyright infringement (some are), whether copyright infringement is illegal (it is), whether P2P is good or bad for the industry (probably good), or indeed any of the other irrelevancies that have been discussed here on Slashdot. Now that they are being forced to actually spend significant effort in real high-profile court time, more people who otherwise wouldn't care may begin to see this organization as the racketeers they really are.

      But I agree with you that if you don't like them don't feed them. The way they've run their business for a hundred years is on the way out, and the only question I have is how much damage to the legal system (and, indeed, the economy as a whole because laws like the DMCA affect everyone) will they cause before the industry changes for the better.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    14. Re:Can I mod this +6? by canadian_right · · Score: 1
      The problem is that the USA government changed the law to make the penalties for copyright infringement way too severe. The lobbiests for the music and movie industry have convinced or paid the USA government to pass these laws, and use the power of the USA government to try to push these same horrible laws on the rest of the world. If radio had been invented today it would never have become a commercial business - just look at what was done to web-radio in the States.

      The RIAA is just gleefully using the legal tools given to it by a USA government that no longers cares about the average USA citizen (mainly because it doesn't have to care as most of them don't vote).

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    15. Re:Can I mod this +6? by canadian_right · · Score: 1
      I'm sorry, but you can't redfine the meaning of words and phrases to suit you own circumstances. I really, really, want to be an Olympic athlete. I think its unfair that only people who compete in the Olympics can be Olympic athletes. I think we should redefine "Olympic Athlete" to be "anyone who can run the hundred meter sprint in less than 30 seconds". This is no more absurd than your statement.

      If you don't want to take part in civil disobedience, fine don't. If you want to take part in open rebellion then go ahead, but don't try to pretty up your actions by stealing the meaning of noble actions.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    16. Re:Can I mod this +6? by gamer4Life · · Score: 1

      3. Move to Canada ;)

    17. Re:Can I mod this +6? by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      > What the parent seems to suggest is that the RIAA should have to prove the accused's guilt "beyond a reasonable doubt." This is the standard for criminal charges.

      Yes, that was indeed what I meant.

      > I certainly don't want file sharing to be a crime, punishable by jail.

      jail and/or fine. (jail is not the only type of punnishment you can get in criminal court)

      There are a few reasons to want this actually:

      1. We do not need a 'copyright police', the normal one will do perfectly fine.
      2. We do not need the RIAA, MPAA and whomever to be able to get our private information from ISPs or such, it is bad enouhg (tho understandable) that government agencies can do that.
      3. The level of proof makes it a lot more difficult to use bully tactics in criminal court.

      Those who actually break the law should nto whine abotu the consequences, but untill proven guilty, noone should be held guilty. What the RIAA is doing is proclaimign peopel guilty without proper proof. To me that (together with compensation of thousands of dollars) is directly underminign the legal system.

    18. Re:Can I mod this +6? by TRACK-YOUR-POSITION · · Score: 1
      "We're just not going to listen to what you tell us to do. Go ahead, arrest all of us- you'll run out of jails before we run out of protestors."

      Err...right, but the American model usually adds lots of concealment, secrecy, trickery, and violence to the mix, to further inconvenience the arresting officer. I never met the man, but I don't get the feeling Gandhi would reger to police officers as pigs.

      Unless you want to claim that bootleggers were following the Gandhi model. (oh ho, now who is the one who gets the quadruple question mark of disbelief???? ;) ) Prohibition seems like the closest historical analog to the current *AA situation.

    19. Re:Can I mod this +6? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      . Once that has happened, it can happen that victims use civil court to get compensation, but that has nothign whatsoever to do with pubishing a crime, and it si extremely exceptional that such a thing stands a chance when someone has been found not guilty in criminal court.

      It is not "extremely exceptional" that someone is found civilly liable despite the lack of a criminal conviction. It often happens in civil rights cases against police departments. It happened to O.J. Simpson. It happened to Bernie Goetz.

      Civil courts and criminal courts perform different functions. Criminal courts vindicate the public interest in *punishing* crime while civil courts compensate each individual for injuries to his person or property. It is only because the criminal system can jeopardize life or limb that a higher standard of proof is thought necessary there. And no matter which way you want to spin things, requiring a defendant to compensate for an injury that she has caused is not punishment; it is restitution.

      No, it means they'll have to file a complaint with the authorities who will haev to pursue it. That the authorities don't do this does not validate their current tactics.

      The lack of criminal enforcement simply means that the public interest is better served in prioritizing prosecutions for murder, rape, or robbery. Just because a criminal law isn't enforced in a particular circumstance doesn't mean than an injury to a legally recognized interest hasn't occurred. In fact, this is precisely why the ability to pursue civil remedies is so important.

    20. Re:Can I mod this +6? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do it and take your lumps. That may mean losing your house when the RIAA sues you into oblivion. Too bad- you're engaged in civil disobedience, and that has consquences.

      Tell you what, next time you are driving over the speed limit and you see a cop on the side of the road taggin people, why don't you just speed up a smidgeon? After all, speeding is illegal and if you are doing it you obviously think it is wrong.

      So, if you are going to speed, do it and take your lumps. This may mean losing your driver's license and your ability to provide for your family. Too bad, your're engaged in civil disobedience, and that has consquences. If enough people disobey, eventually the laws will change.... err Hmm, scratch that, if enough people disobey, the local police precints just get more revenue.

      Well, be a man and bend over and take it like a man!!!

    21. Re:Can I mod this +6? by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      > It is not "extremely exceptional" that someone is found civilly liable despite the lack of a criminal conviction. It often happens in civil rights cases against police departments. It happened to O.J. Simpson. It happened to Bernie Goetz.

      That there are cases where it happened does not show in any way that it is exceptional or not tho.
      (somethign I actually pointed out already but ok.)

      > Civil courts and criminal courts perform different functions. Criminal courts vindicate the public interest in *punishing* crime while civil courts compensate each individual for injuries to his person or property. It is only because the criminal system can jeopardize life or limb that a higher standard of proof is thought necessary there. And no matter which way you want to spin things, requiring a defendant to compensate for an injury that she has caused is not punishment; it is restitution.

      So, who do you ask for restitution>? the person who is responsible for causing the damage.

      If this person is found guilty in criminal court, you will have a lot easier time heldign that person responsible in civil court also and actually claiming your compensation.

      When civil courts are being used to award restitution, there should be a proper level of investigation and documentation of those damages, and actually, there should be a level of proof that those damages occured.

      > The lack of criminal enforcement simply means that the public interest is better served in prioritizing prosecutions for murder, rape, or robbery. Just because a criminal law isn't enforced in a particular circumstance doesn't mean than an injury to a legally recognized interest hasn't occurred. In fact, this is precisely why the ability to pursue civil remedies is so important.

      Good points, but it does not justify using civil courts for what should be criminal prosecution really.

      You are wrong with regards to why the standards of proof are as they are, at least when lookign at reality. It may well be that that was the original reasoning. When civil courts can award milions of dollars in damages, they can in effect jeopardize life and limb as well. There is good reason for havign a hight level of proof in criminal court, and really, that comes first of all from the understandign that you can better have a free criminal then an innocent man in jail.
      By the same reasoning, you better go without restitution then havign the wrong people pay it.

      I'm sorry but civil court is not the proper place for fighting this, and what is happening here is circumventing the system because of not agreeign with the priorities the system sets.

    22. Re:Can I mod this +6? by neds_dead · · Score: 1

      So you think that stealing music should be considered as noble as Washinton's stance or a Slave's revolt against thier oppresion?

    23. Re:Can I mod this +6? by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "Really, why must people be forced to abide by this "rule" that civil disobedience means you have to accept the punishment for some bogus crime?"

      Every person who understads the meaning of the adjective "civil."

      "Would it have been more noble or correct if George Washington et al. had meekly submitted themselves to be executed for treason?"

      Spoken like someone who has no idea the ways Washington and his colleages bent over backwards to try to find a peaceful solution. Even after the first outbreak of violence and armed resistance in April of 1775, it was still well over a year of failed efforts to find a peaceful resolution before the governments of the colonies accepted that seeking independence through open rebellion was the only option.

      "Should all those slaves who escaped from their plantations have willingly surrendered themselves and gone back to face the lash to fit these immutable laws of protest that you are subscribing to?"

      No, you fight the extradition in court, like Dredd Scott. You do not follow the course of John Brown, not if you want people to agree with you and support you.

      You will note that both the Battle at Lexington Green and the Dredd Scott court decision were, on the surface, "defeats" for those who we now consider to be in the right. However, those tactical defeats were also stratiegic victories, doing far more to win "hearts and minds" over to the side of the people trying to fight "The Man."

      Note in the article description there's mention of the (in)famous RIAA litigations against a grandmother and a young girl. Nobody who hears about those will forget about them any time soon, but nobody cares about the people who do everything they can to buck "The System" in loud and obnoxious ways.

      "Being allowed to the pants off of people for garden variety mp3 sharing is a perversion of justice, everybody knows it,"

      That's why you ask for a jury trial.

    24. Re:Can I mod this +6? by richieb · · Score: 1
      As far as file sharing, folks, as the law as written, file sharing of copyrighted works is illegal.

      Not technically correct. It's up to the creator of the copyrighted work to decide how his work is to be distributed.

      So, for example, I own the copyright on my writing in this post, but I'm giving you permission to share it on any file-sharing network. :)

      --
      ...richie - It is a good day to code.
    25. Re:Can I mod this +6? by NuclearDog · · Score: 0

      "It's not theft"

      You're right, it's not theft. It's copyright infringement.

      Theft is, let's say, when I come into your house and steal a book. You no longer have this book to read and enjoy. Copyright infringement is when I come into your house and photocopy the book. You still have the book to read and enjoy, but the publisher just lost a sale (if the book is still in print).

      ND

      --
      This statement is forty-five characters long.
    26. Re:Can I mod this +6? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For that argument to have any ground in this conversation, that has to mean that you think they are accusing people who didn't do it.

      I don't think a lot of that is going on.


      Did you miss the news stories about the RIAA suing a Grandmother for using Kazaa, when in actuallity, she owned a Mac, which Kazaa doesn't run on?

    27. Re:Can I mod this +6? by xigxag · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but you can't redfine the meaning of words and phrases to suit you own circumstances.

      Well, yes you can, if enough people come to agree with you. Many of the events in today's Olympics weren't even really considered sports 50 years ago. Beach volleyball? Rhythmic gymnastics? Obviously there are some limits -- you still have to be invited to the Olympics to be considered an Olympic athlete, but the boundaries of who gets invited have changed considerably over the years, due precisely to people who wanted to redefine what it means to be an Olympic athlete. So perhaps civil disobedience at one time meant risking extended imprisonment or death. But I don't think that's what most people expect from their experience now. I'd wager the majority of people practicing "civil disobedience" in protests and such are hoping, at the end of the day, that their transgressions will be wiped clean or made de minimus. Someone trading mp3s is asking, I think, for no more.

      In any event, it was the original poster who brought up civil disobedience. I don't seriously think that people who are trading mp3s are practicing civil disobedience any more than I think the same of people who are running the light. What I really have issue with is the false dichotomy being raised, "Either obey the law or practice civil disobedience" as if those are the only two options. In the real world, disobey the law and hope you don't get caught - and if you do get caught try to avoid being penalized is by far the most prevalent way that people oppose a law they don't wish to obey, whether it comes to pissing in an alley, dropping a candy wrapper, cheating on taxes, making an illegal turn, insider trading, perjury or murder. Each and every one of us has done illegal things and done our best to avoid the punishment facing us. Anyone who claims they expect to be caught and punished every time they break the law is frankly lying.

      --
      There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
    28. Re:Can I mod this +6? by Cryogenes · · Score: 1

      That may mean losing your house when the RIAA sues you into oblivion. Too bad- you're engaged in civil disobedience, and that has consquences.


      So whose side are you on? If a black guy gets thrown into prison for daring to sit on a seat reserved for whites, will you shrug your shoulders and say "Too bad, he engaged in civil disobedience and that has consequences. Don't like this policy? Then don't drive in their bus!"

    29. Re:Can I mod this +6? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Do it and take your lumps. That may mean losing your house when the RIAA sues you into oblivion. Too bad- you're engaged in civil disobedience, and that has consquences. If enough people disobey, eventually the laws will change, but that doesn't mean people don't get hurt. For far more serious examples, look up the US civil rights movement or Ghandi's struggle against the British."

      Of course in this case you're wrong for stealing the music, and as 60 mintues showed last week, mainstream people feel no sympathy for you if you're caught and prosecuted. They made the p2p guy look like crook.

    30. Re:Can I mod this +6? by Kenardy · · Score: 1

      I'd like to suggest that you skip the used CD market as well (except, possibly, for like-kind FtF sharing). I suspect that the funds endusers realize from the sale of used CD's usually ends up in new CD purchases. Nothing is gained when all you do is launder the money through an additional set of hands before it gets to the RIAA.

      Just boycot RIAA CD's in all forms.

    31. Re:Can I mod this +6? by Kenardy · · Score: 1

      Actually, why not RAISE the penalties for illegal copyright violations ... say $100,000 for the first illegally copied CD and $1,000,000 for each illegally copied CD thereafter?

      That would make the RIAA look like doggie do-do for chasing after the casual thief who copied 20 tunes and increase their incentive to pursue folks who copy every title on or before the date of its release.

      Where I work there is a guy who makes (quite a bit of) 'spare change' by selling pirated CD's for $5.00. He buys them from someone else at 3 for $10.00. He doesn't care that it is stealing ... he just wants to make the lease payments on his SUV.

      Quite frankly, I am of the opinion that he is participating in organized crime and deserves whatever may befall him for his part in it.

      I don't like the RIAA. Not even a little bit on a nice day. I consider the way they pursue their business grossly immoral. But I'm no fonder of small potatoes thieves than I am of big ones.

    32. Re:Can I mod this +6? by Snaller · · Score: 1

      No matter how you spin it (It's not theft

      Its not spin, just fact.

      you have two options

      Actually you have a third: GET THE HELL INVOLVED IN POLITICS and work for a change!

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    33. Re:Can I mod this +6? by shark72 · · Score: 1

      "So whose side are you on? If a black guy gets thrown into prison for daring to sit on a seat reserved for whites, will you shrug your shoulders and say "Too bad, he engaged in civil disobedience and that has consequences. Don't like this policy? Then don't drive in their bus!""

      World of difference here. Blacks have the same inalienable human rights as others do to the pursuit of happiness, and the Jim Crow laws were stripping them of these rights.

      Consumers do not have an inalienable right to download the latest Linkin Park CD via P2P if they can't afford to buy it or if they'd just rather not pay for it. The inconvenience of paying the lousy fifteen bucks, or doing without, is orders of magnitude left than being denied a seat due to the color of your skin.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
    34. Re:Can I mod this +6? by maximilln · · Score: 1

      I get so tired of the groupthink whining here at /. about the evil RIAA

      Oh you're asking for it.

      Then don't buy from them. It's simply not that hard

      Quit being stupid. Put down the nitrous or whatever it is that keeps you loopy.

      FACT: They have a product.
      FACT: People want to buy the product.

      Can we dispense with all the bull and just get to the sale? Sales are final. Ownership is transferred. These legal battles over terms of ownership after the point of sale are nothing short of children making promises with their fingers crossed. I can't believe that the courts tolerate this juvenile behavior! That they do is nothing less than a complete exposure of the average mentality of the ruling caste.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
  33. How it ought to be done by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I would change copyright law to model punishment for not-for-profit file sharing violations on traffic speeding.

    For speeding, (which is arguably a more serious offense than file sharing because lives are put at risk) we have a system where people are caught and given a ~$100 fine on the spot. They can choose to drag it out in court later, but most don't.

    Some items:

    Cars have license plates. Likewise, IP addresses shouldn't necessarily be deep secrets. Put in place a system for instant subpoena of a suspected offending IP to obtain the user account.

    Only cops hand out traffic tickets. Likewise, a copyright holder would have to work through law enforcement authorities to initiate any action against suspected violators. Remove all civil liability for small-time file sharing; make it purely a petty misdemeanor. An enforcement officer would verify that the copyrighted files in question were indeed available on the IP address in the complaint.

    To prevent abuse of the above system, the suspected account owner would need to be notified in real time whenever such a subpoena is issued. This would detail who was requesting the IP address info and what for. This would be similar to the speeding system, where you usually can plainly see the police car with the radar on the side of the road once you get close enough.

    If the suspected activity is confirmed, law enforcement authorities would mail out a ticket for ~$100. The fine would provide the funds to pay for this system. If the suspected infringer voluntarily pays the fine, it's the end of the story.

    If the suspected infringer goes to court to defend himself and is found to have been falsely accused, they would be eligible for compensation of ~$5000 from the accuser. This would prevent excessive abuse from the **AA.

    I think that this kind of system would essentially halt illegal file sharing (at least within the borders of a single country) without causing undue stress on anyone or violating too many civil rights. To me it makes a lot more sense than trying to make examples by handing out harsh punishments to a small handful of unlucky suspects.

    1. Re:How it ought to be done by khrtt · · Score: 1
      I think that this kind of system would essentially halt illegal file sharing



      Right. Like speeding tickets effectively eliminate speeding.

      Then, again, meybe you live in some country where people don't speed, like Germany. Here in the States it's all hypocrisy at its finest. In fact, not speeding could be very dangerous when it gets you tailgated by angry 18-wheelers at 65 mph.

    2. Re:How it ought to be done by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1
      Right. Like speeding tickets effectively eliminate speeding.

      OK, it probably wouldn't wipe it out totally. However, file sharing enforcement could be more thorough than speeding enforcement because of automated scanning.

      Then, again, meybe you live in some country where people don't speed, like Germany. Here in the States it's all hypocrisy at its finest.

      Well, they're supposed to actually know how to drive over there before they qualify to get a license. If I had my druthers, we would also screen for better drivers and remove speed limits here where appropriate.

      Likewise, not-for-profit duplication of copyrighted works should have been allowed starting from 1790. IP-based businesses would have evolved taking that into account, and we wouldn't have this huge enforcement issue today.

      However, neither one is likely to happen here any time soon, so I was proposing a more palatable solution at least for file sharing.

    3. Re:How it ought to be done by teamhasnoi · · Score: 1
      Raise the fine for false accusement (yes, I made that up) to 20,000 and we suddenly have a new business plan:

      1. Set up RIAA honeypot
      2. Hire lawyer on retainer.
      3. Profit!

      At last, artists could get paid for their work - even when the RIAA uses accounting practices from the devil.

    4. Re:How it ought to be done by Shikoten · · Score: 1
      I think that this kind of system would essentially halt illegal file sharing
      Just like the same system halts illegal speeding?
  34. Actually by yoshi_mon · · Score: 1

    Same with this DirecTV thing. Their were cheating them out of programming by getting a smart card that was illegal and getting them products for free.

    Actually the DirectTV smartcard issue was a bit different. They went after anyone who had purchased the gear needed to reprogram the smartcards that they were using regardless of if they used it for that or in some cases even had DirectTV at all!

    --

    Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
    1. Re:Actually by bradword · · Score: 1

      So targeting the drug dealers isn't ok, since they were just making the drugs, not actually using them?

    2. Re:Actually by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      As long as we fucking kill the aspirin makers, since they are exactly the same in your eyes.

      Fucking aspirin.

    3. Re:Actually by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +6, Stupidest Post of the Year. Give this man a free iPod or something.

    4. Re:Actually by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your thought process boggles my mind, and probably your own.

  35. Legal defence insurance? by Teun · · Score: 4, Informative
    Where I come from (The Netherlands) lots of people, if not most, have a Legal Support Insurance.
    The Insurance might decline certain cases for example for gross misconduct but usually you've got some support when needed, typically for less than 50 Euros per year.

    In cases like this it is not uncommon for such insurances to bundle their efforts, sometimes including consumer organisations, to get a more fundamental ruling.

    Of course littigation on the scale we now see in the USofA is not (yet) as common/rampant in Europe.

    --
    "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
    1. Re:Legal defence insurance? by gilroy · · Score: 1
      Blockquoth the poster:

      Of course littigation on the scale we now see in the USofA is not (yet) as common/rampant in Europe.

      Also, we in the US already do such a bang-up job on health insurance, I'm sure this would be simple... :)
    2. Re:Legal defence insurance? by jred · · Score: 1

      I was at a local ice cream shop w/ my daughter recently & started talking to another dad there. Turns out he does just that, provides some type of "legal insurance". I didn't get very deep into it with him (how long does an ice cream cone last?), but it seemed to be what you're talking about.

      I can't attest to how popular it is, but his family was dressed nicely & they had a very nice car.

      --

      jred
      I'm not a mechanic but I play one in my garage...
    3. Re:Legal defence insurance? by maximilln · · Score: 1

      Turns out he...provides some type of "legal insurance"...I can't attest to how popular it is,

      This is EXACTLY how the legal system is fraudulently skewed in favor of the corporations. Every business of any real size has lawsuit liability insurance. The companies don't pay their legal issues--the insurance companies do. The insurance companies replace their profit margin with auto and homeowner's insurance. In essence, you and I pay for the legal defense of a company which is abusing the legal system. It is no wonder that individuals have no money left for their own legal defense neither can they afford to pay for the same lawsuit liability insurance.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
  36. It's about sharing, not downloading by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So many in this thread seem to think that these lawsuits are becouse of downloading. The truth is that in many countries (most scandinavian countries for example) downloading is perfectly legal. It's sharing/uploading/distributing material that you do not have a legal right to distribute that gets you in trouble. I have to say that as much as i sympathize with the small guys that get sued for sharing their music collection, they are still breaking the law. A 20dollar pricetag on a cd still does not give anyone the legal right to distribute that cd without permission from the the holder of the copyright (in most cases in the USA its prolly the RIAA). So basicly i'm saying, tough luck. You break the law knowingly distributing stuff you don't have the right to distribute, you get sued. That's the risk you take. Ofcourse the RIAA is trying to "bully" people to get it to stop. If that is an effetive method is a totally different question. If it's right that music costs so much is also a totally different question. The question at hand is that people distribute stuff that they don't have the right to distribute. I wonder how quickly people at slashdot would react if it were software that would get distributed that way... (specially software that pays their bills)...

    Just my 2 euros... flame away...

  37. Great! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Best justice that money can buy...

  38. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by nwbvt · · Score: 0, Redundant
    And a post pointing that out is also modded Troll.

    No, groupthink doesn't exist on slashdot...

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  39. Someday they're gonna hit somebody... by Gogl · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...who just happens to be a real successful lawyer or have a lot of friends in the EFF or something, and it'll be interesting. They keep on throwing these lawsuits out helter skelter, and it's obvious they're not doing a lot of research about it (remember when they sued an 11 year old or something?). Eventually they'll hit somebody who'll fight back.

    1. Re:Someday they're gonna hit somebody... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [Someday they're gonna hit somebody...]who just happens to be a real successful lawyer

      Uh, huh. I'm sure there are a lot of successful lawyers who steal music.

    2. Re:Someday they're gonna hit somebody... by Gogl · · Score: 1

      I bet you'd be surprised. It's really more about convenience than "stealing" for many people. I personally know some wealthy folks, including a doctor, who "steals" music.

    3. Re:Someday they're gonna hit somebody... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's true. When would they have time when they are fleecing people for $250/hr?

    4. Re:Someday they're gonna hit somebody... by Eric_Cartman_South_P · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I am afraid they are smarter than that. The legal team part of the RIAA, anyway. Attorneys have a slang phrase they call "Bloodwork". Getting the blookwork on your own client, or someone you are hired to sue, means using all of your connections to get all the info you can on that person, and put it all in one folder. Credit Report, Life History, Goodgle Results, the Private Investigators/Cops/Government Officials who are "friends" of the Law Firm and do behind the scenes checks... all this is part of Bloodwork than any top 100 firm in this country does on EVERY CLIENT and EVERY PERSON THEY ARE UP AGAINST. I would bet my iPod that the RIAA have come accross many people who where sharing songs who were Attorney's, Heart Surgeons, Feds, very wealthy, etc, and skipped right over them.

    5. Re:Someday they're gonna hit somebody... by Gogl · · Score: 1

      I'd agree, except for the fact that they have messed up in the past (that 11 year old, grandmothers, etc.), so I wouldn't be surprised if they mess up in the future. I agree that "bloodwork" would be a good idea, but they seem to be throwing out so many lawsuits so haphazardly that I'm not sure they really are doing all this background checking you talk about.

    6. Re:Someday they're gonna hit somebody... by Kwil · · Score: 1

      Just because they're not checking age doesn't mean they're not doing background checking.

      --

      That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze

    7. Re:Someday they're gonna hit somebody... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know, I'd guess age is a pretty critical step of a background check...

    8. Re:Someday they're gonna hit somebody... by Reziac · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I've long since concluded that the RIAA is indeed researching their victims (see my post above where I got into my chain of logic a bit) but that doesn't mean they are going to be 100% perfect -- maybe the legal research dept. got lazy that day, or mislaid a file, or just plain screwed up. And there've been what, half a dozen such blatant bloopers out of 3000 or so cases? that's well under one percent. I'd guess that average police departments make more investigative mistakes than that.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    9. Re:Someday they're gonna hit somebody... by lucifer_666 · · Score: 1
      I think both the 11 year olds' and the Grandmothers' accounts were initaited by someone else... there's no way the 11 year old was paying for it herself.

      So when RIAA ran their checks, it came up with the details of the credit card holder rather than the person using the connection.

  40. of course not by Savatte · · Score: 1



    Who wants to be a martyr when you have kids and a family to support?

  41. Uh-oh! We have a free thinker here! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dear Slashdot user,
    It has become apparent to me that you have expressed a free thought. This is an offence taken very seriously by the moderators. A short time from now, hoards of Slashbots will moderate you down accordingly! In the meantime I suggest, for your own safety, that you install Gentoo and report to your nearest LUG meeting for reprogramming. Additionally, repeat the following mantra at least 10 times per minute: "Stealing is bad, but since copying music without reimbursing the artist is defined as copyright infringement rather than theft it is ok!" If you follow these simple guidelines, and with a bit of luck, you just might avoid a bitchslap.
    Good luck,
    Anonymous Coward

  42. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ha! You were modded a troll too! I'm going to be different though. Everyone out there in Slashdot land...pirate as much as you want.

  43. YHBT YHL HAND. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    lol you're such an idiot.

    1. Re:YHBT YHL HAND. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      he still hasn't given up. a few posts up you will see that I am spouting off complete and total utter BS and yet this moron keeps replying. ah the joys of pestering idiots on Slashdot. mindless zealotry never ends!

  44. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Enforcing copyright laws is akin to slavery - mental slavery. They are telling you what you can and cannot say to others.

    nazi's were LEFT WING SOCIALISTS

    Yeah and the people's republic of china is because they say they are too... Get a clue, and stop confusing the name of the thing with the thing itself (a common human error, but an unfortunate one).

    Copyight is censorship, plain and simple.

  45. Nope by nwbvt · · Score: 1
    "Copying music mp3 files of music you do not own and do not sell is also allowed uner the fair use guidelines for music.. "

    Nice try junior lawyer.

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    1. Re:Nope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wondered for a moment why this comment was modded up to 2. Even though I agreed with its general sentiment, it certainly wasn't worthy of a 2. Then it hit me: it wasn't modded up at all! Rather, the author was full enough of himself to assume that his comment was worthy of a karma bonus. Fan-fucking-tastic.
      --
      Sick of pompous windbags? Change "Karma Bonus" modifier (Preferences, Comment Options) to -1 penalty.

    2. Re:Nope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Prove that it's false then asshole.

    3. Re:Nope by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      Lots of ACs today...

      Here you go, a simple result of a Google search.
      http://www.law.cornell.edu/topics/copyright.html/

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    4. Re:Nope by Kwil · · Score: 1

      Actually, he's right..
      ..in Canada

      --

      That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze

    5. Re:Nope by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      You again? Man, you must have a bad case of karma envy.

      Sick of annoying troll cowards? Change "Anonymous Coward" modifier to -1 penalty.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  46. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The left lane is supposed to be for passing.

    Signed,

    The 18 year old who's been stuck behind you for three states while you poke along at 49 mph.

  47. Not quite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's more like "Ohh yea.. thats right.. I fucking fail it"

  48. You Poor Bastards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm British! I live in England! Me, the insensitive clod!

  49. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hello mr. troll,

    > So you are comparing enforcing copyright laws to slavery?

    Comparing immoral and illegal and concludig it is something different. That was very difficult to understand I guess for someone with the IQ of a troll.

    > Why not just call them a right wing nazi (even though nazi's were LEFT WING SOCIALISTS) and conclude your idiotic argument?

    They used the word socialist, more precisely, national socialist. That however does not make them socialists or left wing. I do not know if there are schools where trolls can learn history, but I suggest visiting one if they do exist.

  50. Circumvent the RIAA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Circumvent the managers at the RIAA by letting your software music jukebox manage your favorite artists. This requires a central database listing creative works and the artists who actually made them so that you can donate automatically to your favorite artists.

    problem: telling some site what kind of music you have my get you sued as you declare to have illegal music.

    solution: give partial hash code (checksum). Site returns say 200 potential hits. You verify for yourself if you have have a copyrighted song 'belonging' to the site. You discard the 199 misses and you use the info about the song to compensate the listed artist directly. This can be done anonymously: "I love your (unspecified) work here is a donation of 20 cents". Artist uses statistics to figure out how to compensate those who helped him with popular creations if the donations rise above thousands of dollars.

    So you spend say 300 dollar per year to (automatically) compensate your favorite artists directly without confessing a crime as your jukebox figures out compensation anonymously and you can also donate manually, even though you do not have any works of arts of that artists in your possession, making the system a black box, meaning that donations do not directly indicate illegal possession.

    Why pay for distribution? Let's circumvent the RIAA.

    --
    Dennis SCP

  51. Dumbass -MOD DOWN! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The AC didn't plagarize because he didn't take credit for the work (if he posted logged in or attached his name to the end, then the argument might be differnt).

    If you read Martin's work, you see that he supports a commons approach to information, an idea that information should be free for all. Therefore posting it as the AC did only emboldens Martin's ideas!

    Please moderators, have some sense here.

    1. Re:Dumbass -MOD DOWN! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have no idea what you're talking about. Martin doesn't champion the removal of credit from a work at all.

      Further, the other argument in this thread, that failing to source is the same as claiming it's your own - you'll find that attitude and belief in MANY academic institutions.

    2. Re:Dumbass -MOD DOWN! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Notice how Slashdot != University?

      Read Martin's work. He champions the concept of the commons and the free flow of ideas in the name of the public good instead of corporate and personal greed.

      People like you just don't get it. You want to oil the corporate machine with the hard work of those who toil every day in society trying to eek out a few bucks to live, yet we have lumanaries like Martin who want to change that and make information in society more fluid.

      I'm really sick of the corporate astro-turfing that comes from people like you. The propaganda is thick and the intellecualism is bankrupt.

    3. Re:Dumbass -MOD DOWN! by vena · · Score: 2, Insightful

      but he DOES NOT call for the removal of credit and the lineage of knowledge. you are blinded by your hatred of corporate greed, which is understandable, but what you fail to take into account is that knowledge is cumulative, and that hard work should be acknowledged. Martin is not so much of a fool as to believe that authors should not be credited with their creation. his argument is against their creations, the knowledge that they provide, is held from those who need it most using corporate funded law to enhance PROFIT. he has nothing against recognition.

    4. Re:Dumbass -MOD DOWN! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This isn't just about corporate greed, its about the fact that Martin wants information to be free and avaliable to all. Just because the AC posts his work does not reduce the simplicity of this concept. Martin never makes such claim that information must follow some strict rules or guidelines; he wants it to fly like the dove in the wind.

      Your intellectual horizons are obviously blinded by preconceived notions of right and wrong. You will never be qualified to understand this until you remove the boundaries and shackles that keep your preceptions from being fully aware of the cognitave possibilities of a more fully enhanced and further accessed realm of knowledge and freedom.

      Only those of us who are willing to stand up and say 'Power to the People' are going to be able to function and exist in this New World. Old notions will die away and those who are committed to winning pointless battles will see that they are just being used to waste their time so that those observing their actions can laugh at their futile attempts to be victorious.

    5. Re:Dumbass -MOD DOWN! by vena · · Score: 1

      you're putting words in Martin's mouth. your passion is commendable, but you're citing it, not Martin when you say "he wants it to fly like the dove in the wind."

      Martin has very specific objections to intellectual property, and he does claim that information, specifically the recognition of work, follows a set of rules and guidelines. though i would be silly not to back up the "plagiarism = quoted without source" argument with Martin's own words: Plagiarism means using the ideas of others without adequate acknowledgement.

      in fact, that sentence begins two paragraphs that recognise that plagiarism is a bad thing. what he's against here is copyright as a tool to combat it, which he argues is ineffective.

    6. Re:Dumbass -MOD DOWN! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You convenietnly quote Martin out of context.

      He also says:

      While plagarism means to credit someone else's work as your own, it should never be bastardized to mean you can't blend ideas or search for an adequate truth, especially in non-formal contexts and pretexts

      Martin, if you actually read his stuff instead of just making it up, wants to re-troll our imaginations with new visions of commonality and freedom. He refers to plagarism as those who would "steal in the name of corporate profit", not those who anonymously republish the inheritly free ideas of others who wish to partake in a discussion.

      The sensibility of his ideas is remarkable. Although he was not the first to come up with such ideas (many Greek and Roman philosphers fortold an era where ideas would eventually be subject to intellectual bigotry and claims of ownership just becuase others could not match the ideas of those who were intellectually superior).

      His ideas certianly tell us what is to come down the pike. Now we see many of our top-flight intellectualists and literaty lumanaries embracing such concepts such as open information and freedom to do as you please with information and ideas.

      Who are we to argue with them? They are the ones who write and come up with ideas that the rest of us are incapable of doing, those of us who do not have the Gifts. We should listen to them as they are the ones who know and the ones who have been enlightened by a force far greater than we can imagine.

    7. Re:Dumbass -MOD DOWN! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nice, you completely made up that quote. you even managed to misspell plagiarism. good job.

  52. Are CD Sales Really Down? Is P2P the Cause? by gvc · · Score: 5, Informative
    There are conflicting reports about whether or not CD sales are down, and if so, whether file sharing is a causal factor. RIAA may well be fudging both so as to fake damages.

    Here's a report that says "Nielsen Rating System At Odds With RIAA's Claim Of Lost Sales".

    Here's a report that states "downloads have an effect on sales which is statistically indistinguishable from zero".

  53. Why is this a bad thing? by Micah · · Score: 1

    People were openly sharing copyrighted material without permission. That's illegal. Period. The law is right to crack down on them. As much as we can hate the RIAA, I don't see how they're wrong on this issue.

    Now, there are plenty of good reasons to hate the RIAA. Like, that they have been trying to pass laws through Congress that limit our freedoms. That is downright outrageous and wrong.

    Heck, these cases might prove that copyright law as it exists would be enough, and we don't need to add in any of Fritz Hollings' tripe to "protect" the RIAA!

    1. Re:Why is this a bad thing? by StarWreck · · Score: 1
      The law is right to crack down on them.
      As much as the RIAA poses as a "Government Agency" they are not one. The RIAA is a private organization who represents 4 major record labels (formerly the Big 5) who use the RIAA to exert their will on hundreds of smaller record labels. The RIAA is not the "law".

      Saying all that, sure they could be right about the people they are suing. However nearly all of the RIAA's victims are Blue Collar workers, Single Mom's, and some even live in public housing; These "Defendants" with income well below the poverty line have no hope of being able to afford a Lawyer, even if they saved every single red cent for the rest of their lives.

      With no Lawyer, they cannot mount any kind of "defense" which leaves them no choice but to accept any of the RIAA's demands. This basically amounts to extortion. Worse yet, many of the "defendants" are forced to pay outrageous amounts, considering their financial situation. These people are not given any mercy, instead their wages are garnished essentially turning them into money producing slave labor for the RIAA.

      Here we see the RIAA's true plan. Because nobody can defend themselves in court means that the RIAA does not have to provide any proof, or evidence of any kind of the "defendants" guilt. This in turn results in the fact that this allows the RIAA to sue anyone they want to whether they are really sharing songs or not. Perhaps they plan to sue every poor person in the entire country... or perhaps the RIAA just plans on turning enough of the country into their own personal slaves to support the lavish life style of top level executives at the major 4 record labels. The RIAA does seem to have taken a liking to slaves who make money for them (see: musicians).
      --
      ... and in the DRM, bind them.
    2. Re:Why is this a bad thing? by syberanarchy · · Score: 1
      This is a bad thing because the punishment with the almighty cartels never fits the crime. Despite what you are made to believe, your actions will never deny any individual artist their home, but if the RIAA chooses to settle with you for 11 grand, that's exactly what may happen to YOU.

      The problem is that the civil system is heavily skewered towards monoliths. The very structure of the system is designed towards keeping the little guy down, unless they can show some slam-dunk revelation, like Orrin Hatch taking a cash-stuffed envelope from Eisner on video. Even then, it's probably a very real possibility that Disney will claim copyright, and the commn guy will still lose.

      Copyright infringement is wrong? That's debatable. Is it illegal? Certainly. But nobody should ever lose their home or have their lives ruined because they shared some top 40 mp3s over the internet. That is indeed tyrrany of a different kind - don't think for a second that these cartels wouldn't impose the death penalty for such "infringement" if they could. As it is, they can't take your life, so they'll just destroy it.

      The system needs to change. Not 60 million people.

    3. Re:Why is this a bad thing? by Micah · · Score: 1

      > This is a bad thing because the punishment with the almighty cartels never fits the crime.

      Ok, you might be right about that. Certainly, a fine of a few hundred dollars would probably do the trick.

      But why can't people take responsibility for their actions? If they wouldn't have (knowingly) openned up their computing and networking resources to allow others download the copyrighted material for free, they wouldn't be in this jam. It's their own fault, period.

      > Copyright infringement is wrong? That's debatable.

      It is? Remember, our cherished Open Source licenses are all based on copyright law. If it's not wrong to copy music for friends, can I copy Linux kernel code into my proprietary application too?

      Attitudes like yours are the kind that can get open source software in trouble. We need to take the high moral ground.

    4. Re:Why is this a bad thing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is not infringement in commerce, so stop pretending it is. There exists no connection to open source or other licenses. An unjust law is no law at all, Micah.

    5. Re:Why is this a bad thing? by geekee · · Score: 1

      Why is something wrong if done for profit but not wrong if done for personal reasons? You may want to rethink your morality if you think this is rational.

      --
      Vote for Pedro
    6. Re:Why is this a bad thing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      in a perfect world only guilty people would be accused of illegal activities. however, here in reality it is fairly common for a person who is innocent to be accused of a crime. this is especially true in cases where a large number of people are accused of said crime in a short period of time, as is occuring with the riaa cases. even if it was a given that file sharing should be considered a serious civil offense, and that all people who commit said offence are aware they are doing it, that would still leave incredible odds that at least some of the people accused of this are innocent. these innocent people have no way to prove their innocence without huge legal expenses and other extreme hardships that far outweigh the costs of settling. there is no legal recourse and no checks and balances to prevent abuse. if you ask me, that qualifies as a Bad Thing.

  54. Want to Listen to Music for free (legally)? by Laebshade · · Score: 1

    Try shoutcast. From rap to rock, oldies to newage, trance to folk music, even music exclusive to Asia, you can find it here to listen to. Whenever I want to listen to music I use shoutcast.

    Yes, I know this sounds like a sales pitch.

    1. Re:Want to Listen to Music for free (legally)? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      whats this here new thingy mah-bob.

      Come on, shoutcast has been out for years, you act like it's something new.

    2. Re:Want to Listen to Music for free (legally)? by Laebshade · · Score: 1

      Yes, it has been out for years, I've been listening to it for quite some time. But it clearly was not mentioned and it's very possibly at least one person reading doesn't know what it is.

  55. Start a defense fund by koan · · Score: 1

    Get some kind of fund going and finance someone that is willing to fight.
    Or find some lawyer strong enough to fight the RIAA that will do it free or at the low end of the scale.
    It almost seems like the RIAA picked specific people that were unable to finance a defense.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  56. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

    Redundant would indeed be better then troll. People know what the law says roughtly. What the article is about however is what the RIAA is doing and if people should just cave in or fight it. So... either redundant or off-topic..

  57. Re:Class-Action Defense? Class-Action Defeat. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i may be comfused, but i was under the impression that none of these cases had actually gone through the court process, let alone been lost. could you post a link for one of these lost cases?

  58. Welcome to the US Legal System by Hangtime · · Score: 2, Insightful

    truth and justict for those who can pay for it...

  59. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just curious--why, exactly, did you feel this comment deserved the Karma Bonus you gave it?
    --
    Sick of pompous windbags? Change "Karma Bonus" modifier (Preferences, Comment Options) to -1 penalty.

  60. One thing i wonder by Diabolus777 · · Score: 1

    Young out of school lawyers are often fighting for a postion. They have to work hard to get noticed and get into the higher spheres. Competition is fierce.

    I am always reminded of Lionel Hutz in the Simpsons that's running after patients in the ER looking for a case. It's a parody, of course, but parodies are an exaggerated reflection of life. So, this RIAA nonsense, the software patents, the ridiculous EULA's and the things we bitch about all day long here have to be a strong case for any one to take on.

    Fight the establishment, you'll get noticed, win, and you'll be a hero.

    I'm fed up of reading about the big guys complaining and bullying everyone around, someone should slap them with the clue stick.

    --
    We should have been
    So much more by now
    Too dead inside
    To even know the guilt
  61. If the RIAA is targeting poor people... by Artifakt · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There are several thousand cases now to analyze. If the RIAA is actually selecting poorer than avarage plantiffs (as some here have alledged), this will show quickly in proper statistical analysis (plot the location of the plantiff on a map, look in the government's poverty index to see what the average inocome in that location is, assign points to an appropriate scale, i.e. 1 point/1,000 $ US).
    If it's there, and can be statistically proven, the next step is to tell the media the RIAA is selectively targeting poor people. A good strong piece of evidence, like RIAA plantiffs averageing 20% below median income, deserves a nice simple "National Enquirer" type headline, like "RIAA out to crush the working class", don't you think? Offer the press a chance for one like that, and some of them will bite.
    While you're at it you could analyze those plantiffs on ethnic lines if they are willing to share the data. If the RIAA has selectively targeted poor people, it would be very hard for them to avoid having selectively targeted minorities at the same time, although they could possibly have deliberately thrown out a percentage of minority cases to avoid the appearance. I'd suggest if this proves fruitful, rather than contacting the media directly with the allegation that the RIAA is selectively targeting black people, you let the NAACP bring the allegation, as in such case, there WILL be a class action countersuit filed, but it will have 22,000,000 members.
    Of course, it's possible there is no consistant pattern. In this case, wait until a couple of months go by where the numbers of plantiffs that are poor or minority is statistically high, and then make the claim "In recent months, the RIAA has switched tactics, to selectively target poorer people."

    --
    Who is John Cabal?
    1. Re:If the RIAA is targeting poor people... by philbert26 · · Score: 1
      If the RIAA is actually selecting poorer than avarage plantiffs (as some here have alledged), this will show quickly in proper statistical analysis (plot the location of the plantiff on a map, look in the government's poverty index to see what the average inocome in that location is, assign points to an appropriate scale, i.e. 1 point/1,000 $ US).

      I think it's a bit more complicated than that. The geographical distribution of the plaintiffs may not be random. Even if the distribution of plaintiffs agrees with the local income stats, they might still be targeting poor people by choosing poor locations to sue.

      There are several other assumptions to consider. Does income correlate with willingness or ability to commit copyright infringement? Is there a connection between income and the ISP people choose? If so, that's another relevant factor, because ISPs that resist legal pressure to reveal user info might be less often targeted. There are probably other factors.

      a proper statistical analysis would be interesting to see, but it's not going to be simple.

    2. Re:If the RIAA is targeting poor people... by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      "Even if the distribution of plaintiffs agrees with the local income stats, they might still be targeting poor people by choosing poor locations to sue."

      If they did that, the median income of the people they picked might match the local average, but it would fall well below the national average, so that's the fact you would want to present in the newspapers.

      There's also other interesting ways to spin this. If they use such a method, Georgetown, Aspen, and various other rich locales might not show up at all in their choices, while Watts or the worst parts of Chicago might be way over represented. If there's a strong bias towards avoiding sueing those wealthy enough to fight the charge in court on the RIAA's part, it will show up, one way or the other.

      One advantage I didn't mention in the first post, is if any reputable institution makes such a claim, the RIAA will doubtless want to claim that they are biased or their methodology is flawed. That's relatively easy in court to turn into an arguement that the government's own numbers are the flaw, or to shoot down by showing the study used a straight forward methodology and trusted the Fed's figures on poverty and median income. The RIAA won't get much cooperation from a Federal judge if they try to advance such a defense as biased federal figures.

      "Does income correlate with willingness or ability to commit copyright infringement?"

      Let the RIAA argue that there IS some bias introduced there if they want. Opposed organizations can argue whichever side the RIAA omits. If the RIAA claims that rich people don't bother to commit copyright violations as they can easily afford legal copies, the counter arguement is really poor people don't commit copyright violations as they can't afford good home computers and high speed access. Don't worry about arguements that wealthier people may tend to choose certain ISPs over others, because such arguements are too trivial to win cases, either in the courts or in the area of public opinion.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    3. Re:If the RIAA is targeting poor people... by wolf- · · Score: 1

      Call Jesse Jackson!
      The RIAA is after poor black americans!

      --
      ----- LoboSoft specializes in Digital Language Lab
    4. Re:If the RIAA is targeting poor people... by geekee · · Score: 1

      "If it's there, and can be statistically proven, the next step is to tell the media the RIAA is selectively targeting poor people. A good strong piece of evidence, like RIAA plantiffs averageing 20% below median income, deserves a nice simple "National Enquirer" type headline, like "RIAA out to crush the working class", don't you think? Offer the press a chance for one like that, and some of them will bite."

      60 Mintues just did a piece on movie swapping using p2p. It didn't cast p2p users or p2p developers in a good light. I don't think there is a lot of sympathy for people who steal music and movies online (and don't bore me with your equivocation about how copyright infringement isn't theft).

      --
      Vote for Pedro
    5. Re:If the RIAA is targeting poor people... by russotto · · Score: 1

      The RIAA doesn't need to target poor people. They've got enough money and enough potential damages that provided they avoid anyone named "Hilton", "Walton" or "Rockefeller", they can simply raise the stakes to the point where the other guy will have to fold.

      In fact, wealthier people are EASIER to force to cave. Go after some working-class person working paycheck-to-paycheck and sharing his MP3 collection on a secondhand computer over a dialup connection, and he doesn't HAVE the $3,000 to pony up. He has to fight (pro se, no less, so the RIAA gets to eat him alive); to him, the $3000 they want is no better than the $150,000 per violation they claim copyright law entitles them to.

      Compare this to Jack Richboy, making $200,000/year, and owning a $1,000,000 house and two $30,000 cars. He pays off the RIAA for $3,000, maybe he has to take a vacation in California instead of Hawaii this year. He fights, and they win, and he's totally ruined -- and even if he wins, the lawyer fees are more than $3,000.

      It's extortion by lawyer, nothing more, nothing less. It doesn't MATTER if Jack Richboy has never shared an MP3 in his life; defending himself against the accusation will cost more than settling, and there's always the chance the RIAA will win and ruin him.

    6. Re:If the RIAA is targeting poor people... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      I've made this point in the past -- it's pretty clear that they are indeed targeting people who have some worth (in the low 4 to 5 figures) but who DON'T have the disposable resources (in the low 6 figures) to fight such a case.

      What twigged me to this? Remember when the RIAA first targeted some college kids, they somehow managed to pick FOUR such kids who each had about 10 grand in the bank. Now, how unlikely is that, if you pick any four random college kids? chances are much more likely you'd find yourself with four kids whose combined net worth is about 200 bucks.

      And every case I've heard of has been along the same lines -- people who could scrape together between $3000 and $10k (IOW, enough to be a scary number for average folks), but who certainly could not afford $50k for a lawyer. What are the chances that out of 3000 or however many cases, they've still not hit some rich lawyer's kid? Pretty damned slim, I think.**

      Confronted with these unlikely financial coincidences, I deduce that the RIAA is researching potential victims' financial situations prior to filing.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    7. Re:If the RIAA is targeting poor people... by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      "don't bore me with your equivocation about how copyright infringement isn't theft"

      If you think ALL the news media will treat any group presenting a claim about bias in RIAA actions as the equivalent of pirates, then don't bore me with your equivocation of calling them the News anymore instead of the Orwellian Newspeakers.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    8. Re:If the RIAA is targeting poor people... by maximilln · · Score: 2, Insightful

      and don't bore me with your equivocation about how copyright infringement isn't theft

      A product is sold. Ownership is transferred. Mumbling and complaining about abstractions such as copyright amount to little more than crossing fingers at the point of sale. The court should hang the vendors from a clothesline and beat them with wooden breadboards for being so childish and naive.

      The seller knows that the medium was easily copyable. The seller knows that the copies are easily distributable. There is no secret here. What kind of mindset must the seller have to think that it's an added value to harass the customers in court with a document which nobody reads? The legal implication of being held liable for the contents of a document which nobody reads is frightening and criminal. Use a level-headed market approach to this rather than trying to come up with conniving underhanded "gotcha" schemes. If the vendor is unhappy with their profit margin they are free to raise the price of the product or produce a better product. There is no public benefit to criminalizing the customer. There is no excuse for claiming ignorance of the ease with which the medium can be copied and redistributed.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    9. Re:If the RIAA is targeting poor people... by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      If that's the case, the numbers will fall pretty close to the middle of the income spectrum, and it will look, at least superficially, like the RIAA isn't targeting any particular economic or ethnic class. Detailed statistical analysis may prove different, but it won't be simple enough to make a case to the general public, and all the RIAA needs to do is hire a good statistical analyst as an expert witness to tangle things up beyond sorting out in any countersuit.
      If you're right, it would be better for anyone considering a class action suit to concentrate on such issues as what interogatives the RIAA sent to the plantiffs during the cases, or try to get someone inside the industry to leak some internal-use-only memoranda on their procedures or something along those lines.

      However, it is still costing the RIAA more than they get back to follow up each case. The RIAA's model seems more focused on deterrence than actually profiting from extortion, so it would be interesting to start from the assumption that deterrence is their intent, figure out what sort of procedural systems they have evolved from that, and see how well they've covered themselves against the sort of bias claims I've mentioned in this thread.
      Your points about "odd coincidences" in the cases you specifically remember are interesting, and I take them for worth more than just anomalies, but unless someone does the math, we'll never really know. I have noticed several possible patterns in the examples mentioned in the press, just as you have, but those are too easily explained away in court as flukes unless someone also has some overall numbers to back them up.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    10. Re:If the RIAA is targeting poor people... by maximilln · · Score: 1

      However, it is still costing the RIAA more than they get back to follow up each case. The RIAA's model seems more focused on deterrence than actually profiting from extortion, so it would be interesting to start from the assumption that deterrence is their intent

      The goal of Churches that preach the evils of sex is not to prevent babies. The goal is to make the congregation feel guilty such that they can be easily manipulated and singled out at any time in the event the Church needs a scapegoat. It's also an information gathering technique. People who eternally feel guilty are more likely to squeal on their neighbor.

      The RIAA is not interested in deterrence any more than the Church ever was. The RIAA is interested in spreading the feeling of guilt throughout the population such that everyone is guilty at all times. This demoralizes a society so that there is little will left to question the overwhelming authority of the ruling class.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    11. Re:If the RIAA is targeting poor people... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Well, that's essentially what deterrence is -- making everyone feel guilty enough (or at least sufficiently filled with fear of being caught) that they don't do whatever behaviour The Authority wishes to restrict -- even if that restriction is really geared toward something else:

      In this case, the RIAA couldn't care less if *consumers* share files. What they really want is to produce such a fear of filesharing, that ARTISTS cannot use it as an effective distribution mechanism -- because when an artist uses filesharing, it cuts the RIAA out of the loop, and the RIAA's cut of their artists' income is around 75%.

      You're right, tho -- this is fundamentally similar to how the Church used various threats of "you'll go to hell if you do X" to put sufficient fear into the plebes that they were easily controllable (and incidentally would continue giving money to said Church).

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    12. Re:If the RIAA is targeting poor people... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      That's the problem with trying to fight back against a scheme that *appears* to target randomly -- as you note, it would very hard to prove that the RIAA is targeting a specific income bracket, since to most people, the victims appear "average". And 3000 cases may not be enough to convince a court of the statistical anomaly.

      What would also work is to obtain the original list (one assumes such a list has been made) of ALL "caught filesharerers", and examine the *discards*. If everyone over a certain income level (and/or all the lawyers' kids) was discarded, that becomes extremely suspicious.

      Okay, RIAA drones -- which of you has the balls to leak the original list of known filesharers, the financial reports on each of 'em, or the criteria used to select targets??

      Tho if there was a lawsuit against the RIAA cartel -- couldn't someone subpoena their "research materials"??

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  62. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by dougmc · · Score: 1
    Someone, please explain this to the driver of the 18-wheeler tailgating me!!
    Technically, if he's tailgaiting you, he cannot be going any faster than you are (not for long, anyways). So if he's driving above the speed limit, so are you.
  63. Well done.. by GooDieZ · · Score: 1

    Congrats to RIAA, 800 sued, another few billions togo (approx. 2.365.891)

    --
    Things in a rear mirror might be behind you
  64. I'm curious... by anethema · · Score: 1

    This isnt meant to be a troll or anything, I really am curious:

    If some of these people fought the RIAA, what legal ground would they have to stand on ?

    If they were clearly engaging in copyright infringment how would they get off in court? If its so easy maybe the EFF should have one of these people take up the battle and maybe offer some financial support?

    --


    It's easier to fight for one's principles than to live up to them.
    1. Re:I'm curious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cruel and unusual punishment of $250K per song?!

    2. Re:I'm curious... by Secrity · · Score: 1

      For one thing they could dispute the ISP's records that ID'ed them. If they actually do own the album (license) for the music, there is the fair use angle. The ISP's record might be correct but somebody must be using the defendant's WiFi. I do not believe that the RIAA has been able to get the defendants' hard drives as evidence. The whole thing is a preponderance of evidence thing, the RIAA would not have to PROVE that you did it, but then you also do not have to prove that you didn't do it. The defense does have to make the judge or jury believe that the defense is stronger than the RIAA's offense. Even if a defendant does lose, there is no guarantee that the defendant will have to pay anywhere near as much as the RIAA is attempting to get. I would like to see a crack whore or trailer trash redneck get sued and then go to court representing themselves with no more defense than "I didn't do it your honor". This would put the judge in an interesting situation.

  65. Assholes by t_allardyce · · Score: 2

    Yep, really fair and balanced legal system im seeing here. This is a fucking disgrace, guilty murderers have had more legal support.

    --
    This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    1. Re:Assholes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have a criminal jury system which is superior to any in the world; and its efficiency is only marred by the difficulty of finding twelve men every day who don't know anything and can't read.
      - Mark Twain, 4th of July speech 1873

    2. Re:Assholes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Yep, really fair and balanced legal system im seeing here. This is a fucking disgrace, guilty murderers have had more legal support."

      So you want a legal system where guilty copyright infringers get off as well?

    3. Re:Assholes by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

      Well.. yeah..

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  66. Who's helping? by Dorsai65 · · Score: 1

    Where the hell is the ACLU or somebody to help defend these folks? Until and unless somebody with time and/or deep pockets is ready to stand behind one of the RIAA targets, it's just going to keep happening.

    --
    --- Asking inconvenient questions for over 30 years...
    1. Re:Who's helping? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe the ACLU can help me out with my parking ticket while they're at it.

  67. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He's tailgating me because he wants to speed. And he can't pass me because trucks in the left lane are illegal, and unlike speeding, he doesn't want to break that law. That explain it?

  68. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "even though nazi's were LEFT WING SOCIALISTS"

    FYI to the people reading this: This is a new tactic by the corporatists AKA wanna be but not quite fascists to help clear their consciences about fascism by saying the Nazi regieme was actually communist (to many Socialism = Communism). I've run into these guys in other forums.

    I don't expect this to sink in any with the troll, but to those more open minded, I'd like to point out the reason for the simularities between Communism and Fascism is that they are both Totalitarian / Authoritian forms of government, are agressively nationalistic, and that the absolute power concentrated in the hands of so few not only really does corrupt absolutely but attracts the corrupt and corruptable.

    In simplistic terms, the difference between the two is that in one, the government controls the corporations and exploits the people, in the other Corporations control the government and exploits the people.

  69. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by pauljlucas · · Score: 1
    If it is illegal, then I would like to see them doing this in criminal court.
    Being illegal doesn't mean "criminal" as in "criminal law." There's this whole other class of law called "civil law."
    --
    If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
  70. Don't buy used. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you buy a used CD, that is one less used CD on the market for someone else, who is not boycotting them, to buy. That may lead them to instead purchase a new CD, thus nullifying your action.

  71. Music Industry Their Own Worst Enemy by HangingChad · · Score: 4, Informative
    My wife and I were driving home from dinner and she pointed out that the music on the popular radio stations all sounded the same. The instruments, the type of singing, she called it modified grunge. Grunge Lite if you will. All angst and woe is me, which means they're probably singing about their record contracts. I used to joke Sarah Mclaughlin and Alanis Morissett were actually the same person working for different labels.

    So at a time when they're suing thousands of their own customers...not a good business strategy IMHO...they're also cranking out really boring, insanely depressing music that all sounds like it was stamped out with an audio cookie cutter.

    If this keeps up they'll have to give up the cocaine, private jets and porn star girlfriends! I'm having a hard time working up any sympathy for them.

    So, yeah, hit them back in the wallet. Go out and sample free downloads, there are thousands of legal songs you can check out. Here are a couple links to get you started:

    • www.goingware.com/tips/legal-downloads.html
    • music.download.com
    • irate.sourceforge.net

    You can also shop at used CD stores. The only way you're going to get them to change is to stop buying their crap.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
    1. Re:Music Industry Their Own Worst Enemy by No+Such+Agency · · Score: 1

      I used to joke Sarah Mclaughlin and Alanis Morissett[e] were actually the same person working for different labels.

      Clearly, you need to listen to more Sarah McLachlan and Alanis Morissette. Modern high-gloss production has a tendency to make people's sounds "converge", but even their most recent releases are quite dissimilar. Now, if you said the same about Creed/Nickelback/Finger 11 etc. I'd back you up 100%...

      --
      Freedom: "I won't!"
  72. Buy the CD's? by Manip · · Score: 1

    You are legally allowed to share them if you own the CD's and thus a legal right to the music.. so if they sue you, can't you buy the CD's of the songs in question and claim that you thought the people you where transfering to also had the right to listen to the music?

    I mean can they *really* prove you didn't make the MP3 from the CD that you said you did?

    1. Re:Buy the CD's? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Yes they can prove it,they have proven it before, and no in the US under the shit copyright laws we have, you are not legally allowed to share music. If you buy the music then you have bought a license to listen to that music through the particular medium you bought it through anytime you want. You do not however own rights to the actual music, thus, you do not have a right to share it.

  73. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

    who names who ?

    Ask the National Socialists

    Socialism doesn't start with concentration camps, that's where it ends.

    Pogo on a nazi, spit upon a jew,
    Vicious mindless violence that offers nothing new.
    Left wing violence, right wing violence, all seems much the same,
    Bully boys out fighting, it's just the same old game.
    Boring fucking politics that'll get us all shot,
    Left wing, right wing, you can stuff the lot.
    Keep your petty prejudice, I don't see the point,
    ANARCHY AND FREEDOM IS WHAT I WANT.

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  74. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by nwbvt · · Score: 1

    Well for starters I'm not afraid to attach my name to an opinion I post, unlike some people I know...

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  75. YHBT YHL HAND by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    again, idiocy strikes! if you couldn't tell that was a troll, then you are indeed a complete total moron, probably blinded by your own zealotry.

    1. Re:YHBT YHL HAND by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only person in this thread thats not an AC and actually appears to know what hes talking about is an idiot... OK, sure buddy, I'll buy that. /eyeroll/

    2. Re:YHBT YHL HAND by vena · · Score: 1

      i don't post as AC, so sorry, you've only been showing off how utterly retarded you are (to me, at least) for a couple of posts. :)

    3. Re:YHBT YHL HAND by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was addressing someone else, but you are part of this too. Your inability to recognize a completely intellectually bankrupt post shows that you are the retarded one. Of course, you will never realize this since it would only hurt your ego but its the truth. Any reasonable person could have seen how completely stupid and non-sensical my posts were.

    4. Re:YHBT YHL HAND by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i realy dont buy it when you people claim to have been trolling just after your shown not to have any idea what your talking about

  76. Is anyone here a lawyer? by nusratt · · Score: 2, Interesting

    One recurring theme is powerful well-funded RIAA pursuing individuals who are forced to settle in order to avoid worse consequences.

    Question:
    is there any such thing as a "reverse class-action"?
    IOW, is there any way that multiple defendants can gather and force RIAA to pursue them all as one joint defendant, so that they could pool their defensive resources?

    1. Re:Is anyone here a lawyer? by CrosbieFitch · · Score: 1

      You could try this:
      http://tinyurl.com/6x7nk

      Get a very, very large number of people to confess to file sharing...

  77. Just deserts by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 1

    They're getting what they deserve. All sophistry and rationalizations aside, what they did [i]was[/i] stealing.

    That being said, someone needs to really fight this to cut the RIAA down to size because they're acting like a damn branch of the government now. The pendulum's swung too far in their favor.

    1. Re:Just deserts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many physical objects can only be used by one person at a time. If one person wears a pair of shoes, no one else can wear them at the same time. (The person who wears them often owns them, but not always.) This is not true of intellectual property. Ideas can be copied over and over, but the person who had the original copy still has full use of it. Suppose you write a poem. Even if a million other people have copies and read the poem, you can still read the poem yourself. In other words, more than one person can use an idea--a poem, a mathematical formula, a tune, a letter--without reducing other people's use of the idea. Shoes and poems are fundamentally different in this respect.

    2. Re:Just deserts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Intellectual property is theft.

      ~~~

    3. Re:Just deserts by geekoid · · Score: 1

      no, it was copyright infringment. Different concept completly. If you can not understand that, then steer clear of these topics.

      The point is, the RIAA are using the courts systems to attack and abuse people. There also using intemidation factors to keep people out of court. Laws can be challenged through the courst system. sometime the only way to fight an unjust law is to break it and them try to beat it in court.

      The BIGGER point is that a Judge is getting fed up. It seems to me that a decent organized group could put an end to this.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    4. Re:Just deserts by teamhasnoi · · Score: 2, Funny

      Unless of course, they are innocent. But that is just sophistry, as the RIAA is above reproach, and never makes mistakes.

    5. Re:Just deserts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Repeating information is not stealing. It is called communication and it is insured by the First Admendment of the United States Constitution.

    6. Re:Just deserts by geekee · · Score: 1

      "The point is, the RIAA are using the courts systems to attack and abuse people."

      No, people used p2p systems to abuse record labels. The RIAA is going to court to get justice. The people being sued are guilty. They have no defense. If you charged them a dollar per song transfer, the fine would be a lot higher than they're actually paying.

      --
      Vote for Pedro
    7. Re:Just deserts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, technically its probably only infringment at the point you make your copy. Logically, the RIAA is chasing people for unauthorized distribution of material the companies they represent own the copyright for.

      But... even that is logically a stretch. The RIAA/MPAA want you to mentally associate content with real property that can actually be stolen. In that model, the p2p scheme is more akin to you leaving a cd on your front lawn, someone picks it up, copies it and puts it back. Seems to me that you are only guilty of not taking the proper precautions to protect their content from someone else violating the copyright on it. I don't believe you legally have any obligation to keep content that you've licensed from them under lock and key. You wouldn't be liable for someone else taking a baseball bat from your open garage and breaking a window with it. Logically the argument would be stronger for chasing p2p users for illegally "publishing" the content, but they would loose the mental association they are trying to make with real property.

      Another point is that the RIAA is claiming damages on the grounds of lost potential earnings without showing the specific number of people that downloaded that piece of content from the person they are suing... or how many of those people would have purchased the content if it had not been available for download. If 200 people downloaded a song but no one "would have" purchased it had it not been available for download by the person being sued, then logically why would the person being sued be liable for any cash amount - there was no loss experienced. Even if several might have purchased it, that is not a loss, that is lost "potential earnings".

      Additionally the RIAA makes the assumption that the market value of an mp3 is equal to the market value of song on a cd. But the reality is probably closer to the actual out of pocket value the market will bear for an mp3 being closer to the out of pocket value of a song heard on the radio - free.

      The RIAA/MPAA's clients entire business model is based on the ability to control distribution. That is the service that they have always sold to the content creators. Without that ability, they have no product. Well, to quote a book that far too many of us have been forced to read, "Someone has moved their cheese".

      The biggest point here is that corporations are convincing the courts and the legislative systems that they have a legal *RIGHT* to "potential earnings" and that people, organizations and technology that deny them of that right by directly or indirectly altering their market requires government intervention to make them stop. The most powerful, profitable, and influencial companies (that don't barter natural resources) in the world are completely dependent on their ability to control the distribution of IP they have purchased or paid to have created. They are dependant on the IP system and therefore use their influence to mold it in their favor.

      In contrast, the only reason that humans have avoided extinction and evolved to the point we have has been because of our ability to freely learn from other people's experiences, successes, and failures. If the genius who first used a pointy stick to defend him/herself from preditors only allowed restricted and limited use of that experience based on compensation, we wouldn't have gotten very far. Building on the collective pool of knowledge is our single predominate evolutionary trait. It's part of our survival instinct to absorb information/experiences anywhere and anyway we can to make ourselves stronger.

      This is a very dangerous collision course we are on.

    8. Re:Just deserts by calidoscope · · Score: 1
      The RIAA is going to court to get justice. The people being sued are guilty...are guilty??

      The people are being sued are thought to be guilty by the RIAA. As someone else pointed out, "guilt" is a matter of a criminal case, the operative word in a civil case is "responsible". Either way, that determination is made by the jury, not the accuser.

      --
      A Shadeless room is a brighter room.
    9. Re:Just deserts by a24061 · · Score: 1
      All sophistry and rationalizations aside, what they did was stealing.

      No, it was not stealing. It was nothing more or less than copyright infringement, which is an entirely different matter. The RIAA and its evil allies misuse terms like "stealing" for propaganda purposes, and you're helping them by repeating it.

    10. Re:Just deserts by maximilln · · Score: 1

      It was nothing more or less than copyright infringement

      You can't say that!
      Why not?
      Because I said it first!

      The whole concept of copyright is a blatant disregard for reality. It is a nuance which creates a game of sport for corporations to engage in. This is not a game which should be turned against individual citizens.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
  78. Don't feed the RIAA Trolls by DrSkwid · · Score: 0, Troll

    They're telling you you like it,
    you're saying that you do,
    They don't have to force it and tell you how to chew.
    You swallow it whole,
    without a fucking squeak,
    Sitting there quietly up they creep.
    You think you're fucking different,
    you think it's you and them,
    If they asked you a question,
    you'd ask them when.
    You think you're hard done by,
    but you just want the same,
    Chicken thighs,
    human thighs,
    it's all the same old game.
    Well,
    you made the choice,
    money,
    sex and crime,
    Tight little egos asking for the time.
    Well I ain't got it,
    you can sit in your pit,
    Middle class,
    working class,
    it's all a load of shit.

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  79. When you can't fight RIAA... by kc_cyrus · · Score: 2, Informative
    ...just make sure you are defending your own computer as good as possible.

    If you can not pay for court expenses, at least make sure you install PeerGuardian or Protowall or make sure that at least you have a firewall to drop the ip ranges of anti-p2p organization.

  80. All talk, no action. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When you pick up a gun and walk into Washington, then maybe I'll believe you. There is not enough support for a revolution; despite what Slashdot would have you believe, most people agree with the RIAA (even though they privately download songs, knowing full well it is illegal). Hell, it's infinitely more likely there would be a revolution over health care than copyright laws at this point in time.

    Besides, could you imagine an army of nerdy, weak Slashdotters? They would probably turn back after half an hour because they are alergic to sunlight and have to take their asthma medication.

    1. Re:All talk, no action. by calidoscope · · Score: 1
      Besides, could you imagine an army of nerdy, weak Slashdotters? They would probably turn back after half an hour because they are alergic to sunlight and have to take their asthma medication.

      Not all the geeks on slashdot are computer geeks - I'll bet there are a fair number who like seeing what they can do with deflagrating granules used to push pieces of lead/antimony alloy wrapped in gilding metal down tubes made of 4140 alloy.

      --
      A Shadeless room is a brighter room.
  81. I think you're missing the point by Trepidity · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The issue is that the RIAA is the one fucking up normal citizens' lives for no reason other than to buy time for a failing business model. If you disagree with this, it is not a good idea to continue to hand them money with which to do this: instead, you ought to boycott them.

    I've been doing this for some time now, and there's quite a bit of non-RIAA music well worth listening to. Metropolis Records is a good place to start for industrial/EBM fans.

    1. Re:I think you're missing the point by servognome · · Score: 1

      The issue is people are breaking the law and getting caught.

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
    2. Re:I think you're missing the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The issue is people are breaking the law and getting caught.

      Well lets just go straight to the executioner then... I mean these people ILLEGALLY downloaded MUSIC from the INTERNET!

      It's not that they shouldn't face a penalty of some sort, It's that these penalties are harsh and brought by a megacorp on in such a way that make it difficult/impossible for an individual to defend themselves...

  82. The RIAA is daring you to fight back by mattr · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The point is not that the people being sued probably were committing acts illegal where they lived. The point is that a massive organization is steamrolling over individuals to make an impression, whereas those individuals would never have bought for example, enough music to refinance their house, etc. The RIAA is also doing things which they didn't used to do 10 or 20 years ago, when people recorded a lot of their music off the radio as one poster mentioned.

    I don't buy RIAA music, haven't since I noticed the price of CDs in the stores was getting intolerable, this was 15 years ago. Somehow though I don't think removing one customer from their market is going to make a big dent.

    Look, they're asking for it. This wave of litigation against individuals seems like a first for the judge because usually, customers don't tolerate that kind of shit. The RIAA believes it can get away with it and continue to feed you shit at high prices and you will continue to buy it. They are DARING you to fight back. Think about it.

    So what else can you do? Well, if you are in business you could financially support non-RIAA or anti-RIAA bands, stations, software, or organziations. If you are in the prime RIAA demographic you can work hard to get all of your friends to stop buying RIAA music (especially the ones who are visible about it).

    Ad agencies are beginning to realize the P2P type social networking (not just Internet-based, think word of mouth) gets much higher quality candidates (potential customers) than ordinary advertising. This can be turned around on the RIAA and suitable software / funding could magnify it. I think the iPod thing at Duke is fantastic. Now think of how to ensure that those iPods could massively reduce the amount of income the RIAA would get from that University, think and do something about it.

    I don't buy RIAA music. I do like to watch live concerts on TV, and sometimes like what I hear on the radio (though I don't hear much of that either these days). These days cellphone subscriptions are starting to have a very large effect on record companies by removing disposable income from young people that would have gone to the RIAA. I am not for promoting illegal activities. I do see though a very unsettling trend of corporations taking over America (and elsewhere) and believe that litigation by the RIAA against potential customers , and the media slant on the affair (well there is a law against it so..) is a symptom of that.

    The RIAA is within its legal rights at the moment to take these kinds of actions. It think it will be interesting to see their response if their customers exercise their legal rights to not purchase, to publicize, to organize, and to legally foment discord and financial destruction in the RIAA. Perhaps a good first plan of attack is to create a fund to hire artists away from the RIAA.

    Remember, it is a lot like smoking. Every time you buy an RIAA product, you are saying "Thank you, please hit me again" to these nasty people. But the RIAA is always looking for new customers and new artists, every year. There is no reason why we couldn't start to put the pressure on them. Food for thought.

    1. Re:The RIAA is daring you to fight back by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "Well, if you are in business you could financially support non-RIAA or anti-RIAA bands, stations, software, or organziations. If you are in the prime RIAA demographic you can work hard to get all of your friends to stop buying RIAA music (especially the ones who are visible about it).

      screw that, use your money to pay the legal costs of someone fighting the RIAA.
      Say, I'll pay your costs, and get you an expensive lawyers, but you have to take this as far as it can go, even if that means the supreme court in 10 years time.

      "I am not for promoting illegal activities."

      sure sign that you are. ;)

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  83. My ? is - would /. help .... by adzoox · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If someone that got sued by the RIAA came to slashdot and created a website to help with legal funds I wonder how much the /. crowd would raise for them?

    Are we just talkers or can we each put a dollar where our mouths are?

    I would think a donation thread and an advice thread WOULD help win a case against them.

    --
    Yell & scream & rant & rave... it's no use... you need a shaaaave ~ Bugs Bunny
    1. Re:My ? is - would /. help .... by teamhasnoi · · Score: 2, Funny
      /.ers would only come to your aid if it was music that they themselves would have.

      You admit you were sharing 'Now That's What I Call Music #23' and you can kiss your legal defense fund goodbye.

    2. Re:My ? is - would /. help .... by Cyno · · Score: 1

      You can either attack the symptoms or the problem.

      And some people make a living off attacking the symptoms. Is that really fair to the victims?

  84. psychology; plausible deniability by nusratt · · Score: 1

    1. You make an excellent point about how people have a false sense of security merely because they're physically isolated. However...

    2. "with P2P programs, you are essentially advertising to the entire world that you have something to share"
    Actually, certain p2p architectures make it impossible to prove that the file was ever resident at the immediately-adjacent node, or to prove the identity of the contributing node. Combine this with encryption, and you have plausible deniability to the claim that the immediately-adjacent node had any way of knowing anything about the content being relayed.

  85. YHBT YHL HAND by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course I made up the quote. I have been trolling you for the past hour, dumbass! Even after I out myself as troll several times, you keep going with the notion that "Oh thats a different AC, I don't believe it!" LOL.

  86. Sure... If only... by Chordonblue · · Score: 1

    ...it were that easy. Somehow not buying CD's doesn't seem to be enough. First of all, it's the KIDS who buy the CD's, and they just want to hear the music. Good luck convincing them while the RIAA gears up it's anti-piracy 'badger' campaign (or whatever the hell that thing is). Secondly, you forget where the RIAA gets a lot of revenue from - licensing. Whether it's Muzac or motion pictures, the RIAA has PLENTY of other sources to gain revenue from.

    Beleive me, the RIAA is with us for a long time - even if they never sold another CD or venue. Something else needs to be done - probably legally. EFF anyone?

    --
    "...Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam..."
  87. Direct Payments by nurb432 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    While I may be in the minority, I have done just that..

    If I have downloaded some live show that I will listen to and feel is worth money, I send the ARTIST some cash..

    If it wasn't worth any money to me, then I don't .. and better luck next time.

    And if decide its worth buying an actual studio CD from the artist, I refuse to fund groups that are with the RIAA, as they have alternative options now, and I support the groups that choose 'plan B'.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Direct Payments by lpp · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Are you talking about big name artists? I mean, if you downloaded a No Doubt live show, liked it and kept it, are you saying you would try to send the band some cash directly?

      If so, have you ever actually verified that the group is getting the funds? I mean, for all you know, their manager or whoever is responsible for handling incoming fan mail might just be pocketing the cash themselves.

      I guess what I'm asking is, is there any indication that performers are even aware that folks like you exist? Because if not, you aren't having much of an effect. It seems we would need to raise awareness to the bands directly.

      Now, what if someone were to create the proverbial tip jar, but this time, with available options to tip any band or performer you choose who has listed themselves with the service. The money would go directly to the performer's bank account without suffering the middle man. By requiring the bands to sign up, you could at least try to screen them to make sure they understand the money is to go directly to them. Fat chance actually talking to them directly, but you never know.

      And I imagine it would have to be in the form of a tip jar or donation or somesuch because of contractual requirements for profit sharing based on sales and such. Better than a "Screw-The-RIAA" jar, legally speaking.

    2. Re:Direct Payments by Holi · · Score: 1

      The problem with that is you are not paying the copyright holder and thus infringing on copyrights. Remember it is the record company who owns the copyrights not the artist (how fucked is that)

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
    3. Re:Direct Payments by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      I have gotten thank you's in handwriting from who claims to be the artist.

      Was i duped? I agree, there no way for me to know for sure....

      ( most of what i listen to at this point are on indie lables anyway, that i think actually get compensated for sales .. but there are a couple of 'big label' artists ive sent money directly to )

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    4. Re:Direct Payments by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      Yes i am aware of the 'legal' issue, its not like i was trying to purchase the live download.

      I am just trying to give my support for the artist behind the music..

      And no, i dont expect to make a difference..

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    5. Re:Direct Payments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I have gotten thank you's in handwriting from who claims to be the artist. Was i duped? I agree, there no way for me to know for sure....

      Wait until the RIAA lawsuit with your money as evidence. Then you'll know who signed the letters.

  88. Fight on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I smoked but I did not inhale... I listened to the music but I did not download it... www.eff.org fight for our rights!

  89. Isnt that ironic? by DWXXV · · Score: 0

    Maybe its just me but considering the subject manner and what the AC is doing.....

    --
    A ruler wears a crown while the rest of us wear hats. But which would you rather have when it's raining?
  90. Re:Class-Action Defense? Class-Action Defeat. by turnstyle · · Score: 1
    "i may be comfused, but i was under the impression that none of these cases had actually gone through the court process, let alone been lost. could you post a link for one of these lost cases?"

    Sure, try this -- though it seems to reference "default" judgments. Regardless, the people who lose those default judgments wind up paying more than those who settle.

    --
    Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  91. Devil:Equal Protection under the Law by gilroy · · Score: 1
    Just to take the other side:

    Why should you be entitled to a better defense simply because you have more money? What about "equal protection under the law"? And it's very convenient to say, "Oh, but the poor don't produce enough... it's their fault." But maybe you got your money through unscrupulous or even illegal means. Being rich or being poor doesn't really say anything about your moral worth. Even hardworking people sometimes get hit with financial disaster.

    You say "the State listens to taxpayers and doesn't fund defense attorneys well" because "they do nothing but defend scumbag criminals!" But by your own rules, they don't defend only "scumbag criminals" -- and everyone knows it because there are no alternatives. Do you really think that people would allow an unbalanced system to persist when they know that, if they ever get called into court, they will have to use those same lawyers? You see, here the holy "enlightened self-interest" argument of rabid free marketeers comes back to haunt them. If everyone's access to lawyers is only to the same pool of lawyers -- if you can't secure an advantage through material wealth -- then there is strong societal interest in having the system be fairer. It's the whole "veil of ignorance"

  92. Re:Just desserts by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 1

    Ahh, sophistry rears its head.....

  93. Difference between RIAA and DirecTV by Bodysurf · · Score: 2, Interesting

    With the RIAA suits, people are sued after someone allows pirated music to be downloaded from their computer.

    With the DirecTV lawsuits, people are sued for merely possessing equipment that can be used for pirating DirecTV. Regardless of the spin DirecTV's lawyers like to put on it, the equipment people are being sued for truly has multiple purposes, some of which are legit. Rather than DirecTV being forced to prove you used it for piracy purposes, they drag you into court and you have to prove you didn't use it for piracy purposes.

    The RIAA equivalent would be them sueing people who purchased DVD or CD burners stating the reason their lawsuit targets used them for piracy purposes. But with CD/DVD burners people, in general, understand them and know they have multiple purposes, many of which are legit. Judges/juries, in general, do not understand smartcard technology and DirecTV brings in dozens of "paid expert witnesses" who testify that the stuff is only good for pirating DirecTV. Sure, you can bring in your own expert witnesses who could show how full of crap DirecTV is, but it will cost you tens of thousands of dollars, at a minimum to get to that point. No wonder that people, even the few innocent ones (e.g., they bought it but never ended up using it for piracy purposes for whatever reason [e.g., changed their mind, too hard to figure out how to use, etc.]), settle for $5K instead of fighting it; it's a matter of simple economics.

    Are most people who get sued by the RIAA guilty? I'd definitely say "Yes".

    Are most people who get sued by DirecTV guilty? Again, I'd definitely say "Yes".

    Have most people who have purchased DVD or CD burners used them to pirate a DVD-Video or a CD? I'd unquestionably say "Yes". So would it be fair for the MPAA or RIAA to just "carpet bomb" or "blanket sue" everyone who has purchased a CD or DVD burner because, in their opinion, 50, 60, or 90% of people who own them have used them at some point in the past to pirate music or a movie???

    However, in the first case (RIAA), their is direct evidence you did it; they can download a song from you and verify it is actually copyrighted -- they actually "observe" you committing the illegal act. In the second case (DirecTV), there is normally no direct evidence you did it. And that's what makes what DirecTV does, de facto, illegal, but in civil court, the person with the biggest pockets always wins. And until DirecTV sues someone with big pockets, they'll continue to illegally sue people and there's not much anyone can do about it.

    So what would I do? If I was going to buy a smartcard reader or a CD/DVD burner in 2004, I'd go down to the local store and pay cash for it. I wouldn't use anything like a credit card or my real name when I bought it. If I couldn't buy it local, I'd go to a WiFi hot-spot, sign up with a Hotmail account, use a fake name and have the stuff sent to a rented PO Box (signed up for using a fake name) and pay for the stuff with cash or a money order.

    And if you are wondering why I'd do the above with a CD/DVD burner. It's because people, in general, aren't going ballistic at the methods DirecTV is using. People, in general, just sit their with their thumbs up their ass when they hear about this, shake their head at the bad satellite TV pirate, while they listen/watch to their pirate music/movie that's playing that they burned with their CD/DVD burner.

    1. Re:Difference between RIAA and DirecTV by calidoscope · · Score: 1
      However, in the first case (RIAA), their is direct evidence you did it; they can download a song from you and verify it is actually copyrighted -- they actually "observe" you committing the illegal act. ???????

      I have yet to see a person capable of uploading songs to the internet - people typically use computers for that.

      What you probably meant to say was that the RIAA (or minions thereof) directly "observe" downloading from what purportedly your computer - presumably ID'ed through IP addresses. Some caveats:
      Was that IP address really routed to your computer?
      Was the functionality for uploading done with your authorization or knowledge? Not totally out of the question that your box could have been 0wn3d.

      --
      A Shadeless room is a brighter room.
  94. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "even though nazi's were LEFT WING SOCIALISTS"

    FYI to the people reading this: This is a new tactic by the corporatists AKA wanna be but not quite fascists to help clear their consciences about fascism by saying the Nazi regieme was actually communist (to many Socialism = Communism). I've run into these guys in other forums.
    _____________________
    A corporatist? What the hell is that? A private individual that owns / partially owns a company? Were you aware that over 80% of the United States adult population is a "Corporatist"? Maybe you should take refuge in Cuba if you are scared of private property or company ownership.

    ______________________
    I don't expect this to sink in any with the troll, but to those more open minded, I'd like to point out the reason for the simularities between Communism and Fascism is that they are both Totalitarian / Authoritian forms of government, are agressively nationalistic, and that the absolute power concentrated in the hands of so few not only really does corrupt absolutely but attracts the corrupt and corruptable.

    In simplistic terms, the difference between the two is that in one, the government controls the corporations and exploits the people, in the other Corporations control the government and exploits the people.
    _____________________
    Corporations ARE the people numbnuts. This holy site you are posting your leftist drivel on.. Owned by a corporation. The keyboard you type and spew on - produced by a corporation. The shoes/clothes/pants/hair brush you use - produced by a corporation.

    People like you are what allows communism to occasionally flourish. You are absolutely willing to take away the rights/property/ambition of the individual for the "noble" cause of the "common good". Well loser there is NO such thing as a common good unless it is enabling individuals the chance to prosper.

  95. (IANAL) Could this be used as a defense? by JoeKeegan123 · · Score: 1

    As stated, IANAL, but how does this work, as far as reasoning and logistics go, when applied to the current laws?

    Is a photocopied document accepted as the original? Or is it considered a REPRESENTATION of the original, and not accepted as THE original because it could have been faked/altered?

    Let's apply this logic to MP3s.

    Round up a bunch of RIPPING software. These MP3s had to start as redbook audio on a CD somewhere, right?

    Now what happens if we ANALYZE this MP3 and compare it to the original song on the original redbook audio CD? Does the technology used in the RIPPING accurately preserve EVERY PART of the orignal redbook audio track?

    If it doesn't, this is not a copy of that track. It's an ALTERED version, and therefore not a copy of the original.

    I mean, if a copied document is not acceptable in court, and only an ORIGINAL document is, shouldn't this precedent apply to digital media as well?

    Also, if the bitrate that the mp3 is sampled at is less of a bitrate than the original redbook audio CD is, doesn't that ALSO make it a rendition of the original track? Almost like a coverband performing it?

    Taking this a step further (I realize that THIS might be stretching it) couldn't we develop a RIPPING software that put a subsonic NOT AUDIBLE TO HUMAN EARS watermark at, say, the beginning and end of a ripped track, that made it MEASURABLY DIFFERENT than the original redbook audio track, and therefore not an accurate representation of it enoguh to be considered copyright infringement?

    I guess it all comes down to ... how STRICT is copyright infringement/copyright law? If we could put preventative measures into place, like the abovementioned watermarking of ripped tracks, we could avoid ALL of this crap that the RIAA is putting everyone through....

    or if it's as easy as proving that the copied document precedent makes their claims that this is copyright infringement invalid, lets do that.

    Any lawyers have an opinion on this type of defense? Or has it been tried before?

    1. Re:(IANAL) Could this be used as a defense? by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

      It wont fly, if the copy is good enough so that a human cant tell the difference then its certainly a copy to the court and if they can tell the difference but the quality and completeness is determined to be high enough by the court then its also a copy. But its certainly not an exact copy and its obviously not the same as stealing the CD off the shelf. Its not piracy because piracy means you're selling it on for a profit. And its not denying a sale because its prooven that a) many people buy what they download and b) some people would have just not bought it anyway, in a shoplifting case that wouldnt hold up "well i wouldnt have been able to afford it your honour so i stole it" but this isnt shoplifting, the item is still on the shelf.

      Copying the song from the CD or downloading it if you own the CD is fair use and running filesharing software is also legal. If you were sharing music with friends the courts/RIAA wouldnt be able to pull their weight (no-one is going to take that) so what it boils down to is allowing the file to be shared from your computer to random people and/or downloading material that you dont have a license for. You could argue that its up to the people who share to make sure that they get proof that you own the CD before they give you the file or you could argue its upto the downloader to make sure they have the CD. In a gun shop its up to the owner to make sure the customer has the license to buy the gun, same thing in a bar. Either way P2P networks are just going to get more close-nit (you will have to be a friend of a friend to share) and more decntralised so it should be abit harder for the RIAA to get their lambs.

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    2. Re:(IANAL) Could this be used as a defense? by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Your logic is dizzying.

      "If it doesn't, this is not a copy of that track. It's an ALTERED version, and therefore not a copy of the original.

      No, it's a copy. If I copy a book on a low grade xerox, it is still a copy, even if some of the letters are blurry.

      A judge would be might pissed if you tried that kind og 1st grade logic.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    3. Re:(IANAL) Could this be used as a defense? by JoeKeegan123 · · Score: 1

      Well, logic has to start simple, so why not from (as you put it) a first grade level? This copyright bull is made so intentionally complicated so that simple won't get around it. Try reading "The Republic" by Plato and you'll see that simple logic often times beats the complicated situation in most cases.

      There just HAS to be a way to stop this bullying.

  96. ground up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >She wanted 'to make sure that no one, frankly, is being ground up.'"

    kind of like how the department of justice ground up microsoft by forcing microsoft to spend millions of dollars defending itself.

  97. Alas... by merikus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...this is how things often work in the legal world, now-a-days. Legal professionals want to go to court as only a last resort, for the simple and compelling reason that you don't know what could happen. The RIAA doesn't want to go to court, as it's worried that they will set a bad precedent for their legal racket. The defendant doesn't want to go to court because they could lose big time, and be forced in to bankruptcy.

    The problem goes much further than this specific case--the legal system is broken and needs fixing. We've created this zero-sum game, forcing people to either settle early and choose their own destiny, or go to court and leave it up to no more than a coin flip.

    Thing is, under the current system, I'd advise my clients to do the same thing. Settle and get on with their lives. Yes, we need a test case to set some precedent here, but I would not put any of my clients in that position unless they were adamant about it.

    There's just too much risk and money involved with going to court, and, so, settlements are creating a practically private legal system with often confidential terms. What to do, what to do...

  98. Re:Class-Action Defense? Class-Action Defeat. by terrymr · · Score: 2

    default judgmenets are where there is no response from the defendant, the plaintiff is usually awarded what they asked for.

  99. Metallica fan since '87 - no more. by genixia · · Score: 1

    Yep, I agree. I got heavily into Metallica in the late eighties and subjected my friends to "And Justice For All" and "Master of Puppets" to the point where eventually some of them became fans too.

    My fandom stopped when Metallica went on the rampage against their fans during the year 2000. What total sell-outs. I had bought every album up to and including Reload - in fact I bought the black album twice when the first CD got scratched. Since that time I haven't put a penny into their account, and wont now on principle.

    Fortunately from what I've read, it appears that they haven't since released anything worth listening to anyway!

    The biggest shame is that I never did get to see them live, and now never will.

    1. Re:Metallica fan since '87 - no more. by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      Fortunately from what I've read, it appears that they haven't since released anything worth listening to anyway!

      Not entirely true. "Turn the Page" is a great song. Of course, it's the orignal Seger version that's more worth listening to: better, and doesn't pay into Metallica's coffers(unless the RIAA has sodomized the law enough that crappy cover bands get control over the originals now).

  100. Re:Just desserts by Cid+Highwind · · Score: 1

    Unless you're prepared to point out specific fallacies in the grandparent post's logic, it's probably best to keep accusations of sophistry to yourself.

    --
    0 1 - just my two bits
  101. Stopping corporate terrorism in music by Morgaine · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Stop listening to crap ...

    That would be a perfectly viable way of ending the reign of RIAA-led corporate terrorism in music, if a majority of music listeners were to join in and stop listening to the crap. As things stand though, 99% of the audience consists of musical sheep, ie. people who despite their good intentions follow exactly the instructions of the music industry in deciding what music is "good" at any given time. The vast majority simply don't realize what's being done to them. Brainwashing is not too strong a term.

    It's pretty inevitable. Unless you shut yourself off totally from the media, you get enveloped in the utterly pervasive music machine's output of not just music and video, but celebrity, hype and buzz. You literally cannot avoid it, it's as sticky as napalm. Face it, there is no future in asking the 99% of musically non-militant people to cut themselves off from the media, not even to enter the shopping malls where that sticky music is playing. The brainwashing is everywhere.

    That public rating idea is great, and if it were to catch on then it might even improve the quality of "big business music" through perceived audience pressure. But meanwhile, music downloaders are being crucified, and leaving them to it in the hope that a long-term strategy might prevail is less than charitable. Some sort of direct legal action or preventative technical solution offers better prospects for the short term.

    --
    "The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra
    1. Re:Stopping corporate terrorism in music by RLiegh · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The problem being that practically speaking; you cannot shut yourself off from the media. Even if, as I do, you

      Don't watch tv
      Don't listen to the radio
      Only listen to music you, yourself like (RIAA or otherwise)
      Only get your news from NPR

      You are _still_ bombared with crap whenever you go into your local store and when you go to work. God help you if you carpool.

    2. Re:Stopping corporate terrorism in music by maxpublic · · Score: 1, Insightful

      As things stand though, 99% of the audience consists of musical sheep

      The reason popular music is popular is because people happen to LIKE it. I know, a novel concept for someone so self-involved, but try to wrap your brain around it. Take your time.

      And can the arrogance. You aren't superior to the "sheep", and you never will be.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    3. Re:Stopping corporate terrorism in music by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      "Only get your news from NPR"
      Are you trying to imply that NPR isn't part of the media.

    4. Re:Stopping corporate terrorism in music by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, so I expect we won't see any more Windows bashing...

    5. Re:Stopping corporate terrorism in music by Alien+Being · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "The reason popular music is popular is because people happen to LIKE it."

      They would like other stuff too, if it got a reasonable amount of exposure. It doesn't get that exposure because of the way things are. Granted, this is a more complicated concept than the one you believe, but maybe if you "Take your time", you'll be able to "wrap your brain around it".

      It seems to me that you are the one who needs to "can the arrogance".

    6. Re:Stopping corporate terrorism in music by sroddy · · Score: 1

      Only get your news from NPR


      As if NPR is an unbiased source of news.

    7. Re:Stopping corporate terrorism in music by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      At least its politically biased, which is a lot easier to filter out than corporate bias.

    8. Re:Stopping corporate terrorism in music by mefus · · Score: 2, Interesting
      --
      mefus
      In Open Society, GPL Software frees YOU!
    9. Re:Stopping corporate terrorism in music by Magius_AR · · Score: 1
      They would like other stuff too, if it got a reasonable amount of exposure. It doesn't get that exposure because of the way things are.

      How do you know?
      Such a claim is just as arrogant and assuming as one who says the opposite.

      Personally I've had alot of exposure to tons of genres, from oldies to rave to industrial to jap pop. You name it, I've probably heard something like it. And frankly, I _still_ prefer most popular music to the "niche" music markets that some snobs claim to be "superior music". And I say "most" because there _are_ a few gems amongst the more obscure music.

      Still, I agree...popular music is popular for a reason.
      The "repetitive brainwashing" conpiracy-theory argument against popular music is all horseshit.

    10. Re:Stopping corporate terrorism in music by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

      "How do you know?"

      Because it has been proven time and time again by artists who had to fight tooth and nail to get their first airplay only to become an overnight success. Record executives are commonly shown to be wrong.

      "Still, I agree...popular music is popular for a reason."
      Yeah, it's popular because the fatcats decide that they're going to make someone a star.

      "The "repetitive brainwashing" conpiracy-theory argument against popular music is all horseshit."

      Maybe you're just too young or naive to see it, but that doesn't mean it's not true.

    11. Re:Stopping corporate terrorism in music by Magius_AR · · Score: 1
      Because it has been proven time and time again by artists who had to fight tooth and nail to get their first airplay only to become an overnight success.

      There's millions of "hopefuls" who think they have talent flocking to the record industry looking for easy money (just look at all the crappy singers that audition for shows like American Idol).
      There's only so many record companies, and they only have so much time.
      Of course there's going to be "tooth and nail" competition. Hell, I heard they turned away alot of GOOD singers in the latest competition, simply because they can only take so many.

      Yeah, it's popular because the fatcats decide that they're going to make someone a star.

      Who has been "made" a star?
      To bring up American Idol again as a perfect example. Three seasons running and where have those people's careers gone? Clay is probably the only one whose album really took off (and frankly I think he's the only one that deserved it). The winner of the first show you never hear about (even her movie flopped). I've never heard any of their "hits" on the radio. Is this not what this show is supposed to be doing? "Making" a star? I certainly don't see it happening at any incredible rate. I think many of them have the talent, but the canned "original" songs that are being generated for them by the show SUCK. These are the same "repetitive" songs you claim are supposed to "instantly be liked by the masses." Well, I certainly haven't been hearing them, nor would I want to. I think the public agrees...that's why the shit ISN'T ON THE RADIO. Clear-cut case of public determining what they like, not the other way around.

      Anyways, from a strictly financial standpoint, why would record companies waste their money bringing a sub-par singer up to spec when they could just recruit a good one with good talent and good lyrics?
      Face it, whether you like it or not, a large portion of the singers you claim are "industry-generated" actually have talent, vocal or otherwise.

      As far as what they're singing sounding repetitive, or all the songs being the same, let me welcome you to this new concept called a "genre". To me, all country music sounds the same. Does that give me privy to discount all the talent present in THAT market segment?

      It's different strokes for different folks. The "sound" of popular music may not appeal to you, but it appeals to others.

      I've always wondered. What would you do if your obscure "better" music DID get airplay and exposure and everyone started to like it? Would it suddenly be labeled the new "popular" music? Would you then be forced to hate it for being overplayed and enjoyed by the masses? ANY genre can be replicated and mass produced. The fact that it occurs doesn't mean that people are no longer allowed to have an actual valid appreciation of the sound.

    12. Re:Stopping corporate terrorism in music by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

      "What would you do if your obscure "better" music DID get airplay and exposure and everyone started to like it?"

      I'm not arguing in favor of any particular type of music. I never said that my music is "better". I'm just saying that there's a lot of valuable music out there that is obscured by the people who are controlling the media.

      "It's different strokes for different folks. The "sound" of popular music may not appeal to you, but it appeals to others"

      You seem to think that i'm some kind of elitist. I'm not. I like some of the monster hits, but I don't need to hear them 5 times/day all over the fm dial. Well actually, I guess I am a *bit* of an elitist, and I think everyone should be. Otherwise, we're just all conforming to the lowest common denominator.

    13. Re:Stopping corporate terrorism in music by Magius_AR · · Score: 1
      I like some of the monster hits, but I don't need to hear them 5 times/day all over the fm dial.

      I'm in total agreeance there.

      There's alot of newer songs I like alot, but get overplayed so much that I eventually grow to dislike them. But this more of an an argument against local radio stations, not record companies. So the blame really rests primarily on your local DJs.

    14. Re:Stopping corporate terrorism in music by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

      "So the blame really rests primarily on your local DJs."

      Not really. DJ's don't get to decide what they play anymore. The playlists are created by executives.

      In the late 50's/early 60's there was a scandal because record producers were bribing dj's to give their records airtime. It was a combination of dishonest radio hosts and dishonest record companies that gave mediocre acts a boost and held back some real talent.

      This still goes on today, but it's no longer a few hundred backs being handed to a dj. It's corporate level deals being done between the Sony's and ClearChannels of the world. Google for "new payola".

      If you're interested in hearing about how radio used to be, just look around for interviews with old djs like Arnie Ginsburg.

  102. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by CuntyCunterton · · Score: 1

    Now that's just crass......

  103. Boycott RIAA by dunsurfin · · Score: 2

    RIAA Radar is one of the utilities on the web you can use to avoid spending your money in ways that support the RIAA in favor of supporting artists who are not affiliated with the RIAA:

    http://www.magnetbox.com/riaa/
  104. RIAA radar by mesmartyoudumb · · Score: 3, Informative

    I suggest everyone check out the RIAA RADAR, It has a list of most artists and their releases, and tells you if the artists company is RIAA or not. Check it out at: http://www.magnetbox.com/riaa/

    Enjoy!

    --
    "Comedy's a dead art form. Now tragedy, that's funny."
  105. They have to prove it by Innominandum · · Score: 1

    IANAL, but I'm pretty sure that they have to PROVE it was you pirating the music. If there is more than one person in your household capable of using your computer, then how can they prove it was you? If they can't prove it was you, they probably can't prove it was the other person, or even both of you.

    They have no case. This is 100% intimidation. These wimps in the article settled out of court. If you win your case, they will probably end up paying your legal fees. If I illegally traded music, I would gladly take these mofo's on in court.

    1. Re:They have to prove it by westlake · · Score: 1
      IANAL, but I'm pretty sure that they have to PROVE it was you pirating the music. If there is more than one person in your household capable of using your computer, then how can they prove it was you? If they can't prove it was you, they probably can't prove it was the other person, or even both of you.

      They don't have to prove it was you. Not if you are the head of the household and paying the bills. Why do you think it is dear old granny who gets sued and not the punk kid living in her basement?

    2. Re:They have to prove it by Innominandum · · Score: 1

      I think in these cases they are able to prosecute the legal custodian of children under 18. Like I said, I'm not 100% positive about my stance. Still, I am pretty sure that if any one of these people did a few hours of research they could easily hold their own against the RIAA.

      I've had bad experiences in the past being bullied around by huge companies. I was able to look up the associated laws myself and come up with some pretty intimidating letters. In all cases they settled out of court. It really isn't that difficult. If things don't get too hairy you don't need an overpriced lawyer.

  106. Missed the point by geekoid · · Score: 1

    IT's about the RIAA abuse. There attacks on people who can not afford to fight an untested case.

    They do not jave the right to crack down on anything. They are not a part of the government.

    Another thing to consider is that a judge is fed up with them as well. That tells me that the RIAA is way out of line, and only using the courts as a tool.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  107. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My name is James M. Brogan, Jr. I was born on October 14, 1979. I live at 280 Park Avenue South, apartment 4F, New York City. Now what's your name, dipshit?
    --
    Sick of pompous windbags? Change "Karma Bonus" modifier (Preferences, Comment Options) to -1 penalty.

  108. Re:Just desserts by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 1

    The fallacies have been pointed out ad nauseum ever since Napster reared its ugly head. Just because the original still exists means nothing; one can extrapolate that fallacy to justify counterfeiting, too.

    The biggest point, as Lars Ulrich pointed out in his seminal slashdot interview, is of consent. If there's no consent by the artist, the copyright holders, the labels, etc, it's stealing, plain and simple. Putting aside the "music wants to be free" crack dream and the non-corporeal nature of music, at a bare minimum music sharing is the stealing of royalties and profits.

    Sharing with 3 million of my closest friends isn't Fair Use. It's all a question of scale...

  109. What proof? (Re:Can I mod this +6?) by mi · · Score: 1

    From the beginning of your post you aknowledge the fact, that the accused are responsible as the accusors charge. So why argue about the standard of proof at all?

    Or do you, in fact, sincerely believe, that some of the people RIAA, who has targeted so far, are innocent?

    Or are you, perhaps, afraid, that RIAA (or MPAA) will, in the future use the same tactics to go after the much wider group of people, and there will be innocents there? That would be a legitimate concern, of course, but as long as it still costs RIAA more (in absolute terms) to wage each of these little battles, than it gets from the "victims" in settlements, there is no need to worry -- they are not making money off these settlements. They just want to scare people enough for the illegal downloads to stop. Whether this is a wise plan or not should not concern us...

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    1. Re:What proof? (Re:Can I mod this +6?) by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 2, Informative

      > From the beginning of your post you aknowledge the fact, that the accused are responsible as the accusors charge. So why argue about the standard of proof at all?

      Accused, when found guilty, are responsible for what they did. Untill they are found guilty, they are accused of, suspected of, but NOT GUILTY.

      This is fundamental to how law and justice work.

      You still have to prove an accusation, AND IF IT IS TRUE, you can hold the person responsible for it.

      Those are really 2 independant things.

      > Or do you, in fact, sincerely believe, that some of the people RIAA, who has targeted so far, are innocent?

      I do not know, nor do you.

      That is exactly why it has to be brought to the proper court with the proper kind of proof.

      There is a very serious chance that there are people among those accused that did not do wrong, but simply cannot afford to fight the situation, even less so in the face of civil court with its low standards for proof.

      > Or are you, perhaps, afraid, that RIAA (or MPAA) will, in the future use the same tactics to go after the much wider group of people, and there will be innocents there?

      There is no reason to assume that it did not happen already, neither is there a reason to assume that it did. This is exactly why stricter levels of proof are required.

      > That would be a legitimate concern, of course, but as long as it still costs RIAA more (in absolute terms) to wage each of these little battles, than it gets from the "victims" in settlements, there is no need to worry -- they are not making money off these settlements. They just want to scare people enough for the illegal downloads to stop.

      As long as people have a big chance on losing regardless of being right or wrong, people are not going to fight it if they have a cheaper way out. This is directly frustrating the legal system and because of that an absolutely unacceptable practise.

      There are working ways to deal with criminals that do not involve bullying people, scare tactics, frustrating the legal system etc. They should use those instead.

      > Whether this is a wise plan or not should not concern us...

      Yes it should, it undermines the legal system.

      A very serious problem resulting from the RIAA way of doign things is the loss of proportionality in punnishment. Prop[ortionality is what makes that shoplifting is not punnished the same way as murder. It is extremely important that crimes that are coinsidered more serious are punnished in a more heavy way. What happens here is circumventing that alltogether.

    2. Re:What proof? (Re:Can I mod this +6?) by mi · · Score: 1
      From the beginning of your post you aknowledge the fact, that the accused are responsible as the accusors charge. So why argue about the standard of proof at all?
      Accused, when found guilty, are responsible for what they did. Untill they are found guilty, they are accused of, suspected of, but NOT GUILTY.

      To start with, someone with your knowledge of the legal system, should know, that in the civil suit there is no "guilt". There is (or there is not) "responsibility". O.J. Simpson is not guilty of killing his wife (as per the criminal trial), but is responsible for her death (as per the subsequent civil suit). But I understand your meaning and will likewise use the term "innocent" as "not responsible"...

      You still have to prove an accusation, AND IF IT IS TRUE, you can hold the person responsible for it.

      I don't have to prove anything. RIAA does. You are trying to convince me -- and the rest of Slashdot, that we have something to worry about. And "I, for one," remain unimpressed.

      There is a big difference between something being true and it being provable. For me to worry about something like this, I need to sincerely:

      1. doubt the responsibility of the accused;
      2. fear, that many innocents may be purposely targeted in the future in the same manner. ("And when they came for me, there was no one left to speak for me.");
      3. fear, that this kind of tactics may be used selectively against political opponents.

      Your original post begins with the assertion, which takes care of the 1. Indeed, you claim, that:

      WHat is beign questioned is how that is dealt with by RIAA and the legal system.

      To which I respond, that since RIAA is not making money out of these settlements -- they spend more on investigations and the lawyers, than they get from the folks -- there is no reason to fear, that this "abuse of the legal system" is sustainable. This aleviates the concerns of the 2.

      As far as 3., well, we haven't seen that yet. The political process, luckily, remains such, that all sides have enough money to be able to defend themselves in courts.

      What remains is your unabashed hatred of the RIAA, and your willingness to tolerate the abuse of the intricacies of the legal system to defend the illegal downloaders against the fines. I'd rather you defend the victims of anti-speeding laws...

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    3. Re:What proof? (Re:Can I mod this +6?) by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1
      To start with, someone with your knowledge of the legal system, should know, that in the civil suit there is no "guilt". There is (or there is not) "responsibility". O.J. Simpson is not guilty of killing his wife (as per the criminal trial), but is responsible for her death (as per the subsequent civil suit). But I understand your meaning and will likewise use the term "innocent" as "not responsible"...


      Good point. This is not exactly how the RIAA wants to tell the story, but quite true of course.

      I don't have to prove anything. RIAA does. You are trying to convince me -- and the rest of Slashdot, that we have something to worry about. And "I, for one," remain unimpressed.


      Okay, bad use of language maybe, 'you' refered to the party seeking damages in general, so in this case the RIAA. They will have to prove, but only to a low standard, that someone infringed and caused them damage in this specific case. My issue is that the low standard of proof they have to provide.

      There is a big difference between something being true and it being provable. For me to worry about something like this, I need to sincerely:

      1. doubt the responsibility of the accused;
      2. fear, that many innocents may be purposely targeted in the future in the same manner. ("And when they came for me, there was no one left to speak for me.");
      3. fear, that this kind of tactics may be used selectively against political opponents.

      Your original post begins with the assertion, which takes care of the 1. Indeed, you claim, that:

      WHat is beign questioned is how that is dealt with by RIAA and the legal system.

      To which I respond, that since RIAA is not making money out of these settlements -- they spend more on investigations and the lawyers, than they get from the folks -- there is no reason to fear, that this "abuse of the legal system" is sustainable. This aleviates the concerns of the 2.


      No it does not aleviate the concerns of 2.

      The quote you refer to is the exact reason why. You should not wait till they are halfway on the list, you should not question how long the list is and how far they are from you, you should question the thing as a matter of principe.

      As far as 3., well, we haven't seen that yet. The political process, luckily, remains such, that all sides have enough money to be able to defend themselves in courts.


      The problem with 3 is that wether the opponents are political or not is irrelevant. Issue 3 won't be too much of an issue in case of the RIAA tho.

      What remains is your unabashed hatred of the RIAA, and your willingness to tolerate the abuse of the intricacies of the legal system to defend the illegal downloaders against the fines. I'd rather you defend the victims of anti-speeding laws...


      I have repeatedly stated that I do not mind action being taken against people who distibute copyrighted material illegally. I do object to a private organisation doing that. There are too many reasons for listing all of them here why in virtually every case such things are a task of law enforcement agencies and not private agencies. I see no reason why it should not be the case here, and many why it should.

      I also see quite some objections to also allow such a private organisation to do this with a lower standard of proof then is required for criminal cases. I do see that problem whenever a private organisation goes after people who commit a crime.

      As for defending file downloaders, where I live it is legal to do so, but distributing (sharing) is not. You may have noticed that I have called it criminal also, not because it is theft btw, but because infringing someones rights should be considered a crime.

      You may also note that the RIAA goes after peopel who share files, not those who download them.
    4. Re:What proof? (Re:Can I mod this +6?) by mi · · Score: 1
      You should not wait till they are halfway on the list, you should not question how long the list is and how far they are from you, you should question the thing as a matter of principle.

      As a matter of principle, there is nothing illegal about RIAA's tactics. I also know, that RIAA has no incentive for having too big a list, nor for putting innocent people on it. And I'm old enough to know, that evil does not spread far without incentive.

      I have repeatedly stated that I do not mind action being taken against people who distibute copyrighted material illegally. I do object to a private organisation doing that.

      This is where you are wrong, I think. A private entity will not be doing this for the sake of doing ("we have to enforce the law"). As long as it (the entity) is not making money on these suits, I'm comfortable, that it will not "go on a fishing expedition".

      An overzealous district attorney, aiming, perhaps, for a governor's seat, on the other hand, could do just that, if empowered by a law. Less bothered by the profit, the government can use vastly bigger resources and be a lot nastier than a corporation (only as long as the said corporation makes no profit on each case, of course).

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    5. Re:What proof? (Re:Can I mod this +6?) by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      > This is where you are wrong, I think. A private entity will not be doing this for the sake of doing ("we have to enforce the law"). As long as it (the entity) is not making money on these suits, I'm comfortable, that it will not "go on a fishing expedition".

      I doubt they will go onto a fishing expidition, I also strongly doubt the claims with regards to damage that are made. I first of all see an incentive to control distribution of copyrighted works and obstruction of alternative means of distribution.

      THeir policy is to try to shutdown the networks and if not possible, try to get laws passed that will give them the desired control and meanwhile scare people away from the sharing networks.

      I see their actions against people who share as a way to help that (and one of the few that has legal ground), as you correctly point out they are generally not economically interesting for them, so the argument of getting their damage compensated, which is what civil court is for, is not a very valid argument for having them at all.
      (I guess this is also where the source lies for our different opinions on this matter)

      RIAA or any similar organisation should not be allowed the potential to use the legal system that way, which is just another reason why I think copyright infringement should be handled as either a fellony or a crime depending on the situation and scale, and why it doesn't belong in civil court in this way.

    6. Re:What proof? (Re:Can I mod this +6?) by mi · · Score: 1
      I doubt they will go onto a fishing expidition

      I'm too unfamiliar with the matter myself to argue the point personally, but I know plenty of people, who view New York's DA Eliot Spitzer's litigation against financial firms as just that.

      RIAA or any similar organisation should not be allowed the potential to use the legal system that way

      Sorry, I remain unconvinced. They cought some people sharing illegally. They did certain steps to stop them and to discourage others. None of the steps was in itself illegal... What's the problem? You don't like them? Buy somebody else's CD.

      As for the criminal-vs.-civil litigations, I offer you the most recent discussion where some people appear to disagree with you.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
  110. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I normally don't reply once I've trolled the trolls, but...

    "A corporatist? What the hell is that? A private individual that owns / partially owns a company? Were you aware that over 80% of the United States adult population is a "Corporatist"? Maybe you should take refuge in Cuba if you are scared of private property or company ownership."

    Corporatist - Of, relating to, or being a corporative state or system.

    "Fascism should more appropriately be called Corporatism because it is a merger of State and corporate power." - Benito Mussolini (1883-1945), Fascist Dictator of Italy

    Oh, and I thought I made it abundantly clear Communism sucks for many of the same reasons facism does. But I guess you can't help the knee-jerk reflex.

    Corporations ARE the people numbnuts. This holy site you are posting your leftist drivel on.. Owned by a corporation. The keyboard you type and spew on - produced by a corporation. The shoes/clothes/pants/hair brush you use - produced by a corporation.

    People like you are what allows communism to occasionally flourish. You are absolutely willing to take away the rights/property/ambition of the individual for the "noble" cause of the "common good". Well loser there is NO such thing as a common good unless it is enabling individuals the chance to prosper.


    So is the government; last time I checked, despite mistakes which make this regieme's critics compare them so, the US government is not run by baboons. Oh, and where did I say that corporations where inheritly evil? All I was trying to say was like the seperation between church and state that helps prevent a theocrasy, there should be at least some of a barrier between corporation and state, so that communism or fascism don't take over.

    I won't even dignify the slander with a responce other than this: This is not a contest over who can spew the most insults.

    Oh, wheren't we talking about whether or not the Nazi's where fascist or not? Looks like it "magically" got twisted into whether or not I was a commie. Wonder how that happened... ;P

  111. RIAA legal fund by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why doesn't someone(s) start a legal fund against the RIAA with contributions by a large pool. Sort of like buying an insurance policy so that if you get sued your legal fees are covered by the fund?

  112. Public Defenders by po8 · · Score: 1

    (Yeah, yeah: -1 OT. Big deal.)

    The fact that you believe that public defenders might be, as a class, passionate and competent means that you have had insufficient contact with your local (assuming US) criminal justice system. Go find someone who is a criminal lawyer, police officer, or judge who sees the courtroom on a regular basis. Ask them what the public defenders are like. Go look at the track record of PDs compared to private attorneys---counting a plea bargain as a conviction (because it is). Then check back here and let us know what you found out.

    IMHO this is the natural consequence of (a) massively underfunding the PDs, and (b) not giving defendants any power in the selection of their PD.

    If you ever are a criminal defendant, I strongly urge you to pay for private counsel, by any means necessary.

  113. Non-Java clients please!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    iRate sounds like an excellent idea.

    Unfortunately, I fell at the first hurdle when trying to install it ... a dependency on Java is a showstopper for me, and I know I'm not the only one with this problem. I know that this is something that Java zealots simply cannot comprehend, but alas it's real, and rather than spending more time arguing about it, I prefer to find alternative solutions.

    From reading the minimal docs, am I right in thinking that iRate uses a pure XML protocol, so that a simple commandline client that forks off an mpg123 player would be pretty simple to implement?

    1. Re:Non-Java clients please!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, you are right. don't know anyone who has done it though.

    2. Re:Non-Java clients please!! by forrest · · Score: 1
      There's a half-baked perl/tk implementation at http://www.abstractfactory.org/irate/AlterniRATE.h tml

      It doesn't download songs yet; it uses your existing iRATE playlist. I wrote it because the algorithm iRATE uses (or at least used to use) to decide which track to play next sucks. There was a problem where popular songs got "stuck" and you woudn't hear them for ages ... that one may have been fixed, but the other problem, that old lower-rated tracks which you would expect to hear every once in a while you will never hear again. The main author of iRATE has declared that to be a non-problem, so I don't think it will ever be fixed.

      AlterniRATE uses xmms to play tunes, and needs a couple of CPAN modules, but has no java dependency.

      I'm not actively working on AlterniRATE anymore, but if anyone's interested in helping make it a full-fledged client, I'd probably get back on it.

      --
      -- Only unbalanced people can tip the scales.
  114. ACLU by ElDuderino44137 · · Score: 1

    'I've never had a situation like this before, where there are powerful plaintiffs and powerful lawyers on one side and then a whole slew of ordinary folks on the other side,'

    Hey All,

    Where is the ACLU in all of this? Are they too busy fighting for the rights of NAMBLA?

    Cheers,
    --The Dude

  115. Perhaps what is needed is software... by 3seas · · Score: 1

    that would make it easy for musicians new and old to put their music on the internet for both free and for pay.

    and once enough do use it then others will create sites contaning ratings, etc...

    Of course this is aimed at non-riaa musicians but once the ratings for any group or artist gets up there, then that group or artist then have bargining power with RIAA..... to force them to either get better about the treatment of artist of come to an end.

    And since such a system will reduce subsidizing new bands and the risk of it, by the RIAA....

    1. Re:Perhaps what is needed is software... by shark72 · · Score: 1

      "that would make it easy for musicians new and old to put their music on the internet for both free and for pay."

      This already exists. Kazaa is used by many indie musicians to distribute their own work. Of course, 99% of Kazaa traffic is the unauthorized distribution of copyrighted work, but I have heard stories that some musicians use it. There's also the old standby of putting MP3s of your work on your own web site.

      Indie and unsigned musicians who wish to make money on their work can use Apple's iTunes Music Store. You typically have to go through a third party that will transcode your music and work with Apple to get it on the store, but the cost of doing so is typically less than pressing a few hundred of your own CDs and trying to sell them one by one on your own.

      Trouble is, the "The Internet will cause the death of the RIAA Real Soon Now" sentiment has been echoed on /. for years. The Internet's a great thing, but it's not immune to a few immutable rules of economics.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
    2. Re:Perhaps what is needed is software... by 3seas · · Score: 1

      kazza is out in regards to what I was suggesting.

      artist would need to register for numerious reasons including keeping the music clean of pirated stuff. Its not for trading music but for publishing original works.

      the "own site" makes since but it doesn't help teh general population to find your site.

      The iTunes Store is an outlet (a store). but not the only (possible) one.

      I was thinking more along the lines of new bands/artist (not to rule out older bands/aritst) seeking web based audiences.

      The RIAA will either come to an end or change. Just because it hasn't happened yet doesn't mean the IP camel won't break its back.

  116. Re:Class-Action Defense? Class-Action Defeat. by turnstyle · · Score: 1
    "default judgmenets are where there is no response from the defendant, the plaintiff is usually awarded what they asked for."

    OK, and as I said in the parent post, just about every case so far has either settled for about $3000, or lost for about $5000-$10000.

    A default judgmenet is a loss, and those who have lost via default judgmenets are paying more than those who have settled.

    --
    Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  117. Can we have a *gasp* technical discussion? by morriscat69 · · Score: 1

    Whay concerns me here is:

    Whant tools are the RIAA using to get into peoples boxes?

    How do we geeks keep the RIAA out of our boxes? So we can teach laymen to do the same...

    Do firewalls work for this?

    Those should be the real concerns here!

    What can we do now ?

    Because at some point, the whole concept of trading vastly inferior copys of the original media, thereby giving a non-corporate non-radio outlet for artists/media will be widely recognized as the legal and acceptable activity that it is.

    Until then, we need to batton down our TCP Ports!

    (and if this has already been beat to death, sombody kindly e-mail me a link! puhleeez? :))

  118. If you get sued, fight! by clambake · · Score: 1

    Fight, but don't try to win... Don't even get a lawyer... But make sure you let the media know that you are going to martyr yourself. As soon as they make mention of how much money you have cost them, take out your wireless laptop and start your perl script to copying a single mp3 over and over again. Have a nice little running counter going on the screen of how much money you have taken from thier babies' mouths. Once you reach a number higher than the amount of money than they reported on thier taxes, or more money than the GDP, whichever, as the court why they are not being procecuted for tax evasion... after all, in a couple fo minutes, they will have just virtually lost more money than exists in teh nation. Then offer to plead guilt only if you are made to pay back the ENTIRE sum that you have stolen from them, all ten quadrillion billion dollars. Any judge with a sense of irony may just let you do it... File for bankruptcy and ride the media parade out the courtroom door.

  119. Somehow, I get this feeling... by Brightest+Light · · Score: 1

    ...that lying in open court is just a bit more illegal than copyright infringement. Besides, they're not suing downloaders (as far as i know), just the uploaders; I doubt that actually owning the CD would do you any good.

  120. MOTDs by Brightest+Light · · Score: 1
    They're not actually breaking into anybody's computers; they're accessing public shared folders. While some programs may share folders that those who own the computer do not want shared; they're still up in public for everybody to access.

    It was my understanding that banners and MOTDs that read "IF YOU ARE A MEMBER OF ($GOVERNMENT_ENTITY|*AA), (YOU CANNOT USE THIS SITE|DOWNLOAD ANY FILES|PROSECUTE ITS MEMBERS|ETC)" had as much legal weight as some people's e-mail signatures that state that "only the intended recipient may read this, if this was not meant for you delete it, etc etc".
    That is to say: none whatsoever.

    1. Re:MOTDs by kelnos · · Score: 1

      this is something i'm curious about. i can see full well why such a MOTD would be ineffective against law enforcement, but why shouldn't it work for a private entity (in this case the RIAA, etc.)?

      to explain my reasoning, an analogy. sure, it's flawed, but maybe not too much:

      say the front door to your house is open. a cop is driving by your house, and sees this, and (logically) thinks "hmm, there could be a burglary or something going on here." he stops his car, gets out, runs up your front lawn, and enters your house (cautiously, of course, and probably yelling "police!" or something as he enters). he moves out of the entryway of your house into the doorway into your kitchen, only to see you holding the knife you used to just stab some poor guy who is lying on the floor, dead. at this point, he arrests you and eventually you go to court and are proven to have killed this guy.

      is there anything wrong with that? i don't think so - i think that's all perfectly legal. law enforcement officials have leave to enter your house if they have reason to believe a crime is in progress, correct?

      now, let's take a similar story, but say it's not a cop driving by, but it's bob, the owner of some music store in town. and say you're not in your house knifing someone, but you have a big pile of CDs on your living room floor with a big sign on them that says "I JUST STOLE THESE CDS FROM BOB'S MUSIC STORE". so bob sees your open door, and, being depressed and sad that his entire stock has been stolen, and he's going to go out of business and lose his house and car, decides he's going to rob you. bob comes in, sees your sign and pile of CDs, takes a picture (yeah, he's a weirdo and carries around a camera all the time), and then sues you. assuming this picture does constitue enough evidence (work with me here), i see no reason why he shouldn't win the case. but i also see no reason why you can't sue bob - or even press charges against him - for unlawfully entering your home.

      yeah, the analogy isn't perfect, but i think it should still hold. if you leave files on your computer open to the world, with a sign on them that says "if you are affiliated with the RIAA or any of its member labels, you are not authorised to enter this computer system", i don't see why they shouldn't be legally accountable if they do. if they find that you're infringing on their copyrights, sure, they can sue you, but you should also be able to sue them (or press charges?) for unlawfully accessing your computer.

      --
      Xfce: Lighter than some, heavier than others. Just right.
    2. Re:MOTDs by Brightest+Light · · Score: 1
      I doubt very much it would work against something like the RIAA because of the nature of most p2p software. I don't think that using a private home as an analogy works. If you're sharing files via p2p; it's anything *BUT* private. I think that this might be a better way of describing it (note that i'm pretty bad at coming up with analogies):

      Instead of a private home, imagine if you took your music collection downtown to an outdoor area with thousands of other people doing the same, set up a table with a list of your music, and allowed anybody to make a free copy of any song on any CD there. That's how most p2p software works: anybody can look, anybody can search among the "tables" for music they want. Now imagine that Bob is tired of people making copies of his music instead of buying the CDs from his store. So he heads to this area to look around for people sharing copies of CDs that he sells, and that should have been bought from his store. He then notes table #, and Bob files a lawsuit against the people at those tables for distributing copies of his CDs. Now imagine that you've put up a sign on your table saying "IF YOU ARE FROM BOB'S CD STORE YOU CAN'T LOOK AT MY TABLE". Seems pretty silly, doesn't it? Now IANAL but I doubt very much that such a sign would hold any legal weight, any more so than an MOTD or banner etc saying something similar.

      Most p2p software that people use for copyright infringement is designed so that you're making the contents of your shared directory open to anybody else running the software. If you don't want people looking at the music collection you've made publicly available on your computer, then don't make your music collection available to everybody (or don't use software that does). I could see people having a defense if the RIAA actively broke into their computers looking for music; but this isn't the case. Another poster here had a good suggestion: If you're going to share music (that you don't have distribution rights to), go do it in a public place with loads of people around, utterly naked. I think that description would give most people a good idea of just how much privacy they can expect when using p2p software to violate people's copyrights.

  121. WiFi Network = NO PROOF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know, if you simply install a wireless network...and then share files, there is no evidence that the 'shared' files didnt come from some anonymous person using your wireless network. And since ISPs are not responsible for what is on the wire, how can you be responsible for what passes over your wifi? Sure, you might be violating the ISP rules for internet use, but that is a different violation.

    There is NO way the RIAA can verify where the files came from unless they get your PC...and currently they aren't doing this...

  122. This is a horrible idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Creating bureaucracy to deal with a problem which only exists due to RIAA greed solves nothing. I wish we could fine you $100 for coming up with this crap.

  123. /usr/share/state/us-constitution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am not a lawyer and do not know the extent of constitutional law, and how this provision would protect us but...

    Admendment IV of the constitution states

    Amendment IV

    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers,
    and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
    violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause,
    supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the
    place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

    Is not what the RIAA doing unreasonable, and is not my computer in my home? Also does the RIAA even use warrents, nope don't think so...

  124. They will be despised by Wansu · · Score: 1


    With each "conviction", hatred toward them will grow. Their enemies are accumulating. When bad deeds are done to RIAA and it's people, there will be too many suspects to narrow down.

    --
    Wansu, th' chinese sailor
    1. Re:They will be despised by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you watch 60 Minutes last week? They made the p2p guys look like asses and showed that the movie industry was the real victim. I don't think there is any hatred growing, except among /. zealots.

  125. Re:Just desserts by Cid+Highwind · · Score: 1

    The fallacies have been pointed out ad nauseum ever since Napster reared its ugly head. Just because the original still exists means nothing; one can extrapolate that fallacy to justify counterfeiting, too.

    No, you can use it to say that counterfeiting isn't stealing, which is true. That doesn't *justify* anything. You're missing the entire point of the "copying isn't stealing" argument. I don't think it's ethical or legal, I just don't think stealing is the right word for it.

    at a bare minimum music sharing is the stealing of royalties and profits.

    Nope, sorry, it's not. Music sharing is violating the rcord label's legal monopoly on distributing a copyrighted song. If we grant that copyright infringment is theft, where does the stupidity stop? Do we redefine homicide as theft of life, assault and battery as theft of health, public drunkenness as theft of peace and quiet, speeding as theft of highway safety and so on?

    --
    0 1 - just my two bits
  126. Perhaps what is needed is a new kind of P2P net. by wintermute42 · · Score: 1

    What ever social/moral issues exist (e.g., artist, like software engineers, need to get paid for their work), peer-to-peer networks have many interesting computer science issues associated with them. For example, Hector Garcia-Molina database group at Standford is also involved in peer-to-peer network research. A peer-to-peer network that provided privacy to those who supplied files would not only avoid RIAA suits, but it would protect people who publish material that governments and corporations wished to suppress (e.g., it would be a way to guarantee free free speech).

    I have not worked this through, but on the face of it, I would think that it should be possible to create a peer-to-peer network where it would be difficult to tell which system supplied a file. The idea (half-baked, perhaps) is that a request would go out for a file, or perhaps a string which could be matched by a responder ("Barry Manilow"+hits). The response would be routed through intermediate systems and might not follow the same path through the life of the transaction (e.g., the file fetch). Neither the requester or the responder would know that path to the other. They would just send packets out to their neighbors.

    While in theory it would be possible to trace these transactions, it would be difficult. And doing so might be similar to wiretapping the internet, which might be illegal without a court order (at least in the US).

    So there are a few questions:

    • Is there p2p software that obscures the source of files? Certainly what I've proposed is not terribly original, so perhaps it already exists. Avoiding getting sued by the RIAA seems like a pretty good incentive to use this software.

    • Is there some problem with this concept? Would a peer-to-peer network that emulates a routing network be easier to track than I think?

  127. Re:Are CD Sales Really Down? Is P2P the Cause? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I believe that, if there is a causal relationship between reduced CD sales and P2P, the RIAA may be misinterpreting the nature of the relationship. In particular, I believe that there is very little relationship between a label's loss of sales and downloading of titles owned by that label.

    For my own part, I simply will not buy music on a major label. This decision was directly predicted by the labels' responses to P2P, both legal and technical.

    As a consequence:
    1) I buy a lot less music than I used to: TV, radio and my existing collection provide most of my listening.
    2) I buy more used CDs than I used to.
    3) I check the label more carefully than I used to.
    3) I explore alternative music and labels a lot more than I used to.
    4) When the option presents itself I buy directly from the band (usually cheaper and they'll sign it for you as a bonus).

    Living in Canada, I also try to ensure that the people around me are aware of the license they are given under the Blank Media Levy. With my distate for RIAA/SOCAN's practices and LACK OF EXPOSURE to their products (consequent from the above), I rarely exercise that license myself.

    In my case, I do not download copyrighted content via P2P (if fact I do not currently run P2P) yet P2P and the major labels reaction to it has had the effect of reducing their sales to me by 100%.

  128. Re:Just desserts by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 1

    No, you can use it to say that counterfeiting isn't stealing, which is true. That doesn't *justify* anything. You're missing the entire point of the "copying isn't stealing" argument. I don't think it's ethical or legal, I just don't think stealing is the right word for it.

    No, I'm not missing anything: there's just not a more appropriate label.

    Music sharing is violating the rcord label's legal monopoly on distributing a copyrighted song. If we grant that copyright infringment is theft, where does the stupidity stop? Do we redefine homicide as theft of life, assault and battery as theft of health, public drunkenness as theft of peace and quiet, speeding as theft of highway safety and so on?

    Stupidity? What else is a homicide but the theft of a life? As even you're trying to prove, the thief doesn't have to have tangible after a crime is committed. All of your definitions are literally correct. You may not be able to put the theft of a life in your pocket, but it's a theft nonetheless.

    So if we're taking a test together and I copy from yours, I guess I'm not guilty of cheating because your test answers are still on your page? You haven't lost anything, right? (Yes, this last is more a response to one of the other posts than to you....)

  129. Re:Just desserts by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 1

    at a bare minimum music sharing is the stealing of royalties and profits.

    Nope, sorry, it's not. Music sharing is violating the rcord label's legal monopoly on distributing a copyrighted song


    ps--the key words in the sentence are "legal" and "copyrighted."
    If you don't like that arrangement that the artists willingly enter into, tough--that ain't none of our business.
    If you work for AcmeManufacturing and I think you're underpaid and your management makes too much and charges the customer too much, that doesn't give me the right to go steal their widgets.

  130. Popular Music by solprovider · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The reason popular music is popular is because people happen to LIKE it.

    The reason popular music is popular is because people have already heard it and are comfortable with repetition. Classical, Musicals, Big Band, Swing, Gospel, Rock, Punk, Metal, BoyBands: each generation did not morph into a new type of human being preferring a new type of music; each generation was indoctrinated by the music aimed at them during their formative years.

    Today's popular music is simplistic compared to music before the rise of the guitar. Modern music is complex when it has 2 vocal melodies, 1 instrumental chord pattern, 1 instrumental melody, and a beat limited to what one person can create (hands doing one pattern and a single-note bass drum line.) Songs are limited to 3 minutes because there is not enough content to keep anybody interested longer. (I enjoy LinkinPark, but they usually turn off the music when they sing, and much of the "singing" does not have a melody.)

    Today's music is not "better" than older material because it is more popular. It is popular because we hear it more often.

    ---
    Please refrain from poorly written personal attacks. I do not know Morgaine, but the post was not "self-involved" and does not exclude Morgaine from the sheep category.

    --
    I spend my life entertaining my brain.
    1. Re:Popular Music by KjetilK · · Score: 1
      Hm, my gf dragged me to the Opera to see Onegin, a ballet. I found that it had been a good idea to cut it down to three minutes, but I still wouldn't have bought it... :-)

      I agree that familiarity has a lot to do with why people tend to like music, but I can't agree about blaming the guitar, there are lots of wonderful guitar music I can listen (and I mean listen to) for long periods of time.

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
    2. Re:Popular Music by maxpublic · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Today's music is not "better" than older material because it is more popular. It is popular because we hear it more often.

      "Better" is in the ear of the beholder. Nobody has any business telling another person that the music they like is "crap" simply because it isn't their style. That's the tactic of arrogant little college boys who think their feigned dislike of popular music somehow makes them intellectually superior to the "sheep".

      And popular music is popular because people like it. Hence the term "popular". It may not be something you care for, but it's still popular whether you like it or not. Live with it.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    3. Re:Popular Music by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

      It's not a question of whether or not it's popular. The issue is how it got to be popular. With enough power, you can make just about anything "popular". But there's another sense of the word "popular" which has to do with democracy, and it's not to be found on the FM dial.

      The problem with today's state of affairs is that giant companies, and not the populace, are deciding what they will make popular and what they will squelch.

      It used to be that DJ's were free to play what their listeners wanted to hear. They even played requests. The playlist today isn't decided by the true popularity of the song, but by a small group of executives trying to maximize their profits.

    4. Re:Popular Music by Sciflyer · · Score: 1

      Look, musical taste may be entirely subjective but that doesnt change the fact that if *i* dont like it, it sucks :p

  131. Jailing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > we jail more citizens per capita than any other democracy

    Make that "more people per capita than any other country, regardless of government or regime, in the entire world".

    Above and beyond any human rights issues, jailing people's pretty much the most expensive way to cut crime (according to a Cato Institute study; keeping kids in school was 10x more effective for the same amount of money).

  132. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by calidoscope · · Score: 1
    Technically, if he's tailgaiting you, he cannot be going any faster than you are (not for long, anyways). So if he's driving above the speed limit, so are you.

    Obviously you don't live in California.
    Speed limit for trucks/autos with trailers: 55 MPH
    Speed limits for cars can be 65 or 70 MPH

    The OP had a very good point, that the speeding 18-wheeler tailgating him is much more a threat to society than someone offering music for downloading.

    --
    A Shadeless room is a brighter room.
  133. Washington lived before "civil disobedience" by robla · · Score: 1

    Before going off on a rant about the definition of "civil disobedience", you should perhaps learn what it means. Here's the Wikipedia article on civil disobedience.

    What Washington et al practiced was open rebellion. Henry David Thoreau was the first to dub the term "civil disobedience" and to pontificate on the topic in a concrete way, well after Washington's time.

    As it turns out, we'll never know if civil disobedience would have worked. It worked for Gandhi, who, as it turned out did willingly surrender himself many times to the British government on the charges they brought against him.

    So, you may think that civil disobedience is stupid, and it may very well be ineffective or not worth it in this case. However, the term is pretty well defined, and thus practicing "civil disobedience" pretty much means you do need to accept the punishment for the crime.

    Rob

    1. Re:Washington lived before "civil disobedience" by xigxag · · Score: 1

      This is drifting into irrelevance, but to respond to your comment:

      1) Forgive me for phrasing myself poorly from the outset. I did not mean to get into the minefield of semantics a la Slashdot. In the context of this discussion I readily concede the commonly held definition of "civil disobedience." My issue was not with that, but with the notion the original poster put forward that the only appropriate response to an unjust law (other than obeying it) is civil disobedience. I disagree. I think in practice people simply outright disobey antiquated, unjust, and pointless laws all the time, without any civil-disobedience style expectation of possible punishment. People customarily practice anarchic disobedience, if you will, as opposed to the "civil" variety. Look, maybe you violated copyright law last week when you forwarded a funny jpeg to a friend. You don't expect to face a huge copyright violation suit for doing it, and if you did find yourself facing such a lawsuit, I predict that you would (wisely) try your best to avoid any penalty whatsoever. Civil disobedience simply wouldn't come into play.

      2) Of course you are correct that the Founding Fathers were rebels, and did not practice civil disobedience. That was my point. They served as another reason why I disagreed with the original poster's dichotomy. It's far too simple for our complicated world. There are all sorts of levels to obedience from eager compliance to grudging acceptance to sabotage to total refusal to war.

      --
      There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
  134. Remember, it's the SHARERS they go after... by DroopyStonx · · Score: 1

    Not the downloaders, so... download all you want.

    Just don't share.

    I hate this whole "don't buy from them/don't download from them" mentality. Don't buy from them? Agreed. Don't download? Hahaha, no. Download all ya want.

    Just don't share.

    --
    We have secretly replaced these Slashdot mods' sense of humor with a rusty nail. Let's see if they notice!!
  135. Why don't terrorists target these guys? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why the WTC? I would've felt less remorse, and maybe a bit of joy, had the buildings belonging to the RIAA/MPAA been decimated.

  136. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by dougmc · · Score: 1
    Speed limit for trucks/autos with trailers: 55 MPH
    Good point ... I stand corrected.
    The OP had a very good point
    Well, the penalties certainly show that --

    Posting to /. while you drive -- what, $200? (many states prohibit the driver watching TV while he drives, a computer screen should qualify)

    Tailgating - $200 or so?

    Speeding -- much less of an issue than tailgaiting, but let's say $200 again.

    Offering copyrighted works ($150,000/item.)

  137. Good for the RIAA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They finally got the message and are suing the actual criminals, rather than the software providers

  138. Sadly, no by Safety+Cap · · Score: 1
    Playlists are not generated by DJs, but by Program Managers. The PMs generate lists based upon how much the record companies pay.

    When you hear some yahoo call into the radio station and request a song that the DJ then cheerfully plays, understand the yahoo's call was recorded and played back only when the song was due in rotation. Add in a little DJ sound byte, and you get:

    "Hey, uh, yeah! Could you play more Britney? She rocks!

    "You got it, man! Here's more Britney, 'cause KPUK gives you what you want!"
    (Projectile vomit-inducing "music" starts playing)

    You think people like no-talent ass-clowns? The reality is her record company might've paid CCU a couple-three million cash, provided a car or whatever for a contest give-away, and maybe shipped in a cadre of cheap Mexican whores and blow for the Mayeses.

    --
    Yeah, right.
  139. Re:Perhaps what is needed is a new kind of P2P net by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Freenet.

  140. Ants p2p a 3rd generation p2p by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ants p2p only uses your IP to find peers and routing points and it has been tested in courts that routing copyrighted material through a network is not illeagal .It crates a hash based on location and time to act as a ID to transfer data it also encrypts the data point to point and end to end .It uses IRC to find peers so is less suseptable to attack than systems that use webcaches and superpeers by DOS attack and the IRC peer discovory system helps find peers in a more ad hock random way .Curretly there seems to be only one IRC channel serving Ants p2p and you have to look in settings to find the US irc server irc.us.azzurra.org if connecting from the US .This type of net will grow and it will take the RIAA and others alot of resources to find file sharers on this network.A recent feature of this network is the addition of a Webserver so you can view and publish webpages annonymously .

    Features

    * Open Source Java implementation (GNU-GPL license).
    * Multiple sources download.
    * Automatic resume and sources research over the net.
    * Sources finding over the net given the hash of the file.
    * Search by hash, string and structured query.
    * Embedded support for etherogeneus data types (not only arrays of bytes...).
    * Completely Object-Oriented routing protocol.
    * Point to Point secured comunication: DH(512)-AES(128)
    * EndPoint to EndPoint secured comunication: DH(512)-AES(128)
    * Automatic serverless peer dicovery procedure.
    * IRC based peer discovery system.
    * IRC embeded chat system.

    http://sourceforge.net/projects/antsp2p/

  141. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by calidoscope · · Score: 1
    Good point ... I stand corrected.

    You comment still holds true for people living in areas where the truck and car speed limits are the same. FWIW, Calif's 55 MPH limit for trucks is probably why the Nixon administration settled on 55, not 50 for the "temporary speed limit".

    Lessee, at least 4 people killed a couple of days ago in Wyoming due to among other things, speeding trucks.

    As long as I'm on a roll - we could make great strides in highway safety by requiring all trucks to carry speed recorders - that would involve less infringement on rights than what the RIAA is doing.

    --
    A Shadeless room is a brighter room.
  142. Re:Perhaps what is needed is a new kind of P2P net by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have you looked at Freenet? The system, however, is very slow and content can be difficult to obtain.

  143. Re:Perhaps what is needed is a new kind of P2P net by microbrewer · · Score: 1

    Ants p2p does this and more theres even a proxy chained encrypted webserver just added .

    Ants p2p Features

    * Open Source Java implementation (GNU-GPL license).
    * Multiple sources download.
    * Automatic resume and sources research over the net.
    * Sources finding over the net given the hash of the file.
    * Search by hash, string and structured query.
    * Embedded support for etherogeneus data types (not only arrays of bytes...).
    * Completely Object-Oriented routing protocol.
    * Point to Point secured comunication: DH(512)-AES(128)
    * EndPoint to EndPoint secured comunication: DH(512)-AES(128)
    * Automatic serverless peer dicovery procedure.
    * IRC based peer discovery system.
    * IRC embeded chat system.

    http://sourceforge.net/projects/antsp2p/

  144. The RIAA is building precedent by macz · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think the RIAA is both Venue and Victim shopping to build enough precedent so they can survive a robust defense, which has to come along someday.

    Bigger concern: Is the RIAA right? And I mean legally, not morally. Does internet file sharing constitute a valid example of "fair use" or not?

    In the US legislation, the fair use defense is assessed on a case by case basis, weighing the four factors outlined in 17 USC section 107: (1) purpose and character of use, (2) nature of the work, (3) amount copied, and (4) market effects. Common examples of fair use are criticism, comment, education and research.

    So if I own a guitar, can I call it a slam dunk and say: "I was learning those riff's, man... educational fair use!" ? Or how about "those words Eminem rapped really spoke to me... I LEARNED something about myself after that man... a truly educational experience."

    If the rumors are true, and music sales are actually up (by some measures), then #4 goes out the window. Can the Record companies post a profit and still use the defense that the market is affected? If they can't when do the shareholders bail?

    Lets face it: copying 100% of the work solely for personal listening pleasure so you don't have to purchase the work to begin with (in a market where Big Record Companies are losing their shirts) is a compelling case against an individual claiming "fair use." But that is spinning the case like the RIAA does every time they take on the little guy.

    How exactly would Joe Sixpack defend himself? Maybe settling for $3000 is the smart play?

    --
    ...But I digress. TREMBLE PUNY HUMANS!ONE DAY MY SPECIES WILL DESTROY YOU ALL!
    1. Re:The RIAA is building precedent by russotto · · Score: 1

      Settlement builds no legal precedent.

      As for the RIAA; they're probably right legally, as they, along with their fellow-travelers (MPAA, ASCAP, etc) pretty much wrote the fucking law.

    2. Re:The RIAA is building precedent by shark72 · · Score: 1

      Lawyers for the original Napster also tried that "fair use" argument, and the Ninth Circuit Court handed them some free clues. Ivan Hoffman does an excellent job of explaining the background.

      Nonetheless, this hasn't stopped lots of folks for making arguments similar to the ones you've given; the "I was educating myself by downloading that file" one is quite common. This is understandable, because many folks aren't familiar with a surprisingly simple concept well known to lawyers: "the laugh test." If you wouldn't buy some lame "educational fair use" rational for music piracy, you can't expect anybody else to.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
  145. And as we have told you before... by Snaller · · Score: 1

    ...if people do that, they blame it on piracy.

    --
    If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
  146. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only thing Socialist about Nazi's was their parties title. Learn some history before trolling.

  147. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by nwbvt · · Score: 1

    People have also heard objections to the law, so under your reasoning posts blasting copyright law should be modded down as well. And modding down an unpopular view for being "off-topic" is almost as bad as modding it down for being a troll.

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  148. I have never disagreed more in my entire life by forgotmypassword · · Score: 0, Troll

    You are absolutely correct. Ashley Simpson is a fantastic musician. She has the voice of a siren.

    The kind of siren that could turn a ship full of lusty sailors into sailor scouts as their cocks turn inside out and streams of blood spray out of their ears.

    When a talentless twit like Ashely Simpson gets put on record with songs made for sheep ... when the bile-vomit brown notes that spew from her throat are artificially manufactured into a sugary snack ... how can you possibly hold that opinion?

    Ashley Simpson == Bad
    God Speed! You Black Emperor == Good

    Ashley Simpson Listener == stupid sheep
    Nicolò Paganini Listener == intellectual superior

    1. Re:I have never disagreed more in my entire life by crasher35 · · Score: 1
      Okay. You may not like Ashlee Simpson, but I dont' see how someone who does like Ashlee Simpson is inferior to someone who likes Nicolò Paganini. In the end, they're both satisfying what they want to hear. You are entitled to your opinion that Ashlee Simpson sucks, but there is not reason you should force that opinion on anyone else by insulting their intelligence. I, for one, just bought "Autobiography" yesterday. In my opinion, it is a good album. Why? Simply because I like it. Does that make me dumb? Not really, no. Atleast I'm not pretending to hate Ashlee Simpson just because... There is no reason for me to hate her music when I clearly don't.

      As for boycotting RIAA artists... not a bad idea, but I can't do it. I am a very devoted Mariah Carey fan, even if you can find me someone else with an amazing voice just like hers, who sings songs just like her, you still couldn't replace her. I can't replace some of my favorite artists. I will always choose John Mayer over any of the copycats because every artist is different, even if they're within the same genre. So to ask me to give up RIAA artists for non-RIAA artists is like asking a Coke addict trade Coke for Sugar. Sure, they may look the same... but that's about it.

      However, I'm always open to trying new artists, new genres, and what not (trust me, you should see my music library, it's eclectic to say the least) and although I can like it more than other artists, you just can't replace another artist.

      --

      I don't like to sit. Sitting is for people who like to sit.

    2. Re:I have never disagreed more in my entire life by forgotmypassword · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You are looking at art as a method of deriving pleasure. By your definition only the fact that someone enjoys the art matters. Art to you is nothing more than a drug.

      I am looking at art as something that can contain merit in and of itself. There is something that can constitute good art, and a person can spend their entire life just trying figure that out. Those persons get degrees in Literature, Music Theory, ...

      It appears as though we have a difference of definitions. No conclusion can be reached in this argument. All I can argue in my favor is that the majority of people that really know art would strongly disagree with you.

    3. Re:I have never disagreed more in my entire life by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      I am looking at art as something that can contain merit in and of itself. There is something that can constitute good art, and a person can spend their entire life just trying figure that out. Those persons get degrees in Literature, Music Theory, ...

      Whether or not a thing is art, or has value, is not determined by egotistical little ivory tower jackoffs. It's determined by anyone, anywhere, who cares to think about it, or attach value to a thing.

      What you're missing is that no one gets to decide for another person what is art, or what is good music. Only that person gets to decide. To state anything to the contrary is to show that you're nothing more than a megalomaniac with a complete disregard for anyone who happens to disagree with you. Just another typical elitist snob who goes about saying things like "people that really know art".

      We have a name for people like that. We call them "losers".

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    4. Re:I have never disagreed more in my entire life by Alucard454 · · Score: 1

      somebody has a serious anger complex.

      chill the fuck out and stop blaming your bitterness on the fictional elitist college male that you seem to think is haunting you.

      --
      education
      That which discloses to the wise and disguises from the foolish their lack of understanding.
      ~a.bierce
    5. Re:I have never disagreed more in my entire life by forgotmypassword · · Score: 1

      What you're missing is that no one gets to decide for another person what is art, or what is good music. Only that person gets to decide. To state anything to the contrary is to show that you're nothing more than a megalomaniac with a complete disregard for anyone who happens to disagree with you. Just another typical elitist snob who goes about saying things like "people that really know art".

      I only think you are getting about 1/4 of the point that I did not convey very well. You are assuming all kinds of things about my proposition that are not true.

      1
      Just because I don't like a particular instance of art does not make it bad. Just because I like a particular instance of art does not make it good.

      I believe that art is a partially ordered. For some instances of art A and B it may be the case that A>B or A<B or it may be indeterminate. For instance you could say that Bach > Simpson, but you could not say that Bach or Mozart is better than the other.

      2
      Just as with science, the opinion of a person who understands the subject carries more weight than a layman's opinion.

      Compare the two opinions:
      I like Missy Elliot because her music sounds good.
      I like Missy Elliot because she makes good use of syncopation.

      The first opinion is entirely subjective. The second opinion has elements of objectivity and that is what your position lacks. And that is why I feel that your position is mostly baseless.

      3
      I don't look down on the people because of their poor choices in music. I do not feel superior in that regards. I am saying that I believe some music is better than others. And I quote you

      We have a name for people like that. We call them "losers".

      You are saying that you are a better person than I am. You have commited in the far greater sin.

    6. Re:I have never disagreed more in my entire life by forgotmypassword · · Score: 1

      I see that in my original post I did refer to an Ashely Simpson listener as a stupid sheep. I did that completely out of humor (in responce to the parent post) and wasn't serious about the statement at all.

      If anyone drew the wrong conclusion from that statement, I appologize.

    7. Re:I have never disagreed more in my entire life by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Science relies on empiricism, based on facts. Art is not a 'fact'; an opinion on art is just that, nothing more, and the weight of that opinion doesn't become more important just because the person spouting it got a degree in the subject.

      There is nothing 'objective' about art. So-called experts are just people with an overly-inflated idea of what their opinion is worth. It's telling that 99.9% of the human race could give a rat's ass what most 'experts' think when it comes to art, with the possible exception of movie critics.

      I don't look down on the people because of their poor choices in music

      You just did, by assuming their choice in music is poor...simply because you say it is.

      Your opinion is just that, and no more important on the matter than anyone else's.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    8. Re:I have never disagreed more in my entire life by forgotmypassword · · Score: 1

      Science relies on empiricism, based on facts. Art is not a 'fact'; an opinion on art is just that, nothing more, and the weight of that opinion doesn't become more important just because the person spouting it got a degree in the subject.

      You understand that you are arguing that there is no reason that you like a certain kind of music? That there is nothing rational about music to study and no way to compare anything. That studying music is nothing more than naval gazing.

      If I am a rational person and you are an (irrational) emotional person then we already disagree upon the fundamental set of axioms. There is no point to us having a discussion other than to say that we disagree - and then to realize that we disagree because we are arguing from different premisses.

      So unless you are going to take a U-turn and declare that you like music for a reason, then there is no more to this discussion.

      > I don't look down on the people because of their poor choices in music

      You just did, by assuming their choice in music is poor...simply because you say it is.


      I like calculators.
      Say you purchase a calculator, say its a Casio.
      I have deemed that you have made a poor choice of calculator.
      Do I think you less of a person for purchasing a crappy Casio?
      Heaven's No. It's a fucking calculator. It doesn't amount to anything.
      What do you want me to say? Your boy band music is bad, but I love you anyway.

    9. Re:I have never disagreed more in my entire life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ashlee Simpson, Mariah Carey, and John Mayer??? Oh my God, you do know that there is actually some GOOD music out there don't you? You, sir, need a good infusion of Floyd.

  149. Not Free by trolman · · Score: 1
    Yep. The people do not understand IP. I have had every significant piece of original code or graphic that I wrote ripped off, as in my name removed and someone else' inserted ranging from goberment to small business users. For me it is no problem as long as I get credit but that is a story for another day...What really bites is that Mom and Dad still think it is okay to ripp-off without paying despite my discord?

    It is Free!

    No. Freedom is not Free.

  150. Corporations are people too by dbIII · · Score: 1
    Shouldn't it be up to the people to decide the laws, not organizations?
    Due to a strange interpretation of the US constitution which hasn't been tested properly, corporations have the same rights as people but none of the responsibilities, and with the US lobbying system their vote counts for a lot more as well.
  151. Strip for the german shepherd dogs by dbIII · · Score: 1
    is it legal for the RIAA to gather evidence how they do?
    We live in days when there is irrefuble evidence that a liberal democracy is using torture to gather information - a government is supposed to set standards and not lower them. In this situation a little bit of cracking is just going to be ignored, it's not as if anyone was physically hurt or anything physically broken in the process of gathering information - and due process is vanishing out the window. When you have a legal system with a loophole big enough to hold people for two and a half years without charges, people tend to care a bit less about due process - like law enforcement by private companies which break the law in the process.
  152. Random thought... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not a lawyer, and I doubt there's any kind of legal precedent for this, but I'm curious. What about the idea of some sort of class action defence for the people who want to fight it out in court but can't afford to?

  153. Best Link Ever!!! by strike2867 · · Score: 1
    --

    Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
  154. Yay for the judge! by sublum · · Score: 0
    It seems that even some of the judges presiding over these cases question the RIAA's tactics. 'I've never had a situation like this before, where there are powerful plaintiffs and powerful lawyers on one side and then a whole slew of ordinary folks on the other side,' said U.S. District Judge Nancy Gertner, who blocked the movement of a number of these cases in her courtroom for months. She wanted 'to make sure that no one, frankly, is being ground up.'"
    I've heard that judges have to rely upon precedent, without accepting interference upon emotion, whim, or 'unsubstantiated' personal will.

    To see that the crush-the-file-sharers "precedent", here, might ever be thwarted - well, RIAA is still at loose in the public, but at least some of their cases might not be casually shuffled-along by quite all of the judiciary.

    Hooray for the careful, free-reasoning judges.

  155. if judges are that slow, then sack em by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

    If a judge cannot hear both sides and understand the issue in ONE HOUR, then his capacity of intellect and reasoning are at best as good as a chicken. Get rid of em, send em packing home.

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    1. Re:if judges are that slow, then sack em by clambake · · Score: 1

      If a judge cannot hear both sides and understand the issue in ONE HOUR, then his capacity of intellect and reasoning are at best as good as a chicken. Get rid of em, send em packing home.

      Yes, because it's SO easy, as a defendant, to just toss out a judge while you are on trial because he can't see it your way...

  156. Re:Just desserts by maximilln · · Score: 1

    If there's no consent

    Who do you get consent from?

    artist, the copyright holders, the labels, etc

    Oh, I see. It gets muddy real quick.

    it's stealing, plain and simple

    There is no theft. The product was legally sold. Blatantly ignoring reality does not give a company or the RIAA the excuse to mount a lawsuit. The existence of laws which blatantly ignore reality is only a glaring reflection of the mentality of the ruling caste. There is no secret that the product is easily copied and easily distributed. If the vendor is unhappy with the terms of sale they should raise the price. This arguing over the concept of ownership after the point of sale is behavior fit for a child. The argument that people can be legally bound by a document which nobody reads is nothing less than criminal.

    --
    +++ATHZ 99:5:80
  157. Re:Are CD Sales Really Down? Is P2P the Cause? by POPE+Mad+Mitch · · Score: 1

    CD sales are not down, the RIAA/BMI 'Music Biz' just wants you to think it is. In europe and th euk at least the number of actual CDs sold is up, by quite a lot, but they dont harp on about this.

    What is actually down is the Gross Value of CD Sales, this is because the prices have been forced down by large supermarkets and online companies ignoreing the RRP and selling for less profit.

    Best i can tell, despite the CDs being sold at a lower price, the RIAA still gets the exact same revenue per disc, so its profits are up. its only the retailers profit per unit that is down.

  158. Blame the RIAA, not the guitar, for simpler music by solprovider · · Score: 1

    1. I should have said "electric guitar". Acoustic guitars were usually part of an ensemble.
    2. I should not have blamed the guitar. Other guitar-like instruments, such as lutes, have been used by minstrels for centuries. Anything portable that can produce polyphonic music without requiring the mouth is good for travelling solo performers to accompany themselves.
    3. While there was simple music before the electric guitar, most of the well-known music required an orchestra. Horns (brass and woodwinds) and most strings are monophonic, so multiple instruments were required to create music. The guitar, piano, accordian, harp, and vibraphone are the only multiphonic instruments I can remember at the moment. I have never heard a solo perfomance on a vibraphone, and the only popular accordian player is Weird Al.
    4. It is possible to create complex music with a single guitar, but it is still limited to 6 (or 7) notes. A symphony can have more melody lines than a guitar, and have them played in several octaves at the same time.

    Tthe number of people required to play popular music has decreased since the electric guitar was invented. I prefer to blame the increase in power of the recording and distribution companies than the guitar. It is cheaper for those companies to hire a 3-4 person band than to hire an orchestra, so the profits are higher if they can sell simpler music.

    ---
    I am a guitarist, so please do not interpret anything I state as disparaging to guitar music. While I have been to the opera and a ballet recently, I prefer guitar music. I hope guitar music remains popular to increase the audience for my music.

    --
    I spend my life entertaining my brain.
  159. If you don't like their music by ryg0r · · Score: 0
    Make your own.

    Its that simple. Download a demo of some music creation software, and have a go.

    Thats what I did. I was sick and tired of the Top30 crap and just about everything on the radio, so I decided to make my own music.

    On the way I found like minded people with similar tastes, and hey presto I don't need to deal with any of that RIAA crap.

    --
    Karma whoring .sigs don't work
  160. You rarely create music or books out of thin air. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Any author worth his salt will use many references to the work of other people.

    Copyright gives the wrong illusion that somehow these people come with completely new ideas out of nowhere, specially under the current draconina terms which make copyright almost perpetual.

    Unde thes circumstance the only slash back is to promote a systme in which copyright is either completely eliminated or heavily reduced in terms and scope.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  161. Re:Just desserts by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 1

    There is no secret that the product is easily copied and easily distributed. If the vendor is unhappy with the terms of sale they should raise the price.

    Awww, c'mon--that's silly. Everyone's favorite (other than listed previously) excuse is, "A CD is too expensive." Imagine if they calculated how many copies the average person gives away and priced it accordingly...not a pretty picture, is it?
    At least how it is now with the sharers being sued, they're the ones bearing the direct costs--not me.

  162. Re:Just desserts by maximilln · · Score: 1

    Everyone's favorite (other than listed previously) excuse is, "A CD is too expensive."

    And the common response is,"Tough, don't buy it." Since the executives are running off with all the real profit anyway let their kids spend their money on it and let the kids share. This will lead to greater strengthening of cliques and social circles but, well, that's a fact of life.

    Imagine if they calculated how many copies the average person gives away and priced it accordingly...not a pretty picture, is it?

    It is no pretty picture for universities to need to police their networks. It is no pretty picture when attorneys subpoena an ISP. It is no pretty picture when I can't leave my webserver up so that I can listen to my music collection at work because some RIAA official might sue me into oblivion. It is no pretty picture when an already struggling family is handed a $5k judgement because their son decided to participate in the heinous crime of letting his friends listen to his music collection. It is no pretty picture for government officials to be actively scanning networks searching for people to label criminals.

    This is not about pretty. This is about socially responsible. It is more socially responsible to face reality: the product is easily copied and easily distributed. Raise the price or make a better product. It is completely inexcusable for the government or the industry to target individuals. There is no secret about which entity has the greater resources.

    --
    +++ATHZ 99:5:80
  163. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by nwbvt · · Score: 1
    LOL. What kind of idiot puts his address on /.? Oh well, prepare to get on mailing lists for tons of gay porno magazines and have your identity stolen by a dozen different hackers.

    What I wanted was for you to show your slashdot (you know, the name of the site we are posting on) identity and stop posting as an anonymous coward.

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  164. Re: "Get people to confess to file sharing" by nusratt · · Score: 1

    "Get a very, very large number of people to confess to file sharing"

    They could still be sued individually, at RIAA's discretion --
    not to mention the "recruitment" problems.

    My point is, is there a way to gather a bunch of people ALREADY BEING PURSUED, as a single defendant?

  165. Alternative Sites by celimage · · Score: 1

    There is a lot of free music on the net in all genres. Yet people still believe good music is "What I hear on the radio". Many individual musicians have free downloads on their home site and major sites like Amazon and Download.com have free downloads. Some people consider the free sites and indies as "inferior" when in fact many are musically and technically superior to the major labels products. The illusion of percieved value is created by the media and as long as people continue to buy into it then they run the risk of the litigation and fines. Look at it this way: Everytime you purchase a major label(RIAA) artist you are paying for someone else's prosecution and persecution or maybe even your own. Dennis Jennings http://celestial-image.com

  166. RIAA=Thieves by epistemology · · Score: 1
    When I was younger, I built a collection of >300 albums on vinyl. Then the industry the RIAA represents made that format obsolete and I replaced this collection buying >500 CD's, including many songs I had previously paid for the right to listen to.

    Then I find out that the RIAA's members had stolen from me by price fixing. They offered me $20 in compensation for this theft of thousands of dollars.

    Well, as President Bush says: "Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, won't get fooled again." So now I have put my music on my computer to make it available to me wherever I am. And I have downloaded (legally) songs that I have already paid for (some twice).

    Now the RIAA threatens to sue me for having my music online, claiming I am making these songs available to theives. Talk about the pot calling the kettle black. This is tantamount to saying that if I watch a DVD on my porch, and the neighbors can look on, I have stolen from the copyright holder because I did not keep their product secure. Bullshit. If the RIAA wants to sue me for downloading music, and keeping it on the internet for my own private use (I don't steal music and don't enourage others to do so), then they have to prove that I have not legally bought these songs.

    Now I have the money and inclination to oppose the bandits at the RIAA I say: Bring it on!

    Price fixing is stealing!

  167. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What difference does it make to me if my name and address are on some website? The information is already in the phone book for all to enjoy. And, apparently unlike you, Nicholas "Nick" Watkins Brown, of 906 Ascot Lane, Blacksburg, VA 24060-4045, I don't feel threatened by gay porn.

    Now, am I "jealous" of your karma, as you allege? The answer is no. Had I chosen to create an account lo these many moons ago, I assure you I would have had excellent karma by now. The reason I ask you to exercise a little restraint with your automatic karma bonus is that those (like me) who prefer not to log in would appreciate not having to see the imbecilic remarks you insist on posting at +2. That is all.
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  168. Re:Just desserts by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 1

    Everyone's favorite (other than listed previously) excuse is, "A CD is too expensive."

    And the common response is,"Tough, don't buy it.


    Absolutely! And the corollary is "Don't steal it, either."

    It is no pretty picture for universities to need to police their networks. It is no pretty picture when attorneys subpoena an ISP. It is no pretty picture when I can't leave my webserver up so that I can listen to my music collection at work because some RIAA official might sue me into oblivion. It is no pretty picture when an already struggling family is handed a $5k judgement because their son decided to participate in the heinous crime of letting his friends listen to his music collection. It is no pretty picture for government officials to be actively scanning networks searching for people to label criminals.

    Life's a bitch, isn't it?

    This is not about pretty. This is about socially responsible. It is more socially responsible to face reality

    Socially responsible? That's a pretty whack definition of "responsible." That's pretty much the opposite definition of anyone else's.

    This is not about pretty. This is about socially responsible. It is more socially responsible to face reality: the product is easily copied and easily distributed. Raise the price or make a better product. It is completely inexcusable for the government or the industry to target individuals. There is no secret about which entity has the greater resources.
    The only thing I agree with in anything you've said is the government shouldn't be involved: this is purely a civil matter, not a criminal matter. Other than that, raising prices will only exacerbate the problem, and what the heck does "better product" mean? A better distribution model? That would be great. The success of the Apple store's proven the people are willing to embrace other models. Better music? Not applicable cuz even shit is pirated today.

  169. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by nwbvt · · Score: 1
    Well unless you want a halfway recent address, you shouldn't be complaining anymore. However, until you start posting under an actual screenname that can be modded and tracked, my complaint still stands. Because I am willing to do so, I am free to use the karma bonus that I have since earned. You have a problem with /.'s karma system, take it up with the administrators.

    Got it?

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  170. The RIAA is a big group of Lawyers by rustman · · Score: 1

    The RIAA is a lobbying organization. It's staff is full of lawyers. Think of them as a big special interest law group. If they're not suing someone, they're drafting legal agreements or working on changing laws to more suit their member companies.

    As have been said before, they don't care about the settlement amounts. They are sending messages and establishing a body of prior case law.

    The RIAA is really more of a messenger. If you hate the RIAA, you should really hate the RIAA member labels as that is where the RIAA's direction is coming from.

    Start a letter writing campaign to your favorite bands and record labels demanding they end their membership in the RIAA.

  171. Re:Just desserts by maximilln · · Score: 1

    Absolutely! And the corollary is "Don't steal it, either."

    Nobody stole it. It was bought and paid for.

    Life's a bitch, isn't it?

    It doesn't need to be. There is no social responsibility in using underhanded methods to turn customers into criminals. CDs, DVDs, VHS tapes, and other media are SOLD in a "all sales are final" environment. There is no pretense that the customer is only renting the material. What is licensing but an embellished rental?

    The only thing I agree with in anything you've said is the government shouldn't be involved

    Then we agree on all points. If the government weren't involved then 1) both of us would be satisfied and 2) this wouldn't be an issue. The fact is that the media companies rely on the government involvement to make their case for them. If the government is involved then it's obvious that the accused are guilty. Without government involvement the victims would have lawyers dying to take up the case of sale and ownership.

    That's a pretty whack definition of "responsible." That's pretty much the opposite definition of anyone else's.

    You're far off base.

    FACT: You have a product.
    FACT: People want to buy that product.
    FACT: It is easy for people to copy and share that product.
    FACT: It is cheap for people to copy and share that product.
    FACT: People are inclined to copy and share that product.

    There are no secrets in any of these.
    What is most socially responsible? You can lobby government to make everyone pay to hunt down whoever you feel like targeting today or...You can give intelligent thoughts to the facts before selling your product. You can't begin to tell me that media conglomerates, with multi-million dollar marketing departments, aren't fully aware that their product is easily reproduced and redistributed. Attempting to fight this fact through politics and legal finger-crossing is the most socially unresponsible and repressive idea in history.

    --
    +++ATHZ 99:5:80
  172. Re:Stop listening to music, addicts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Indeed you are free to post using your karma bonus. You are also free to masturbate and ejaculate into the glass lens of a rolling camcorder and send the copies of the resulting videotape to your friends and family. Most people wouldn't, however, out of consideration and respect for others, not to mention fear of the social opprobrium they would thereby incur upon themselves. For these same reasons, Nick--may I call you Nick?--it would behoove you to uncheck the Karma Bonus box on those posts which are undeserving of such. This is the meaning of the dictum "freedom entails responsibility," a saying with which you may be acquainted. I trust and hope you will take my suggestion to heart.
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  173. Stupid trolls... by nwbvt · · Score: 1
    You must really have no life.

    Look around, how many people keep that box unchecked? Virtually no one. Its the mods job to determine what rating my post has, not mine, not yours. So until you get moderation power, just keep your trap shut, deal?

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    1. Re:Stupid trolls... by maximilln · · Score: 1

      how many people keep that box unchecked?

      Are you talking of the box in the personal prefs or the box in the posts? The end result is: I do not post with karma by default. The AC is implying that you do.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    2. Re:Stupid trolls... by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      I just did a quick unscientific survey of posters on slashdot. I went to the most recently submitted article and clicked on the usernames of the posters. Over 50% of them had the majority of their recent posts at 2's (discounting those who lacked sufficient posts to be qualified for excellent karma and those whose posts were not routinely modded up or down by the mods (I wasn't about to go out and check each post). Considering not all of them had excellent karma, it becomes clear that the majority of /.ers with excellent karma do not change the defaults to have their posts modded down. And whats more, you are the first one I have ever seen complain about it.

      You are a troll, case closed.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    3. Re:Stupid trolls... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't have a problem with the other comments posted at +2, because for most of them it's plausible that their authors genuinely believed them to be worth that score. In your case, however, it's hard to see how you could possibly have imagined others would want to read this or this, for example, at +2.

      All I ask is that you refrain from applying your karma bonus to inane posts like these. How hard is that?
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  174. Yes he did. by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    (no text)

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  175. Re:Just desserts by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 1

    Absolutely! And the corollary is "Don't steal it, either."

    Nobody stole it. It was bought and paid for.


    Once. That confers on you lots of rights, but sharing it with someone who didn't isn't one of them.

    Life's a bitch, isn't it?

    It doesn't need to be. There is no social responsibility in using underhanded methods to turn customers into criminals.


    Whoa, back up with the passivity there. People turn themselves into criminals: copyright infringement was illegal long before the 1st .mp3 was ever ripped. There's no doubt about the sequence of events here.. Plus, there's no "social responsibility" in BEING a criminal. People do this to themselves. My heart doesn't bleed at all for them. And, while we're on the subject, what the eff does "social responsibility" actually MEAN? It's a great buzzword, but it's rather bereft of meaning, especially in this context.

    CD's, DVDs, VHS tapes, and other media are SOLD in a "all sales are final" environment. There is no pretense that the customer is only renting the material. What is licensing but an embellished rental?

    As someone once said, if you don't like it, don't buy it. But not buying it doesn't confer any other rights or abilities.

    The only thing I agree with in anything you've said is the government shouldn't be involved

    Then we agree on all points. If the government weren't involved then 1) both of us would be satisfied and 2) this wouldn't be an issue. The fact is that the media companies rely on the government involvement to make their case for them. If the government is involved then it's obvious that the accused are guilty. Without government involvement the victims would have lawyers dying to take up the case of sale and ownership.


    Nice job of selective quoting--you work on the Bush campaign, too? The government shouldn't be pursuing violators.

    That's a pretty whack definition of "responsible." That's pretty much the opposite definition of anyone else's.

    You're far off base.

    FACT: You have a product.
    FACT: People want to buy that product.
    FACT: It is easy for people to copy and share that product.
    FACT: It is cheap for people to copy and share that product.
    FACT: People are inclined to copy and share that product.

    There are no secrets in any of these.
    What is most socially responsible?


    You wanna tell me again what socially responsible means? And what whatever that means for this? Yes, those are all facts. And as I learned years ago, "if 10 million Frenchman think the Earth is flat, that doesn't make it flat." If you're trying to say that the industry needs to re-examine their business model...you're right. HOWEVER, that doesn't make sharing NOW any less morally reprehensible.

    You can lobby government to make everyone pay to hunt down whoever you feel like targeting today or...You can give intelligent thoughts to the facts before selling your product. You can't begin to tell me that media conglomerates, with multi-million dollar marketing departments, aren't fully aware that their product is easily reproduced and redistributed. Attempting to fight this fact through politics and legal finger-crossing is the most socially unresponsible and repressive idea in history.

    You, if you think that, need to get out of here and get some help...and get some perspective on life, history and the world. End of conversation. We've moved from a reasonable conversation to you scaring me...

  176. My Comment by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 1

    Here are my thoughts/opinions... If you buy a CD/DVD, you should have the right to personal use. Personal use would be... Playing it for friends, family, and money-less parties. In any situation, if someone is earning money, i.e. a profit, then I consider it an infringement. Copying the data. The advantages of this isn't to share it, which would be an infringement, but to have a back-up incase your CDs get ruined. What if someone steps on it? Paying $9.99 for another copy of a movie seems unfair if it wasn't your fault. Lending the CD, the original hardcopy CD, to a friend, a family member, etc. I see nothing wrong with this. But copying the data onto a spare CD, then giving it to someone else, that's not borrowing. That's giving in a sense. For online lending of music/movies/etc., that's a grey area I'm not going to touch upon yet.

  177. Bloodwork? by lorcha · · Score: 1
    They're doing John Does against an IP address and point in time. They can't do "bloodwork" until after they know the person behind the IP and they can't get that without filing a John Doe lawsuit (remember the Verizon case?).

    So they can't know before filing whether the person they're filing against is an 11 year old girl or a high-powered lawyer. Nice try, tho.

    --
    "Avoid employing unlucky people - throw half of the pile of CVs in the bin without reading them." -- David Brent
  178. Art is a product, science is a process by Merk · · Score: 1

    There is always something objective about art.

    Picasso didn't just pick up a brush and start painting masterpieces. His father was an artist, and he trained and practiced for many years. That training and practicing is scientific, even if artists might not recognize it as such. They hypothesize that a certain technique might result in more interesting paintings, they do an experiment by painting something using that technique, and then make a conclusion based on the output.

    It's true that when things are close to comparable levels of quality, that it is difficult or impossible to say that one is objectively better than the other. On the other hand, I think it's fair to say that the song "Silent Night" is objectively better than the sound of a baboon screeching.

    If it's telling that 99% of the human race couldn't give a rat's ass about what experts think when it comes to art, why is it that when people think of art, they think of the Mona Lisa, the Scream, and other critically acclaimed art?

    Along the same lines, if people don't value critics, why is it that they watch what the MTV critics think is good enough to air on their station, or what the reviews in magazines say about upcoming CDs? Not all critics have degrees in their subject, but most of them have experience in some way. Would you pay any attention to a magazine's music reviewer who was deaf? What about a reviewer who didn't know the difference between Country and Rap? Even if you, personally, don't buy music based on these critics, a lot of people do, and that's how music becomes "popular".

    Popular music is partially the result of getting decent reviews by critics, but it's also partially the result of a powerful marketing machine. If a band produces a great song, but can't get the word out, then nobody will ever hear it. On the other hand, if a well known band produces a mediocre CD, then gets it into the hands of every reviewer in the country, pays to have it played on every station across the country, it will probably do pretty well.

    The problem is, it's relatively easy to make popular music. The formula isn't too hard. On the other hand, it's hard to make a truly great song. Most of the time, making a truly great song means taking risks. Since music companies don't like taking risks, they will generally stick with the sure thing, and so the music they produce is rarely great, but also rarely awful.

    If every artist had equal access to ears, then the songs that most people liked would really be the good ones, and "popular" music would be "good" music. With our current big-money-dominated music scene, popular music is just the best music from a selection of tunes that critics (in the form of marketing people at recording companies) think is good enough to sell well.