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Supreme Court Takes Hard Look at P2P

Patrick Mannion writes "Supreme Court justices quizzed attorneys for file-swapping software companies and Hollywood studios Tuesday, in a case that will help determine the future of both the technology and entertainment industries. In their questions, the justices were critical of the entertainment industry's proposal, which would hold companies "predominantly" supported by piracy liable for copyright infringement. However, they showed little sympathy for the file-swapping companies' business model."

86 of 489 comments (clear)

  1. Supreme Court Takes Hard Look At P2P... by ElVaquero · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...finds it delicious!

  2. Business Model? by Ioldanach · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What do the "business models" have to do with this? There are file sharing clients out there that are entirely free and have no company behind them to have a "business model". Not everybody's selling something.

    1. Re:Business Model? by jumpingfred · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You don't follow the news at all do you. Gun manufactures are getting sued becuase their guns were used in crimes.

    2. Re:Business Model? by ari_j · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There's a difference between getting sued and losing a lawsuit. Can you demonstrate one news article of a court deciding that a gun manufacturer was liable for injuries or deaths intentionally caused by use of their products? (Settlements with no admission of responsibility and legitimate products liability lawsuits, such as "I shot your gun at a target and the gun blew up in my hand," do not count.)

    3. Re:Business Model? by 12345Doug · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If their (P2P comapnies) entire business model is to profit off of known/suspected illegal activities it could very well be important in the ruling. After all P2P must show substantial legal uses to gain a favorable ruling. If the justices don't see that based on the business models it could bode ill for P2P. Just my 2 cents.

    4. Re:Business Model? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If they think P2P companies business model's are bad...take a look at tobacco and even the fast food industries.

      Tobacco CEO "Hey, were lying to & killing our customers for money, but so what, it makes us cash to pay the suckers in congress to keep them off our backs!"

      McDonald's CEO: "Let's hire a bunch of low paid workers and get rich off of them. Slaves even made more money than what were paying them!"

    5. Re:Business Model? by Ioldanach · · Score: 5, Informative
      Can you demonstrate one news article of a court deciding that a gun manufacturer was liable for injuries or deaths intentionally caused by use of their products?

      Yes, I can.

      N.Y. jury finds some gun makers liable in shootings

      Not that I personally agree with it.

    6. Re:Business Model? by ari_j · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Fair enough, and I disagree with the jury on this; but there is at least a rational basis for their finding, which is that the gun maker negligently allowed their guns to fall into criminal hands. I don't think that they owed such a duty, but evidently in New York they did. (There are many reasons I will never live in New York, and this kind of thinking is but one of them.)

      I do wonder if the gun makers found liable in that case appealed the matter. News stories about lawsuits always piss me off because they only announce two things: filed lawsuits and dollars given. If a case is dismissed as frivolous by a judge, that never gets reported; and if a case is appealed, that never gets reported. For instance, the McDonald's coffee case was ill-reported as it was, but the media didn't tell you that the woman's award was significantly reduced after the jury verdict was announced. Simply put, the vast majority of what happens in court isn't news-worthy. (Although if it happens in criminal court and there is a celebrity defendant, somehow everything that happens becomes monumental and deserving of widespread media coverage. What color underwear was Jacko wearing in court today, anyhow?)

    7. Re:Business Model? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
    8. Re:Business Model? by ArsonSmith · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Tobacco I kind of understand. Although any more it is fairly obvious that smoking is bad for you and if you don't know better by now then your money is better in the hands of tobacco CEOs. ...but until I see a ball and chain attached to the McDonald's workers legs I wont aggree witht hat analogy.

      Choice is key.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
  3. Supreme court takes hard look at P2P by Winckle · · Score: 5, Funny

    P2P says "what are you staring at?"

    1. Re:Supreme court takes hard look at P2P by admiralh · · Score: 2

      the Supreme Court has proven time and time again its ability to make wise decisions

      Dred Scott v. Sandford? - Don't like slavery in your state? Too bad!

      Plessy v. Fergeson? - "Separate but equal" turned out to be "Separate and massively different."

      Roe v. Wade? - Found a "Right to Privacy" and fostered a period of intense politicization of judicial appointments.

      Bush v. Gore? - Equal protection for voting standards only applies if it helps a Republican President get elected.

      --
      Hopelessly pedantic since 1963.
  4. They will leave it to congress by erick99 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I don't see how they can do anything else given the complexity of the problem and the fact that this does need to be addressed with a fresh set of laws that replace (rather than add to) the existing.

    Indeed, many legal observers say the high court is likely to leave the law largely as is and if it wants a different outcome, to ask Congress to change the copyright law.

    --
    http://www.busyweather.com/
  5. Actual Court Transcript by superpulpsicle · · Score: 5, Funny

    RIAA: We are getting screwed.

    Supreme Court: How?

    RIAA: They are giving our product away.

    Techie: I got a one line perl script p2p software.

    RIAA: Arrest that thief.

    Supreme Court: We'll just rule out that script as illegal and take it off the market.

    Techie: Sure.

    RIAA: WTF, he's got like 20 scripts in 20 languages.

    1. Re:Actual Court Transcript by sapped · · Score: 5, Funny

      Techie: I got a one line perl script p2p software.

      RIAA: Arrest that thief.

      Finally! perl coders being treated the way they should have a long time ago.

  6. More details here by angle_slam · · Score: 4, Informative

    SCOTUSblog has a more detailed look at the happenings today.

  7. Re:More proof the Supremes work for Business by enforcer999 · · Score: 2, Informative

    What proof? The Supremes were equally critical of both sides.

  8. What about open source p2p by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful


    who have no buisness model at all ! not that a bad ruling would make a difference , the internet is global , the cat IS out of the bag and congress and their bribers might be suprised that their legal decisions will not affect the other 5 billion people living in countries where their wants and laws have exactly 0 influence

    of course the p2p creators will just move to less opressive countries, it works for gambling and porn sites

    the "free world" has moved on, unfortunatly corporate America hasn't

    1. Re:What about open source p2p by arminw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ...Then Congress will step in and take care of that...

      Indeed, just like they did with DMCA. Republicrats and Democans can all be purchased for the proper amount of bribes. Of course it is not called a bribe, but campaign contributions. The entertainment companies have a lot of money, but then do the technology companies. The outcome may be determined by which is able or willing to buy more legislators. What the public wants or needs will not be considered, just as it was not when the DMCA was enacted.

      --
      All theory is gray
  9. Justices by Excen · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'm honestly surprised that the Supreme Court Justices even know what a computer is. Then again, I suppose they have to get their porno some way, now that the Meece commission is no longer in business.

    --
    "No beer until you finish your tequila!" -Leela's Dad
    1. Re:Justices by MyLongNickName · · Score: 2

      Because we know that the Supreme Court is filled with idiots. They should try to elevate themselves to your level.

      On a completely unrelated note, interesting journal entries.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
  10. Here's to Nashville by MrAnnoyanceToYou · · Score: 5, Interesting

    They could only find 18 singer-songwriters in Nashville that were desperate enough to talk / suck up to big-record-industry people that they'd go to DC? Sounds like a pretty weak group of people to me.

    I don't hate musicians, or want them to starve, but I hate the slime they have to deal with now to distribute, and I want those people to starve. Twice.

    I'm in favor of the entertainment industry having to undergo monstrously painful changes. From what I can see, many people are - the way it is currently designed is destructive to both society and art as a whole. What we hear and see being run by a bunch of profiteering luddites is completely unappealing to me.

    Just thought I'd be one of fifty to present this argument in the next ten minutes.

    1. Re:Here's to Nashville by voisine · · Score: 2, Interesting

      They had a sign that said, feed a musician, download legally. If you can't afford food, it's because no one *wants* to hear your music. If you really are an as yet unsuccessful musician, wouldn't you do well to give your stuff away to get some attention? Then maybe you get a few more paying gigs. I think that'll be the music business model in the future. Why do we need a recording industry at all? In the future, successful musicians will give away recordings for free to gain popularity and then make money from concerts and other live performances.

  11. Hmm by Sv-Manowar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They seem to be lumping together the technology used to produce P2P software, and the businesses that use P2P to make profit

    This will enable them to make a stronger case in their basic "p2p is bad" argument, when it's not the way it should be. Hopefully they will view the two things differently

  12. sould creators have some rights too.. by acomj · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It seems that p2p takes away rights out of those that create things and make them public. Be they songs or photos etc.

    P2P is basically publishing. Why should you be allowed to publish my stuff, if I hold the copyright?

    These rights go away with time when the copyright expires. (A really stupid long time, thanks congress)

    If a creator wants to make something public domain then they can do that. If they want to paid for something they create, they should be able to do that too. (my photos are routinely hot linked as bloggers backgrounds and I don't care, so I don't sue)

    Whats with the right to do what you want with whatever you want all of a sudden?

    1. Re:sould creators have some rights too.. by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Whats with the right to do what you want with whatever you want all of a sudden?

      Why should "intellectual property owners" have special privileges with regard to their products which allow them to override normal private property rights?

      Does a cabinet maker get to control how people use the cabinets that the cabinetmaker has sold them? (I suppose he could always make them sign a contract, but I suspect he'd lose a lot of customers that way.)

    2. Re:sould creators have some rights too.. by bonch · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's very telling that this completely normal post was marked as "Troll" by some sheep.

      The truth is very simple in this situation.

      1.) P2P file-sharing is just a technology, neither good nor bad.

      2.) Copyright infringement of other people's stuff, no matter how many people try to justify it, is ethically wrong.

      The big struggle with this is coming from frightened content owners who realize that people are lazy and don't care and will pirate anything they can get their hands on, simply because human nature is such that if you can get something without paying for it, you will. Frankly, piracy is wrong and always will be wrong, and legal downloading like iTunes is already taking off, which means most pirates are so cheap that they're not willing to spend 99 cents on a song. However, there is nothing wrong with the technology itself, like with VCRs.

    3. Re:sould creators have some rights too.. by stlhawkeye · · Score: 2, Insightful
      There's two Slashdot Official Positions on this, one is an flat-out lie, and the other is naive and stupid. They are:

      • Flat-Out Lie
        "I never use p2p illegally, therefor neither do most people, and therefor it should be illegal." This stems from Slashdot Misconception #1, quoted in my sig, that most people are basically like me. There's a corollary to this, which is, "I've bought a ton of music/software/videos/etc/whatever specifically because I got to preview it on p2p first. They're making money off p2p! Those idiots!" These companies spend millions on accountants. They know where their profits losses are coming from.
      • Naive Stupidity
        "Information wants to be free, I shouldn't have to pay for music/books/movies/etc in the first place." I won't even touch this because the people who espouse this platitude are impossible to reason with. By "reason with" I don't mean, "convince them that they're wrong," I mean, "convince them that it's POSSIBLE that they're wrong." If somebody can't accept the latter, there's no point in ever talking to them about anything. Sadly, this characterizies about 50% of this community.

      I don't like the draconian legal wrangling to restrict software that has legitimate uses.

      I don't like the copy-protection schemes and corporate masters who pollute music stores with the computer-enhanced carbon-copy drek that issues forth from the mouths of such talent as N Sync and Jessica Simpson.

      I don't like any of this crap better than anybody else does. But there's a reality to face. The overwhelming majority of p2p network use is unquestionably illegal in the USA, and the overwhelming majority of p2p users are unquestioningly violating the law. You and I know that the content cartels won't win this fight through legal means, and you and I know that they're missing the boat on this completely. You and I know that they should be leveraging this technology to their profit rather than bullying 16 year olds with legal action.

      But you guys need to, at some point, realize that these companies are protecting property that legally belongs to them (whether or not it should is another issue) and they have every right to do so.

      I'll spare you the traditional flawed analogy.

      --
      "I have never won a debate with an ignorant person." -Ali ibn Abi Talib
    4. Re:sould creators have some rights too.. by tomjen · · Score: 2, Informative

      2.) Copyright infringement of other people's stuff, no matter how many people try to justify it, is ethically wrong.

      No it is iligal. Wether it is ethically wrong is something each man or woman has to decide for themself.

      --
      Freedom or George Bush
    5. Re:sould creators have some rights too.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
      2.) Copyright infringement of other people's stuff, no matter how many people try to justify it, is ethically wrong.

      Bzzt! Wrong! "Copyright infringement of other people's stuff" is legally wrong. It is not necessarily ethically wrong.

      If the term of copyright is too long (and there are many who feel that way), is it unethical to copy something that has passed the "reasonable" copyright term but is still covered by an "unreasonable but legally defined as X" term? (e.g., performing "Happy Birthday" in a public place - not Fair Use - and not paying royalties)?

      If you feel copyright is unethical as a point of first principle, since "information wants to be free," is it unethical to violate copyright (i.e., is it unethical to ignore an unethical law)?

      Furthermore, as long as we're on the subject of ethics, is it not ALSO unethical to "change the terms of the copyright deal" after the fact (when Steamboat Willie was created, it was understood that copyright was X years; Disney later lobbied to have copyright extended to X+Y years with no additional public benefit)? Disney is robbing the public of that which ought to have been rightfully theirs - Disney agreed to X years, but then decided they wanted to change the terms when X years was almost up. Is not unilaterally altering the terms of a contract after the contract is entered into unethical?

      The public did not "break the social contract of copyright" by mass infringement first. Copyright holders broke the social contract of copyright first by unilaterally changing the terms from "reasonable" to "completely unreasonable" after the contract was entered into. Once a contract has been broken by one party, there is no ethical reason for the other to continue to uphold their end the contract (e.g., if I agree to pay you in advance for services rendered, and I never pay you, there is no ethical requirement for you render those services). Since copyright holders broke their end of the contract by seeking ever-longer terms and ever-more restrictive laws on material that had already had the terms and restrictions defined at the moment of creation (i.e., retroactively changing the law), there is no ethical reason for the general populace to uphold their end of the contract by not infringing.

      The objection above, of course, applies only to material that retroactively had its copyright extended, but it is also not unethical to break the terms of an unreasonable contract that has been unilaterally imposed (with is, in effect, what copyright has become); if copyright terms are unreasonable, there is no ethical problem with ignoring them because the contract itself is unreasonable to begin with.

      Please don't confuse "legal" with "ethical." Many things that are ethical are not encoded into law. Many things that are encoded into law are not ethical.

      --AC

    6. Re:sould creators have some rights too.. by drsmithy · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Copyright infringement of other people's stuff, no matter how many people try to justify it, is ethically wrong.

      How can you justify this statement, given that "copyright infringement" has no consistent definition ?

      "Copyright infringement" in, say, Australia (where we can't even legally record most things off TV) is a very different things to "copyright infringment" in, say, the US.

      The big struggle with this is coming from frightened content owners who realize that people are lazy and don't care and will pirate anything they can get their hands on, simply because human nature is such that if you can get something without paying for it, you will.

      This is not true at all. Exhibit A: bottled water.

      All "content owners" have to do is make things cheap, attractive and easy enough and the vast bulk of customers will pay for their goods. The problem is "content owners" aren't prepared to price their stuff low enough.

      Frankly, piracy is wrong and always will be wrong, [...]

      That is rather dependant on your view of copyright and "intellectual property" in general.

      [...] and legal downloading like iTunes is already taking off, which means most pirates are so cheap that they're not willing to spend 99 cents on a song.

      I'm not prepared to spend that much on a song - more accurately, I'm not prepared to spend that much on a bunch of songs. US$0.99/song still works out to roughly the same price as buying an entire album's worth of songs - the only major different being buying per-song allows you to make sure you get only the songs you want. That's not even taking into account the lower sound quality and additional restrictions typically inherent to on-line music stores.

  13. Hard Cases = Bad Law by overshoot · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The trouble is, Grokster is not a sympathetic defendent. The Court have (more or less rightly) noted that the Defendents have build a business model predicated on copyright infringement, and will be inclined to Do Something about it.

    Unfortunately, the only tool really before the Court is an overturning of the Betamax doctrine, which was decided with a much more sympathetic defendent.

    This is one of the few cases I can think of where the appropriate charge should have been conspiracy. It's a crappy bit of law, but it would actually fit. As it is, I'm afraid that the Defendents may have screwed us all.

    --
    Lacking <sarcasm> tags, /. substitutes moderation as "Troll."
    1. Re:Hard Cases = Bad Law by jfengel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Unfortunately, the only tool really before the Court is an overturning of the Betamax doctrine, which was decided with a much more sympathetic defendent.

      Or explaining in what way this is different from Betamax. The cases are similar in a general sense (a technology with potential copyright-infringement possibilities but also legitimate uses). But they're different in balance.

      The Betamax technology already had a large installed base of users who were using it primarily for time-shifting. Although it could be used to copy movies, it was expensive (it took two VCRs) and the copies were somewhat degraded. It was also really slow, and you couldn't mass-produce copies easily. Sony wasn't making a big profit by supporting illegal copying; banning Betamax would do big harm to Sony and its legitimate customers and little good to the movie producers.

      In this case it can be argued that the existing P2P programs are used primarily for copyright infringement. These companies appear to be making their existence largely on the backs of the copyright owners.

      I'd hate to see them have to make this distinction, because it causes a lot of grief in the gray areas. BitTorrent in particular has important non-infringing uses, particularly in the distribution of Linux binaries, and nobody's making a profit off BitTorrent even when it's used illegally.

      If the court ends up saying, "Grokster illegal, Betamax legal, BitTorrent just barely legal", they're going to have to elucidate some standard for future cases to judge by. I don't envy them that job.

    2. Re:Hard Cases = Bad Law by einhverfr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Not gonna disagree with you there. But sometimes that's the best the courts can do. They're facing a problem where the infractions (copyright infringements) are very real and very common. Whether this would actually help, I can't say. Law is rarely about perfect or absolute solutions. They muddle along as best they can.


      Well, you have another problem here. Business model may be a legitimate target but it doesn;'t get you off the hook here.... IIRC, Grokster is largely a Gnutella-based system and interoperates with other such programs. Just because you make Grokster liable doesn't make the problem go away. I.e. all Grokster does is add some services (chat, etc) to an otherwise decentralized file-sharing network. I.e. Grokster makes money by providing non-infringing services to a group of copyright infringers. Just because you force Grokster out of business does not necessarily impact the infringing activity at all. *In fact, the file sharing networks that they have built will survive them.*

      Now, you can make a stronger argument for shutting down the internet if what you want to do is stop infringement. Shutting down Grokster will have *no impact* but shutting down AOL, MSN, Earthlink, and every other ISP in the US will. However, here you run into everything that one has said about Betamax....

      Furthermore you have another problem targetting the business model here. What do you do about open source gnutella clients? There is no business model based on profiting from infringement there. So get rid of Grokster, the company, and replace it with Gnutella. Who is responsible.

      In the end, I think that it is reasonable to say that someone who is *directly profiting* from infringement might be liable (ala Napster), but ultimate responsiblity for actual infringement is with the person sharing the music. No court judgements against Grokster, Streamcast, etc. will impact this.

      In the end, the way to *kill* the current predatory music industry is not to redistribute the stupid music that they distribute today, but rather to build a new infrastructure for promoting music outside the major recording studios. Gnu-Radio might be one aspect. There are others as well. THere are many companies trying to get this sort of thing started now--- Open Music is where Linux was in 1995, so give it another 5 years....

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    3. Re:Hard Cases = Bad Law by Alsee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      explaining in what way this is different from Betamax.

      I understand you want to argue this is different than Betamax, but you you did not actually do so.

      In this case it can be argued that the existing P2P programs are used primarily for copyright infringement.

      In other words you are suggesting overturning Betamax.

      What Betamax says is: "it need merely be capable of substantial noninfringing uses".

      You are trying to make an argument that providing a perfectly legitimate product to a perfectly legitimate market of law abiding people to use for perfectly legitimate purposes *becomes* illegal if there also happen to be other people who will also seek out your product and who plan to use it for illegitimate purposes if that other group winds up being a majority.

      According to Betamax that is *exactly* what you cannot do. You cannot penalize a legitimate producer of a legitimate product, and just as importanly you cannot deny the legitimate customers access to that product simply because they became a minority.

      According to Betamax you cannot try to argue about percentages unless you want to argue that there is *NO* substantial noninfringing use at all. And you certainly cannot argue over oujia-board predictions about percentages might be in the future. When Grokster first created their product they did not have to read tea-leaves or consult with the spirits to guess at what the future usage percentages would be. When they first released their product they simply needed to know that they had a legitimate product with substantial legitimate use. It was a legal product when they released it. The product does not flip-flop between legal and illegal if the public usage percentages happen to drift back and forth between 51% and 49%.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  14. Aha! by Orangez · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "However, they showed little sympathy for the file-swapping companies' business model." So there is a business model?

    --
    "Never trust a computer you can not throw out of a window..."
  15. Predominantly Pirate by Ossus_10 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That was an interesting assertion about the predominance of piracy in P2P. I seem to remember a slashdot article about how the majority of Bittorrent and other P2P services were not used primarily for piracy. Maybe Grokster and StreamCast are different? I'm sure that wont help them. They need to focus on all the little old ladys that use P2P to send pictures of their Grandkids to the world. Ossus

  16. Prediction: Court rules in favor of P2P. Heres why by eyefish · · Score: 4, Insightful

    P2P is like the the kitchen knife: You can use it to cook or you can use it to kill people, but just because you can kill people doesn't mean we should prohibit everyone from using a knife to cook.

    Likewise, you can't restrict people's ussage of P2P just because P2P it is also used for piracy, after all P2P is probably one of the most useful networking patterns in existence for all kinds of things.

    If I were the enterntainment industry, I'd embrace P2P as it solves one of the biggest problems they face today: Bandwith to millions of people. This just goes on to show that the people running the enterntainment industry are dinosaurs falling behind the times.

  17. Re:More proof the Supremes work for Business by sgant · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Er...yeah...and it shows that they want to reverse Roe V Wade and take away our guns too! And...and...kick our dogs!

    I mean, come on. The court was being critical on both sides. Hence the part of the justices were critical of the entertainment industry's proposal, which would hold companies "predominantly" supported by piracy liable for copyright infringement.

    So to you, when they say they're critical of the entertainment industry's proposals, that means they really not? Er...what you talking bout Willis?

    --

    "Leo Fender was in a 'state of grace' when he designed the Stratocaster." -- Paul Reed Smith
  18. Thank God there's UseNet by almound · · Score: 4, Funny

    Don't tell the Supremes about it, OK?

  19. Transcript (cont'd): by dep01 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Supreme Court: So? We're really only concerned about AMERICAN piracy here. *sighs from the RIAA, smiles from Techie*

    --
    "hey, could you pass me a paper towel? er.. I mean... DEPLOY ABSORBTION PANEL!"
  20. When Law and Technology Fail by rawyin · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Darwin, while disputed frequently, did a decent job of proving that which fails to adapt will fade into history. Unfortunately when the times show you have no recourse to stop an action, you will do more damage to yourself to try and hold back the tides.

    I anticipate a ruling in favor of file sharing networks. I suspect this ruling primarily because:

    1. Historic case law supports the idea
    2. There are too many legitimate purposes in existence today
    3. The government more often than not rules in favor of the people

    Hopefully such a ruling will encourage the RIAA to redefine themselves and evolve into something better

    Or at least get rid of a few of the fluff artists.

  21. The scary part about it is... by BlackMesaResearchFac · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I agree that the Supreme Court will likely keep things as is and move on, but once this issue gets to Congress, watch out...

    Then it becomes entirely about who is lining whose pockets. The RIAA, with the help of some of its friends, has a decent shot at buying what it wants.

    Granted there are opponents w/ money, but the RIAA has proven to be very motivated.

    --
    -- Scientist: You aren't going to leave me here, are you? Boagh! Thump...
  22. what's the best way to support musicians? by rjnagle · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It seems likely that the Supreme Court will not overturn the lower Court's decision, and that is good for artists and consumers. Good riddance to the big labels, I say.

    But the question of compensating artists has not been addressed. We need to create an environment where downloaders want to support musicians they love rather than simply downloading their stuff for free.

    Musicians need to start setting up tipjars and consumers need to ask rigorous question about how much of anything they purchase goes to an intermediary.

    I recently went to a concert of Kristin Hersh where she sold no CD's but encouraged people to support her by buying mp3's of demos off her website. I bought $20 of mp3's off her website, of which Hersh received a significant percentage. Is that the future?

    Here are some other thoughts about how to reward musicians

    --
    Robert Nagle, Idiotprogrammer, Houston
    1. Re:what's the best way to support musicians? by Nik13 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I always wished groups had paypal account or such so you could send money to support them, but them being caught in a contract with the devil to publish their music, they can't just accept the money like that without letting others take their cut. When I find some good mp3's, I'd like to compensate the artists - not the record label execs, but right now there's no way of doing it.

      Buying the CD gives most of the money to intermediates;

      Buying a used CD gives those no money, but gives none to the artists either (only the used CD store makes a small profit);

      And there is nothing worth using online (no, I don't want anything to do with iTunes or iTMS, nor napster, DRM and other crap)

      If they were allowed to have some sort of paypal account and distribute their mp3's on the web or in a similar way (pay a few $ and you can download decent mp3's off the site?), I'm sure they'd make a killing at it.

      Sure, there will always be a few who will abuse this, but they can't do anything to that (people have always shared, and you can't close all the holes). I think most people would gladly pay to support their artists.

      --
      ///<sig />
  23. Re:More proof the Supremes work for Business by rholliday · · Score: 5, Funny

    Last I checked the Supremes worked for Diana Ross, and they were kind of pissed about it.

    --
    Xbox reviews.. We think they're funny.
  24. Re:Activist Court by ePhil_One · · Score: 4, Insightful
    With the level of activism that is going on with this court this can't be good.

    Exactly! Keep the decisions in Congress, where they are more easily bought and paid for!

    From the sound of it, the court is taking a reasonable approach. Have some faith in the institution, they have a hell of a track record.

    --
    You are in a maze of twisted little posts, all alike.
  25. Re:Activist Court by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Heh, the sad thing is that what Republicans and Democrats alike call "activism", most normal people call "applying the constitution". Read the majority and opposition opinions of most of their cases. Rarely do any of them read "I'm a Democrat and your Republican law sucked ass so we're cancelling it" or vice versa.

  26. Re:More proof the Supremes work for Business by bonch · · Score: 2, Funny

    More proof that you, enforcer999, are working not for small business, but big business. Sigh.

  27. Count me in by soupdevil · · Score: 2, Interesting

    as a Hollywood content provider rooting for the p2p networks.

  28. business issues by badxmaru · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If you look at it from the POV of the businesses, they have these huge organizations where there's massive overhead between the artist and the receiver. Much of this goes to marketing, paying for coffee, internet usage by interns, the like. But the problem is that they all are publicly listed stocks and they have fiduciary responsibility to their shareholders to make sure they return value. This value of course is reflected in the stock price. These companies are on a hot plate to fix a problem which has been verily disruptive ever since it came into being. In the good ole days, sharing a CD was limited to those who were on solid lists, knew couriers or simply picked a large barrelled pistol and robbed a Tower Records. Nowadays, it's almost an expected experience that people have when they sign onto broadband.
    By suing these sharing networks, the industry is trying to alleviate its "systemic" risk, allowing at least perceptions of control to come into play. Albeit this is a false sense of control, Sharman et al couldn't possibly be considered liable for what downloaders of their software do, but they're going to make a case for it regardless.

    In a back room somewhere, some finance intern has calculated that by liquidating all these software developers in a successful law suit will apply the current value of those companies and bring the music industry to a break-even point which will in turn allow them to make their stock numbers. Allowing the CEO's and likewise glorified fattened calves to keep their jobs and drive their $100,000 motorcars, live in their million dollar homes, and guarantee their children into Harvard and Yale through endownment donations.

    Yay Capitalism.

  29. predominant by MattW · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Given a bunch of P2P programs, infringers of a feather are going to flock together. Even wit the best intentions of providing a legitimate service, one service will end up known as the 'best place' to trade copyrighted files, and people will go there.

    You can shoot the messenger, but another will rise in its place.

    Note to the RIAA/MPAA: profit from P2P, instead of trying to fight it. You've just had the most powerful and potentially convenient distribution method in the world dropped in your laps, and it costs you nothing to distribute content now. If you can't find a way to increase your profits in light of that, then you deserve extinction. Someone will rise to replace you, too.

  30. Looks good by PxM · · Score: 4, Insightful

    All of the previous courts that have ruled on this case have sided with P2P. Probably because the P2P side has been making the argument that P2P is just the next version of VCRs, audio tapes, etc. Also the Constitution says that the purpose of copyright laws is to "promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts" and the P2P side has artists saying that the tech is good for them because it helps them get their stuff out. The RIAA's argument is pretty much "we're losing money" rather than "the arts are being destroyed" so they have a harder argument to pull off. There is also the strong evidence showing that many people who use P2P do buy the music later on. While this is still technically illegal, it ends up promoting the arts so this is probably a Good Thing in the eyes of the Founders.

    --
    Want a free iPod?
    Or try a free Nintendo DS, GC, PS2, Xbox. (you only need 4 referrals)
    Wired article as proof

  31. Re:More proof the Supremes work for Business by hey! · · Score: 4, Funny

    Yeah, but the Temptations are on the side of the little guy.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  32. The Best Part of This by filmmaker · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Is how there is absolutely ZERO discussion of the artists themselves. What do they want? Not even an issue. How can we help make sure they are supported and that we, the labels, can keep them as talent in our stable? Not an issue. And you'd think that second one would be; you'd think that the long term implications of keeping good talent happy and keeping consumers happy and buying would enter this thought process

    The term I heard used today was "inducement." Basically, can it be argued that Grokster induces crime. I sure hope this thing is laughed out of court because, while I understand that physical world analogies fail and it's more complicated than a lot of folks will admit, the precedent that would be set if software is found to be inherently criminal would have the potential to set us into a freakin dark ages.

    I mean, it's already happening.

  33. Working Artists? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I have zero sympathy for musicians in this situation. I remember the OLD days when they had to "perform" live to earn a living. Now they complain about not being able to sell retouched recordings from the comfort of their MTV crib jacuzzi's. So pitiful. All this P2P stuff doesn't seem to have made a dent in MTV cribs.

  34. Re:Prediction: Court rules in favor of P2P. Heres by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 4, Insightful
    P2P is like the the kitchen knife: You can use it to cook or you can use it to kill people, but just because you can kill people doesn't mean we should prohibit everyone from using a knife to cook.

    I like the analogy, but I'd say that modern P2P is more like the broadsword--you can use it to cook or you can use it to kill people, but you can be damn sure that it was designed with a specific purpose in mind...

    Yes, P2P is used for plenty of legal activity. A P2P application, in and of itself, does not violate the law. You're lying to yourself, though, if you suggest that the driving force behind P2P is anything other than illegal file sharing.

    I, too, think that the court will find in favor of P2P, but honestly, there are no good guys in court today. One side is a pack of morally bankrupt, lying weasels who claim to be looking out for the little guy but are really in it for the money--but I don't care too much for the other side, either.

    --

    Obliteracy: Words with explosions

  35. Re:More proof the Supremes work for Business by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I just remember that the US Constitution reserves rights to the states, not the feds, no matter what the current regime desires.

    Heck, I still have copyrighted software and magazines that will have my copyright 70 years after I die - and in my family we live about 100 years on average, so I'm expecting my copyrights will expire in 2130 or so. This is just plain wrong.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  36. NPR puff piece on the subject by RobertB-DC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This morning, National Public Radio ran a piece on the upcoming SCOTUS arguments. To my disappointment, it was a industry-friendly puff piece that didn't even attempt to find a valid use for the file-sharing technology. It could have been written by an RIAA PR rep, especially given the number of times they used the phrase "downloading copyrighted works". The only opposing view was a short whine by someone with Grokster about their business model.

    Usually, NPR excels in their reporting. But on this subject (as well as the subject of low-power FM broadcasting, another place where public radio puts its own interests above those of the public) they fall way short.

    --
    Stressed? Me? Of course not. Stress is what a rubber band feels before it breaks, silly.
    1. Re:NPR puff piece on the subject by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Ironically, I was listening to "Your World with Neil Cavuto" on FOX yesterday during a long after-holiday drive home, and the host and guests were solidly pro-P2P, to the point that Cavuto was rhetorically asking whether they would be arresting people who lend CDs to friends or start requiring ISPs to read our email to be sure we're not attaching copyrighted works.

      So much for the "NPR loves the little guy, FOX loves the big corporations" stereotypes.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  37. Nothing new about the questions they ask by hellfire · · Score: 2, Interesting

    In their questions, the justices were critical of the entertainment industry's proposal, which would hold companies "predominantly" supported by piracy liable for copyright infringement. However, they showed little sympathy for the file-swapping companies' business model."

    IANAL, especially not one who brings cases before the supreme court, but of what little I know of judges this isn't a surprise.

    I've had a few traffic tickets and I've even taken an old landlord to court. Every one of those judges, fair as they were, were highly critical, probative, and stern in their questioning of both sides. In other words, they were grumpy and downright rude. However, fortunately in my cases, they showed no favoritism to either side and ruled impartially. I expect this behavior they gave to both sides. Hell if you think your case is important enough to take to the surpreme court you damn well better take any kind of rudeness they give you and say "yes your honor may I have another?"

    A big part of this is because judges are never trained to be nice. Judges especially, but laywers in general often seem to lack basic courtesies, especially in court. Another large part of it is because the US system is set up as an advesarial system so there's a lot of bad vibes in a court room that would make anyone stressed and grumpy. But the biggest part is they are simply getting down to business and trying to find the facts. Setting both sides on their heels by asking tough questions is how the supreme court works and how they come to the final answer. If you are coming to the highest court in the land you better come prepared with some pretty damn good answers.

    Enough media hype of the judicial process... I want to know the answer the surpreme court comes up with!

    --

    "All great wisdom is contained in .signature files"

  38. Several questions . . . by mmell · · Score: 3, Funny
    First -- what do RIAA and MPPA plan to do about individual coders who are working all the time on P2P programs such as LimeWire? After all, it seems that the "powers that be" are trying to uninvent P2P file sharing -- rather like the U.S. trying to stuff the nuclear genie back in the bottle after bombing Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

    Second -- when will RIAA and MPPA go after the DVD and CD manufacturers for creating a digital medium with little-to-no effective protection against copying? After all, it seems to me that unencoded audio CD's and CSS encoded DVD's (being readily copied in both cases) are technologies which foster and encourage illegal copying.

    And let's not forget television and radio broadcasters, who's offerings can be recorded and re-disseminated without any technical work on the part of the end-user (consumer?). Are they responsible for all of the (VHS,BetaMax) pirated content which they helped create? I still have the first three season's of Star Trek TNG on VHS (shredding tapes now to stave off assault by MPAA).

  39. Re:Activist Court by Compenguin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    No, instead they use flowery language like penumbra and using the equal protection clause for all sorts of crazy things like "libery of the contract"

  40. Re:Prediction: Court rules in favor of P2P. Heres by GlassHeart · · Score: 2, Insightful
    P2P is like the the kitchen knife: You can use it to cook or you can use it to kill people, but just because you can kill people doesn't mean we should prohibit everyone from using a knife to cook.

    That analogy only goes so far. Dynamite, for example, can be used in construction or mining, but can also be used to blow people up. In most or all countries, explosives are legal but highly regulated.

    I'm not saying that your kitchen knife analogy is invalid, just that the principle you extrapolate from it is overly broad. There are many things that governments regulate tightly, or even ban entirely (uranium, for example) from private hands, not just because they can be used to kill people, but because common people don't have a plausible need for them. The density of uranium probably makes it an excellent paperweight, but that's unlikely to convince a court to make the government sell you some.

    In other words, the debate should be about the potential for harm (let's not pretend that P2P isn't used for copyright infringement) and the potential good. You can consider technology to be "pure" and agenda-free if you want an intellectual discussion, but if you want to win a court case you'll probably need to come up with significant non-infringing uses for it.

  41. Re:What /. pirates don't want you to know by jdgeorge · · Score: 2, Insightful

    While there are artists like Chuck D who like file-sharing, that's their choice. /. pirates don't want you to know about all the artists who are against their music being pirated without their permission. The reason is that pirates always try to paint their activities as some sort of revolution for the artists against the big, bad record labels. It's not the case...piracy is just people wanting to get stuff for free.

    Nice; flame the Slashdot readers by calling them all pirates. A work of genius.

    To be sure, piracy is just people trying to get stuff for free by illegal means. However, peer-to-peer file sharing has no more to do with pirating multimedia content than using a web browser on the internet has to do with violating copyrights.

    Do you consider your use of a web browser on the internet to be nothing more than a means that allows you to violate the copyrights of others?

  42. Re:What /. pirates don't want you to know by koreth · · Score: 2, Insightful
    piracy is just people wanting to get stuff for free.

    True enough. But filesharing is not just people wanting to get stuff for free, which is the point of this court case.

    What am I getting for free by spending a big chunk of my web server's bandwidth allocation seeding a torrent of the Project Gutenberg DVD, for example? (If you're downloading that and one of your peers is sending you a couple megabits/sec of data, that's probably me. You're welcome!) If Grokster and company lose this suit, it will quite possibly become illegal for me to give out that collection of free, unquestionably legal, public-domain works. What a victory for the public good that would be!

  43. Went to the supreme court this morning by mystereys · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I went to the supreme court this morning in hopes of being able to see the oral arguments for the case (I live in the DC area). Unfortunately, there was a huge line and I and many others didn't get in. I can report on what happened outside, though.

    The pro-RIAA/MPAA/MGM protesters showed up first, at maybe 8:45am. They tried to go up on the steps leading to the court building, but police told them they needed to stay on the sidewalk. This group of folks then hung out for a little while with their signs (one which read "Thou shalt not steal. -God"), then some of them took out their guitars and started playing and singing.

    Then at around 9am, the protesters from the Consumer Electronics Association showed up, with black shirts reading "Save Betamax" in white letters. They were met with a some cheers from some folks in the waiting lines as they left their bus and assembled on the sidewalk a little ways away from the rival protesters. They had more creative signs compared to the musician protesters. The interesting thing to note were different demographics of the two protesting groups. The musicians were mostly middle-aged white men. The electronics advocates were generally younger, and had more of a mix of genders and races.

    The news media started showing up in full force at around 9:30, and took some interviews with various people, including folks from both protest groups, and random people (including a teenager from a school group). I saw cameras from NBC, ABC, Channel One and Reuters. The media seemed to be focusing a lot of attention on the musician protest group, as at least one of their members was always being interviewed. However, that might have had something to do with them having guitars and making music, which got them attention.

    The crowd waiting to get in seemed to be either on the side of Grokster or ambivalent. I took some photos, which I'll put up on Flickr (tagged "Grokster" or something like that) or the dc metblog when I get home from work.

    --
    "Righteous speed demon and trust fund party darling of justice"
    1. Re:Went to the supreme court this morning by nullforce · · Score: 2, Funny

      Were they publicly performing copyrighted works? Did they have permission to do so?

  44. Pay to Play! by tilleyrw · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "If I write songs for free, I can't pay the rent."
    "They're stealing our music. Our RIAA-Overlords are unhappy!"

    ...

    Let the music companies run a secured BitTorrent network. Access to this MediaNet would be by subscription. Subscribers receive a username plus an RSA SecurID key generator. A SecureID keyfob is an eight-digit number generator. Every sixty-seconds a new number appears according to a pseudo-random number generating algorithm.

    When I access the AT&T Gov't Solutions home page, there are three items needed: my username, my user-defined PIN, and the number displayed by my keyfob. Because the home computer in Vienna has a copy of the algorithm in my keyfob, it's number is identical. This verifies (to the network) that I'm me.

    To recap, a login would require:

    Username Four-digit PIN (user-defined) RSA SecureID keyfob (six or eight digit number)

    This guarantees that only instance of a subscribed account could exisct on the network at any one time. The network would have include in the database all known songs.

    Just think, all known songs for a low, low price of $6.66 per month. Sell your soul to the media-overlords for just the price of fast-food meal.

    --
    This post encoded with ROT26. If you can read it, you've violated the DMCA. Handcuffs please, sergeant.
  45. Tough time. by Patrick+Mannion · · Score: 2, Funny

    I think the celebrities will have a tough time flying back and forth between the Micheal Jackson trial and the P2P hearing. I wonder which matters most to them.

    --
    In America, you spam computers In Soviet Russia, computers spam you!
  46. Government interests by jfengel · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why people seem to equate that to a need to keep keep from developing P2P applications is beyond me.

    Because in general the courts have decided that the government has an interest in preventing crimes, not just punishing them.

    That means that sometimes they'll make activities illegal even when they don't harm anybody. Owning an unregistered gun is usually illegal, even if you don't shoot anybody. Driving while intoxicated is illegal even if you don't hit anybody. Owning cocaine has legitimate medical purposes, but try telling the court that you have a gram to fix nosebleeds. Lockpicks and other tools often used in the commission of crimes are illegal in some places.

    If they find that a bit of technology is used primarily for illegal purposes, they'll make the technology itself illegal. It's not a very libertarian attitude, and in the cases I cited there are plenty of people who would say that the court is wrong. And it certainly conflicts with your rights in a strict-constructionist sense. But the courts have often found that "insure domestic Tranquility" can include preventative measures.

    So feel free to disagree with it, but their reasoning shouldn't be totally opaque.

  47. Re:More proof the Supremes work for Business by enforcer999 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Oh. I am a little sensitive about the subject. I am sure you could not tell. ;-)

  48. Re:Prediction: Court rules in favor of P2P. Heres by frankie · · Score: 2, Insightful

    modern P2P is more like the broadsword

    The problem is that "P2P" is not monolithic, and each variation requires a different analogy. Things like Grokster were certainly intended to aid (illicit) media swapping, and their associated business entities don't help to dissuade this notion. OTOH we have stuff like BitTorrent, which has literally enourmous non-infringing uses (result #3 and similar notwithstanding).

    Hmm...I'm having trouble here, what kind of blade is BitTorrent? Maybe a chainsaw powered by a beowulf cluster of tandem exercise bikes?

  49. Maybe I'm missing something by brontus3927 · · Score: 2, Informative
    Maybe I'm missing something here, but how exactly does one ban a protocal? If (and that's a big if) the Supreme Court decides in favor of the RIAA, overturns Betamax, and outlaws p2p file sharing, what then? For the first time in history, software (which is intellectual property) will be made illegal (hacking/cracking tools aren't illegal themselves, but using them on a computer you don't control is, just like p2p software currently isn't illegal, but downloading pirated software/music/movies is).

    Since Grokster, kazaa, Azureus, etc. presumably close up shop and take down their websites becuase their businesses were found to be unconstitutional (which is what the Supreme Court acutally decides is the consititutional legality of an issue). No new p2p software is created commercially. Now what?

    Well, constitutional protection against ex post facto (Article I, Section 9, Clause 3) means that you would still have the right to have possess p2p software that was on your computer before the Supreme Court decision. You just couldn't use it legally. But for those who are using p2p to download copyrighted content, the legality issue shouldn't be a big issue.

    On a related note, programmers with the neccessary wherewithal, will continue to create and update p2p applications...illegaly but will do so none-the-less. Or p2p projects will be created and maintained outside the US. If history has shown us anything, criminalizing a behavior or thought has little effect in stopping the behavior, and tends to give it a glamourizing effect. Example #1: drug use. Example #2: Prohibition.

    Or say everybody just walks away from p2p applications all together. Then what, does piracy stop? Of course not. What Microsoft calls "casual piracy" the making of physical, unauthorized copies of copyrighted material has always been a bigger share of piracy than p2p file sharing. Ignoring that issue, what would happen? Instead of downloading illegal content through your p2p client of choice, there would be a resurgence of services like usenet and IRC.

    If the Supreme Court had ruled the other way in Betamax, there would have been severe implications, because building hardware is a more difficult enterprise and harder to hide what your doing. But a ruling in favor of the RIAA here wouldn't have half the effect they think it would.

    That said, I think it would be historically bad precedent that would criminalize perfectly legal behavior (getting the latest Fedora distribution.

    The best way to fight the government is to work with it. Write your support to newspapers. Write your congressperson, they're not all as currupt as you think. At the very least they want to get re-elected and the best way to get re-elected is to support causes popular to your constituency, and oppose causes unpopular to them. Write a detailed, sincere letter, and most of them will respond. But they won't know anything if you don't tell them. Its your job to ask the government to work for you.

  50. These guys are representing P2P? by Dachannien · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In a series of court battles where the ??AA want to eliminate *all* P2P, is it really a good thing that Grokster and StreamCast are representing P2P software? What about BitTorrent, for example? While it's P2P and while it's sometimes being used to violate copyrights, it has been used and even endorsed by some entertainment businesses as a necessary part of distribution of software/patches/media. My concern isn't that Grokster or StreamCast suffer, but rather that the entire concept of P2P file transfer is criminalized by association when it actually has real, legitimate, and very important private and commercial uses.

  51. Far Reaching Industry Effects by nurb432 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is not just about the music/video/software industries..

    If a company ( or person ) can be held legally accountable for the improper use of his product then many industries are screwed and this could wreak havoc on the countries economy due to the litigious nature of the present day.

    Everyone from car manufacturers, to gun makers could now be argued, with this precedent, that they are liable. Even a brick manufacturer could conceivably sued under this pretense.

    The fall out of this case may just effect the long term viability of this country.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  52. Why don't we question the legality of copyrights? by foszae · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I suppose i'm not a good capitalist

    i'm not going to even touch the particular argument about whether P2P software or activities are inherently illegal or not because i'll make my vote on my own.

    what bothers me is the inherent idea of copyrighting materials. i believe as most people presumably do that it is fair to expect to make a living off the work you produce. but i don't see how it is an automatic right that anything you make muscially should sustain you for years, particularly if you never do anything again.

    as an activist for freedom of speech, i will certainly allow that a song of revolution is equally valuable as a novel that shook the world. but as a consumer, i'll tell you that i think the average Britney Spears schmaltz isn't worth even listening to the ads on the radio, let alone paying money for it. and the fact that twenty years from now, they'll be selling minivans to her current fans using that song just saddens me. the fact that any person can cruise talentlessly through the music industry and then get huffy about protecting their right to live off that "work" just makes me laugh

    but what makes me cry is something different. take the example of Happy Birthday. one of those universal songs, you might end up singing it every month for the rest of your life (certainly around my office you do). it is one of the cornerstones of Western culture, a part of our collective social imaginary. we as a people sing this song in celebration time and again.

    unless of course you're in the movies or a commercial or television. because yes, somebody wrote it and they expect to get paid. who cares if they're ninety year old ladies at this point. or for that matter, who cares if it's the children of those 90 year old ladies. or for that matter if it's Vivendi Universal or BMG or Sony who bought the rights to the copyright off the children of those now-dead 90 year-old ladies but still stand up demanding their 18 cents everytime it's played in a commercial setting.

    yes it makes sense that you should get a living out of the works you produce, but frankly with patents and copyrights being given extensions time and again, these works are money-earning products so long past any human lifespan that the idea of the creator making a living from it has been lost. give them five years. give them twenty years. i think it's fair that a generation should pass before something enters the public domain (though it still seems too long).

    the fact is that copyright has become an inalienable right to be greedy about some cute catchy riff that has all the weight or importance of that pothole i ran over yesterday. it protects the rights of singularly untalented people and defies the truth that some songs have been embraced and loved by humanity.

  53. i still don't understand by bravo369 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    i still don't understand how P2P companies should be held liable. Many people out there burn and pirate DVD's and music CD's and sell them on the street. By the RIAA and MPAA logic, won't they be suing the makers of CD and DVD burners next?

  54. Re:Prediction: Court rules in favor of P2P. Heres by ArsonSmith · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While you are somewhat right you are trying to define a logical layout to a technical issue. Even still things like email servers and DNS are all peer to peer. Printer and filer shares, not servers, are considered peer to peer. TCP/IP is a peer to peer protocol by design.

    --
    Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
  55. Re:Activist Court by surefooted1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Exactly! Keep the decisions in Congress, where they are more easily bought and paid for!

    When this does get to Congress, and it probably will, you can count on your "beloved" Microsoft to put up the $ on our side. If you look closely at this issue, the MPAA and RIAA not only want to make Grokster et al liable, but also other software and hardware makers. You can guarantee Microsoft, Intel and the gang will not stand being liable for piracy.

  56. Are ISP's next? by Vip · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A few companies here advertise their high-speed internet. In many of the ads I have seen lines such as "Share music!" or "Download music!" They are actively advertising to their customers to use P2P.

    Couldn't the music biz interpret this too as aiding file-sharing and destroying their business model? Perhaps Shaw and Telus (2 major high-speed ISP's here) need to be shutdown?

    Vip

    1. Re:Are ISP's next? by Jamie+Lokier · · Score: 2, Informative
      They [ISPs] are actively advertising to their customers to use P2P. Couldn't the music biz interpret this too as aiding file-sharing and destroying their business model? Perhaps [ISPs using such advertising] need to be shutdown?

      No, because there is plenty of music available for legitimate sharing and downloading with the blessing of its copyright holders. (An example: Magnatune).

      It is therefore a very legitimate feature for ISPs to advertise - and this is becoming more and more so as sharing-friendly licensing initiatives like Creative Commons take root.

      Oh, and the music biz has no intrinsic right for their preferred business model to be protected. They have to compete on a fair playing field like everyone else - including artists using a sharing-friendly business model. Protecting copyright is not the same as protected one specific business model among the many built upon copyright.

      -- Jamie

  57. Re:P2P is like Prohibition by Jason+Ford · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Piracy is still wrong (just as making bathtub gin was).

    Why was making bathtub gin wrong? Perhaps you meant that it was illegal (unless you're at Stage 4 in Kohlberg's Moral Development scheme.)

    --
    I did not become a vegetarian for my health, I did it for the health of the chickens. --Isaac Bashevis Singer
  58. Photocopier by RichMan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Would the photocopier have ever been made if the paper publishers had taken the line the RIAA and MPAA are taking now?

    Would text scanners exist at all?

    These both have infringing uses but they are not the subject of lobbying groups attempting to deny their very existance.

    It is all about powerful lobby groups attempting to maintain their stranglehold on media creation and deny the people their voice. (Ok that is a little strong). It is about $$$$.

  59. Feed a Musician? by Vorondil28 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    From the article: "We're here to give a face to people being hurt by illegal downloads," said Erin Enderlin, one of the songwriters. "When we don't get paid, we can't pay our rent."

    When the heck has an executive said to a musician, "Sorry pal, due to illegal downloads, we don't have enough money to pay you."

    Sorry, but the musicians-are-getting-screwed defense is a crock.

    --
    This sig rocks the casbah.
  60. Re:Why don't we question the legality of copyright by optimus2861 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The purpose of copyright is to make sure than an author is able to profit from their creation during their life and (their estate) somewhat beyond their life. The only purpose it serves is to reward and protect the creator.

    Ye gads, I have to punt the mod points on this one. Where did you get this shit? Certainly not the constitution. Read it. Here's what it says in section 8:

    "The Congress shall have Power (...) To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;"

    Ergo, the purpose of copyright is, as written, To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts. Not, as you say, for the author to earn a fast buck. That's only the means to the end. Congress could decide tomorrow (shyeah, right) that the "limited Times" be shortened to a single day and there'd be nothing the authors could do about it (aside from that pesky Berne convention). The authors' estates certainly weren't a consideration in the first copyright laws, which granted copyright for a whopping 14 years.

    Hell, you even said that copyright doesn't do a good job at promoting the arts -- so by your own statement and the constitutional wording, copyright, at least in its current form, doesn't work! It's not serving its constitutional purpose! Now that I'm sure many /.'ers would get behind! :)