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RIAA Suit Rejected With Prejudice

yfarren writes "According to cdfreaks.com the RIAA has lost the case against the mother of a 13 year old girl accused of file-sharing violations." From the article: "The case was dismissed with prejudice, which prevents the case from being advanced against the defendant. Finally, the RIAA tried asking the Judge to amend the judgment in order to allow them to sue the child through a Guardian Ad Litem. However the court denied [the] RIAA's request."

28 of 649 comments (clear)

  1. Open memo to the RIAA: by BWJones · · Score: 5, Insightful


    Mwaaaaaaa ha ha ha ha ha ha ha heeee heeeeeee wheeeeeee. *SNORT* Bah ha ha ha ha *wheeeeeze!* *snicker*

    In principal I agree that music theft is bad and in all honesty, none of my music is pirated, but you gotta realize that stuff like this just makes you guys look bad. Bad as in $#!theads, not bad as in cool.

    Karma goes around and it comes around, so i'd say this is due.

    Oh and Edgar Bronfman Jr: You say you want to hold the cheapest songs on iTunes to .99 cents and raise the prices on the popular tracks? Was not this what you were trying to do when that pesky price fixing scheme was discovered back when you were at Universal? Are you guys *trying* to put yourselves out of business?

    --
    Visit Jonesblog and say hello.
    1. Re:Open memo to the RIAA: by 91degrees · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Indeed. This was pretty heavy handed of the RIAA.

      Actually, it's possible that the court overstepped its authority, but would any judge want to issue such a judgement against a 13 year old who, quite honestly, is hardly a reckless tearaway. Any sane judge is going to be more lenient towards the kid than the multi-million dollar trade organisation.

    2. Re:Open memo to the RIAA: by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Are you guys *trying* to put yourselves out of business?

      Yes.

      Because if the industry's failing, it's a lot easier to blame it on copyright infringement than poor business decisions, because copyright infringement is defined and illegal but poor business decisions are just poor decision, and it's difficult to prove either bad faith by the execs or that copyright infringement has no effect. And you can get a lot more money by suing people than by playing with a fair market (especially one with IP, which has zero marginal cost and the customers realize it).

    3. Re:Open memo to the RIAA: by shark72 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "You say you want to hold the cheapest songs on iTunes to .99 cents and raise the prices on the popular tracks? Was not this what you were trying to do when that pesky price fixing scheme was discovered back when you were at Universal?"

      Kind of, but not quite.

      This is how the price fixing thing went down:

      1. Best Buy and Wal-Mart started selling CDs at or below cost as an incentive to get customers into the stores (where they'd ideally buy higher priced, higher margin items -- the CDs are what's known as "loss leaders").
      2. A few music retailers (TWE and Tower Records among them), which did not have stores full of consumer electronics, clothing or groceries to sell, could simply not match the loss-leading prices posted by Wal-Mart and Best Buy. So, they went to the record companies for help.
      3. The record companies set up MAP ("minimum advertised price") programs with TWE and Tower. The record companies would help fund the stores' ads (called "program money" or "co-op money") as long as the ads didn't list prices that went below the MAP. Tower and TWE could sell CDs for whatever prices they wanted; but they couldn't advertise them below the MAP. MAP programs, by the way, are prevalent in many, many industries, including the PC peripheral industry.
      4. Best Buy and Wal-Mart, which were getting no program money from the record labels, went to the government.
      5. The court, in turn, smacked the record companies and told them to stop their MAP programs. They did... and meanwhile, MAP programs continue in many other industries.
      6. Wal-Mart and Best Buy continued selling CDs at or below cost. Tower Records filed for bankrupcty.

      The price fixing judgement was a win for Wal-Mart and Best Buy. The big losers were not the record companies (as the MAP programs did not affect the price at which they sold records into distribution), but indie record stores, which can no longer get co-op money from record labels. It's also a loss, indirectly, for people like me who remember and cherish indie record stores. They're a dying breed.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
  2. Huge mistakes by fembots · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They shouldn't have let it go to the court.

    But good news for everyone else.

    1. Re:Huge mistakes by Copperhead · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not if the defendant settles, which is what people have done so far.

      --
      Your reality is lies and balderdash and I'm delighted to say that I have no grasp of it whatsoever. - Baron Munchausen
  3. Lose, lose situation for RIAA by dada21 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While I feel this court ruling is fair, the opinions in the article are a bit off...

    In my opinion, the RIAA should not be allowed to target young minors with lawsuits, especially since most cannot afford to purchase music as it is, let alone have a credit / debit card to use legal services.

    So if a child steals from a store that they go to without a parent, it should be OK because the minor can't afford to purchase the item?

    more reasonable approach would be first send a warning to their parents about what is going on, since in many cases the parents don't understand what's going on.

    And when the parents are unaware of their child, it is bad parenting. Sometimes a warning isn't enough.

    I agree that the RIAA's suit was unfounded, in this case. I also believe the RIAA has lost their battles and will only be wasting time and money on additional lawsuits (that will cost them, in the long run, far more than they will 'save' or 'gain' in judgements).

    I'm not even sure that the RIAA can afford so many lawsuits. Sure, they're a multi-billion dollar "co-op" organization "defending" artists, but each lawsuit costs them something. Even with in-house legal staff, there are still filing fees, follow-up costs, and the like. I'm assuming their return-on-investment is calculated by how many people they assume will stop pirating their music out of fear of lawsuits? So they're assuming that they'll be seeing a return from people buying more albums because they are afraid to pirate because the RIAA sues pirates? Confusing.

    The reality, though, is that they likely won't stop suing, and if they even win 1 out of 10 cases, it will likely cause them to fail even more.

    So I say, sue away, RIAA.

    1. Re:Lose, lose situation for RIAA by Asgard · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I suspect the difference is that you probably didn't require the parent to pay 2x the cost of the item as a penalty.

    2. Re:Lose, lose situation for RIAA by size1one · · Score: 5, Insightful
      "So if a child steals from a store that they go to without a parent, it should be OK because the minor can't afford to purchase the item?"

      No it is not ok.

      You've just made the common mistake of replacing "copyright infringement" with "theft". In this case they become quite different. A theft from a store takes a tangible good from the store, something that might be sold to someone else. Downloading a song online does not prevent the sale to someone else.

    3. Re:Lose, lose situation for RIAA by NMerriam · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I own multiple retail businesses, and when a child steals from me, I guess I "extort" the parent by saying "pay up or I'm calling the cops."

      One critical difference -- do you demand the parents pay for the goods stolen, or do you demand the kid's entire college fund?

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    4. Re:Lose, lose situation for RIAA by Deanasc · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And the parents aren't facing a possible $150,000.00 per stolen item civil penalty which amounts to the threat behind the threat of extortion.

      --
      I've hit Karma 50 and gotten a Score:5, Troll... I win!
    5. Re:Lose, lose situation for RIAA by Sj0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's ok. Through lobbying, both media lobbies have effectively stolen fifty years of the public domain.

      How about we call it even?

      --
      It's been a long time.
  4. It seems odd to me... by Spytap · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...that such a strong dismissal would also include this part:

    "While the case was dismissed, the mother had to pay legal fees as the Judge refused to award her attorneys fees. The reason is that the plaintiffs' lawyers had taken the appropriate steps in trying to prosecute the mother and that the mother used tactics to obstruct the Plaintiff to efficiently prosecute her."

    So it's dismissed, but she still owes somewhere between a couple thousand and a hundred thousand dollars? She's fucked regardless.

    RIAA's still making it's message heard: Either roll over early, or we'll fuck you for life.

  5. Fucking hell by Turn-X+Alphonse · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think I speak for us all when I say "What The Fuck".

    What company wants to sue children? We were all kids once, we probably commited minor crimes (stole a chocolate bar or whatever). But you never hear a shop keeper going "lets sue the little kid! He's a right fucker him!", they slap them on the wrist, tell their parents and keep a closer eye on them.

    I didn't like the RIAA before, but when they start to sue children.. you've crossed a line no adult should even think of crossing.

    --
    I like muppets.
  6. Cool, but she still had to pay costs... by RyanFenton · · Score: 5, Insightful

    She still had to pay her defence costs in this case - hardly unusual, but very much a threat against those who don't want to settle. Yes, they can use this case as precident, but the costs of any court case just won't be acceptable to most of the people here in the U.S., who are living in a constant state of debt. This leaves the threat of bankruptcy as a legitimate tool of terror in the hands of the content distribution organizations, and any other corporations that decide that preying on the weak to settle is a legitimate financial strategy.

    We need some corporate anti-terror legislation to stop corporations from acting to terrorize citizens. We already have too much historic and current legislation running the other way around. Of course, we used to just call it organized crime when applied to corporations, but terror as a political label is in fashion these days.

    Ryan Fenton

  7. Re:More appropriate title by turtled · · Score: 4, Insightful

    the RIAA tried asking the Judge to amend the judgment in order to allow them to sue the child

    Were they going to sue for lunch money??

    --
    "I cannot think of any need in childhood as strong as the need for a father's protection." -- Sigmund Freud
  8. fun with popups by jaxon6 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Repeat after me:

    Never, ever, ever link to a site with that level of popups.

    I really think /. should make a point of not linking to sites that are just that shitty. Maybe the site owners will get the point.

    And when the hell is Firefox going to get functionality to block flash-based popups?

    --
    Do you see the sig? Do you have it in your sights? Why yes, Miss Moneypenny...
  9. Guardian Ad Lidem by MBCook · · Score: 5, Insightful
    No kidding. Guardian ad lidem? That means they wanted the court to remove the parents' legal rights to the child for the purposes of this case (ostensibly because the parents weren't looking out for the best interests of the kid) and have an officer of the court take over.

    The parents' of this kid aren't fit because they won't let the RIAA sue her? They want a new legal guardian (again, only for legal matters pertaining to this case) appointed purely for the purpose of suing a child the parents' prevented you from suing?

    These people are INSANE.

    --
    Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    1. Re:Guardian Ad Lidem by moosesocks · · Score: 4, Insightful

      These people are INSANE.

      No. They just have no soul.

      --
      -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
  10. Re:Easy Targets by penguinoid · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Going after 13 year olds... it's like some sort of electronic pedophilia.

    Not so much pedophilia... It incredibly commonplace for any hunting animal to target the young or the weak, those who cannot fight back or run. In this case it seems most unfair. As others have pointed out, minors do not have credit cards and thus cannot buy music online, and the parents are often quite clueless. Anyhow, this doesn't help the prejudice that lawyers == sharks.

    --
    Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
  11. Re:Am I Correct? by flanksteak · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You can sue a minor, you just have to follow special procedure. Part of which is the appointment of someone of age to represent the minor (in addition to the lawyer). The interesting thing about the case is that after the RIAA lost on the technicality they asked for permission to represent so they could follow the rules. The judge said no, which strikes me as a recognition and rejection of the overall end-around tactic.

    It would be interesting to review the cases where the RIAA has acted this way and see if they pick cases where the parents may not be of means or legal savvy to fight the way this woman did.

  12. Re:More appropriate title by scooby111 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No, they would sue to attach her future wages and to make an example out of her.

    The RIAA has never been above scare tactics to get their way.

  13. Re:You did not read the judgement, did you? by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Their only legal recourse is the PR disaster of filing a completely new lawsuit naming a 13 year old girl? Up until this point, they've been trying to just sue whoever had their name on the IP address. If this trend continues and the RIAA tries to sue hundreds or thousands of children, the public might be enraged to the point that Congress would be forced to make changes to the laws that make the RIAA's witchhunt possible.

    We let a lot of kids off with less punishment for accidentally killing another child than the RIAA wants from these kids for sharing music (and possibly unknowingly at that since the p2p apps are configured that way...).

  14. Legal !== Ethical by groovemaneuver · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think it's important to keep sight of the fact that what is legal is not necessarily ethical (and vice versa). While it is perfectly legal for the RIAA to sue a single mom or her children, it seems rather sketchy in the ethics department.

    I don't think that it is ethical to infringe on copyrights, and I doubt most people would disagree. At the same time, I think it's also unethical that an organization like the RIAA can pretend to be acting on behalf of artists that they routinely abuse. I think people are really starting to understand that buying albums doesn't really support the artists ($.01 - $.03 dollars to the artist vs. $12-$25 to the RIAA and retailers). Because so much money goes to this seemingly ethically devoid entity, people have no conscience dilemmas when downloading.

    Every artist signing a record deal is gambling: chances are they're going to lose, but every once in a while someone makes it big. I'm much happier as a consumer and music fan when I purchase music directly from an artist. F*ck the RIAA.

  15. Re:You did not read the judgement, did you? by digidave · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Congress would be forced to make changes to the laws that make the RIAA's witchhunt possible."

    Yes, Congress will make it possible to sue the parents. What, did you really think Congress was on your side?

    --
    The global economy is a great thing until you feel it locally.
  16. The curse of digitization by skingers6894 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The RIAA are attempting to contain the uncontainable - and it's their own fault.

    No matter what they like to say many, many people do not believe that copyright infringement is the same as theft.

    Combine this with a media format that can be copied in seconds and you have a problem.

    How did the poor recording industry end up in this mess? Greed and shortsightedness.

    They had a format that could not be copied easily. Vinyl was the clearly superior sounding format of the day. For music lovers a tape copy simply would not do. People could not afford to create their own records. Even the inferior tape copies could only be created from the vinyl in actual time. So people bought the original. They weren't buying the "rights to the song", they were buying the media!

    Enter the CD. Better sound quality but people did not have the capability to copy it perfectly - at first. The CD came out at a price that was a PREMIUM over vinyl. Why? Because the format was BETTER QUALITY, we were told. The recording industry was happy to be selling "media format" when it suited them. We the consumers were told that the price would drop as the production costs of CDs came down. Well, I can produce a CD for about 25 cents in my house now. So why am I paying at least 50 times the price that I could produce the thing for? Where is the price reduction that was promised? It never came.

    So now the RIAA have a problem. The media is now worth squat and we can make our own perfect copies for virtually nothing. Plan B - copyright violation and suing 13 year olds.

    Great idea guys, sue your user base. Worse still, sue the user base who couldn't afford to buy the stuff now anyway but may be inclined to in the future IF you hadn't completely soured their musical experience when they were young by taking them to court for listening to Jay-Z.

    Get a clue. Reduce your prices. Encourage artists to make money from concerts (wow, imagine, performers, performing!). Find a superior format again and make it worth buying. You are trying to contain a product that can be perfectly reproduced in seconds, from anywhere in the world, to anywhere in the world, for free. People find it hard to believe it's stealing. Good luck with your business.

  17. Re:More appropriate title by killjoe · · Score: 3, Insightful

    All we really need is judges with balls enough to throw silly lawsuits out the window. See IBM v SCO for an example. Any fucking two year old would have been smart enough to ask SCO "which code did they steal"? But they judge has let this suit go on for three years without once asking that question.

    --
    evil is as evil does
  18. Street Justice by 0x0000 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, since you would be a criminal, you might not be able to draw welfare (actually, is there still any such things as welfare? I thought the neo-cons put an end to that?).

    No, I think that since the RIAA are demanding the criminalization of file sharing behavior, the file sharers should oblige them - deal with the RIAA in terms they can understand: Gang fo thugz to gang of thugz.

    E.g. Form an IP Theft Crime Syndicate and respond to each lawsuit with a couple drive-bys at some RIAA member corporate offices. There are more of you than there are of them, and they are highly visible wiht a lot to lose - right out there in the open. Vulnerable.

    For the financially disadvantaged (those who can't just dash out and buy a tech 9 or mac 10 or whatever they're called - toss a couple of gasoline bombs thru their plate glass (wait til everyone has gone home if you're squeamish about offing the bastards - but a more useless bunch of dickheads I really have trouble imagining) - show them what "losses" are really all about...

    And speaking of fininancially disadvantaged, hasn't anyone noticed that the RIAA/MPAA thugs only pick on middle-to-low income citizens? They seem very careful to avoid going after anyone who has the real financial oomph to give them a real legal fight. This Michigan decision is not too bad, but the war is far from over, and the people are losing.

    The RIAA/MPAA will no more be stopped by legal means than any other group of entrenched gangsters.

    If the courts and law enforcement won't stand up for the citizens' rights, the citizens have to do it themselves.

    This girl's mother could obviously afford a lawyer, and was willing to take the chance - what about all those other one-paycheck-from-the-streets victims who are having to balance next a paying couple months rent in protection money to the RIAA thugs against the possility that if they give a similar amount of money to lawyer they *might* not get stuck with an even larger fine?

    I figure if the RIAA/MPAA thugs had their families threatened in the same way - to the same degree - they are threatening the families of their victims they might at least begin to understand what's at stake.

    Regardless of what protestations and representations the RIAA/MPAA thugs might make, file sharing as we know it is not illegal. The fact that they have purchased legislattion supporting the pretense of its illegality doesn't change that. To those victims without sufficient funds to purchase legislation to protect themselves from unjust action under the color of Law, force becomes the only possible response.

    It's a rigged system. It's ime to shut it down and start over.

    --
    "The Internet is made of cats."