First RIAA Lawsuit to Head to Trial
mamer-retrogamer writes "Out of 14,800 lawsuits the RIAA has filed in the past two years, none have gone to court - until now. Patricia Santangelo, a divorced mother of five living in Wappingers Falls, New York, found herself the target of an RIAA lawsuit and vows to contest it. Santangelo claims that she knows nothing about downloading music online and the likely culprit is not her but a friend's child who used her computer. The RIAA disagrees."
No jury in the world would come down on a person for downloading a few songs when the corporation suing is insanely rich and greedy. Even if she were guilty, I would give her a slap on the wrist at most. Go after the people selling the pirated music!
gasmonso http://religiousfreaks.com/What? No Limp Bizkit? No Britney Spears? No Kanye West?
Free Conference Call -- No Spam, High Quality
When you're in the buisness of fear-mongering, backing down from things - even when it's completely irrational - just isn't an option. They'll keep repeating their truth until everyone believes it.
Every cloud has a silver lining, but, then again, so does every cigarette packet.
Would this lawsuit set any type of precedent, or is it unique in any way?
It's true no man is an island, but if you take a bunch of dead guys and tie 'em together, they make a good raft.
I don't believe that a jury would convict a divorced mother of five on the crime of downloading pirated media. If she wins this trial, it'll be a black eye for the RIAA: They're first trial fails to hold water. What would then happen?
From TFA:
And as for those who claim they didn't download any music, the RIAA says that if defendants got a letter in the mail saying they or someone in their house illegally downloaded music, chances are it is true.
"The chances of it not being the right person or someone in that household are slim," said Stanley Pierre-Louis, senior vice president for legal affairs at the RIAA. "Let's face it, what we're doing is on the right side here. What these users are doing is violating the copyright laws."
I call bullshit.
This is exactly why I have a second unsecured access point in my apartment piped to the internet. Plausible denyabilty. Who know who's using it? My modem's IP address could be connected to any one of the 50 apartments in my building.
Why do they always seem to pick on the "little guy"? A divorced mother of 5? How can they possibly make themselves look good by doing this? They would probably be more liked if they were to sue the 20-year-olds with gigs of music instead of the divorced parents trying to make ends meet, or the old granny. It looks as if they are trying to play the "Big mean bad guy", though I can only see this hurting them, am I wrong?
You, the voter.
The voters elected a Congress with no concern for their enumerated and severely powers. Republicans, Democrats, Greens and Independents are equally evil.
The voters continue to vote, robbing everyone of their basic rights. The crazy majority has given their power away to a government more concerned with growing its power.
Don't confuse the RIAA with evil. You, the voter, are evil. They just followed the letter of the laws you wanted.
My god. It is like going to a Rolls Royce dealer to steal a car and taking the Geo Metro from the Used lot.
Seriously, I'd take RIAA a bit more seriously if they placed value on the song based on market value like the judge did in the My Sweet Lord case.
"If you want to improve, be content to be thought foolish and stupid." - Epictetus
In litigating with spammers the first response is, "it is not us." I had one spammer try blame it on competitors and anti-spammers, but there was no offer of proof. Though this is different since liability for spam is not only on the person who presses "send" but also on the advertised site.
The "somebody else did it" defense is common. But, what proof has been presented to support it?
Here, we have not seen what evidence has been presented (in a summary judgment motion or motion to dismiss).
Fight Spammers!
Where's the paypal button to her defense fund?
I love the RIAA lawyer's quote, "Let's face it, what we're doing is on the right side here."
We're back in that universe where shaking down divorced moms with five kids for $3,000 - $4,000 or the threat of tens of thousands in court fees and damages, all as punishment for the heinous crime of the download of six songs, is "the right side." It's even more fun when you consider the possibility it wasn't even her who did it. I don't know, how popular is Godsmack among that demographic?
The RIAA interoffice memos on these cases must read like tobacco company internal communications.
Those are my 2 cents, and they're free.
Don't confuse the RIAA with evil. You, the voter, are evil. They just followed the letter of the laws you wanted.
Uhm, no. They are following the letter of the laws they purchased through a Free Market Government.
"Evil" is not in elections, or anything else. Evil is the willingness to fuck over someone for your own gain. Pure evil is when that gain is just for your own enjoyment.
The folks at the RIAA are willing to fuck over as many people as they can to ensure their own position in the distribution of music, a very profitable position. File sharing is dangerous, not just because people can download the latest lame Metallica song, but because it will allow people to distribute their own music. Yes, there's a lot of really, really bad stuff out there for free (some of it worse than Metallica's recent stuff), but as review sites progress, and the truly independent music scene evolves, people will be able to find the music they like, and the RIAA is cut out completely.
Independent music is doing to the RIAA what free software is doing to Microsoft-- making them stay up at night, even if it doesn't appear to be a real threat at the moment. P2P is essential for a solid independent music scene. The RIAA is trying not just to eliminate file sharing of copyrighted works (which is wrong, no matter how heavy-handed the bad guys are), but to paint all file sharing as evil.
If they can do that, they can destroy the truly independed music scene before it even gets started.
Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
1 out of 14,800 lawsuits.
Gosh that sounds like organized crime....RIAA shaking down 14,800 people for money...extortion is what it sounds like to me...sounds like the RIAA should be concerned about The RICO ACT
"Only one thing, is impossible for god: to find any sense in any copyright law on the planet." Mark Twain
If the record industry loses the case then they will have no legitimacy, if they win parents will pressure their representatives to change the laws that give them legitimacy. Copyright protection is a legislated right, not an inalienable one.
Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
In addition to saying "It wasn't me," she should challenge the constitutionality of the law which allows the RIAA to obtain her identity and examine her (allged) bandwith use habits WITHOUT A COURT WARRANT; illegal search and seizure is inadmissable in a court of law and the constitution is supposed to protect us against this sort of thing.
She could ask the ACLU to defend her on that basis and they might very well jump at the idea.
I've always hated that provision of the law (DMCA), which allows them to just bypass the courts and hire the cheapest lawyer/firm on the block to use their very deep lawyer funds chest to threaten the average joe with massive suits and see them capitulate, regardless of whether or not they are guilty.
You can't use a badly formulated law to punish the unjust and expect complete compliance from the masses.
Further, when copyright (copywrong?) can be extended to insane lengths of time far beyond what was intended (e.g. steamboat willie) and fair use takes a back seat to corporate profits, can we be very surprised at the disrespect/disobediance thses laws are receiving?
uR iGn0ranc3, Their Power
Juries have a little used function whereby they can render a not guilty verdict by refusing to acknowledge the validity of the law itself. The concept is called jury nullification and is searchable if you want to read more about it. The high priced monopolisitic BAR lawyers guild and judges hate it, frequently threatening people in juries who even mention it.
Just another one of those things that isn't taught in US public schools.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jury_nullification
Ya know, if all of those 14,000 people had only decided to take the issue to court, it sure would have cost the RIAA a good deal of money in court costs. Too bad most people are too afraid to fight the corporate giant.
I dont see the difference between keeping a recorded song from the radio and from keeping a song on my computer. In the end it's the same - music. I'm perfectly aware of quality but lets not get into that.) Now i'm not sure if the record industries lose money because we record songs out of our radio's albeit with worser quality, but I think it's the same idea as downloading off your favorite P2P client, bittorent, or newsgroups. It's the same thing as when VHS and betamax came out. The industry was worried about this new technology and how they'll lose tremendous amount of money because of it. I think record industries should expect that their music sales will decline because of techonlogy particulary the ability to compress music to realistic sizes with decent quality, and the ability to transfer this media with realitive ease. Giving people subpoenas for dowloading songs won't help, and I think it's just pointless. You're not going to make up technology's bite out the music market by doing this.
I congratulate you on being the first person I've ever seen who compared illegally downloading music to rape
You must be new here.
Dear Mr. RIAA,
I have an excellent idea for you: Borrow Sony's DRM trojanware, (the trojan-net is already up and running) have it illegally download songs on selected people's computers, then fly in with a juicy lawsuit!
I'm sure a few scripts could even mail out the summons automatically, with a quick link to a Paypal account in case they would prefer to settle out of court!
Bavarian Purity Law of Rice Krispie Squares: Rice Krispies, Marshmallows, Butter, Vanilla.
See, this is why we need more people like Pete Ashdown running for office. He has a policy & strategy page with some comments about raising a stink over the RIAA's lawsuits.
The Christian religion has been and still is the principal enemy of moral progress in the world. -- Bertrand Russell
no missing step:
1. Monitor P2P network
2. set up settlement hotline
3. Sent threatening letter (something like hundreds of thousands of dolars if you go to court, a more "resonable" ammount if you settle)
4. Profit!!
By reading this, you have given me brief control of your mind.
3. Be a lawyer.
Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
There could very well be people getting into trouble who did nothing wrong. I service lots of residential machines and their loaded not just with spyware, but trojans and viruses that make their way into these machines through remote and browser exploits. Some these machines need complete re-installation even though I clean up all local machine and user specific startup entries.
These I suspect have been root-kitted to act as zombies or proxies. These people have no idea what kinds of traffic is running through their machines and connection. It sounds as if such people are getting sued in some instances, but probably don't the know well enough to realize what is happening.
It doesn't seem to me that a list of bittorrent peers associated with a copyrighted file proves guilt. The environment is too insecure to guarantee who the actual source is. It seems to me the RIAA should have to prove a couple things:
1) That they downloaded the file with the copyrighted name and verified that the content is actually the copyrighted material.
2) That the activity from the IP address of the peer being charged actually represents the activity of a particular machine's owner. They would probably need to confiscate the machine for this - is this feesible? Just charging the owner of a connection seems unreliable, many machines can sit on a home or business network. Can one be held responsible for hijacked traffic running through their pipe?
Where this is headed it seems is a battle over regulating net communication. The RIAA will begin to push technical mandates through congress to make the internet more "secure," which will be difficult at best without implementing lots of centralized control and monitoring. How long till we have sign our packets with keys? Then how long till "sponsored" packets become free, while others cost?
A recent slashdot story featuring Doc Searl's opinion piece, Saving the Net from the pipeholders" sum's up this position very well. It's kind of long, but but offers an insightful view of what's ahead, and is worth reading for anyone with interest in the future net as a decentralized, unprejudiced peer to peer medium.
the RIAA will need to show...that the infringement occured at your IP address. At that point...the burden then shifts to YOU to prove...that it was somebody else and not you that did the infringing.
I'm not necessarily disagreeing, but why single out the IP address as such a watershed in the chain of accountability that the burden of proof flips? To see what I'm getting at, what makes IP addresses so special, as compared to (for example):
the RIAA will need to show...that the infringement occurred in your city. At that point...the burden then shifts to YOU to prove...that it was somebody else and not you that did the infringing.
the RIAA will need to show...that the infringement occurred under a screen name you frequently use. At that point...the burden then shifts to YOU to prove...that it was somebody else and not you that did the infringing.
--MarkusQ
This would almost work, except for one thing -- while it is indeed legal to sell a partial ownership in a CD you own, and it is also legal to make an archival copy, or copies, of a CD, the problem is that under the laws, you cannot have an archival copy of the CD separately from the actual CD itself. In other words, you could do this, make 100 "archival" copies, but to keep it legal, whoever actually had in their possession the original CD is also the only one that can lawfully have possession of the archival copies.
There were a few cases on this where video rental places wanted to keep pristine their originals, and rent out the backup copies. Even if done on a one-to-one basis, this isn't legal, because when the physical possession of the original CD is transferred, any archival backups (in any form) must either be transferred with the CD or destroyed. It doesn't matter that you are all owners -- the point of an archival bakcup is so that you don't have to go out and buy a new CD when the original gets destroyed, not so that you can listen to the CD at two different places at the same time.
"That's not even wrong..." -- Wolfgang Pauli
RIAA for shame. Crows about "rights" while fueling the festering problems. 30+ yrs is enough, put up or shut up and get out. The current regime is simply an obnoxious, parasitic force begging to be slapped down hard by an angry public. I am kind of morbidly curious to see the public reaction if and when the court system fails again.
In p2pnet's interview with Patricia Santangelo, she said she's "stressed" about funds for her defenses, but doesn't have an account for donations.
However, Santangelo is listed, in case anyone wants to snail-mail her some help.
Santangelo lives about ten minutes from me. I'm going to try to round up some friends to picket and toss eggs and CDs at the RIAA scumbags on her day in court!
Thank you, Edward Snowden.
"Arguments from authority are worthless." —Carl Sagan
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chewbacca_Defense (actually it was only on a google cache version)
Your Honor, Ladies, and Gentlemen of the Jury,
My client's computer uses a M$ OS. It was taken over by a hacker via BackOrifice. She did not download any music files. The defense holds that the hacker that installed BackOrifice use my client's computer as screen to download the files for his/her use.
Most folks, as my client, are not computer scientist, nerds, programers, etc.. They do not have the expertise to be able to deal with the clever manipulations of OS that hackers do. Do you really want to convict a person on the basis of the charges leveled by the RIAA. They need to explain, in detail, just how they ***know*** that my client was the one download the files that they allege that my client downloaded. Further they need to prove that my client did not at the time of the downloads that they allege, already legally possess the right to the music that the alleged files contained.
"Oh drat these computers, they're so naughty and so complex, I could pinch them." --Marvin the Martian
The answer to the downloading conundrum is easy.
p hp . All the music is legal, live concert, artist permitted, and free. Download Grateful Dead, 311, G Love and Special Sauce, Cracker, Glen Phillips, Andrew Bird, and the Ditty Bops and so on to your heart's content.
1. Go to http://www.archive.org/audio/etreelisting-browse.
2. Listen to commercial-free streaming audio via ITunes (Radio) and other internet media.
3. Reward the artists whose work you enjoy this way by going to their concerts. Reward any artists whose albums you can hear from front to back for free, like Nickel Creek on CMT.com and the Ditty Bops on dittybops.com.
Q: What did the comedian say to the crowd?
A: If I knew, this joke would be funny.
I found about 30 gigabytes of porn on it. Almost 3/4 of the HD was porno. There was quite a bit of kiddie porn there too. Somehow she had gotten a Trojan Horse on her computer and it had turned the laptop into a porn server. The reason her connection was so slow at home was that her machine was downloading porn to the perp!
Since then, I've NEVER assumed ANYTHING about any computer!Let's assume the RIAA is 100% right, and the defendant has done everything they are accused of. The concept of damages will be interesting. I seriously doubt that the defendant made songs available for download that were not already available via P2P. The "lost" revenue is really just the money the defendant would have paid, IF they chose to buy the songs. Yahoo music service is what, $5/month? So if she paid Yahoo $5/month, she could have downloaded all of these songs (and the P2P underworld would have had all of the same songs anyway). I'd love to know how the RIAA thinks they can prove damages in excess of $5/month.
Unfortunately, a court of law has numerous restrictions on the ways in which "common sense" can be applied. A perfect example would be when a jury is instructed to disregard testimony it just heard, even if the basis for the instruction is not that the testimony is false or misleading. Honestly, a lot of jurors are intimidated by court rooms and lawyers and judges, and find themselves contemplating things like justice and The Rule Of Law on a level more personal than anything that came before jury duty. This makes the fact that we have a formal constitutional right to jury nullifaction much more than a minor assist to common sense... it allows jurors who want to follow strictly legal pathways to do so, even when nullifying a law.
- First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
The RIAA can sue for ... wait for it (it'll make you sick) ... $750 to 30K per song. That's without proving willful (intentional) action. If the RIAA can prove intent, the statutory limit is $150K per song.
That doesn't mean they'll get the maximum, but that's the values given in the US Code. See 17 USC 504.
That's why I think people cave, the possibility is out there that they will lose everything they own.
Outrageous? Absolutely. Thank our past congresscritters and Presidents for that one. Oh, and the likes of Disney and the heirs of Gerschwin, for that matter.
Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.
I'd really hope the defendant's lawyers do a good job during the discovery process. They should be able to request all the records the RIAA has concerning their various investigations into alleged infringements, not just the cases they have been prosecuting. When they produce a list of corporate infringing IPs, it's going to seem odd that the RIAA is only going after shallow-pocketed individuals. If I remember correctly, to enforce copyright you are required to pursue all known violations in order to maintain the copyright. Maybe this case will force the RIAA to start filing many, many more lawsuits, including going after large companies as well. What happens once a Microsoft, Google, or .gov IP shows up on their hit list?
In the mid-1950's, Zenith engineers created the first wireless TV remote control, eliminating the need to have a child.
Go after the people selling the pirated music!
Just because its ridiculously expensive doesn't mean that you can call it 'pirated music'. Jeez, people these days call anything at all 'piracy'.
The correct term for this crime is 'price-fixing'.
I'll probably be modded down for this...
She should setup some type of bank account or something so that people who want to can contribute to her legal costs and join the fight! I imagine a whole lot of people interested in how personal privacy and legal rights have been eroding lately would be more than happy to contribute a couple dollars each.
It would go a long way in bringing public awareness to just how heavy-handed the **IAs are coming down on individuals and send a clear message that we're ready to fight back!
Just a thought.
It isn't a constitutional right it is a tort preceeding. common law if you must. It is in the same manor of how a judge can decide this law is meant to be applied in this way and thereby creating a different law all together. It is built into the fabric of the judicial system and is the basis of how a guy can shoot someone stabbing his wife and yelling your next in a state with no self defence laws and not be convicted of a crime.
Ohio for instance, untill reletivly recent, didn't have any laws pertaining to self defense. If you punched a guy that was clubbing you, you were just as guilty of asault as the original asaulter. Jurry nullification has basicaly made the asault laws unenforcable or at least weakened them to the a point were a prosecuter couln't win a case by charging a man being beaten for fighting back. In that situation, the law was deam unjust and unenforcable. This still leave someone the burdon of proving the facts were as claimed though. It isn't an out for someoen to provoke a fight and then pretend to be inocent so it can still be enforced.
Jurry nullification in this case could come in the form of you have to be certain a said person was the one actualy responcible for the copyright infraction. In a civil trial you have a lot more roo for dougbt then a criminal trial so nullification could actualy just implse stronger requirments for proof while keeping the laws enforcable for those blatently violating it. Analogies suck in these situations because you can change what parts of the laws that can be applied by the actions of the jurry. Copyright law is pretty specific in that the person violating it is the one causing harm. The store that let sold you the cds or cassete tapes even though it was likley you were going to copy somehtign doesn't get charged with anyhting. Simularly, you providing your computer to someoen else, shouldn't automaticaly mean you are guilty of somethign thye might have done or somethign that a mistake might have made people think you have done.
This will be an interesting case to watch unfoled. I'm sure the evidence and the weight the evidence carries with be questioned and it may become somethign admissable but unenforcable by the rulling of the jurry. IE, ip logs and screen names (with auto logons) are not enough to prove you were at your computer at a certain time and participating in ceretain activities or had control over those activities or if the listing of names of copy protected material actualy means the protected works were availible and the copy was actualyt being violated. (garage bands cover songs and create thier own songs with the same names and song already names and can distribute them) If the jurry negates or nullifies any of this evidence it will be hard to prove anyone did anything.
I have a question about the facts of this case: is this case, or any of these cases, concerning someone illegally "downloading" songs? TFA explicitly says this. I thought that all of these cases were against people who distributed songs for others to download. The imprecision of terminology in this matter is confusing. Has the RIAA actually begun suing people who download but did not distribute songs?
I am particularly interested in what the legal proof of music ownership is. Has this ever been determined? (I've never been able to find it, if so.) E.g. If I move and lose a CD, but have a song from it on a mix CD, how do I prove I own a song? If I digitize a cassette (or LP or whatever), must I lug around the cassette tape for the rest of my life to prove I once bought it? If a judge asks a citizen "prove that you own this song", what does the citizen have to do?