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The RIAA vs. John Doe, a Layperson's Guide

Grant Robertson writes to tell us that he has made a pass at translating a recent guide to surviving an RIAA lawsuit from technical lawyer-speak into a much more easy to understand layperson's guide. The law, being complex and sometimes cryptic, allows ways for the RIAA to tilt the odds in their favor forcing unsuspecting victims to settle rather than fight. Take a look at Ray Beckerman's tips to survival translated into words anyone can benefit from.

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  1. More such as this. by mcai8rw2 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I wish there were more 'guides' like this. Usually the corporations hide the true meaning of their T's & C's behind so much confusing babble that the end user usually has zero idea of what is actually going to happen to them in certain scenarios.

    Its like contracts...I read them. Over and Over again...it doesn;t mean I understand what they mean. We all need pet solicitors.

    --
    >>>Scanning for I.D.I.O.T.S. >>>
    >>>I.D.I.O.T.S. FOUND! >>>
    1. Re:More such as this. by Agent00Wang · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The confusing babble is part of the reason why we have lawyers. Nearly everything can be argued in court and lawyers just make more (paid) work for themselves by having the T&C be confusing in the first place.

      --
      NINJA SPIRIT - The Ancient Art of Insanity
  2. Useful guide, but not to survival by Clovert+Agent · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Great piece, but it's far from a guide to survival. It's a translation into Laymanese of how you're going to be screwed by the RIAA's gaming of the legal system.

    1) You're going to lose a motion and not be told how or why
    2) You're going to be sent legal documents but will not be able to get a lawyer to defend you because the lawyer won't have the information he needs
    3) You're going to have your information handed over to the RIAA and there's nothing you can do
    4) You're going to land in a civil case and the precendents are murky enough that you may well lose, but it's certainly going to cost you a bundle anyway

    What I'd like to see is a real survival guide on the back of this. For example, when you get the notice that you've lost that first motion, what should you do? What can your lawyer do to get up to speed and file a motion to dismiss in time? What can you present to the judge to show that the case, on the evidence to hand, is baseless?

    Good article, and a great starting point, but it'd be so much more useful with some real advice rather than just being a well-written explanation of exactly how screwed you are.