RIAA Defendant Says Kazaa Settlement Bars Case
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "The defendant in Arista v. Greubel has filed an answering statement. The statement says that the RIAA's case against him, since it's based upon his use of Kazaa, is barred by the RIAA's receipt of $115 million from Kazaa. Mr. Greubel also challenged the constitutionality of the RIAA's $750-per-song damages theory, saying damages should be limited to $2.80 per song. See the previous Slashdot discussion of that issue and Judge Trager's decision in UMG v. Lindor."
against individuals or have all of them been settled out of court? This has been going on for so long that I've lost track!
IANAL but I don't care. The defendant is right in every single assertion they have made. The RIAA is wrong and should be sued out of existence. /conversation
hmm, does this sorta set a precedent for us to use our Zunes to hold pirated music? After all, MS Basicly setteled it premptivly by paying off one of the major labels....
Do Or Do Not, There Is No Spoon, There Is Only Zuul. Everything in the above post is probably opinion.
..... Or the terrorists win.
This is my opinion. To make sure you don't steal it, it's covered by the DMCA.
There is no way for a person to win against the machine.
Especially with that attitude...
One point: computer geeks and programmers need to get used to the "feces flinging" technique of the lawyers. Write a program with multiple logically inconsistent statements and it will collapse in a screaming heap. Doing that is anathema to most programmers. But when mounting a legal defence (or attack), you're allowed make logically incompatible statements. You just keep flinging feces until something sticks. The fact you're arguing the case should be dismisseddoesn't stop you arguing that the damages awarded should be reduced 100x - EVEN THOUGH it's nonsense to talk of damages because you're arguing the case should be dismissed. Many computer geeks just don't get that. You're not programming a consistent logical system, you're feces-flinging. Remember that, and you can start to win much more often against the lawyer/CxO scum.
I like how providing people with multiple arguments about why you are right and allowing them to choose which ones they believe have merit makes someone scum.
We don't need jury nullification. The plaintiffs have no case.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
Mr. Greubel's lawyers are Charles Mudd of Chicago, and John Browning of Dallas. They are two really good litigators. John Browning's the guy who got the excellent order on hard drive inspections in SONY v. Arellanes, which I predict will serve as a model for all future RIAA v. Consumer litigations.
I wouldn't bet against these guys.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
"That's $750 PER SONG. Share 1(one) CD? $7,500+."
Good point. I think the "$750 per work" language is a remnant of the old days of piracy, where people tended to pirate entire albums, books, or movies at once. It's from before today's song-by-song piracy.
"That's a hefty fee for putting something on Kazaa. (Compare to fines for reckless driving and the like.)"
Yet if your sharing that song with 10,000 people caused the rightsholders a loss of $750 of business, then it's just. Yeah, yeah, I know, the rightsholder might not need the money and might be a cocaine addict, but rich cocaine addicts have the same rights under the law as we do.
"Given the bandwidth most people have it's extremely unlikely that they've uploaded to more then 50 people. (The song itself may be shared more then 50 times, but not by just one person.)"
You've nailed it. I recall some analysis several years back that through fingerprinting or what have you, they found 16K copies of an Eminem song on a P2P network that all came from the same rip. Power in numbers.
Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
I agree with you that the complaints are defective.
They're all the same by the way, all 20,000 of them.
So far though 6 out of 6 judges have said that this vague complaint is ok for the first round.
We're still waiting for judge number 7, Judge Karas, in Elektra v. Barker.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
Double counting damages is not exactly legit. The RIAA cannot sue me for illegally distributing a song, claiming I am responsible for "downstream" sharing, and then sue "downstream" sharers as well. Either I am responsible or the downstream user is responsible -- claiming both, at least if the RIAA benefits from it the first time, is called judicial estoppel and is grounds for their argument to be thrown out. The defendant's theory in this case is probably similar.