Is "Making Available" Copyright Infringement?
NewYorkCountryLawyer updates us now that the legal issue — is it copyright infringement merely to "make available" a copyrighted work? — has been argued by the attorneys in Elektra v. Barker (on January 26). Whichever way the ruling goes it will have a large impact across the Internet. Appeal seems likely either way. No ruling has issued yet but "a friend" has made the 58-page transcript "available" (PDF here).
Between this, and people being held liable for the actions of their neighbors using their open wi-fi networks, it makes me scared to think what will come next...
Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars.
Did anyone think of a library making copyrighted materials available? (Sure it is likely to be more detailed then that but in the same manner is this where we are going?)
From Merriam-Webster:
1 a : a place in which literary, musical, artistic, or reference materials (as books, manuscripts, recordings, or films) are kept for use but not for sale b : a collection of such materials
Sounds exactly like a share folder to me. I wonder why nobody has used this as a defense before?
Weaselmancer
rediculous.