RIAA's "Making Available" Theory Is Tested
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "The RIAA's argument that merely 'making files available' is in and of itself a copyright infringement, argued in January in Elektra v. Barker (awaiting decision), is raging again, this time in a White Plains, New York, court in Warner v. Cassin. Ms. Cassin moved to dismiss the complaint; the RIAA countered by arguing that 'making available' on a p2p file sharing network is a violation of the distribution right in 17 USC 106(3). Ms. Cassin responded, pointing out the clear language of the statute, questioning the validity of the RIAA's authorities, and arguing that the Court's acceptance of the RIAA's theory would seriously impact the Internet. The case is scheduled for a conference on September 14th, at 10 AM (PDF), at the federal courthouse, 300 Quarropas Street, White Plains, New York, in the courtroom of Judge Stephen C. Robinson. The conference is open to the public."
Open to public? Public? Want to stop by? Check this out: http://maps.google.com/maps?daddr=Quarropas+St,+Wh ite+Plains,+NY&geocode=&saddr=&f=d&hl=en&sll=41.02 9449,-73.768966&sspn=0.00968,0.020084&ie=UTF8&ll=4 1.027248,-73.765168&spn=0.01936,0.040169&z=15&om=1
If you are about to mod me down, keep in mind that this post was most likely sarcastic.
.. I believe they are correct here - enabling someone else to commit a crime is a crime in itself. And like it or not, sharing copyrighted material IS a crime in the USA at this point in time.
If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
What if I have media in a shared folder while I am using my own unsecured wireless network which I believe nobody else is using?
Why do I have to keep repeating myself?
In the United States, you have every right to get together with friends and make copies of music on analog tape, or digital copies of music using digital audio recording equipment. This is per the Audio Home Recording Act of 1992.
I'm not sure what this means about copying a CD someone else bought to a tape, but copying a CD for a friend using digital audio equipment and audio cds is perfectly legal, and copying an audio tape to another audio tape is also legal. We pay a "tax" to the RIAA on every piece of digital audio equipment, audio CD, and audio tape to allow this.
Depends actually on the country. If I leave my car unlocked, with the keys in plain view inside, and someone takes my car for a joyride and causes an accident, I'm liable because I was careless.
Of course, this does not apply to the internet. Car analogies are rarely really good.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
I notice that the trolls are out in force on this one, so let me point out something. There is nothing in the Copyright Act that prohibits "sharing" of copyrighted material, or "making available". We do it all the time, every day, when we play music for a friend, have a party, have someone over to watch our DVD, etc.
The RIAA is relying on an alleged infringement of the "distribution" right.
But "distribution" under the Copyright Act means (1) disseminating (2) actual physical copies (3) to the public (4) through sale or other transfer of ownership or rental, lease, or lending. See brief (pdf), esp. pages 3-4.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
Googling the Judge, he seems to be well liked. He gives lectures at Law Schools and he vacated a $35,000 judgement against a defendant in another RIAA case (Santangelo) so the case could continue. If anything he seems to be "for the little guy". His average rating is 9.2 out of 10. Here's one comment:
Civil Litigation - Private
Comment #: 4118
Rating:8.6
Comments: A real pleasure. A smart, funny man who treats everyone with respect. If anything, a little too tolerant of pro se civil litigants. Straight shooter.
One the surface he appears to be a Judge who respects the public, has a passion for Law who doesn't automatically default to corporations. And, most importantly, he hasn't called the Internet a bunch of Tubes.
This may prove helpful.
-[d]-
There are a lot of bizarre statements about the "law" being made here by people who don't know anything about copyright law but are pretending they do. Don't be misled by them. Just read the statute, 17 USC 106(3).
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
Wrong, fair use does NOT require you to own the entire work to begin with, otherwise no research papers could be written.
think about what you write first, please.....