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RIAA Targets New Colleges, Still Avoids Harvard

NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "Billboard reports that the RIAA has filed its eighth round of 'early settlement' letters to twenty-two colleges. Continuing its practice of avoiding Harvard, the RIAA's new round does not include any letters to that institution, where certain law professors have counseled resistance to the RIAA and told the RIAA to 'take a hike'. The unlucky institutions on the receiving end of the 403 new letters include Arizona State University (35 pre-litigation settlement letters), Carnegie Mellon University (13), Cornell University (19), Massachusetts Institute of Technology (30), Michigan State University (16), North Dakota State University (17), Purdue University — West Lafayette and Calumet campuses (49), University of California — Santa Barbara (13), University of Connecticut (17), University of Maryland — College Park (23), University of Massachusetts — Amherst and Boston campuses (52), University of Nebraska — Lincoln (13), University of Pennsylvania (31), University of Pittsburgh (14), University of Wisconsin — Eau Claire, Madison, Milwaukee, Stevens Point, Stout and Whitewater campuses (62)."

159 comments

  1. 403 Error: by creativeHavoc · · Score: 5, Funny

    403 new letters
    I accidently associated the 403 letters with the 403 error, and thought it was some geeky way of describing them, haha. 403 letter: Forbidden You may not download our musics!
    --
    insight through the mind
    1. Re:403 Error: by budgenator · · Score: 4, Funny

      Now it is, this will forever be apart of geek lore like the 419 scams, in Korea jokes, in Soviet Russia jokes, goatse.cx and most of all the Cowboy Neal option.

      I guess now every nerd will be sending the MafIAA a 404 reply letter saying sorry resource not found, go blow smoke up somebody Else's ass because it wasn't me.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    2. Re:403 Error: by Killjoy_NL · · Score: 1

      Whoah, some of the other replies to your post are venomous, what is wrong with these people?

      --
      This is the sig that says NI (again)
  2. Dangerous move... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Cornell University (19), Massachusetts Institute of Technology (30), Michigan State University (16) They should be careful. Didn't they hear that MIT students are Fearless, bomb-wielding, genetic-mutant creating hacking terrorists?
    1. Re:Dangerous move... by SmackedFly · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And that MIT is located right next to Harvard...

    2. Re:Dangerous move... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      And that MIT is located right next to Harvard...

      Correction: Harvard is located right next to MIT.

    3. Re:Dangerous move... by JackMeyhoff · · Score: 1

      Not any more :) *rushes out to change the signs*

      --
      http://www.rense.com/general79/wdx1.htm
    4. Re:Dangerous move... by Maxwell · · Score: 1

      correction: they are on the same street, but miles apart...

  3. This only means the RIAA has no case by mind21_98 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If the RIAA really had a case, they'd talk to kids from Harvard too. And since the Harvard kids were told to say no, the RIAA could sue the Harvard kids to oblivion. This only means one thing: the RIAA letters are extortion, plain and simple.

    1. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by houstonbofh · · Score: 1

      Duh! Everyone knows this. It is just that most people have second thoughts when they are facing the dripping fang vampire all alone. Harvard just let the students know they would not be alone. The other schools are willing to throw the students under a bus. Not surprising, really...

    2. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Following a shipwreck a lawyer, priest, and newspaper reporter were stuck in a raft close to shore, but in waters clearly infested by sharks. After many hours of miserable huddling the lawyer screamed "I can't take it any more!", dove into the water and swam towards shore. The others shouted protests, but to everyone's surprise the sharks parted and let the man swim safely to land.

      "It's a miracle!" exclaimed the priest.

      "No... professional courtesy", explained the journalist.

      And that also explains why the RIAA isn't going after the Harvard kids.

    3. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What's the alternative? That RIAA is prejudiced against Harvard? Not likely. When you have a trademark, you can't make the decisions about who you enforce it against. You have to treat all cases without prejudice and enforce it across the board. Why is it not the case here?

    4. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by Frank+Battaglia · · Score: 5, Insightful

      For starters, it's different here because Copyright and Trademark law are completely different, with different justifications and goals.

    5. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by fishbowl · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >When you have a trademark, you can't make the decisions about who you enforce it against.

      Of course you can. You're confusing doctrines related to defenses, with obligations.
      There's not a word in the law that supports your exaggerated view on trademark enforcement.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    6. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by budgenator · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Maybe potential law students would be wise to consider which school's the RIAA consider's easy pickings and which ones are untouchable when sending out applications.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    7. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 4, Informative

      Duh! Everyone knows this. It is just that most people have second thoughts when they are facing the dripping fang vampire all alone. Harvard just let the students know they would not be alone. The other schools are willing to throw the students under a bus. Not surprising, really... One interesting note on that point is that the Chairman of the Computer Science Department at Boston University is acting as an expert witness on behalf of the students.
      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    8. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by ZachPruckowski · · Score: 2, Informative

      Copyright infringement suits can be filed against any alleged perpetrator in any fashion. They don't have to do it evenly. In fact, it's impossible for the RIAA to even sue all file-sharers, as there are dozens of millions.

      To answer your main question, the reason they're not hitting Harvard is because Harvard's cyber law guys are willing to stand up for the students. Specifically, they oppose the idea of serving as the "unpaid enforcement arm of the provincial interests of the RIAA". While not anti-copyright, they oppose the strong-arm tactics.

      Anyhow, the point seems to be that while the RIAA is hitting schools that pass along the letters, they're not going after Harvard, which I'm sure NYCL (who rocks, btw) is trying to point out - any powerful group offering resistance to the RIAA will be left alone.

    9. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by pikine · · Score: 1

      Is that why he's no longer the chairman? I don't know if it's official yet, but compare this with that.

      --
      I once had a signature.
    10. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by Daffy+Duck · · Score: 2, Informative

      Chairmanship of a department is not an honor (at least in an engineering field). It's typically passed around as a hot potato (haven't been chairman yet? you're next!) because it's a huge time drain and a distraction from the research the faculty want to do. I expect his shift was just over.

    11. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      This only means one thing: the RIAA letters are extortion, plain and simple.
      Piracy being such a large, widespread, and hard-to-quash problem, the RIAA can't really afford to invest big money into big suits. If they start spending large amounts of money on individual cases, and the risk of losing becomes too high, it will no longer be worth their while to sue. That would be problematic, because without their resistance to piracy, piracy itself would just snowball as people realise nothing is stopping them. They have to go for the low-lying fruit, and unfortunately, being a business, they can't afford the due diligence in preparing for such lawsuits. That's why they're leaving Harvard alone.

      Because they are actively (yet messily) seeking legitimate damages from these people (guilty or not), it's not extortion. I would call the practice a lot of things (immoral, unjust, mercenary, etc), but extortionate simply isn't one of them.
      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
    12. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the RIAA really had a case, they'd talk to kids from Harvard too. And since the Harvard kids were told to say no, the RIAA could sue the Harvard kids to oblivion. This only means one thing: the RIAA letters are extortion, plain and simple.

      No, it does not "mean one thing." While the RIAA may well be out of bounds with their letters, their decision to avoid Harvard may be for a myriad of other reasons. For example it could be strictly financial, as suing students at a top law school who vows to fight back would be much more expensive than it's worth. That doesn't mean they're right or wrong, only that they are doing what any sane warrior does, picking their battles.

      Careful with those wild accusations and leaps of logic. I'd like to think "our" side is more rational than theirs.

    13. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by Chase+Husky · · Score: 1

      I had my adviser jokingly ask if I wanted to be department chair, since the position was vacant and none of the faculty members wanted to take it.

    14. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by BakaHoushi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Or, to sum up your post a little better, the RIAA only goes after people who can't fight back.
      The RIAA likes to take candy from babies, but avoids the ones with guard dogs.

    15. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      And that also explains why the RIAA isn't going after the Harvard kids.

      It would be interesting to know how many of the RIAA lawyers have their law degrees from Harvard? Perhaps they are avoiding Harvard because they do not wish to become persona non grata at their own alma mater? Where do their own children (yes even Dr. Evil and lawyers have children) attend university? Perhaps Harvard is a popular choice among the rich lawyer with children set (and Harvard might be more inclined to mysteriously deny junior's application following legal actions against Harvard students by his father)? The rich and the powerful, and those institutions which cater to them, receive special treatment and this is simply another proof, as if any more were needed, that only "the little people" need fear the RIAA and their attorneys.

    16. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by Bobartig · · Score: 1

      This depends on the department, but "mathy/sciency" departments tend to have non-honorific/rotating chair positions amongst senior professors.

      At my undergraduate school, the math chair rotated in a nonsensical fashion. The physics department chair went to whoever wanted to be involved in school administration, and was more stable as a result.

      --
      This is where I get my recommended daily allowance of "Foot in Mouth."
    17. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by weierstrass · · Score: 1

      >It is just that most people have second thoughts when they are facing the dripping fang vampire all alone.

      Agreed. Where is the legal defense fund for these guys?

      Personally, I won't buy CDs not because I am cheap, but because I don't want to support corrupt dinosaur industries acting in such immoral ways towards consumers. I would gladly pay a few dollars of the hundreds and hundreds I've saved by downloading music to an organization that would give the students involved legal advice, and eventually fight a test case on their behalf.

      --
      my password really is 'stinkypants'
    18. Re:This only means the RIAA has no case by steveg · · Score: 1

      Our last chair stayed on for an extra year because no one else would take it. He refused to stay a fifth year (normally it's a three year term) and we came close to having someone from another department assigned because no one in our department was willing. After intense negotiation, the dean finally convinced someone to step forward.

      He's on his second year of three and is already looking forward to going back to being a regular professor.

      There are times when it's *nice* not to be tenure track.

      --
      Ignorance killed the cat. Curiosity was framed.
  4. On way... by eggoeater · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This wouldn't exactly do the torrent community any favors, but if I were running a torrent client from a campus LAN, I'd block inbound connections from IPs not on my campus. If they cant see me sharing, they cant sue me.

    Kinda find it interesting that one of the best law schools in the country isn't receiving these threats.

    1. Re:On way... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They'd still see your ass on the torrent, though. It's not like they have to actually test to see if you're actually sharing real chunks.

    2. Re:On way... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just because *they* can't directly see you violate copyright, doesn't mean other people can't report you. I'm sure the RIAA/MPAA isn't below hiring a bunch of 'snitches' or setting up 'snitch' lines to report ANti-American behaviour. Respecting copyright is the American way, sharing is communism!

    3. Re:On way... by dattaway · · Score: 1

      They'd still see your ass on the torrent, though. It's not like they have to actually test to see if you're actually sharing real chunks.

      A person can't run a honeypot and learn about networking and security anymore?

    4. Re:On way... by houstonbofh · · Score: 4, Funny

      A person can't run a honeypot and learn about networking and security anymore?

      Only if you are a media company. ;)

    5. Re:On way... by PlatyPaul · · Score: 1

      Sadly true. I attended Purdue myself and (years before the RIAA started mailing out these letters) knew several people who had received notices that they must cease and desist or face the possibility of not graduating. To support this effort, certain parties would periodically identify Purdue IP addresses on common sharing grounds (i.e., Kazaa) and notify the school. To their credit, the official use policy of on-campus internet included a "I will not pirate" paragraph, and the administration only seemed to target the excessive bandwidth users.

      --
      Misery loves company. Online misery loves unsuspecting random strangers.
    6. Re:On way... by Phroon · · Score: 1

      This wouldn't exactly do the torrent community any favors, but if I were running a torrent client from a campus LAN, I'd block inbound connections from IPs not on my campus. If they cant see me sharing, they cant sue me.
      That's exactly what the network topology is like at the University of Illinois, all incoming connections that aren't on campus are automatically firewalled, unless you convince everyone in your dorm room to agree to move you to the 'Mostly Closed' network, where a few major ports (22,80,ect.) are open to incoming traffic. Each computer does get it's own public IP, though.
    7. Re:On way... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless your torrent server is on campus and refuse to connect to anyone outside of campus, this won't work. Remember bit torrent do not hide IP address.

    8. Re:On way... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interestingly, at least in the last round of suits involving the University of Wisconsin, not a single person who was getting the letters was using Bittorrent. They were using other protocols.

    9. Re:On way... by ZachPruckowski · · Score: 1

      Except that their "Making available" defense has been beaten before, so they're forced to fall back on actual infringement. They have to have received a chunk of the file from you in order to get very far with the suit.

    10. Re:On way... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The RIAA is aware of on-campus networks, but they are "scratching their heads at them," to quote a contact through my university. For one thing, it's tough to get solid access to them to start collecting 'evidence' (until the next version of DMCA comes around with a mandatory university compliance clause for anyone taking federal grants).

      A more troublesome thing for the **AA's is that a campus file sharing network is only open to current university members: those who have gone through an admission process, are paying substantial sums for an education, are living on campus (or VPN'ing in), and are currently immersed in an educational environment. That kind of screams "fair use exception." Well, it's my opinion it does; the IT admins, provost, and legal counsel all think that's too shaky of an argument.

      Anyway, all of the letters at our university were for people using stuff like Kazaa and Ares that connect off campus. No letters were sent for files being made available over the on-campus-only file sharing network, which is IP filtered.

      ....

      On a separate note, an interesting question for Slashdot: should the Universities pass these letters on to students or tell the RIAA to take a hike? Some elements of our University faculty are afraid of being complicit in extortion, but many still see the value in providing notice to the students that they are being investigated by the RIAA (while, of course, others think that these rat bastard students deserve what's coming to them). For reference, about 50% of our students settled for $3,000 based on the letters alone, and all students are given explanations of the letters and access to free legal counsel. Students are also put in a mandatory anti-file-sharing course, not just for getting a letter but for doing stuff like consuming massive bandwidth for specific protocols. About 3% of people put in that course are referred again, and no one has been referred three times (which carries mandatory judicial punishments).

      (Don't scream at me for what's going on, I'm just relaying info and asking a question.)

  5. Wait a second... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    ...didn't you guys all get up in arms a few years back when the music industry was trying to sue the companies reponsible for developing the apps used to illegally distribute intelelctual property? Wasn't the argument that it's the users responsible, not the tools? Now they'rer after those responsible and you want them to stop. All the while you guys complain when the GPL is infringed. Hypocrite much?

    1. Re:Wait a second... by HiThere · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Different group of guys. Just because they all have Slashdot accounts doesn't make them the same.

      Personally, if it hurt the RIAA I'd be all in favor of distribution of their copyright works. Unfortunately, I don't think it does, it only exposes you to risk (not much, but some). As such I think it's stupid. (OTOH, you'd need to pay me large sums to listen to most of what they release as music. $100/hour might do it, if it weren't too loud...and I could play computer games at the same time. So my opinion of relative worth vs. risk may not be normal.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    2. Re:Wait a second... by Arramol · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The problem is that the RIAA has a long history of filing lawsuits based on little or no evidence, which is how they've ended up suing at least a few families that have never owned computers and a dead grandmother who lived a similarly PC-free life. We're up in arms because of their shotgun, witch-hunt style tactics, especially since the cost and difficulty of defending yourself in court over something like this means that many people end up having to pay for crimes they never committed.

    3. Re:Wait a second... by icebrain · · Score: 2, Informative

      Having seen many discussions along this line over the past year or two, I've picked up on a couple of different motivations from people opposing the RIAA/MPAA. Most opposition appears to fall into these (simplified) categories:

      The first group is the "all information should be free" group, and seems to see all manner of copyright to be immoral, unjust, and responsible for the deaths of babies.

      The second group seems to not mind copyright, but is bothered by the poor quality of the product (especially music) and the exorbitant costs associated. They just want to punish the RIAA for stupid pricing and turning out crap, or to "stick it to the man."

      The third group doesn't care about the copyright issue as much, but is more concerned with the appalling tactics used by the **AA groups. Filing lawsuits without proof, continuing to press suit on little old ladies without computers, unlawful search, threatening letters, invasive computer code, purchasing of legislators, etc.

      --
      The meek may inherit the earth, but the strong shall take the stars.
    4. Re:Wait a second... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But, this doesn't quite add up. If their big plan is to milk people for money and scare the general public, and they are so sure that this plan will work, shouldn't they be aiming all of their legal prowess *at* Harvard, to prove they are right? I mean, think of all the "damages" they would get from (stereotypically rich) Harvard kids, as opposed to UPenn...

    5. Re:Wait a second... by adminstring · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Sounds like a good subject for a Slashdot poll: What is your least favorite thing about the record companies that make up the RIAA?

      For me, it would be hard to choose, although my choices would probably be these (in this order:)
      1. They screw the artists with contracts which basically amount to indentured servitude.
      2. They screw the consumers with excessive markups (made possible by # 3 below)
      3. They have destroyed the integrity of radio with the ongoing practice of payola
      4. They engage in mean-spirited legal attacks against defenseless people
      5. They eat babies.
      Well, that about sums it up for why I don't like major labels. Luckily, there are tons of great bands putting out their own stuff, so I can support the bands directly and avoid giving any cash to Their Satanic Majesties. Really we don't need these companies. We can support our local music scenes and independent touring bands. Do it for the poor little babies that the RIAA would purchase and eat if they got your money. That's right - think of the children!
      --
      My truck is like a series of tubes.
    6. Re:Wait a second... by Loconut1389 · · Score: 1

      change #5 or add #6 and you might have something there:
      #5) they ate cowboy neal
      or
      #6) they sued cowboy neal
      or something.

    7. Re:Wait a second... by Khaed · · Score: 1

      5 isn't a problem if they only eat ugly babies.

      Seriously, of the other four:

      1 doesn't concern me because I have no sympathy for artists who sign with the RIAA.

      2 bothers me only a little, because I very rarely purchase RIAA music anymore.

      3 bothers me, but less since I got an MP3 player.

      4 is the one that really pisses me off. They never seem to target people who can fight back -- and this case of avoiding harvard is a perfect example of that fact.

    8. Re:Wait a second... by timmarhy · · Score: 1
      But they aren't after the people. they are just sending out threatening letters to people they THINK might be sharing data. They don't know their names or if they really did pirate anything.

      If they think they have a case why the straight up offer of a $2k settlment? This is protection money, nothing more.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    9. Re:Wait a second... by Arabani · · Score: 1

      If you're trying to extort money, it makes no sense to go after the ones that can fight back. The settlement amounts are roughly identical, so going after those who can fight back isn't the best decision. And think about it this way - isn't it more likely that a student at UPenn, knowing that he's going to be left hanging, will settle rather than a student at Harvard, who knows he's got the school's support?

    10. Re:Wait a second... by greenbird · · Score: 1

      I realize I'm way late getting to this, but I had to comment for the record. You're not even close. Hopefully even if no one else does at least you'll read this.

      The reason people oppose the RIAA/MPAA is because they are getting the government to enact and alter laws for the sole purpose of preserving a business model that has been made obsolete by technology and in the process are criminalizing technological advancement (DMCA, HDMI, internet radio, podcasting, myth TV, DVD player hardware restrictions) that encroaches on what is essentially their monopoly control over the entertainment industry. Their business model entails an oligarchy that in collusion has monopolistic control over the production and distribution of all forms visual and audio media. They were able to establish this monopoly because in the past the costs for production and distribution were prohibitive for entry into the market. Technology has reduced those cost to a level that democratizes the ability to produce and distribute media so they are changing the laws to retain their oligarchic control in the face of a democratic revolution. For some examples: An internet radio station has to pay large amounts of money to the RIAA even if they only play creative commons or copyright expired material. In Canada the government has enacted a tax on blank media that the government collects on behalf of these cartels even though I have never in my life burned a song onto a CD. They are trying desperately to get "fair use" which is enacted in law reduced or eliminated by propaganda campaigns, judicial legislation and/or changes to the law.

      --
      Who is John Galt?
    11. Re:Wait a second... by icebrain · · Score: 1

      Um, I thought all that was covered under the "appalling tactics" category, including "invasive computer code [and] purchasing of legislators."

      DRM would fall under invasive computer code, and the other offenses you mentioned (Canadian tax, radio station fee, etc) would be the purchasing legislators stuff.

      When I said "don't care as much about copyright," I meant that to contrast them with the "information should be free, and I should be able to download whatever I want without paying for it!" crowd. I certainly agree that the **AA orgs are stepping about thirty miles over the line of traditional copyright, fair use, and privacy. I just got lazy and didn't want to type all of that.

      --
      The meek may inherit the earth, but the strong shall take the stars.
  6. Active Music Trading on Freenet 0.5 and 0.7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Music and movies are being traded on Freenet under a 'culture freedom' movement. You shouldn't be able to be caught if you don't want to be, it's all a matter of your risk tolerance.

    1. Re:Active Music Trading on Freenet 0.5 and 0.7 by morcego · · Score: 1

      If you call that "culture"...

      --
      morcego
    2. Re:Active Music Trading on Freenet 0.5 and 0.7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If you call that 'culture'..."

      I'm sure they have Classical music there for you too ;)

    3. Re:Active Music Trading on Freenet 0.5 and 0.7 by Technician · · Score: 1

      You shouldn't be able to be caught if you don't want to be, it's all a matter of your risk tolerance.

      My risk tolerance is quite low. I've never lost the lottery, or received a settlement letter. Both for the same reason. I didn't play.

      The RIAA has played. I find less new music. I find more and more CD's infected. I find more incompatible file formats, most with defective by design DRM. They blame the lost sales on Piracy. They are wrong. The legal product is broken and overpriced.

      Instead of fixing their product and fixing the price (not price fixing), they have been caught red handed in a sabatoge effort.

      http://www.p2pnet.net/story/13397

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    4. Re:Active Music Trading on Freenet 0.5 and 0.7 by Orange+Crush · · Score: 1

      My risk tolerance is quite low. I've never lost the lottery, or received a settlement letter. Both for the same reason. I didn't play.

      Oh, don't think that'll stop 'em. There have been plenty of cases of the RIAA sending letters to people who've never violated their copyrights.

    5. Re:Active Music Trading on Freenet 0.5 and 0.7 by Technician · · Score: 1

      There have been plenty of cases of the RIAA sending letters to people who've never violated their copyrights.

      And after they found I have a P-P program installed "Bittorrent" and the files downloaded is Ubuntu and such. I also use filtered DNS which happens to block The Pirate Bay and other locations. (Link from Slashdot to an article hosted there showed up as blocked) I have BitTorrent because it is as much of Ubuntu as Windows Update is part of Windows. I attempted to un-install it once, but there was a warning that removing it would break updates. To top it off, Comcast (my ISP) has been blocking BitTorrent seeding. No other P-P filesharing program is installed to my knowledge. With these factors in place, I'm not very likely to receive a settlement letter.

      I have filtered DNS because I have adopted teens at home who would have no qualms exposing me to a lawsuit. They have managed to fill up their MP3 players on a meager allowance and visiting friends. They do not have admin rights to change the hosts file or network settings on the computers or router.

      people who've never violated their copyrights. Many of them have kids and kids friends who have root privilages to the computers where they install P-P clients.

      After they find that no P-P seeding exists, I will pick them for attorney's fees and join the class action.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
  7. More Absurdity by anarking · · Score: 3, Interesting

    UMASS Boston doesn't even have dormitories, so how do they expect to be targeting specific students?! These blanket accusations to "set examples" and try to deter file sharing is absolutely despicable, and more colleges need to take hints from Harvard and not be intimidated by baseless claims that are already crumbling in the courts. All colleges that don't stand by their students and hand them over to the pack of lying dogs at the RIAA are complacent with the same absurdities and the students ought to wonder what they've been paying for at their respective colleges. The insanity continues, Fight the RIAA, Fight for your Rights!

    1. Re:More Absurdity by SeaFox · · Score: 1

      All colleges that don't stand by their students and hand them over to the pack of lying dogs at the RIAA are complacent with the same absurdities and the students ought to wonder what they've been paying for at their respective colleges

      I was under the understanding the students were paying for a college education, not a safe harbor to commit copyright infringement. So I don't see what the cost of attendance at a school has to do with RIAA lawsuits. Why should students be subject to any more protection than they would if they were at home online?

      At least that is what I was going to say originally.

      But then I thought about the role the college plays in the student's online access. The university is the student's ISP so to speak here, assuming the RIAA/MPAA is following the same procedures they would had the aledged offender been on a COX cable internet account, then I still stand by that. Now, if the school is getting a letter from the RIAA that says "[IP address] was downloading copyrighted material at [time] on [date]. Who is this?" and the college is piping right up with "Oh, that's [student name], here's their address and telephone number." I would think the student would now have the right to sue the college for breach of privacy. If the correct legal procedures are being followed to get the student's [subscriber's] information, the school has done nothing wrong. There's no unwritten rule your college will be your anti-MPAA attack dog while you're attending.

      However, I do take issue with the people getting academic punishments from their schools over this. There's no excuse for a university to throw out a student over copyright infringement issues with a third party. Do these offenses have anything to do with the student's attendance and schoolwork quality required for his degree? No. To use the tired saying, it's an A-B conversation that they should C their way out of.
    2. Re:More Absurdity by jmnormand · · Score: 1

      yeah is kinda strange having umass boston on the list. no dorm and a relatively open wifi network, im not even sure you can access anything beyond the common ports. my best guess its it more likely faculty using office computers than students.

    3. Re:More Absurdity by sco08y · · Score: 1

      All colleges that don't stand by their students...

      What colleges *do* stand by their students nowadays? They've been extorting vast sums of money from them for a while now, and they treat them like children, they take away their right to defend themselves and they let cheating run rampant. Granted, I'm disgruntled, it was frustrating and lonely finishing my degree, but I hardly think my situation was unusual. "Alma mater" my ass.

  8. Perfect picks. by RobertM1968 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Wonderfully, it seems the RIAA is picking a bunch of colleges with both the money and the staff to assist in defending their students. With other colleges already taking similar stances, I expect that many of the current round will do so as well. Thus, I expect the RIAA to soon learn that this method is fraught with enough reasons to ensure they fail.

    My only worry is their attempts at creating circumstances and/or laws that "coerce" the colleges to give up their (possibly) innocent (or not) students without due process.

    1. Re:Perfect picks. by krayzk9s · · Score: 2, Informative

      I go to the University of Pittsburgh, and they want no part of getting in the way. If the RIAA files a notice the University will tell them whose IP it belongs to and even assist them.

    2. Re:Perfect picks. by jo7hs2 · · Score: 1

      Plus, they've decided to pick out quite a few public institutions of higher learning, who will bring to bear their considerably larger legal resources, being both entities of the state AND members of large university systems. On a side note, I was wondering what took so long to get the University of Maryland on there. Um, Go Terps?

    3. Re:Perfect picks. by Mark+Programmer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      In the case of Carnegie Mellon in particular, I remember the policy being that CMU will pass the information requested by the RIAA right through to them, and has explicitly told its student body that it will not shield them from investigation and prosecution. I wonder if these institutions were cherry-picked for having such policies. Can anyone comment on (a) whether CMU's policy is unchanged, and (b) whether the other schools operate to a similar strategy?

      --

      Take care,
      Mark

      There is a solution...

    4. Re:Perfect picks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's more or less how I understand it. I think there is also an official policy that they will defend you if you're innocent, but I imagine that by the very nature of you getting sued the university will consider you guilty (and, realistically, you probably ARE, even if the MPAA/RIAA has no real proof).

      OTOH some of the SCS (School of Computer Science) people are very very knowledgeable, so it might be worthwhile for such a targeted student to talk to professors and such there, and see if they can swing their weight around on the administration to help.

      This is basically my speculation, of course, as a freshman who's been on campus for only about a month now. It's certainly what I'd do if I were caught, though I honestly haven't had nearly as much time to actually watch half the stuff I used to download, so my illegitimate usage has decreased to near zero.

      (And some clever person has a setup of DC++, I think, available for download which is configured to only connect to other CMU IP's, so its usage doesn't count against bandwidth limits nor can the MPAA/RIAA find you with it. IMHO students so inclined should just use that.)

      Anonymous because I'm paranoid... CMU allocates static IP's on the wired network so it really is trivial to trace such a person; whether that should hold up in court is another matter.

    5. Re:Perfect picks. by the_ed_dawg · · Score: 1

      Wonderfully, it seems the RIAA is picking a bunch of colleges with both the money and the staff to assist in defending their students.
      Unfortunately, it has been my experience that universities have money for everything except the students. (Yes, I attend one of the universities in the notice.)
      --
      There are two types of people: those prepared for the zombie apocalypse and those who will be eaten.
    6. Re:Perfect picks. by Knytefall · · Score: 1

      Indeed, there are knowledgeable people in SCS, but CMU's administration never fails to bend over when asked to.

    7. Re:Perfect picks. by derflammenhund · · Score: 2, Informative

      Granted, I haven't read the fine print on OIT's position, but based on their ads on the busses and what's been run in the Diamondback (school paper), the University of Maryland will be doing absolutely no assistance for students whatsoever.

      This is good for the institution overall because we already don't have any money left over, but OIT has been warning students for quite some time that they're not invincible or invisible, and it's only a matter of time before someone gets upset at them.

      Looks like that time has come... Here, have fun with this, too - http://www.oit.umd.edu/PlayFair/index.html

    8. Re:Perfect picks. by RobertM1968 · · Score: 1

      In the case of Carnegie Mellon in particular, I remember the policy being that CMU will pass the information requested by the RIAA right through to them, and has explicitly told its student body that it will not shield them from investigation and prosecution. I wonder if these institutions were cherry-picked for having such policies. Can anyone comment on (a) whether CMU's policy is unchanged, and (b) whether the other schools operate to a similar strategy?

      I think it is time colleges (like CMU)understand that "not shield(ing) them (the students) from investigation and prosecution" is far different to caving in to requests that the colleges have no legal requirement to fulfill. The colleges should be forcing the RIAA to follow the law - to the letter - and then after that (or during that process) fulfill their (the colleges) obligations under the law.

      Just my one cent on the matter - that I wish the colleges (and every other OSP/ISP) would consider. I'll leave the other cent on another post later... ;-)

    9. Re:Perfect picks. by mayoZ · · Score: 1

      Wonderfully, it seems the RIAA is picking a bunch of colleges with both the money and the staff to assist in defending their students. With other colleges already taking similar stances, I expect that many of the current round will do so as well. Thus, I expect the RIAA to soon learn that this method is fraught with enough reasons to ensure they fail. My only worry is their attempts at creating circumstances and/or laws that "coerce" the colleges to give up their (possibly) innocent (or not) students without due process. From experience, most university officials will protect the university itself and the university's computing assets before protecting the students. This is the smartest move for them, although maybe not the most popular. The first line of defense will be some sort of network or computing usage policy that the student agreed to upon enrolling at the university.
    10. Re:Perfect picks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      good.maybe students at that establishment will grow up realizing that taking other peoples work for free is not some fucking human right.

    11. Re:Perfect picks. by safXmal · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Don't worry. The university will start protecting you the moment a son or daughter of a big donor shows up on the list. That shouldn't take too long before it happens.

    12. Re:Perfect picks. by rizzo420 · · Score: 1

      while i disagree with the RIAA's tactics, i agree 100% with this post. i work in a college IT department and run a training program for my student employees. one of them actually had the balls to ask me where he can get music for free and when i told him that there was only certain types of music he could get for free, and none of it was mainstream, he kept harping on me, wanting me to suggest some miracle P2P network or something. i won't say i never downloaded music for free, but i no longer do it (i also no longer listen to a whole lot of mainstream music and either buy the CD directly from the band or from some other source, and 99% of the time now, it's not RIAA music).

      i don't want to hear about price gouging or anything... it still doesn't make it right. if you want the music, there are legal means of getting it, plain and simple. sure, the RIAA sucks, and i agree that they're causing their own demise, but that doesn't excuse downloading or sharing music for free when other people pay for it because it does buy someone's dinner. there are legal ways to fight the system.

      --
      please me, have no regrets.
    13. Re:Perfect picks. by sirambrose · · Score: 1

      This isn't the first time for the University of Maryland. I got an email at the start of the semester about the risks of file sharing and the number of students that had been sued. The email clearly stated that the college does not waste tuition money on defending students.

  9. No one likes the RIAA by Oktober+Sunset · · Score: 4, Funny

    If The RIAA were an ice cream flavor, they'd be pralines and dick.

    1. Re:No one likes the RIAA by dkf · · Score: 1

      If The RIAA were an ice cream flavor, they'd be pralines and dick. Yes, but without the pralines.
      --
      "Little does he know, but there is no 'I' in 'Idiot'!"
    2. Re:No one likes the RIAA by yabba-dabba-do · · Score: 1

      LOL, I just was watching that on TV. Party on Garth!

  10. This can only mean one thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...that the RIAA is run by Harvard grads.

    Figures, corrupt lawyers and all...

    1. Re:This can only mean one thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, considering Harvard happens to be one of those colleges that you have to buy your way into...

    2. Re:This can only mean one thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On a serious note, it has to make you wonder how many of the RIAA's lawyers are Harvard grads.

  11. In related news... by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 2, Funny

    Harvard professors receive 22 requests for counsel about 403 RIAA letters ...

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
  12. Re:Good For Them by anarking · · Score: 1

    Simply enable file sharing on your computer drive, irregardless of your intent, and they will come after you suing for everything you have, just to make an example of you, even though you shared nothing and broke no copyrights (case of the cleaning woman that was near a computer with a shared drive). They assembled task forces to go out impersonating police officers using force to intimidate people into stop sharing anything. This is the out-of-control RIAA people are dealing with. Do you want to have a lawsuit like that around your neck for enabling file sharing on your drive so perhaps people on your own network can have access to whatever files you wish them to, personal mp3s or otherwise? Do you want to live in a world where these type of Gestapo tactics are accepted? Don't be so complacent, Wake Up to what they're doing to ordinary innocent American Citizens before it's too late and you're their next fodder to set a deterrance example.

  13. How to beat the RIAA by kimvette · · Score: 2, Interesting

    * Don't listen to artists from member labels. Well, at least not new artists
    * Don't buy their product. If you MUST buy, find a way to buy directly from the artist, or download artist-authorized bootlegs and send your money to the artist.
    * Don't download RIAA product. Downloads only help them to justify their whining.

    --
    The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    1. Re:How to beat the RIAA by houghi · · Score: 1

      I got a gift from Universal. A Gwen Stefani CD. So I did not pay for it. So am I now allowed to listen to it or not? I am confused.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    2. Re:How to beat the RIAA by budgenator · · Score: 1

      I have to agree, there is enough bad music out there that we don't need the RIAA lables to force-feed their bad music to us. It's not like your favorite club-band's can't self-produce and sell direct.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    3. Re:How to beat the RIAA by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 3, Funny

      For your own sake, don't listen to it. This applies regardless of the RIAA's tactics.

      --
      In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
    4. Re:How to beat the RIAA by adminstring · · Score: 4, Funny

      I would advise against it. 4 of 5 backup singers say that "that shit is B-A-N-A-N-A-S."

      --
      My truck is like a series of tubes.
  14. Harvrd Legal Counsel by rbabb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If Harvard's professors really do have a valid defense that is intimidating the RIAA from suing them, they should do some pro-bono work for the other schools that ARE getting sued! Help out your fellow institutions for the betterment of everyone!

    1. Re:Harvrd Legal Counsel by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 1

      If Harvard's professors really do have a valid defense that is intimidating the RIAA from suing them, they should do some pro-bono work for the other schools that ARE getting sued! Help out your fellow institutions for the betterment of everyone!

      One would think that Harvard's position on this would hold some weight with other schools, who seem only too willing to fold. If schools as a group got together at put up a common front to the RIAA, either the RIAA would back off, or there could be a single test case.

      --
      If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
  15. Re:Good For Them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The big guy has lobbyists and senators and lawmakers and lawyers in their pockets in their efforts to fuck over society and the citizens of this country in their own favor. We have file sharing. It's our little way of being able to say "yeah? fuck you too"

  16. Bullies by tomz16 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Perfect life lessons in this one...

    - Bullies won't go after you if they are afraid that there's a chance of getting their nose bloodied.
    - Don't have to run faster than the bear... just faster than the slowest guy running from the bear.

    Harvard students are excluded from these notifications, not because of their innocence, but because of the fact that there are literally thousands of easier targets to go after that have no chance of fighting back!

    1. Re:Bullies by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 1

      Bullies won't go after you if they are afraid that there's a chance of getting their nose bloodied. That is exactly what this is about. They don't like picking on people who can fight back.
      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    2. Re:Bullies by DavidShor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Does anyone?

    3. Re:Bullies by LandruBek · · Score: 1

      Did you see Fight Club?


      Seriously, the point is that they are not picking fights they "have to" fight for any sort of ideal (like EFF suing AT&T, or a momma bear defending her cubs). They are just opportunistically trying to find pushover victims, and to scam a few thousand dollars of lunch money off of each one. In a "just war," combat is a last resort. Not so with these weasels.


      --
      $META_SIG_JOKE
    4. Re:Bullies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The list should also include:
        - Bullies won't go after you if you are a family member.
        - Bullies won't go after you if you are a friend of the family.
        - Bullies won't go after you if you are a an ally or a possible future ally.

      The RIAA probably hired the best they could, many of which comes from Harvard School of Law. I bet numerous phone calls goes between the RIAA law advisers and some Harvard teachers.

  17. So I am on the list. by f4hy · · Score: 0

    My university is on the list. What slash /.ers want to give advice for what I can do about it?

    1. Re:So I am on the list. by canuck57 · · Score: 1

      My university is on the list. What slash /.ers want to give advice for what I can do about it?

      Organize a protest.

      Get everyone to pick a nice day and download something illegal and free. They are not going to go after 5000 students. Maybe even load up the profs computer with a few gigs of stuff.

      Set the RIAA up. You download off of someone else's machine. Once they are about to convict has 20 students say they did it as a prank (maybe even true).

      Lots of ways, your in college/university -- be creative.

    2. Re:So I am on the list. by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 3, Insightful

      My university is on the list. What slash /.ers want to give advice for what I can do about it?

      Go to Ray's blog and read up on the legal motions filed by students at other universities to challenge the RIAA's misuse of the law and true lack of evidence. And them file similar motions for any students sued at this university.

      --
      "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
    3. Re:So I am on the list. by budgenator · · Score: 1

      Spoof the Dean's IP address LOL.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    4. Re:So I am on the list. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On our campus we block inbound connections to halls. It's an unpopular plan for a few, but as we're not a technical establishment, most are happy that the web is reachable. No inbound connections makes p2p file sharing like walking to the moon through overcooked porridge, and it means that less of the technically inept find themselves at the wrong end of a summons.

      If the users... sorry... valued customers (no, really!) want illicit 'choons' or 'warez', then they will soon learn to get it on a stick from an off campus chum, especially since they'll get it quicker that way. This method makes us less likely to get harassed by the riaa (capitalization omitted to please the growling mob, with whose argument I have a smattering of sympathy).

    5. Re:So I am on the list. by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 4, Informative

      My university is on the list. What slash /.ers want to give advice for what I can do about it? Here are my suggestions.
      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    6. Re:So I am on the list. by Technician · · Score: 1

      What slash /.ers want to give advice for what I can do about it?

      If you were one of the high filesharers, let us know if you settled or how the fight went.

      If you are in school after that, I would recommend sticking to USB drives for a while.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
  18. People's Republic of Cambridge, baby. by PsychosisBoy · · Score: 1, Funny

    God, I love this place. It is the best city in the northeast. Seriously, no one fucks with us.

  19. RIAA does target Harvard... by neapolitan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I went to Harvard for college...

    http://www.thecrimson.com/archives.aspx?SearchTerms=RIAA&SortField=0&PageSize=10&News=1&Opinion=2&Sports=3&Magazine=5&Arts=4

    I hope the Crimson's servers stand up.

    The RIAA frequently targeted students individually, and AFAIK continues threatening letters occasionally to individual students if they can figure out who you are. As you can see from the Crimson archives there was some pushback from the law school profs.

    Back in the late 90's, your (fixed, non-DHCP) undergraduate IP at Harvard mapped to username.person.harvard.edu or something like that, making it trivially easy to see who was where, and you would 'magically' get spam for visiting websites, as your email was username@fas.harvard.edu. This was changed around '99 or so, now it is a roamXXX.student.harvard.edu I believe, and DHCP'd to a real IP address. This helps protect anonymity and individual student's activity, and Harvard does not give out the mapping to individual students.

    Harvard internally sends curious emails reporting "excessive bandwidth" use to us, which also still continues AFAIK. Several of my friends received these, we think it was in the neighborhood of > 10 GB per day use. They basically said to quit it, or we might look further as to what you are doing, or bring you in front of a disciplinary committee. This was back in the days of i2hub (remember this?), and most of my friends just throttled their bandwidth with no further problems -- very scared of the hassle of defending yourself even if it is "legit" activity.

    --
    Slashdotter, ID #101. UIDs are in binary, right?
    1. Re:RIAA does target Harvard... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah I think most schools give random IPs from a pool that's why they need your school help to sue you. Lucky you have a sane administration.

  20. Wisconsin much? by ILuvRamen · · Score: 0

    I'm from Wisconsin so naturally I noticed the fact that they apparently focused heavily on UW schools! That's the worst kind of discrimination...the kind against us! Then again it's not much of an "us" since I went to a technical college lol. Take that, universities and your programming theory instead of practical skills ;)

    --
    Google's Super Secret Search Algorithm: SELECT @search_results FROM internet WHERE @search_results = 'good'
  21. Mickey Mouse... by headkase · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The day I can use Mickey Mouse in my own work is the day I give a damn about the RIAA's "losses".

    --
    Shh.
    1. Re:Mickey Mouse... by stubear · · Score: 1

      Copyrights on Steamboat Willie could expire tomorrow but you'd still need to obtain permission to use a trademarked character. The best you'll ever be able to do is distribute out of copyright Disney films. Also, even if the copyright on Steamboat Willie expired tomorrow and Mickey Mouse was not a trademark, the only depiction you would be allowed to use would be the Steamboat Willie version of Mickey Mouse, not the Red trouser, yellow-button wearing Mickey Mouse we all know and love.

    2. Re:Mickey Mouse... by rs79 · · Score: 1

      "The day I can use Mickey Mouse in my own work is the day I give a damn about the RIAA's "losses"."

      Nice. Kudos.

      I'd be happy if in this lifetime I was able to download all the music I had but lost because they wore out or lost in the past 3 and a half deacdes of paying for the same music sometimes up to 4 or 5 times over for the same work.

      --
      Need Mercedes parts ?
  22. OJ got off because of good lawyers too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The RIAA simply doesn't want to deal with them, even though they are wrong.

  23. Situation at Purdue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here at Purdue, the RIAA sends a letter to the University citing an IP. The University then forwards the letter to the student they match with the IP. Students can then settle or wait for the lawsuit. The University isn't really offering any type of resistance to the RIAA, though they aren't actively turning students over, either.

    I've heard our "IT czar" speak on the issue of copyrights, and his various opinions did not seem consistent.

  24. RIAA Cowards by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 0, Redundant
    The RIAA are cowards. The problem is that university administrations by and large are bigger cowards still, hence they act too often as RIAA lapdogs.

    The RIAA's growing college problem is that at least 4 groups of students at different universities are fighting back, and creating a info-store of litigation documents that can become a roadmap into defending against future suits. If everyone fought back against the invasions of privacy, and the lack of true evidence at the time the suits are filed, the RIAA couldn't handle the litigation load!

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
    1. Re:RIAA Cowards by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 1

      The RIAA are cowards. The problem is that university administrations by and large are bigger cowards still, hence they act too often as RIAA lapdogs. The RIAA's growing college problem is that at least 4 groups of students at different universities are fighting back, and creating a info-store of litigation documents that can become a roadmap into defending against future suits. If everyone fought back against the invasions of privacy, and the lack of true evidence at the time the suits are filed, the RIAA couldn't handle the litigation load! Make that five. NC State students just jumped into the fray.
      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
  25. It even rimes! by siyavash · · Score: 1

    It even rimes! Riaa... Mafiaa... can somebody please tell those morons to adapt and evolve their business instead of suing their customers? oh wait...

    1. Re:It even rimes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  26. Must be part of ... by xednieht · · Score: 1

    the RIAA legal eagles' new strategy... let toss some poop up against this wall and see what sticks.

    Genius. Pure undeniable genius.

    --

    Hope is the currency of fools
  27. Re:Mickey Mouse...MOD UP PARENT by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The day I can use Mickey Mouse in my own work is the day I give a damn about the RIAA's "losses".

    This is a very wise, if obscure to many, comment that copyright law has been so skewed towards the big corporations that civil disobedience is more than justified. Study the history of copyrights and you'll understand why the Founders of the USA democracy specified that secure for a limited time was part of the United States Constitution. Unfortunately, Congress (Republicans), the President (Clinton), and most of all, the Supreme Court of the United States have totally let us down on this issue over the last decade. The RIAA is now hard at work to steal back what little of the Public Domain still remains.

    At the very minimum, DRM should be legally required to expire on the day that the copyright for the work it's protecting expires!

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
  28. Re:Good For Them by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    "Irregardless" isn't a real valid word. I think you mean "regardless".

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
  29. Re:Good For Them by anarking · · Score: 2, Informative

    Those who must address miniscule grammar mistakes (it is a real word, however erroneous) can formulate no real point to make themselves. Go worry about something else, like getting sued by the RIAA for accidentally sharing your personal porn collection that you hid in a BritneySpears.mp3 file.

  30. Re:Good For Them by Debug0x2a · · Score: 4, Informative

    Actually irregardless is a nonstandard word meaning irrespective and regardless.

    --
    First post = troll. Cleverly worded post designed to enrage others = flamebait.
  31. Go UMass Amherst! by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

    Now if only our Comp. Sci. department could work on ways to protect UMass students from the MAFIAA.

    Like way can't we run our file-sharing over something like Tor, obscuring the source, destination and content of our packets?

    1. Re:Go UMass Amherst! by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 1

      Now if only our Comp. Sci. department could work on ways to protect UMass students from the MAFIAA. Like the Chairman of the Computer Science Department at Boston University going to bat for the BU students.
      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    2. Re:Go UMass Amherst! by damiam · · Score: 1

      You can do exactly that, but it's really slow and hurts the Tor network by holding up legitimate traffic.

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    3. Re:Go UMass Amherst! by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      You're right. Instead, I'm just getting a bunch of us Comp. Sci majors together to design and implement an encrypted peer-to-peer file-sharing protocol based on social aquaintences.

    4. Re:Go UMass Amherst! by yabba-dabba-do · · Score: 1

      Best filesharing protocol ever : SneakerNet.

  32. What is the role of PeerGuardian? by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1

    What is the role of PeerGuardian in all of this?

    I'm not sure I know how PeerGuardian works, but Wikipedia has an explanation: PeerGuardian 2 [is a] free and open source program developed by Phoenix Labs.

    Wikipedia also says, "There are many trojan websites that look identical to PeerGuardian's website, but the installers come pre-packaged with spyware." Wikipedia also says Azureus requires the "SafePeer Azureus plugin".

  33. ProtoWall? by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1

    Also, what about ProtoWall?

  34. If you're wondering how to follow the instructions by rbarreira · · Score: 1

    ... RIAA Radar to the rescue!

    --

    The AACS key is NOT 0xF606EEFD628B1CA427BEA93A9CA9773F
  35. Re:Mickey Mouse...MOD UP PARENT by eean · · Score: 1

    I'm sure the computers 70 years in the future will have no problem dealing with whatever "DRM" we put on our stuff now.

    Granted eventually Moore's Law will end and that principal will no longer be true. Hopefully the charade of DRM will be over by then though...

  36. Quality of posts (MOD OFFTOPIC) by Propaganda13 · · Score: 1

    I accidently associated the 403 letters with the 403 error, and thought it was some geeky way of describing them, haha. 403 letter: Forbidden You may not download our musics!

    you have to be one of the dumbest motherfuckers i've ever seen on slashdot. why don't you just go fuck yourself and die? we really don't need morons like you around, fucktard asshat bitch.


    Hmmm, which one of these is the lower quality post? At least the OP was a coward on top of it all. If you're going to complain at least take responsibility and burn a little karma.
  37. Re:Good For Them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Non-standard" is dictionary writer code for wrong but common enough to justify including.

  38. The RIAA is terrified of people with real money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    There's a reason that the jails and prisons of America are filled mostly with black and other ethnic minorities. White and affluent minorities have access to the best legal care that money can buy, for both civil and criminal matters. The RIAA knows this, and they're probably running scared, knowing that most of the Harvard students have access to good lawyers who can dash off a quick legal F you letter to the RIAA.

      There are certain legal surnames that terrify greedy pigs, shysters and publicity hounds. Can you imagine the RIAA filing one of their bogus lawsuits against a child or grandchild of someone like Johnnie Cochran? He would have been on the six o'clock news, burning the legal summons with a match, telling the RIAA to stick their phony lawsuit.

    1. Re:The RIAA is terrified of people with real money by Technician · · Score: 1

      White and affluent minorities have access to the best legal care that money can buy, for both civil and criminal matters.

      Affluent have less reasons to engauge in activities in high vice areas. As such, much of the "legal care" needed is a non-issue. I'm in my 50's and the only time I have used a lawyer is for the adoption of a couple kids. We adopted pre-teens from "the other side of the tracks" and as a result, we are currently employing a lawyer for some of their actions.

      Some neighborhoods and families have differing standards of right and wrong. The actions of those with differing standards often are the reason some are picked up for problems and others are not.

      I grew up in the country. I worked doing everything from mowing hay, harvesting crops, raising sheep, and such. When growing up, I don't remember ever seeing a police car on our street. I saw a couple in town a couple times, but the police was not part of my growing up years.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
  39. Re:Mickey Mouse...MOD UP PARENT by Chandon+Seldon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm sure the computers 70 years in the future will have no problem dealing with whatever "DRM" we put on our stuff now. Granted eventually Moore's Law will end and that principal will no longer be true.

    The evidence strongly implies that Moore's law will end long before it becomes feasible to crack AES (and therefore AACS) by brute force. DRM is a social problem that should be dealt with - ignoring the problem because you think that it will magically get fixed in the future would be a very bad decision.

    --
    -- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.
  40. side bar by Jahz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I've seen numerous high rated posts on to this article with comments about how universities are failing to protect their students from the RIAA. As a general statement, I disagree with that assessment. Read before replying... As a recent grad from a major university in Boston, I can attest that universities are not charged with protecting or providing legal assistance for their students. In fact, pretty much any news story that I see about a student or group of students breaking the law includes expulsion of the students involved. The exception is that minor drug and alcohol offenses are treated as addictions and resolved with some form of mandatory counseling. Sometimes students are expelled for being arrested off campus (nearby)! Universities largely take a cut-and-run approach to problem students. So, the way they are acting with the RIAA is NOT a surprise at all.

    When a college passes a RIAA extortion letter to a student that they believe is the intended recipient, the college has done nothing wrong. In fact, I think it would be a liability to not pass the information along. I know that I would never want my university to act as a legal threat filter on my behalf because in the end, it isn't the university being held responsible, its me! The bottom line is that everybody who receives a threatening letter - be it legal or other - should consult with a lawyer and respond appropriately.

    Many of the posts did recognize the *real* problem with some of these institutions: unethical cooperation with RIAA. Providing *any* information about a student, whether that information be an IP address, mailing address or name should be illegal. I know that recent laws have made it impossible for even my parents to access my student records and GPA without my express permission (which I have given :-) ). It should be the same for every other bit of personal information I have on record with my university. Every school that receives a bunch of these letters should have their legal counsel reply with another letter stating something like:

    "This school acts as a neutral internet service provider. The intended recipients/users have been notified. It is up to them to respond individually. If you require any additional information, please obtain a court-ordered subpoena."

    So for now, the real problem seems to be that many schools lack a fair and effective internet/data privacy policy.

    --
    There are 10 types of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who do not.
    1. Re:side bar by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 3, Interesting

      As a recent grad from a major university in Boston, I can attest that universities are not charged with protecting or providing legal assistance for their students. Yes but they should not be jeopardizing and destroying their students' due process rights, either, as many of them are doing. This is what they should be, and in my view are legally obligated to be, doing.
      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
  41. Are Harvard Lawyers that badass by ancient_kings · · Score: 0

    to scare the RIAA? Geeeez, remind me to never p1ss off a harvy lawyer....

  42. Interesting .. by cheros · · Score: 1

    .. if that's a given it puts any school who actively collaborates with the RIAA in violation of privacy laws. Now that's going to be fun, and that's without the fact that most of the RIAA's methodology and so-called "evidence" has suffered some serious dents.

    They almost make me deliberately start copying just for the hell of it. Nveer felt like that before..

    --
    Insert .sig here. Send no money now. Owner may sue, contents will settle. Batteries not included.
  43. It seems the RIAA is working on it's health then.. by cheros · · Score: 1

    .. I mean, if this is anything to go by.

    Stupid idiots.

    --
    Insert .sig here. Send no money now. Owner may sue, contents will settle. Batteries not included.
  44. Sickening by insomniac8400 · · Score: 1

    These suits have nothing to do with damages and everything to do with convincing schools to pay for crappy drm laden services like ruckus. Purdue wasn't on the RIAA's list of colleges with the most downloading, but as soon as they dropped ruckus(since no one used it) they jumped to the top of the list. From what I have seen less people download music for free today than they did 4 years ago(only due to itunes, not because of anything the RIAA has done).

  45. only means the RIAA is extortionate by harvey+the+nerd · · Score: 1

    extortionate - adjective: greatly exceeding bounds of reason or moderation. When the RIAA asks for more than triple damages (e.g. 3 x 89 cents each for *proven* infringements) or sues computer illiterate little old ladies who may be blind or may not have been alive at the time, I consider that extortionate and worse. I think that in a constitutional US, sometimes, clear civil sanctions or criminal review would be in order for some RIAA actions and cases. Also remember, one A. Hilter, on September 1, 1939, claimed to be a victim of Polish aggression.

    1. Re:only means the RIAA is extortionate by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1
      You're right. I don't know why the hell I typed "extortionate". Please forgive me.

      However, as for the damages, triple sounds about right. Factor in that:

      a) they've got a copy of the music that they didn't pay for,
      b) they are encouraging piracy either
            i) directly, by using a P2P program and/or
          ii) indirectly, by contributing to the pirate culture, and
      c) the RIAA is losing a lot to piracy, and so it only stands to reason that those who get caught get a bigger punishment.

      As an analogy of the latter point, imagine there is a bus network that suffers from a problem with people boarding the bus without paying, and they decide to punish them by making them pay the money or get thrown off. Sure, they could do that, but they'd be losing money from all the people they didn't catch, and there'd be no deterrent, so the problem would continue indefinitely. If the RIAA just made people pay for the songs, then no-one would pay the money, and because of the relative anonymity of a P2P swarm, everyone would eventually start pirating. Does that sound like justice to you?

      [The RIAA]...sues computer illiterate little old ladies who may be blind or may not have been alive at the time
      Well, that doesn't sound like justice to me. It's a problem with being a private company, having to protect your bottom line, and having to protect your business. Too often, the due diligence simply isn't there. It's an unfortunate state of affairs, and the RIAA really shouldn't be so... fiscally conservative, shall we say. But also, a little of the blame belong to the pirates for forcing the RIAA's hand.

      Also remember, one A. Hilter, on September 1, 1939, claimed to be a victim of Polish aggression.
      Godwin should slap you. Anyone can claim being a victim, and they may well be right, but apparently that warrants a Hitler comparison.
      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
  46. Altruism is not required. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Harvard's interest is Harvard. It is unreasonable to expect otherwise.

    By taking a "protect our students" stance, they further encourage prospective law students to go there.

    Other colleges would also probably attract more students if they similarly flipped the bird to the RIAA, however, those other colleges may not have sufficient legal expertise under their belts to be confident that they could win the fight. So long as they believe that the money they would lose in a legal battle would be greater than the money they will lose in students not wanting to go to their college, cowardice is in their best interest.

    "Fighting the good fight" for other colleges would cost Harvard money, would not make Harvard any money, and in the best-case scenario (the RIAA's legal tactics are completely halted) it would remove this threat for which Harvard is currently a safe haven (and hence remove this extra incentive for students to go there). It clearly is not in Harvard's best interest to fight this fight for other colleges pro-bono.

  47. What, no UW - Oshkosh?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why? They've targeted almost the entire UW system, except for me own alma mater.

    Maybe they got wind of the fact that students are entitled to legal representation by the university's own retained lawyer. How much, you ask? $2.00 back when I was a student.

    Someone should tell the RIAA they're getting ripped off by their legal team :)

  48. Just waiting... by Z00L00K · · Score: 1
    ...for a court where this is settled with prejudice.

    But that's too much to hope for...

    --
    If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
  49. University as ISP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe they sell cheap access to their students? A university I went to used to act as a cheaper ISP for its students. I found an even cheaper service, so I never signed up.

  50. Haven't we all done this though??? by jflo · · Score: 1

    I, in no way support the RIAA for its actions and I honestly believe that they really need to stop trying to prove how big their 'legal cock' is. The bottom line is this though, the music industry hasn't done much to release high quality music like it has in the past. Mostof my college buddies, and myself included, would much rather download a few songs from a cd before geting sucked into buying it because of one great 'bump and grind' track. If anything, we (slash dottas) should get together and throw a law suit against the music industry for giving us crap for so long and throwing a fit when we stop taking it. But in long run, I think all of us have used programs such as Limewire at some point in our lives.... however, most of my usage of software like that was when I was in college myself. Maybe if college kids had more money then maybe they'd want to buy more music, instead of beer and pot. Oh well, this is never ending battle that needs to just go away!

    --
    WWPD - What Would Picard Do?
  51. Re:Good For Them by kryptkpr · · Score: 1

    English is not standardized, so what exactly is meant by "wrong" (aside from the obvious spelling, grammar or typo)? The language grows new words and evolves old ones all the time.

    --
    DJ kRYPT's Free MP3s!
  52. Re:Mickey Mouse...MOD UP PARENT by eean · · Score: 1

    Nah, we'll have quantum computers that can zoom through any encryption we come up with today. :)

  53. Re:Mickey Mouse...MOD UP PARENT by chuhwi · · Score: 1

    The problem is, allowing the drm to expire basically requires either the drm to still be working when the copyright expires (to have the server change the restrictions to allow conversion to a normal format), trusting the company to distribute an open version when the copyright expires, or having some sort of escrow system. The first two options require too much trust, and the third one requires a major change in copyright law (back to mandatory registration) as well as a lot of infrastructure so the government can distribute public domain works.

  54. Re:Mickey Mouse...MOD UP PARENT by Chandon+Seldon · · Score: 1

    Nah, we'll have quantum computers that can zoom through any encryption we come up with today. :)

    Contrary to the reports from some sensationalist tech journalists, quantum computers don't magically obsolete today's encryption algorithms. Take a look at the Wikipedia article for details. To summarize, for algorithms like AES, a quantum computer may be able to attack keys as much as twice as long as the keys that a classical computer can attack - margins of error that large are built into many systems that use such algorithms in practice.

    --
    -- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.
  55. Re:Good For Them by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

    That's a succinct and cromulent argument. English is continually embiggened.

  56. My college too by h4xor+ch1x · · Score: 1

    Last year, a bunch of kids got letters from the RIAA demanding settlement, and they mostly just paid up cause they couldn't afford a lawyer. Anyways, now the RA's have to hand out little pamphlets about reasons not to illegally download (which mostly are 'your computer is gonna get a virus' and 'the RIAA will make you pay'). The disturbing thing is one particular anti-downloading flier mentioned that the letters sent the previous year were for alleged copyright violations. Anyways, I have friends in IT who know how the people who download are caught at my school, so I can mostly avoid it. However, I'm too scared to torrent even legal material like open-source software, because I don't know if the people who give the info to the RIAA knows exactly what I'm torrenting, like an MMORPG (which wouldn't be within the RIAA's jurisdiction at all I believe) versus a huge collection of music, or if they do know what I'm torrenting, whether they would know that the specific MMORPG happened to be open-source and I do actually have the right to download and share that specific file to my heart's content.