Rochester Judge Holds RIAA Evidence Insufficient
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "Judge David G. Larimer, presiding in Rochester, New York, has denied an RIAA application for default judgment on the ground that the RIAA's evidence was insufficient, in that it contained no details of actual downloads or distributions, and no sufficient evidence that defendant was in fact Kazaa user 'heavyjeffmc@KaZaA.' The decision (PDF) concluded that 'there are significant issues of fact regarding the identification of the defendant from his alleged "online media distribution system" username.' (In case you're unfamiliar with the term 'online media distribution system,' that's because it is a term the RIAA coined 4 years ago to describe p2p file sharing accounts in its lawsuits; the term is not known to have been used by anyone else anywhere else.) In August a similar RIAA default judgment motion was denied on the ground that the pleadings failed to allege sufficient factual details supporting a claim of copyright infringement, in a San Diego, California, case, Interscope v. Rodriguez."
Decided by question of fact, not question of law. Instead of "not liable in principle" it's "not liable because they couldn't prove it". Judge's favorite way of avoiding responsibility for a legal precedent for hundreds of years.
But at least it shows you why choosing a judge in such cases is a much better option for the defendant than a trial by jury - technicalities count, precisely for the reason that judges have a vested interest in maintaining the status quo, while juries prefer to take the big-bang approach.
If you read the actual ruling (and I know none of you will), it turns out that the defendant has been served, but has never bothered to respond or show up. The RIAA have then gone for a default judgement, but this apparently makes the judge responsible for carefully checking their allegations. Normally that would be the defence's job. So the defendant has in effect managed to get himself a free legal defence, of the very highest quality: the judge himself.
It's a risky strategy, but at least he isn't getting reamed by some guy who makes $300 an hour for playing a lawyer on Slashdot.
If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
It is not a 'media distribution' system, it i a 'file sharing' system.
media != file
Patents Drive Free Software as Hurricanes Drive Construction Industry
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
In this instance, it was a decision about a specific set of facts which are non-generalizable.
That would be true if the RIAA show trials were different from each other in any way. None of them ever present "sufficient evidence" of damage. If other judges look at this decision and follow, the game is over as it should be. This judge has come close to understanding that the charges themselves are unsupportable.
The sad fact of life for the broadcast and recording companies is that they have nothing special to offer. Anyone can now make good quality recordings and everyone has access to the same, dirt cheap promotion platform. Their position as the sole promoter of music can only be maintained by eliminating everyone else's rights.
The nature of publishing has changed and the laws need to move with it. If the goal of copyright it to maximize culture and the state of the art, copyright law needs to become more accepting of new publication methods not less accepting. Terms of exclusivity and punishment for violation of that exclusivity need to more closely match the lower costs of recording and publishing. 100 year copyrights and $200,000 judgements are absurd. You will never see anyone prove actual damages like that because it never happens.
DMCA, Hollings, Palladium. What might have sounded like paranoia is now common sense.
... which is why, if you open a random P2P users' collection, you will find hundreds of gigabytes of quality open-license indie music like Code Monkey and maybe three or four random crappy Britstreet Boys tracks.
The labels are certainly not the only ones capable of making music, but they sure seem like they create the vast majority of the music that people think is valuable enough *to pay nothing for*.
Help poke pirates in the eyepatch, arr.
In the one court case the RIAA did win, Distribution was never proven. That woman was convicted, on a preponderance of the evidence, of Making Available. The jury was stupid, Internet illiterate -- and damn proud of it! Yet the two foremost authorities on copyright law (Nimmer, and the other one whose name escapes me -- IANAL) require that Distribution actually occur before the owner's exclusive right has been violated. That's impossible to prove with the evidence the RIAA has unless they can force someone to testify against the Defendant. In fact, turning somebody who probably participated in the downloading themselves is likely the only way the RIAA could honestly win a case with a fair jury and proper jury instructions.
Furthermore, even if "illegal" music files are found on a computer hard drive, that doesn't mean that they were "illegally downloaded" by the computer owner. They could have been ripped from owned or borrowed CD's. A friend could have brought over a data DVD of MP3 files and loaded them. The point is that MP3's on a computer hard drive alone is not evidence of illegal downloading.
Ray, you ask elsewhere what evidence to demand from the RIAA. Most of all you should require a guaranteed unaltered hard drive image of the computer that actually collected the evidence, this snapshot taken at the time that the Plaintiff's so-called evidence was collected. You also need them to Prove that the time clock on their screen shots matches the time clock that the ISP used when logging the IP address data. THESE ITEMS ARE CRUCIAL in determining that the evidence in question was accurately collected.
Consider, would you accept fingerprint data where you never questioned the technician on how it was gathered, or determined that he was using proper equipment with proper training? Or that the matching method used was the best available?
Would you accept as uncontaminated and properly tested DNA evidence from someone who had never shown any expertise in the area of DNA collection, could not provide proof that he had the equipment or training necessary to properly collect uncontaminated samples, or used a lab with no track record of being able to properly test samples?
How about a policeman who can't produce at trial the radar gun, in the condition it was in at the time he claims he caught your client speeding? There's a case pending right now where GPS evidence disputes the police radar evidence. And it can be very hard with a radar gun to know for sure which car it tagged. Would you accept that unquestioned?
I would hope not!
The evidence, methods, and personnel here require similar scrutiny. There is so much stuff that can go wrong in a personal computer these days, using questionable software (KaZaA in particular, which is the program that SafeNet maintains the use when they say "we went out on the internet like any other use could and found these infringing files offered for distribution"), virus/worm/trojan infections, adware/spyware, inept investigators.
And be sure to get the exact IP addresses the investigators used when downloading the files offered in evidence. There might be logs proving whether or not that IP addresses ever connected to the computers in question. In addition, the investigators may have been using illegal IP addresses in attempts to get around IP Address Blocking -- ev
"It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
GP was written by a user who immediately jumps into every discussion about the RIAA with a pro-RIAA line. Since I have never met anyone in the real world other than people on the RIAA payroll who say such things I really wonder who he or it works for.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
they won't be able to bring affidavits but will have to bring witnesses
the witnesses will have to be competent to provide the testimony they will attempt to introduce
the exhibits will have to be authentic
the exhibits will have to be properly authenticated
the investigator witness will have to show he's properly licensed
the evidence will actually have to prove that the defendant committed an infringement of one of the rights enumerated in 17 USC 106(3).
I.e., even with the defendant in default, they will not be able to prove their case, which means they will likely lose.
I would not be surprised to see them quietly forget about this case.... they've bumped into a judge who sees through their lack of evidence. They can stand on their head but will not be able to actually prove a prima facie case with the garbage they have.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
The very term "Online media distribution system" is so broad that it could cover YouTube, the iTunes Store, Napster, and eMusic, just to name a few. Heck, it's even broader than that. Since text is a form of media, this site and all sites on the web are "online media distribution systems." This was probably the RIAA's intent. Create a term that is so broad that it could be applied to anyone you dislike and that causes a sufficient level of confusion. Since the RIAA is unable to prove much about the majority of filesharing cases, they feel that they can get away with overly vague terms, as opposed to factual evidence.
"I'm glad I'm going to die because, when I do, the world's gonna go to the dogs." -Me on aging and the next generation.
Copyright infringement cases are tort cases, not contract cases. When is the last time you saw a default judgment entered on a negligence claim?
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful