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U.of Oregon Says No to RIAA

NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "The University of Oregon has filed a motion to quash the RIAA's subpoena for information on student identities in what is believed to be the first such motion made by a university with support from the state Attorney General. The motion (pdf) explains that it is impossible to identify the alleged infringers from the information the RIAA has presented: 'Five of the seventeen John Does accessed the content in question from double occupancy dorm rooms at the University. With regard to these Does, the University is able to identify only the room where the content was accessed and whether or not the computer used was a Macintosh or a PC ... The University cannot determine whether the content in question accessed by one occupant as opposed to another, or whether it was accessed instead by a visitor.' The AG's motion further argues (pdf) that "Plaintiffs' subpoena is unduly burdensome and overbroad. It seeks information that the University does not readily possess. In order to attempt to comply with the subpoena, the University would be forced to undertake an investigation to create discovery for Plaintiffs — an obligation not imposed by Rule 45. As the University is unable to identify the alleged infringers with any accuracy, it cannot comply with its federal obligation to notify students potentially affected by the subpoena. One commentator has likened the AG's argument to saying, in effect, that the RIAA's evidence is 'rubbish'."

241 comments

  1. If this works... by bobdotorg · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ... I'm interested to see how will subsequent rulings will affect the 'unsecured wireless defense'.

    --
    __ Someday, but not this morning, I'll finally learn to use the preview button.
    1. Re:If this works... by QuantumRiff · · Score: 4, Interesting

      UofO doesn't have unsecured wireless. They have a captive portal that requires you to login. Their argument for the wireless is that they can't tell if the person logging in is the same person as the one that is using the computer.. (IE, you give your GF your laptop and password for the day). In fact, with the issues cropping up from the CALEA act, (can't remember the exact spelling this early in the morning) schools can soon get in trouble for not authenticating their wireless, in case terrorists want to use it. No joke, thats what the feds say!! Most of the schools are pretty ticked about that act, since it opens up all sorts of possibilities for abuse, like this story.

      PS.. GO DUCKS!

      --

      What are we going to do tonight Brain?
    2. Re:If this works... by SpiritGod21 · · Score: 1

      As we understand it, CALEA doesn't apply to us (a state university), and therefore we have no obligation to do anything in response to CALEA, other than exercise normal due diligence. Which isn't, when you get into it, a whole lot.

      Who CALEA applies to is our ISP, not us. This is what the law says and what our ISP says; they don't want us doing it, they want to handle it. Therefore, we can have ethernet jacks that anyone can plug into and use (though they're outside our firewall). You have to have an ID to access our wireless, but that's for reasons other than CALEA.

      IANAL, but as a computer tech, this is what has been passed down to me, and it sounds plausible enough to accept without my researching further.

    3. Re:If this works... by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      An amazing read. Does the U.O. have a Pre-Vet program there? If so, I think my eldest would get a better education there. I find myself troubled by schools that prefer to chant the current party line as opposed to using thought and reasoning. Thought and reasoning are not always the optimal course of action, but it is a better action than one that requires switching off the brain in order to perform.

    4. Re:If this works... by JCSoRocks · · Score: 1

      I, too, am thankful to see a group of people doing something other than just bending over and waiting. The irony of relatively liberal universities allowing themselves to be walked all over by RIAA was brutal.

      I don't think have have a pre-vet program. OSU (Oregon State) does though, they also have a graduate program. You have a better chance of getting into the grad program if you've been a part of the pre-vet program as an undergrad. I wouldn't be surprised to see OSU take a similar stance to U of O's if they're successful.

      [obligatory] Go Beavers.

      --
      You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
    5. Re:If this works... by ConfusedVorlon · · Score: 2, Funny

      In Italy, hotels, internet cafes, etc are required to get your passport before letting you log in. Again - this is supposedly in case the terrorists get access to the internet.

      I felt sooo much safer knowing that it was impossible in Italy for terrorists to see lolcats. I guess the system is watertight - otherwise I'm sure they wouldn't be putting all us legitimate non-terrorist types to such inconvenince.

    6. Re:If this works... by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 1

      An amazing read. Does the U.O. have a Pre-Vet program there? If so, I think my eldest would get a better education there. I find myself troubled by schools that prefer to chant the current party line as opposed to using thought and reasoning. Thought and reasoning are not always the optimal course of action, but it is a better action than one that requires switching off the brain in order to perform. I happen to agree with you. I would not want to attend or have my child attend a school that is willing to relinquish its students' civil liberties, as some other colleges and universities have done. I think this motion speaks well for the University of Oregon as an institution that values critical thinking. And I think it speaks well for the Oregon Attorney General that people in his office actually read the law books, and then enforce the law, and are not cowed by a few large corporations.
      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    7. Re:If this works... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      >If so, I think my eldest would get a better education there.
      and free music and movies! im definately going there.

    8. Re:If this works... by dj_krztoff · · Score: 1

      Being a former UofO student, I can tell you one thing with certainty: These hippies won't stand for this sort of tactic. I can imagine that the campus is plastered in "Fuck the RIAA" stickers as I type this.

      Nike should enjoy the day off.

      I miss Eugene.

    9. Re:If this works... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you seriously going to pick a college for your son based on their response to the RIAA? Maybe you should look into the EDUCATION aspect too before making any rash decisions.

    10. Re:If this works... by Pogue+Mahone · · Score: 2, Funny
      Well of course. Everyone knows that lolcats is a famous terrorist haunt simply by looking at all the secret messages steganographically encoded in the cute-ickle-puddy pictures.

      --
      Every bloody emperor has his hand up history's skirt [Peter Hammill/VdGG]
    11. Re:If this works... by rkanodia · · Score: 2, Funny

      Top Secret Steganographically-Encoded Message:
      i'm in ur lolcats
      plotting to destroy ur civilization

      (alternately: can i has nooks?)

    12. Re:If this works... by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      schools can soon get in trouble for not authenticating their wireless, in case terrorists want to use it.
      Terrorists? Paedophiles! I don't want a paedophile accessing MY CHILD'S internet! How could schools sink so low as to allow just anybody off the street to access the internet of our children?
      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
    13. Re:If this works... by Kaenneth · · Score: 1

      But then, the Oregon courts refuse to enforce contract law, after the Sate decided it didn't want to pay it's employees their pensions.

      (or so I heard from an Oregonian)

    14. Re:If this works... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The RIAA is out of control. Costing the industry and consumers money. DRM has insane requirements. What will they do next? Only stores with 24hr video survellience cameras can sell CD's?

      Even secured wireless routers are nothing but a password unless you require a certificate or PKI server. Let's drive up the cost of college even more because the RIAA is trying to dictate was are reasonable security measures. If the RIAA wants to hunt people down for copyright violations, they can spend their own money on their own investigative group.

    15. Re:If this works... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was just on campus today, and the UO bookstore had little pamphlets available, and West Moon was selling bumper stickers.

      I won't be surprised if Froggy writes it in a joke book. 3

  2. Rule 45? by mazarin5 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Rule 45 is fine and all, but what about Rule 34?

    --
    Fnord.
    1. Re:Rule 45? by Dachannien · · Score: 4, Informative

      Correct me if I'm wrong, but rule 34 applies strictly to parties to an action (meaning, the plaintiff(s) or defendant(s)). University of Oregon is neither, so they have to be subpoenaed per rule 45.

    2. Re:Rule 45? by Jello+B. · · Score: 5, Funny

      Woosh.

    3. Re:Rule 45? by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      I wondered if maybe he was joking, but after actually looking up rule 34 in the FRCP, it turned out that it looked like it was relevant to a serious discussion, so I gave him the benefit of the doubt.

    4. Re:Rule 45? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I was about to do the same, but than I wondered if he meant Rule 34 of the internet.

      http://xkcd.com/305/

    5. Re:Rule 45? by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 2, Informative

      You are correct. Rule 34 is inapplicable.

      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    6. Re:Rule 45? by Dachannien · · Score: 2, Informative

      BTW, to the genius mod who rated me off-topic:

      http://www.law.cornell.edu/rules/frcp/Rule34.htm

    7. Re:Rule 45? by nomadic · · Score: 1

      REAL men go straight to Rule 11...

    8. Re:Rule 45? by perbert · · Score: 2, Funny

      Are you really suggesting that there should be RIAA lawyer porn? Oh, the humanity!

    9. Re:Rule 45? by networkBoy · · Score: 1

      Rule 42 is all you need :-)

      --
      whois gawk date unzip strip find touch finger mount join nice man top fsck grep eject more yes exit umount sleep dump
    10. Re:Rule 45? by MadJo · · Score: 1

      You actually want RIAA pr0n?

    11. Re:Rule 45? by Trespass · · Score: 1

      No, they stop at 1 and 2.

    12. Re:Rule 45? by jeffy210 · · Score: 2, Informative

      There's a reason you were modded off-topic. It's because the joke did Mach 4 over your head.

      --
      ------
      "And may your days be long upon the earth."
    13. Re:Rule 45? by hyades1 · · Score: 1

      Or better yet, 23. Kick Out The Jams, Man.

      --
      I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
    14. Re:Rule 45? by halcyon1234 · · Score: 1

      Rule 45: Expand or die.

      Rule 34: War is good for business.

      Oddly appropriate.

    15. Re:Rule 45? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This comic is especially great when you realize he really did register http://wetriffs.com/

    16. Re:Rule 45? by Ryokos_boytoy · · Score: 1

      A drawing of a lawyer with his head up his ass? Seen it.

      --


      If you don't say anything, you won't be called on to repeat it. -- Calvin Coolidge
    17. Re:Rule 45? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm pretty sure I've seen RIAA porn before.

    18. Re:Rule 45? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The GP was joking - rule 34 is an Internet adage that states that "if it exists, there's porn of it".

    19. Re:Rule 45? by TheSpoom · · Score: 1
      --
      It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
      - E. Debs
    20. Re:Rule 45? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      /b/ woowoo

  3. The beginning of the end? by ptbob · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If the colleges won't help the RIAA with their "Investigations" could this be the beginning of the end of the RIAA going after college students? Let's hope so. They already gave up on Harvard, too many students and professors that actually understand the law.

    1. Re:The beginning of the end? by FataL187 · · Score: 0

      Highly doubtfull, they will simply use some other unlawfull, unethical, tactic to get the information they need to go after whoever they see fit.

      The RIAA needs to get their ass handed to them in a high profile counter suit before they will even think about changing their tactics!

      -FataL

    2. Re:The beginning of the end? by Dan+Ost · · Score: 1

      If it's unlawful, eventually they'll get in trouble for it.

      At least, one can hope.

      --

      *sigh* back to work...
    3. Re:The beginning of the end? by sm62704 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, nowhere near the beginning. The RIAA labels' suicide started years ago and is still ongoing. Now, if you're scratching your heads and are wondering WTF I mean by "suicide", the established industry is dying from its own actions.

      The year the old "pirate" Napster was being sued, CD sales (IIRC) were at their peak and have been dwindling since. The RIAA boycott (that you have never even once heard about in the mainstream media - hmmm....) must have had some slight effect on the industry.

      Their first mistake was to think CD burning technology wouldn't, like all computer technology before it, be affordable for the serfs.

      Their second mistake was to try to kill their competetion, the indies, by killing P2P.

      Their third mistake was seeing MP3s as "product" rather than "advertising". They have always been known as "record companies", and they sold records. Now they're trying to sell music, and music is a non-tangible item. Note that the indies actually do this, giving away MP3s and selling CDs at their shows.

      There were other mistakes - overpricing their wares (an indie CD is usually $5-$10), only having one good song on the CD (my generatiuon was damned lucky, have you ever heard a Led Zepplin song that sucked? There aren't any!), suing their paying customers (DUH!!!!!!) etc.

      All their woes are self-inflicted. Now by "suicide" I'm assuming that you'll agree that if a mosquito lands on your foot and you try to kill the mosquito by firing five shots from a sixteen guage shotgun at it and you bleed to death, it's suicide.

      -mcgrew

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    4. Re:The beginning of the end? by DarkSarin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm sorry, but while Led Zeppelin is good (I'm sure not going to argue), there are a certain percentage of their songs that I am convinced one must be stoned/high/drunk/etc in order to enjoy them properly. Since I am an abstainer, I don't really ever enjoy those songs. Not that they are bad songs, but they are not as good as the rest to those of us who don't use drugs of any type other than medicinal purposes.

      The rest of your argument is unaffected by this, however, and I agree.

      The RIAA is obselete on about 18 different levels, only 12 of which are potentially understandable.

      --
      "We don't know what we are doing, but we are doing it very carefully,..." Wherry, R.J. Personnel Psychology (1995)
    5. Re:The beginning of the end? by unlametheweak · · Score: 1

      If the colleges won't help the RIAA with their "Investigations" could this be the beginning of the end of the RIAA going after college students? Let's hope so. They already gave up on Harvard, too many students and professors that actually understand the law. I would suspect that the RIAA would simply just try to have the law changed, or have new ones created to close any loop-holes. I think this is a distinct possibility given how consumer interests and individual rights often take a back seat to federal or corporate interests when making laws. The DMCA is the most obvious example. And the riddance of the Net neutrality law is the most recent example. In Canada we are expected to sign into law pro-CRIA legislation within the next few months thanks to lobbying by the CRIA (and this with a minority government in power).
    6. Re:The beginning of the end? by tholomyes · · Score: 1

      "...those of us who don't use drugs of any type other than medicinal purposes."

      Or some of us just have a broader definition of what constitutes a medicinal purpose.

      --
      When did the future switch from being a promise to a threat? -C. Palahniuk
    7. Re:The beginning of the end? by Mister+Whirly · · Score: 1

      "there are a certain percentage of their songs that I am convinced one must be stoned/high/drunk/etc in order to enjoy them properly"

      That's just the vodka and Oxycontin talking...

      --
      "But this one goes to 11!"
    8. Re:The beginning of the end? by greenbird · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but while Led Zeppelin is good (I'm sure not going to argue), there are a certain percentage of their songs that I am convinced one must be stoned/high/drunk/etc in order to enjoy them properly.

      I call "reference". Name one.

      The RIAA is obselete on about 18 different levels, only 12 of which are potentially understandable.

      The first being that I can't get a digital Led Zeppelin song legally.

      --
      Who is John Galt?
    9. Re:The beginning of the end? by Peil · · Score: 0

      The first being that I can't get a digital Led Zeppelin song legally. Maybe not yet, but from later this month you can http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7045438.stm

  4. I wonder.... by iknownuttin · · Score: 0, Redundant

    if all of the negative press the RIAA has received has emboldened folks to stand up to them and also has encouraged greater scrutiny of their legal claims by the general public and legal community.

    --
    I prefer Flambe as apposed flamebait.
  5. Hopefully More Push-back Follows. by blcamp · · Score: 0, Redundant


    This is a good thing. More and more organizations and people are starting to come around to the realization that the *AA's bullying is just that, basically the schoolyard thug taking the little guy's lunch money (and unfortunately here, much more) on a larger scale.

    Hopefully the day comes (sooner rather than later) when RIAA, MPAA and all the other acronyms meet a new acronym: RICO.

    --
    The problem with socialism is that they always run out of other people's money. - Margaret Thatcher
    1. Re:Hopefully More Push-back Follows. by CarpetShark · · Score: 2, Insightful

      More and more organizations and people are starting to come around to the realization that the *AA's bullying is just that, basically the schoolyard thug taking the little guy's lunch money (and unfortunately here, much more) on a larger scale.


      Agreed. However, when someone says, "We would like to help you bully people, but we just don't have the information you want." they're hardly taking a stand.
    2. Re:Hopefully More Push-back Follows. by AndersOSU · · Score: 1

      I read it as, we're not going to help you bully people, and here's a plausible legal explanation why not.

    3. Re:Hopefully More Push-back Follows. by Hierarch · · Score: 5, Informative

      RICO is so often brought up in these discussions that I finally went looking to see what it would take to get a RICO indictment and eventual conviction. I'm not so sure that it applies.

      Note: I got my RICO information from Wikipedia, so take it for what it's worth.

      First off, RICO requires that the individual or groups commit two of 35 different crimes. Extortion is in the list, but not many of the other crimes could apply to the RIAA no matter how far we stretch them. I think even extortion is a bit of a stretch. The ones that are even worth considering are:

      • Extortion
      • Fraud
      • Blackmail
      • Obstruction of Justice
      • Racketeering

      I think we can ignore things like murder-for-hire, slavery, etc.

      There's a fine line between extortion and blackmail. In both cases, there's a threat for gain. "Pay up or else!" In extortion, the threat is generally something illegal; for blackmail, the threat is normally something that would be legal, if it weren't being done as part of the threat for gain. Certainly, the RIAA is well within the bounds of legal behavior to bring lawsuits, and the courts are very reluctant to limit access to the courts under any circumstances.

      To show extortion, one would need to demonstrate that bringing the suits is, itself, improper. That's not impossible, particularly if we can prove that the RIAA threatened litigation that it knew it couldn't win, but there are other rules for dealing with threats of frivolous lawsuits. My knowledge of that end of the law is pretty shaky — does anybody know what those rules are? Does anyone know if one can use them to demonstrate that the legal threat was, in fact, extortion?

      For blackmail, one merely needs to demonstrate that the threat was used for gain. Unfortunately, once again, the courts like to encourage parties to settle. Settlement negotiations are almost impossible to characterize as blackmail.

      RICO was written with obstruction of justice in mind. The idea was that organized crime would threaten witnesses, suborn testimony, etc. Some of the things that I've heard in a few RIAA cases do push this line, but I don't think they cross it. There's a big difference between trying to subpoena a minor and depose her outside the presence of her guardian, versus saying "If you testify, I'll kill your pets, your kids, and your grandparents, in alphabetical order."

      Fraud only seems to apply if the letters they send out contain fraudulent offers. I'm not sure how this could apply, but it's worth examination.

      Racketeering refers to a completely illegal business model - e.g., a "Protection Racket," where you pay for "insurance" against bad things happening to your business — where the bad things are the insurer actively trashing your business. If extortion applies to a large proportion of lawsuits (enough to show a clear, deliberate pattern), then racketeering probably applies as well. However, I don't think extortion could be demonstrated.

      Ultimately, much as I'd personally love to see RICO applied, I don't think it does. They key point is that the courts don't like to limit access to the courts, even by a chilling effect. Everybody has a right to their day in court. That, in turn, leads to the abuses we see where a big corporation can afford more and bigger lawyers than small mom-and-pop businesses, who settle cases that they could win because they'd lose more money in legal fees than the settlement.

      What we need is a revamp of this part of the legal system. Frankly, I don't see how that can be done without free, government-appointed counsel in every case, which is even less workable than the current system.

      --
      --Somebody infect me with a .sig virus, I'm too lazy to write my own!
    4. Re:Hopefully More Push-back Follows. by CarpetShark · · Score: 1

      It's possible they meant that, but it's still not being honest, not being helpful to society as a whole, and not having the courage of their convictions. If everyone has to find loopholes because people can't come together and right a wrong, then everyone will eventually lose, as the loopholes are plugged... or removed, or whatever you do with loopholes ;)

    5. Re:Hopefully More Push-back Follows. by MozeeToby · · Score: 1

      True enough, but you can't be legally required to do something and the just say "No, I don't wanna". In this case I see them saying something more along the lines of "No, I don't wanna and here's why you can't make me".

    6. Re:Hopefully More Push-back Follows. by Mister+Whirly · · Score: 1

      I read it more as "We don't have the money, time, or people to try and verify what you claim with the information given to us." I don't think this is so much a "standing up for student's rights" issue as a "you want us to do all the legwork for you and not pay us" issue.

      --
      "But this one goes to 11!"
    7. Re:Hopefully More Push-back Follows. by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 3, Informative

      I read it as "your evidence doesn't show that the person to whom the IP address is registered is a copyright infringer, and we are prohibited by law from divulging any identity information about anyone else".

      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    8. Re:Hopefully More Push-back Follows. by Mister+Whirly · · Score: 1

      Isn't that up to the courts to decide, and not the university?

      --
      "But this one goes to 11!"
    9. Re:Hopefully More Push-back Follows. by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 1

      Of course it is, ultimately. But lawyers have to make that preliminary determination as well. The Attorney General had to advise the University as to whether the subpoena was legal, and concluded that it was not.

      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    10. Re:Hopefully More Push-back Follows. by Kjella · · Score: 1

      "If you testify, I'll kill your pets, your kids, and your grandparents, in alphabetical order." Time to go down to the dog pound as well as purchasing "1000 dog names starting by A", then?
      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  6. Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by MobyDisk · · Score: 2, Interesting

    IANAL.
    The U. of Oregon is right that the IP address is insufficient to identify the infringer. But I don't think that is a valid reason to deny a subpoena. Currently, the RIAA knows the alleged infringement came from university. If they can subpoena information that reduces that down to 2 likely suspects, then that is perfectly valid. The fact that this evidence alone cannot identify the individual precisely doesn't mean that they don't have a case.

    1. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by TheMeuge · · Score: 1

      IANAL, but I don't think you can sue "suspects". You need to identify the person or entity you're suing. If you could sue suspects, the RIAA could just sue every college student.

    2. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wow, many people don't RTFA and get slammed for it, sounds like you didn't read anything except the headline!

      Even the summary clearly indicates that the only thing the University can state with any accuracy is the room that was used, and whether the computer was a PC or a MAC.

      This in no-way limits the pool of potential "defendants" to two, (which was also stated in the summary), it simply says that it could have been on-or-the-other of the two room-mates, or any guest they may have ever had, or anyone else who may have had access to the room (i.e. janitorial staff, friends, friends' friends, party guests, etc.).

      The University seems to be essentially saying that the scope of the investigation that they would have to undertake in order to comply with the subpoena exceeds the burden the litigant is (or should be?) permitted to impose on them.

      -AC

    3. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by jbwolfe · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think the issue all along has been that IP addresses are not persons. Yes, you can argue that the address has a responsible person behind it, and perhaps that's all the law cares about. But the RIAA needs to prove the infringing party is the same one who owns the IP address- not trivial. They are asking the ISP or University to decide who that is. All it takes is an uneducated person with an unsecured WAP and a savvy and unscrupulous wardriver and suddenly the ignorant have become copyright infringers. Leave your dorm room open and unattended or be unlucky enough to share an address with a dishonest roommate who points the finger at you could be enough to cause heaps of trouble.

      --
      Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac?
    4. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 5, Informative

      I think the issue all along has been that IP addresses are not persons. Yes, you can argue that the address has a responsible person behind it, and perhaps that's all the law cares about. But the RIAA needs to prove the infringing party is the same one who owns the IP address- not trivial. They are asking the ISP or University to decide who that is. All it takes is an uneducated person with an unsecured WAP and a savvy and unscrupulous wardriver and suddenly the ignorant have become copyright infringers. Leave your dorm room open and unattended or be unlucky enough to share an address with a dishonest roommate who points the finger at you could be enough to cause heaps of trouble. You have hit the nail on the head. The RIAA's investigation, at its best, only takes them to the dynamic IP address. That is not "all the law cares about". In copyright infringement, one cannot be held responsible for another's copyright infringement under 'secondary infringement' theory unless one affirmatively induced it.
      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    5. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 1

      And after they prove it in court, through due process, they can get that information.

      Not before.

      As it says in the constitution of the USA. Not the corporate charter of the RIAA.

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
    6. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by cliffski · · Score: 0, Troll

      Then the university needs to take steps to prevent it happening. if that means banning certain p2p protocols or certain websites then so be it. Sorry to burst everyone's bubble but universities are places where you go to further your education, not to shield yourself from prosecution when you knowingly and repeatedly download copyrighted music that you do not pay for, and for which you know payment is required.
      You may not believe in copyright, or the rights of the IP holders, fine, then you should fight to change the law, or happily be prosecuted so you can have your day in court and make your spec about the injustice. But to hide behind university lawyers and IT people who frankly have better things to do than stick up for the illegal activities of the students, is just lame.

      --
      DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
    7. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by wizzard2k · · Score: 1

      I would be surprised if this is the end of it. I'd reason to believe the university knows exactly which port had the IP in question at the designated time. The burden here, I'm assuming, is that UO is unwilling to go the extra length required to determine who was at that port at the time.
      If the dorms are anything like mine were, one roommate is on each side of the room, and there's a good chance it not too hard to figure out. Proving this in court, to the extent to base your case on it, is probably not a good idea, since I know we reconfigured our dorm furniture at least a dozen times. Interestingly enough, the desks always stayed in the same basic position, due to the requirement of nearby network and power... Granted I had a router plugged into mine, with at least two PCs running off it at any given time (desktop, server, and the computer I was fixing at the time), so that could have been my defense were it at all necessary in 2000.
      Personally I think the university is just following the RIAA's request to the letter, and giving them a big FU to the spirit. They probably could go the extra mile and figure out who the defendants should be, but they probably don't want to bite the hand that pays them.

    8. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by AndersOSU · · Score: 1

      I know I'm feeding a troll, but it is hardly the universities job to enforce the law, anymore than it is my landlords responsibility to make sure I'm not doing illicit things in my apartment. Sure, my landlord can evict me if he discovers I'm doing something illegal (violating the terms of my lease), but he is under no obligation to keep an eye on me.

      More to the point, the university has no more of an obligation to ban p2p than comcast does. Do you think that comcast should be breaking the internet by shutting down connections that it doesn't like? Do you think that any of these solutions are viable long term as protocols evolve to better cope with draconian filtering policies?

    9. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1

      The University doesn't "need" to do anything that the law doesn't require them to do. It's not their problem if there's no way for the RIAA to enforce its business model.

    10. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by johnnyheavens · · Score: 1

      This isn't the case. What UofO and the AG are saying is that the information only points at two possible machines and any number of potential people and that they simply are not going provide names without detail. Making broad sweeping requests for information never means you are required to give detail that may or may not be unrelated. It's more then a valid reason to deny. Innocent until proven guilty is something that must be respected along the way of an investigation/lawsuit. The school has no business sharing information that may not be true. Perhaps if the user(s) in question had been logged into school systems with a school ID...that seem a whole other story.

    11. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just curious.

      Why can't the RIAA just sue the University as the infringement happened on their network?

    12. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by besenslon · · Score: 2, Informative

      not to shield yourself from prosecution when you knowingly and repeatedly download copyrighted music that you do not pay for

      C'mon, it's unbelievable that still here on /. there are people which believe that it's unlawful to download. The copyright infringement is actually the distribution, i.e. the uploading. Looks like the RIAA's PR campaign does it's job ...

    13. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by nosferatu1001 · · Score: 1

      Why not?

      As they are a service provider they are not responsible for the actions of their users, unless they induce users into committing infringing acts.

      Your version would lead to Comcast or Sky getting sued due to users downloading movies. This would only happen if comcast ran ads saying "join us, and download for FREEEEEE!!!!!"

    14. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 1

      This in no-way limits the pool of potential "defendants" to two, (which was also stated in the summary), it simply says that it could have been on-or-the-other of the two room-mates, or any guest they may have ever had, or anyone else who may have had access to the room (i.e. janitorial staff, friends, friends' friends, party guests, etc.).

      I got in trouble with my university for trolling an IRC chat room. (Chat roomed admin called my ISP.) They traced it to my internet connection.

      TRUST ME, the "roommate, janitorial staff, friends, friends' friends, party guests, etc." defense DOESN'T WORK. They know you can secure access to your own computer and will attribute responsibility for it. And remember, this was for a reprimand offense. Imagine how much more scruity such a b/s defense is going to get when you try it on a copyright infringement case in an actual court.

      Not AL, but aware of the patience of courts.

    15. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 1

      And what authority do you have for your statement? You cannot point to a single case.

      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    16. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by Leto-II · · Score: 1

      Then the university needs to take steps to prevent it happening. if that means banning certain p2p protocols or certain websites then so be it. Sorry to burst everyone's bubble but universities are places where you go to further your education, not to shield yourself from prosecution when you knowingly and repeatedly download copyrighted music that you do not pay for, and for which you know payment is required.
      You may not believe in copyright, or the rights of the IP holders, fine, then you should fight to change the law, or happily be prosecuted so you can have your day in court and make your spec about the injustice. But to hide behind university lawyers and IT people who frankly have better things to do than stick up for the illegal activities of the students, is just lame. Speaking from... uhm... first hand experience here. They do some prevention of P2P. No matter what they do there is always ways around it though.

      They severely rate limit traffic they can identify as P2P traffic. This is easily overcome by encrypting bittorrent traffic, which all modern BT clients can do.

      They also will monitor your traffic usage and if, for instance, you use a large percentage of the traffic they will tell you to back off -- they don't know it is because of illegal activity but they also don't want you using so much bandwidth it effects other student's network service.

      Also, they do some follow up when they get complaints from MPAA/RIAA and the like. They have sent notices to whoever is registered as residing where the infringing ethernet port is located to tell them the University received complaints and if it happens again ethernet access will be revoked. The infringer has to sign a document saying they won't do it again. But giving some warnings like this and taking legal action are two entirely different things.
      --
      Do not anger the worm.
    17. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 0

      I'm impressed: with one post making a perfectly reasonable argument, you've managed to get one reply accusing you of trolling because they disagree with your position, a second one that completely missed the point that this whole discussion is about what the law requires the University to do, and a third who thinks Slashdot groupthink is a good source of legal advice as long as it's repeated often enough.

      Congratulations, that's a pretty good hat trick for just having a dissenting view! :-)

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    18. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by GrayMatters · · Score: 1

      I believe there are many instances though in which an IP address is much more equivalent to a person than is this case here, apparently. At a university I'm familiar with, for example, students in residence halls are required to register their network adapter's MAC address in order to gain network access. The MAC address is associated with their unique user account, and given an IP address and a timestamp by Media Sentry or whoever, it's relatively straightforward to determine which MAC address was the recipient of the IP lease at the given timestamp. They may not be the user behind the keyboard if copyright infringement occurs, but barring something like MAC address spoofing, it's pretty incontrovertible that the keyboard where the infringement occurred was theirs. While I laud Oregon for refusing to place an undue burden on themselves, this really wouldn't be a uniformly precedent-setting situation should it pan out in Oregon's favor, as far as I can tell.

    19. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by cliffski · · Score: 0

      Indeed, this is the common view on slashdot. its fine according to groupthink here to download copyrighted material, because the people who try to earn a living creating the movies, music and games we all love are 'teh evil mafiaaaaa' and you are sticking it to the man by stealing their stuff.
      I love the dig at me 'falling for teh mafiaaaa PR!!!!11!!'. believe it or not, I believe in paying people for their work. Its called being honest and not trying to rip off my fellow man. Alien concepts to most of the posters here and on digg.

      --
      DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
    20. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by tholomyes · · Score: 1

      I kind of doubt that students are paying thousands of dollars in books, tuition, and housing just to "shield themselves from prosecution" and "hide behind university lawyers". And the banning of protocols is generally not a good idea, since there are often many legitimate uses for them-- in bittorrent's example, Linux distros, WoW patches, and legally available music, for instance-- but building blacklists at the firewall level wouldn't be unreasonable.

      "...and IT people who frankly have better things to do than stick up for the illegal activities of the students..."

      Like spend their time policing their network, banning protocols and websites, instead? I think either is going to take a fair amount of time, but in this case the UofO isn't defending the students, it's defending against... wasting the time of their IT staff in chasing people down. I'm sure they have better things to do.

      --
      When did the future switch from being a promise to a threat? -C. Palahniuk
    21. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by nomadic · · Score: 2, Informative

      You can sue "John Doe", with the understanding that you'll hopefully find out who he is during the discovery process.

    22. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by Eyeball97 · · Score: 1

      "They know you can secure access to your own computer and will attribute responsibility for it."

      HAHAHAhahahahaha .....

      Give the right person physical access, and all bets are off. In fact, I'm surprised none of the defence lawyers have used this to their advantage. Set up a demonstration in the courtroom of exactly how "hard" it is to get into the average computer if you have physical access.

      You don't even need to touch their HD or break their passwords (barring a bios password). Bootable flash drive? Portable apps anyone?

      Well, that, plus it's the same as prosecuting party 'a' because party 'b' stole their firearm and used it in a crime, which would never stand up in court (unless party 'a' were somehow proven to be implicated or was somehow negligent).

      But then laws do seem open to interpretation, to suit the crime^h^h^h^h^hmoney?

    23. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For trolling an IRC channel? Really? Were you also spamming gigabytes of child porn, or was this a case of someone with way too much time on their hands filing frivolous abuse reports?

    24. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      How exactly do you convict an IP address?

      OK, so you are confirming the idea that there can never, ever be any enforcement of copyright infringment? Are you sure you are comfortable with that? Because pretty much that means that no matter what I (or anyone else) does to you as long as the Internet is the vehicle there can never, ever be any consequences. Fraud, libel, threats, theft, invasion of privacy, no matter what - it is all a free ride because all you can ever track it to is an IP address which doesn't ever identify a person.

      Sure, it might narrow it down to one of a few people. But you are saying without first convicting the IP address in court you can't even learn the identity of the person.

      Is that really what you mean?

    25. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by FishWithAHammer · · Score: 1

      Ouch. Owned by Mr. Beckerman.

      Side note: I was unfortunately unable to attend the speech you gave this Monday at my school, Mr. Beckerman, but I heard very good things!

      --
      "You can either have software quality or you can have pointer arithmetic, but you cannot have both at the same time."
    26. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so if the students are trading child porn or planning a terrorist attack, and the university is told what ip address... do they ignore that too? or only ignore the untrendy laws?

    27. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Serving is "illegally" making available for distribution a product which you lack distribution rights for.

      Downloading (requesting) is initiating a copy operation, or in short, performing the actual unauthorized duplication.

      I think the crap should be legal, but there's no question that it's not now, by current definitions of infringement.

    28. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 1

      Give the right person physical access, and all bets are off. In fact, I'm surprised none of the defence lawyers have used this to their advantage. Set up a demonstration in the courtroom of exactly how "hard" it is to get into the average computer if you have physical access.

      You don't even need to touch their HD or break their passwords (barring a bios password). Bootable flash drive? Portable apps anyone?


      Okay, well I do wish you luck if you try to argue that someone snuck into your dorm room (and no one else's!) without your knowledge, carrying bootable equipment, opened the P2P programs on your OS, downloaded copyrighted files, and then vanished with no clear benefit to himself, without creating any witnesses or appearing on any video cameras.

      Seriously -- your defense would work just the same as a defense in prosecutions of laws you do support (child porn, ID theft), so it sounds to me like you're just rationalizing: "no one can ever be proven, to my standards, to have committed a computer crime, but only for those crimes I don't think should be crimes."

      Well, that, plus it's the same as prosecuting party 'a' because party 'b' stole their firearm and used it in a crime, which would never stand up in court (unless party 'a' were somehow proven to be implicated or was somehow negligent).

      Um, not reporting the theft of your firearm until someone commits a crime with it (assuming there's a long enough gap) will certainly get you into a lot of trouble, even if you're not charged with the crime that that person committed.

    29. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 4, Informative

      You have to have evidence that the person you're suing has committed the copyright infringement before the Court can permit discovery of his identity information. As Oregon's AG pointed out, the RIAA doesn't have such evidence.

      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    30. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 1

      Thanks, Fish. Sorry I didn't get to meet you in person. I had a nice time in Orono, meeting some really fine folks.

      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    31. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by jp10558 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Okay, well I do wish you luck if you try to argue that someone snuck into your dorm room (and no one else's!) without your knowledge, carrying bootable equipment, opened the P2P programs on your OS, downloaded copyrighted files, and then vanished with no clear benefit to himself, without creating any witnesses or appearing on any video cameras.

      Umm, hell people don't notice much larger things than someone (say, another student) wandering into someone else's dorm room and futzing with their computer for a while. Ever watch *any* cop tv show? People don't notice murderers wandering into neighboor's houses/apartments. And they usually catch the killer on TV!

      Plus, did you miss the boot Knoppix + plug in flash drive? Music doesn't take hours to download, and that's what we're talking about.

      Let me also address several other points:

      1. Video camera's? How many *DORM ROOMS* have survellience cameras installed? How many *DORM ROOMS* have 2 people with access who regularily let in other people to hang out and do stuff? We're not talking about Mission Impossible break in people in black skinsuits here, we're talking other college students. How are you picking them out of survellience video anyway?

      2. no one else's dorm room? I'll bet the RIAA is handing over more than 1 request - likely 10+.

      3. Not reporting theft of a firearm? Not sure what the point here is but what if you don't notice the firearm is gone? If you think it's safely locked up, you may not check on it often. Maybe not for a year (next hunting season?). Likewise, how would you know (unless you really set up all sorts of software logging) if someone ran a portable app to save to a flash drive some music, or booted into Knoppix and saved to a flash drive/network share?

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
    32. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I think that what the U of O is doing is living up to the letter of the law, not the spirit of the law.

      Same tactic that RIAA is doing too, but I think the thing that the U of O is pointing out is that they, as an uncompensated 3rd party would be unduly incumbered in performing work for the RIAA which falls beyond the scope of the law.

      Course, I could be wrong.

    33. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1

      a case of someone with way too much time on their hands filing frivolous abuse reports?

      If you've spent any time on IRC you should know that there are many many people who are more than happy to wile away their days doing exactly this.

    34. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 1

      I didn't say any of that. I said the subpoena's should stand up to due process challenges if they are valid.

      If they aren't, then they won't.

      I don't see how this has anything to do with me liking copyright infringement.

      Sean

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
    35. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by Eyeball97 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Who's to say they "snuck" in? There are probably a thousand valid reasons why you'd *let* someone use your computer - and you don't stand over their shoulder to make sure they're not doing anything they shouldn't. And yes, the same arguments could *and should* be used in child porn, etc cases. Otherwise you are prosecuting people without having proven *beyond all reasonable doubt* that it was them.

      Quite right, too. If you're going to prosecute someone for child porn and ruin their lives, you better be *damn* sure they're guilty.

      No clear benefit? Did you bother reading the post? You have heard of a flash drive, have you? You make "carrying bootable equipment" sound like a big deal. Mine's a 16Gb Corsair. Fill that sucker up with mp3's and tell me I got no benefit. Hell, my *phone's* got 4Gb. That's before I even whip the 250gb usb laptop drive out my pocket.

      Guns...Who said anything about *not* reporting it stolen? Who said anything about *not noticing* it was stolen until after the fact. Do *you* check your gun safe every day to make sure it's still there? Oh, and you seem to have conveniently overlooked "(unless party 'a' were somehow proven to be implicated or was somehow negligent)" which makes you a journalist, or a lawyer. :-)

    36. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by viper66 · · Score: 1

      At my university we had to register the MAC address of our network card with the IT department when we signed the AUP. Unregistered MACs were not given an IP or routed to the Internet. I don't recall if there was anything in the AUP about being responsible for what other people did while using your PC, but even if there was I think setting a OS password would be considered secure enough by their standards. As others have said, this would not prevent someone else from using your PC with bootable portable media, and given that your roommate could provide someone else access to your PC without your knowledge or consent I don't see how you could be held responsible in a lawsuit.

    37. Re:Unfortunately, this is a valid subpoena by compro01 · · Score: 1

      then that would be a criminal matter and completely different rules would apply, as this was a civil case.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
  7. RIAA is rubbish. Question here for the law types. by ACK!! · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The bullying tactics the lawyers have used in the suits typically reside under the term of "unduly burdensome".

    I am glad that the U. of Oregon stood up to these guys but it seems that the idea of a warrant or getting this information as being "unduly burdensome" seems pretty broad.

    Is there a solid definition in these types of cases for what is really unduly burdensome?

    --
    ACK /ak/ interj. 2. [from the comic strip "Bloom County"] An exclamation of surprised disgust, esp. i
  8. How's their safe harbor doing? by Daffy+Duck · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If they can't identify "subscribers", how can they pass along DMCA complaints or terminate the accounts of repeat offenders? If they can't do those things, does that eliminate their Safe Harbor status?

    If I were an RIAA shark, I'd smell blood in the water.

    1. Re:How's their safe harbor doing? by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      No. If they take down material and neglect to take "reasonable steps to notify the subscriber" (i.e., the person who posted the material in the first place), they lose the legal protection against any damages that the takedown causes to the subscriber. The RIAA would not benefit from this even if the university never notified anybody of a DMCA takedown.

    2. Re:How's their safe harbor doing? by Gravatron · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Unless the person lives alone, has a completely secured wireless/wired connection, is free of bots, trojons, and a thousand other things, you can never be entirely sure who was using the machine. It's a fundlemental failing of the law, IMHO, which is a result of bad lobbying, and a lack of technical understanding by those who passed the law.

    3. Re:How's their safe harbor doing? by AndersOSU · · Score: 1

      You forgot guests. The RIAA should also have to provide evidence that it is unlikely that someone else touched this locked down computer.

    4. Re:How's their safe harbor doing? by JoelKatz · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > If they can't identify "subscribers", how can they pass along DMCA complaints
      > or terminate the accounts of repeat offenders? If they can't do those things,
      > does that eliminate their Safe Harbor status?

      Short answer, "no".

      Slightly longer answer, many services can't do that. Requiring them to would place an impossible burden on anonymous speech.

    5. Re:How's their safe harbor doing? by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      You are confusing hosting with an Internet connection. As far as I know, nobody has ever been served with a DMCA violation because of something they were doing with their own computer. Like sending email to someone.

      DMCA doesn't apply, really. What would you "take down"?

      Besides, as others point out, there is no law here. Nothing.

    6. Re:How's their safe harbor doing? by peacefinder · · Score: 4, Informative

      "If I were an RIAA shark, I'd smell blood in the water."

      Well, yes. But the question is, whose blood?

      As I said elsewhere, the U.O. President is a former dean of the U.O. Law School, and a former Attorney General of the State of Oregon. His university bio says he argued seven cases before the US Supreme Court as state AG and won six, and goes on to say that's more cases and a better record than any other contemporary State A.G. Its almost impossible to imagine that the University took this step without consulting him, and it's equally difficult to imagine he's misjudged the strength of their case or that he's afraid to take it all the way to the US Supreme Court.

      I think the RIAA's sharks have just bitten a much bigger shark. If they aren't looking for a way to swim away quietly, they're in for a hell of a fight.

      --
      With reasonable men I will reason; with humane men I will plead; but to tyrants I will give no quarter. -- William Lloyd
    7. Re:How's their safe harbor doing? by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 1

      If I were an RIAA shark, I'd smell blood in the water." Well, yes. But the question is, whose blood? As I said elsewhere, the U.O. President is a former dean of the U.O. Law School, and a former Attorney General of the State of Oregon. His university bio says he argued seven cases before the US Supreme Court as state AG and won six, and goes on to say that's more cases and a better record than any other contemporary State A.G. Its almost impossible to imagine that the University took this step without consulting him, and it's equally difficult to imagine he's misjudged the strength of their case or that he's afraid to take it all the way to the US Supreme Court. I think the RIAA's sharks have just bitten a much bigger shark. If they aren't looking for a way to swim away quietly, they're in for a hell of a fight. Great post. I'd mod you up to +5.

      I think the RIAA "sharks" are in a state of shock at the moment.
      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    8. Re:How's their safe harbor doing? by Daffy+Duck · · Score: 1

      I truly hope you're right, because these thugs need to have their asses handed to them in a big way.

      But I don't think U.O.'s president is going to be the savior here. President of a university is a full-time-and-then-some job. If RIAA sues them and claims their Safe Harbor is forfeit, is he going to quit and go back into private practice to take on a case on behalf of UO? Is he going to drag his $500-million-a-year university into court against the $20-billion-a-year recording industry over a law that is so stacked in their favor that the only likely way to litigate it away is to get the most conservative Supreme Court in decades to come down on the side of the little guy?

      And look at the cases he did win before the Supreme Court - they all have a creepy "the State can do whatever it wants to you" flavor to them. I'm not betting on this pony to save our civil liberties.

    9. Re:How's their safe harbor doing? by peacefinder · · Score: 1

      Well, IANAL, but this is /., so...

      It seems likely to me that this motion to quash will be granted. If so, then there's two possibilities: if the RIAA has better evidence of identity it will try again and if the subpoena is sufficient UO will give them what they ask for. If they don't have data to support another subpoena, the RIAA will walk away. I seriously doubt this matter will get to the Supremes; it seems like a narrow technical issue. It is not necessarily some principled stand by the university.

      Either way, though, if the motion to quash is granted it'll be a big loss for the RIAA's actions against users of university networks, because it'll show other universities another way to deal with the subpoenas. The important thing is that the UO president has demonstrated sound legal and procedural skills in the past - enough to get to and win at the USSC - so if he's allowing his institution to do this then the idea probably has substantial legal merit. Other university administrations will pay attention, because he's got credentials in this area that most others lack.

      The problem for the RIAA here is that they picked a target that has chosen to call BS, and the credibility of the UO president is going to make that cry of BS heard nationwide.

      --
      With reasonable men I will reason; with humane men I will plead; but to tyrants I will give no quarter. -- William Lloyd
    10. Re:How's their safe harbor doing? by Daffy+Duck · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I didn't make my original question clear. I agree that *this* case has nothing to do with the DMCA and that the subpoena could easily be quashed and UO is victorious. My concern is that they're establishing as their "defense" that they have no way of determining who is using their network. And I'm wondering if that destroys their safe harbor under the DMCA. Not relevant for *this* case, but for the very next copyright complaint about something from a UO IP address, could the university itself be the defendant liable for millions rather than the messenger for a student who only has thousands?

  9. this is not how you defeat the riaa by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    everyone still keeps acting like the riaa can be defeated with reason and legal leg work. as the recent jury trial showed, reason and legal legwork cannot defeat legions of well-funded lawyers. the only way to defeat the riaa is to wait them out

    once there was a time when we were nothing but small mammals, and the world was ruled by terrible lizards. in the realm of intellectual property, this is that time. the internet, of course, obliterates the old economic models of distribution. the old economic models are the riaa's sustenance. so you defeat the riaa by waiting for it's food source to dry up

    in the meantime, do what little mammals do best: be nocturnal, be quick, be small, be quiet. mask yourself, use proxies, do all manner of obfuscation and security through obscurity. the internet has no legal jurisdiction. don't fight them head on. just hide

    there will be of course casualties, even a dying lizard can swing it's tail mightily. but in the end, it will be dead, and we shall inherit the earth. patience my friends. you cannot defeat the terrible lizard head on. just wait for it to die of starvation

    it's economic model is history. the only one who doesn't know it is the riaa. there is no reasoning with the terrible beast, it's behaviors are not, and never have been, and never will be rational. you do not reason with a legal attack dog

    wait, and the riaa will die. stop trying to reason with the unreasonable

    suing soccer moms and grandmothers for thousands of dollars is not the actions of a rational entity. it is the mark of a last desperate stand, and the end is in sight

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:this is not how you defeat the riaa by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 5, Insightful

      everyone still keeps acting like the riaa can be defeated with reason and legal leg work. as the recent jury trial showed, reason and legal legwork cannot defeat legions of well-funded lawyers. the only way to defeat the riaa is to wait them out You've got to be kidding.

      1. You can't "wait them out" if you're the one that's being sued (or, as in this case, the university that's being put in a position in which it's being forced to violate the law)

      2. If you think this motion doesn't have enormous impact, you're wrong.

      3. The Capitol v. Thomas case is far from over.
      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    2. Re:this is not how you defeat the riaa by 6Yankee · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      once there was a time when keyboards had shift keys

      once there was a time when slashdotters knew the difference between its and it's, and how to use full stops

    3. Re:this is not how you defeat the riaa by Xeth · · Score: 1

      This is a fallacy known as "reasoning by analogy". While, yes, an unfunded RIAA is a powerless RIAA, there very well may be other ways to effect the desired changes in the world. Ancient ecosystems have very different rules from the modern legal system, and you shouldn't expect them to behave in the same way.

      --
      If your theory is different from practice, then your theory is wrong.
    4. Re:this is not how you defeat the riaa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If you have karma to burn by posting crap like that whilst logged in, then maybe you could point out to these barely literate "turds" that there is a difference between "then" and "than".

      Fuck, that irks me, mightily.

    5. Re:this is not how you defeat the riaa by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's not the RIAA that's doing this, it's 4 large record companies who are hiding behind the RIAA as a way of concealing their antitrust law-prohibited conduct. I have never seen any plaintiff who is not a label owned by the big 4. There are hundreds of other record companies who are RIAA members who have not been a part of any of these lawsuits. If I were an RIAA member I would be asking law enforcement authorities to investigate.

      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    6. Re:this is not how you defeat the riaa by u-235-sentinel · · Score: 1

      3. The Capitol v. Thomas case is far from over.

      Correct me if I'm wrong but I understood that while the Jury found her guilty, she is now claiming the fines are not consistent with damages the RIAA experience. That since the songs in question are around 99 cents from iTunes (for example) and the RIAA receives around 70 cents from the sale, that the judgment should come down to reflect real damages not some made up number.

      Basically that the fine was unconstitutionally excessive.

      --
      Has Comcast disconnected your Internet account? Same here. You can read about it at http://comcastissue.blogspot.com
    7. Re:this is not how you defeat the riaa by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 1

      The jury awarded the record companies $220,000.
      She has made a motion to set aside the verdict.
      If her motion is not granted, she will be filing an appeal.

      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    8. Re:this is not how you defeat the riaa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      once there was a time when we were nothing but small mammals, and the world was ruled by terrible lizards. in the realm of intellectual property, this is that time. the internet, of course, obliterates the old economic models of distribution. the old economic models are the riaa's sustenance. so you defeat the riaa by waiting for it's food source to dry up


      To take your bad analogy one step further...

      The dinosaurs didn't die overnight. Nor over 1 year. It was sudden on "geologic" timescales -- not the timescale of a human lifetime.

      So far we've shown that we're almost incapable of thinking of consequences beyond a single human lifetime. Most folks now accept laws that give the government powers which would have had our (recent) colonial ancestors up in arms. No. The time to fight this battle is now. Not actively fighting this now is the same as letting it become the accepted norm for the next generation.
  10. U of O A Good Place To Start by VoxMagis · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I live in the same town.

    With Phil Knight's money behind them, a former State Attorney General as the head of the school, and a liberal-leaning state, this could really spell out some issues for RIAA.

    --
    -- I really need to bleed off some of this /. karma.
    1. Re:U of O A Good Place To Start by MacGyver2210 · · Score: 1

      I hope so. I also hope the RIAA blows all or most of their worth in money on these cases all over the country, and when they come out the loser because of legal precedent or injunction, have no legs to stand on and collapse entirely. -R

      --
      If the only way you can accept an assertion is by faith, then you are conceding that it can't be taken on its own merits
  11. IP Trace subpoena by Christoph · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A subpoena for an IP trace ("tell me who owned this internet access account on this date") is not normally a burden. If the subpoena instead requested the school "identify who was using this computer at this time", the school's response fits. The subpoena requires the school investigate, not just disgorge a few records.

    Maybe all the students in the dorm could each claim they were the guilty party? ("I'm Sparticus!")

    1. Re:IP Trace subpoena by Daniel_Staal · · Score: 1

      Maybe all the students in the dorm could each claim they were the guilty party? ("I'm Sparticus!")

      The RIAA would just take that as admission of guilt and sue each one of them seperately for their lifetime total income + damages.

      --
      'Sensible' is a curse word.
    2. Re:IP Trace subpoena by techpawn · · Score: 1
      I can just see it:

      Requesting information for IP Address 127.0.0.1 on Oct-31-2007

      Your resistance will be noted! Thank you,
      RIAA
      We ALL did it!
      --
      Ask not what you can do for your country. Ask what your country did to you
    3. Re:IP Trace subpoena by Technician · · Score: 1

      Maybe all the students in the dorm could each claim they were the guilty party? ("I'm Sparticus!")

      I like the idea. Even better, I like the idea that all MAC address belong to some Linksys router or another in the dorm. Beyond NAT, it could be anyone.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    4. Re:IP Trace subpoena by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      Maybe all the students in the dorm could each claim they were the guilty party?

      "Is thewe anyone hewe named... Bwian?"

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    5. Re:IP Trace subpoena by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      Maybe all the students in the dorm could each claim they were the guilty party? ("I'm Sparticus!")

      As I recall, the slaves who tried that in the Third Servile War were all killed anyway for their trouble. Perhaps not the best example to follow.

    6. Re:IP Trace subpoena by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If one of the students in the room setup a wireless router there is no way to track down the mysterious WHO once the traffic bounced beyond the IP address of the room.

      The lesson here is that everyone should own a wireless router...even if they don't use it :-)

    7. Re:IP Trace subpoena by Corporate+Drone · · Score: 2, Insightful
      IANAL, but nonetheless, I think you're got the wrong idea here...

      A subpoena for an IP trace ("tell me who owned this internet access account on this date") is not normally a burden. If the subpoena instead requested the school "identify who was using this computer at this time", the school's response fits.

      From the fine document:

      On September 17, 2007, Plaintiffs served the University of Oregon ("University") with a subpoena under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 45, commanding the University to produce "[i]nformation, including names, current and permanent addresses, and telephone numbers, sufficient to identify the alleged infringers of copyrighted sound recordings" for the seventeen IP addresses attached to the subpoena.

      The school was asked to provide identifying info sufficient to identify the alleged infringers, based on IP address. They showed that they're unable to do so. At best, they might provide dorm room numbers, for a portion of those IPs, but even so, they wouldn't be able to provide info that's "sufficient to identify alleged infringers". Therefore, they're asking the subpoena to be tossed.

      The subpoena requires the school investigate, not just disgorge a few records.

      No, that's not what subpoenas do. Subpoenas don't compel people to embark on investigations; that's the duty of the plaintiffs in this case. Instead, this ex parte subpoena simply says, "we've uncovered proof that a particular individual infringed; all we need now is their name, and you can provide it to us". A subpoena'ed individual is not required to go investigate, but rather, simply provide the records and information that is in their possession.

      What's newsworthy here is that the U of O is finally standing up to the RIAA's fishing expeditions and saying, "sorry ... we're not going to do your investigative work for you."

      --
      mmm... yeah... You see, we're putting the cover sheets on all TPS reports now before they go out...
    8. Re:IP Trace subpoena by zegron · · Score: 1

      "I'm Sparticus"

      Well in the RIAA's case they would just sue them all. :-P So I doubt the sparticus type defense would be very viable. :-)

  12. Couldn't the RIAA just rephrase it's request? by pavon · · Score: 1

    The way I understand this, the RIAA subpoenaed the identity of the person using a certain IP at a certain time. The university responded that they don't know and it isn't their job to find out. So couldn't the RIAA just modify their subpoena to ask for the information that the university does have (the dorm room, MAC address, OS info, etc), and then do further investigation on their own? At that point they still have to convince a judge that they have enough evidence to go to court (provided they don't scare the students into settling). I definitely agree that this is not enough information by itself to find someone liable for copyright infringement, but I guess I don't see why that is a valid excuse for the university to not provide the information that they have.

    1. Re:Couldn't the RIAA just rephrase it's request? by nosferatu1001 · · Score: 1

      Becuase you didn't read the rest of it - that the university cannot say it was only the users in that dorm room that accessed it, it still leaves all potnetial visitors, cleaning staff etc who may have done somehting. It still does not reduce the poool of people by any reasonable amount....

    2. Re:Couldn't the RIAA just rephrase it's request? by tekiegreg · · Score: 1

      I dunno about that one, if entrances are logged into dorms (and dorm rooms?) via key card or similar technology, a through investigation can reveal a few hundred people who swiped the card in the dorm and a few at best who swiped the card in the dorm room. That still leaves a few but with other corroborating evidence you might be able to pinpoint someone. Still for the RIAA to do this, it goes far past the point of diminishing returns, but the RIAA has been good at doing just that...

      --
      ...in bed
  13. As a UofO Graduate this make me PROUD!!! by joshuao3 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Go Ducks!

    It's about time someone fought back. UofO has the backing of Phil Knight (founder of Nike), so there should be plenty of money to fight off the RIAA should things get ugly.

    --
    Monitor bandwidth usage on IIS6 in real-time: http://www.waetech.com/services/iisbm/
  14. Recycle used CDs, save the planet by digitaldc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    the University is able to identify only the room where the content was accessed and whether or not the computer used was a Macintosh or a PC ... The University cannot determine whether the content in question accessed by one occupant as opposed to another, or whether it was accessed instead by a visitor

    Back in the day, we used to tape tapes and albums with absolutely no consequences. And we still bought new tapes and albums anyway. Today, we are assumed to be criminals for doing the same thing, only now in digital format. What is a person to do?

    I'll think I will stick to used CD stores for now. Reduce, reuse, recycle.

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
    1. Re:Recycle used CDs, save the planet by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 4, Interesting

      growing up in the 70's and 80's I remember radio stations having special 'whole album sides' plays. they'd even give you a count-down before they started the first uninterrupted track.

      can't get much more blatant than THAT, can you?

      if it was ok then - and the sony/betamax case already established our right to make personal copies of 'media' - what's changed?

      what's changed is that media companies see the signaling of the end for their business model. they see they have 5-10 yrs left, if even that. they are trying to milk the system for all its worth, ONE final time.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    2. Re:Recycle used CDs, save the planet by Tuoqui · · Score: 1

      You'd be considered a criminal for doing the same anyways. Look at Florida if you want to sell a used CD to a shop they gotta get your drivers license and ID and stuff and hold things for 10 days before stocking it on shelves, etc... because of some dumb law the RIAA got put in.

      Its because they want to be the point of sale for EVERY copy forever and ever. Dont think if they could get away with it with DRM and crap that they wouldnt try making you buy the same song for your computer, your iPod, Your Stereo, Your car and Your Radio.

      --
      09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
      +2 Troll is Slashdot's way of saying groupthink is confused
    3. Re:Recycle used CDs, save the planet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You compare copying a tape a distributing a CD via P2P, well, they are not really the same are they.

      I often hear the "tape" argument but lets be honest. When we copied tapes form friends we had to know the person, they had to trust us enough to let us borrow the tape and it took a sizable amount of time even with "high speed dubbing".

      As it stands in the digital realm, you can rip a complete CD in a matter of minutes, and then send out thousands of copies in a small amount of time without having to ever have met the person getting it, much less know them enough to call them a friend.

      How often did you take you copied tapes and leave them out in public for everyone to copy? I never did personally.

      Go copy a tape from a friend, the RIAA will not give you the least bit of shit for it. Rip a cd and make it available to millions, yeah that is a different story.

    4. Re:Recycle used CDs, save the planet by Xentor · · Score: 1

      The RIAA-approved answer:

      Because now, with everything digital, a copy of a copy of a copy of a copy is as perfect as the original. Back then, there was a limit to how much you could copy before the quality was so low that no one would want it.

      The real answer:

      The MAFIAA realizes that their days are numbered, thanks to the Intarwebs (Tubes, , etc), and found enough congressmen and lawyers, and made them an offer they couldn't refuse.

      --
      "The amount of intelligence on this planet is a constant. The population is growing." -Cole's Axiom
    5. Re:Recycle used CDs, save the planet by vonhammer · · Score: 1

      Yes, but it took time to make the copies. And, because it was so time-consuming, the amount of copyright infringement was very small relative to the store sales. Today, is a whole new world, with the ability to acquire a huge repository of music in almost no time. This has fundamentally changed the dynamics of the marketplace. The record labels would have responded back in the 70s and 80s the same way if CI were as easy and prevalent.

      I agree with you about the labels seeing their window of opportunity shrinking and making a last ditch, desperation attempt, at slapping the genie back into the bottle.

      I also agree with a prior poster that the mammalian response will work away at this over time. The question will eventually be resolved by whether the majority of the population embraces mammal or reptile values. When the majority of your population is breaking the law, it's not time to enforce the law, it's time to change it. But, if the prevailing wisdom sides with CI == theft, then the riaa will be around for a long time running their shakedown operations.

    6. Re:Recycle used CDs, save the planet by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      A tape off the radio or from a CD was (a) not permanent and (b) not all that great. Today we have perfect digital copies that are every bit as good as the original. There is no need to buy the CD when you have the copy, no need whatsoever.

      Anyone using the "try before buy" argument is lying or stupid and wasting their money. Nobody is buying CDs if they are downloading they very same music. Who is buying CDs today? The people without broadband Internet connections because downloading is too slow over dial-up. Nobody I know has bought a CD in almost 10 years. Nobody I know is going to buy a CD ever again, except maybe at a concert as a sort of souvenir.

      What people fail to understand is that the RIAA isn't just fighting to preserve an outmoded business model, they are fighting to preserve any value whatsoever for recorded music. They have pretty much lost the war because nobody under thirty with a broadband Internet connection is ever going to pay for recorded music again. Some people might buy from iTunes, but trust me nobody is filling their 30GB iPod with $5000 worth of music. Or even $1000. It is all out there for free and everyone that can is taking advantage of that.

    7. Re:Recycle used CDs, save the planet by jeffeb3 · · Score: 1

      It might be that the technology means better copies, easier process to make copies, or greater distribution across the vast internet. It could be that the legal framework and standards have changed to make this type of litigation feasible.

      I would argue that the nail in the coffin that makes this so much different than recording to tape on your home recorder has to do with accountability. No one knew who, if anyone was recording the album. Know one knew if you gave your friend a copy a tape you bought. But now, there's an address of the offender.

    8. Re:Recycle used CDs, save the planet by maschwab · · Score: 1

      http://www.freecycle.org/ is a website promoting this. Drill down to your local area and sign up for the Yahoo Group.

    9. Re:Recycle used CDs, save the planet by mdenham · · Score: 1

      There are still radio stations that do it - and not just one side of an album, but the whole thing.

      I'm going to refer you to our local station that does it, here on the other side of the Cascades from UO - 98.3 KTWS. If you're within about 70 miles of Bend, you'll be able to pick it up.

      Monday through Thursday at 9pm is "Laser Larceny", where they do a whole album (if it's a double album, they tend to do those on consecutive nights).

      The other reason they're a great radio station: the twice-annual auction that their parent company (local!) holds out here. I once had the joy of outbidding one of their DJs for a string of pink-flamingo lights. ($5 well spent!)

    10. Re:Recycle used CDs, save the planet by Chandon+Seldon · · Score: 1

      Dont think if they could get away with it with DRM and crap that they wouldnt try making you buy the same song for your computer, your iPod, Your Stereo, Your car and Your Radio.

      You're not nearly greedy enough to work for the RIAA. If they got their way, songs would be 25 cents/play - you wouldn't get to "have a copy" ever.

      --
      -- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.
  15. Finally... by naetuir · · Score: 0

    Finally....A larger organization that doesn't fold under another organizations demand.

    I hope this is the start of many, many more responses of the same ilk. The only way for laws that don't work for the country to be dealt with is to see some serious damage done and watch for the outcry. Hopefully, someone in the gov't is keeping track of how many people are crying out for the RIAA to stop. Just because its business model is hurting does not mean it should be allowed to lash out at single mothers, college students and anyone that they believe cannot defend themselves properly.

    --
    Use what works.
  16. not uniformly by swschrad · · Score: 1

    student legal services at one big-12 university is reportedly telling students to fess up and settle, because nobody with big enough pockets to fight a goliath has yet walked in the door.

    --
    if this is supposed to be a new economy, how come they still want my old fashioned money?
  17. Costs of enforcement by JoeCommodore · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I was waiting to hear about this, RIAA/MPAA and other have been doing a lot of finger pointing and taking advantage of the legal system to do a lot of their work and people are realizing that RIAA/MPAA is collecting the money bot not necessarily paying the bills for investigation and enforcement.

    I have been expecting the pendulum to swing the other way to either strike down these things due to the financial burden on the enforcement/ judicial/ corrections or to start taxing (rightly so) all those poor artists of which they have been protecting their rights.

    --
    "Enjoy what you're doing! If it becomes drudgery, you're doing it wrong!" - Jim Butterfield
    1. Re:Costs of enforcement by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I have been expecting the pendulum to swing the other way In reality the pendulum had not swung in the RIAA's direction, it just seemed that way because almost no one was fighting back. Our adversary system of justice requires adversaries. The only difference now is that more people are fighting back. I think the RIAA made a big mistake taking on colleges and universities.
      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    2. Re:Costs of enforcement by dnormant · · Score: 1

      "I think the RIAA made a big mistake taking on colleges and universities."

      But there's some logic that they did. There is probably a high concentration of music pirating in this environment. I imagine they were somewhat blinded by the richness of the pickins'. Did they see this slap coming?

    3. Re:Costs of enforcement by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 1

      Did they see this slap coming? My guess is that they are in shock.
      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
  18. Rule 34 by NotQuiteReal · · Score: 0, Redundant
    OK, I'll bite - why is "rule 34" funny? Let's see... rule 34

    Oh god, with RIAA Lawyers? You disgust me.

    Of course, I am not surprised. Lawyers screw people all the time.

    --
    This issue is a bit more complicated than you think.
  19. GO DUCKS! by Richard.Tao · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yeah, that's my college there. My RA got a notice for infringement so his internet was shut off. He's in a room by himself, so he maybe be screwed. UO is a very progressive school in a liberal town, it's great to hear they're standing up for students. From the article it doesn't sound like they're protecting any of our rights, just complaining that it's difficult for them... Oh well, either way it protects the students.

    1. Re:GO DUCKS! by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yeah, that's my college there. My RA got a notice for infringement so his internet was shut off. He's in a room by himself, so he maybe be screwed. UO is a very progressive school in a liberal town, it's great to hear they're standing up for students. From the article it doesn't sound like they're protecting any of our rights, just complaining that it's difficult for them... Oh well, either way it protects the students. Yeah, but if you read the litigation documents carefully you'll see they ARE sticking up for the students' rights. They're saying "we're not going to give you someone's name if you don't have evidence that that person did in fact commit a copyright infringement".

      When they say "this subpoena would require us to conduct an investigation" they are in effect saying "the RIAA hasn't conducted an appropriate investigation".

      In fact, I'll go one step further: when they point out to the Court that the RIAA's evidence doesn't point to a copyright infringer,

      -they are saying something that is fully applicable to all of the RIAA's lawsuits, both those against college students and those against the general populace,

      -they are only saying what the RIAA has admitted under oath at the Capitol v. Thomas trial and in the deposition of Dr. Jacobson in UMG v. Lindor, and

      -they are in effect sticking up for ALL of us.
      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    2. Re:GO DUCKS! by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, Ray, but I just don't see how any reasonable, impartial person could accept the arguments you make here.

      Yeah, but if you read the litigation documents carefully you'll see they ARE sticking up for the students' rights. They're saying "we're not going to give you someone's name if you don't have evidence that that person did in fact commit a copyright infringement".

      If you know with reasonable certainty which computer was used to commit an infringement, that is evidence that its owner was responsible. It's certainly not conclusive evidence, and it might turn out to be evidence that someone else did it instead, but it's evidence all the same.

      When they say "this subpoena would require us to conduct an investigation" they are in effect saying "the RIAA hasn't conducted an appropriate investigation".

      And how are they supposed to conduct an "appropriate" investigation themselves if the University can withhold key information that would allow the RIAA to continue?

      You can't have it both ways. Either the RIAA is responsible for constructing a full case before bringing it to court, in which case it's only fair that when they have evidence pointing in a certain direction they are able to follow up on it, or the RIAA only need the basis for a case and the court must legally compel others to provide any missing information they have, including the identities of the Does being accused. Personally, it seems to me that the latter is ethically more appropriate, but that approach seems to be what a bazillion people around here complain about every time an RIAA-related story comes up and someone gets sent notices and legal threats based on little more than an IP address.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    3. Re:GO DUCKS! by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but... there are two possible ways to look at this. Either you are saying the RIAA has no right to enforce copyright or you are saying there is a different way to pursue an investigation that they have failed to do. I suspect you are saying the first, which is a pretty far out stance for someone claiming to be a lawyer.

      I would offer that the RIAA has all the evidence that can be obtained without acquiring evidence from computers. If there is no evidence there - when their investigation has determined clearly that something was happening at that IP address - there are a couple of possibilities, one of which is that indeed it was a visitor or someone sharing the connection wirelessly. Alternatively, it could just be spoliation. Difficult to prove in this case which would probably mean the end of the matter.

      I'd be interested in hearing from someone what alternative there might be to the investigation that the RIAA has conducted so far and how they could have better information at this point. They have an IP address and some file names, and possibly the actual files as well. Sure, it would be nice to tie that up with a picture of a person at the keyboard with the screen showing uploading activity going on, but how exactly are they going to get this? RIAA storm troopers breaking down the door brandishing cameras?

    4. Re:GO DUCKS! by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 1

      Well I'm sorry that you disagree with the law.

      The law is that you are not entitled to identity information unless and until you can prove by competent evidence, in admissible form, a prima facie case against the person whose identity you are seeking.

      I can't imagine why you would think there's anything unfair about such a legal principle. If you were named in a lawsuit because you were one of many possible people who had committed the complained-of tort, I'd think you'd understand the irrationality of the argument you are presently making.

      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    5. Re:GO DUCKS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you know with reasonable certainty which computer was used to commit an infringement, that is evidence that its owner was responsible. It's certainly not conclusive evidence, and it might turn out to be evidence that someone else did it instead, but it's evidence all the same. Do you realize exactly how difficult verification would be? We are talking about trillions of files. RIAA claims are as merit-less. It's as absurd as somebody asking your ISP for your name, address, bank info, social security number, because they "claim" your "uploaded" post violates some IP.

      What's next? Are University Administrators going to send out scare warning against logging on to the internet as they do for using P2P programs?

      So what basis is there to prevent a landslide of claims of copyright infringement from swamping everyone? Imagine a billion people each filing thousands of claims of "copyright infringement". And they aren't alleging infringement of a single specific individual person. They are trolling IP addresses, and demanding personal information of those behind IP addresses, without any proof of what actually occurred on the other side of that IP address.

      There's not a single witness, there's not a single photograph, there's no evidence whatsoever of an individual acting. That would be like the Goldmann family not suing OJ Simpson for civil damages for Nicole's death, but SUING YOU! because you lived at a certain zip code. And in the meantime getting subpoenas to reveal your identity and freeze your bank account. And then mailing settlement letters that are clear violations of RICO if in fact a single person is not the person that uploaded a specified file.

      The claim isn't that anybody else but "authorized" RIAA goon trackers downloaded files that may or may not be on someone's computer.

      And how are they supposed to conduct an "appropriate" investigation themselves if the University can withhold key information that would allow the RIAA to continue? And how is anybody supposed to conduct an "INappropriate" investigation of you for whatever they feel like investigating you for if all institutions you have business with don't divulge all records about you. Should Comcast get access to your grades, your health records, your banking information, if they claim an anonymous post written came from your IP address and was libelous?

      Check this site for Collections Agencies and overseas criminals spamming people's PHONE LINES looking for names that have no connection at all to the individuals they are looking to collect debts from.

      http://www.whocalled.us/

      Should they be able to get subpoenas from the telephone companies to reveal your identity? How would that be any different from what the RIAA is doing? Just look at the massive fuck ups that are occurring on phone lines! And it's a helluva lot harder to establish real identity of actual actors from "IP addresses".

      Charge the RIAA with Identity Theft and a whole truckload of RICO violations! These RIAA goon trackers and the record labels that hired them shouldn't just have counter suits filed against them, but criminal charges brought against them. This police state bullshit being pushed by those not even licensed or qualified for police functions needs to be put to an end.
    6. Re:GO DUCKS! by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      The law is that you are not entitled to identity information unless and until you can prove by competent evidence, in admissible form, a prima facie case against the person whose identity you are seeking.

      I won't pretend I understand the legal niceties of all those terms you just used. However, please correct me if I'm wrong, but the standard of proof required for a civil case in your country is balance of probability, is it not? If so, and you've got solid evidence that an identified computer was used in breaking the law, and you know the identity of the person whose credentials were used to connect it to the network, then I think that would be sufficient to bring a valid case.

      Now, if the defendant had given their (presumably private) credentials to someone else, or someone else had access to the computer at the time, then that can be brought up in court. But really, is this more likely than the alternative explanation than that the law-breaking was done by the person whose credentials were used, and if not, why isn't a case on the basis of this evidence reasonable, and therefore discovering the identity justified?

      I can't imagine why you would think there's anything unfair about such a legal principle.

      Because if the law is as you describe it and my argument above isn't valid, then you have created a cyclic argument: no realistic case can be brought without already knowing the identity of the would-be defendant, yet you can't ascertain the identity without already having a case. Such a system denies those who are damaged any realistic prospect of protecting their rights through the legal system, and surely as a lawyer you can understand why I find that wrong.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    7. Re:GO DUCKS! by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 1

      There's a third option. What the RIAA has presented is an allegation. Let them prove in court that their evidence is correct. Show the method by which they acquired their logs, and that it's accurate. Show the chain of custody and the steps they took to insure that the logs weren't altered before being presented to the court. List the mechanisms they have in place to detect any alteration of the evidence while under their control. Show how they analyzed the logs, the procedures they used to track a connection back to the IP serving the files and that those procedures in fact accurately identify one specific computer and no other.

      It's similar to a lot of "this anonymous poster defamed us" cases. Before they get that poster's identity, the plaintiff should be (and slowly is being) required to prove that the statements made were in fact defamatory. That can be done without knowing or caring who made them. The same thing applies here: show in court that your evidence is in fact true and that it shows a case of copyright infringement, then you get access to the records to see who's guilty of it.

  20. well i would be foolish to debate you on legal pts by circletimessquare · · Score: 5, Insightful

    but i would assert that sea changes in business and culture can render your entire legal argument moot

    for example, in a world where no artist signs with any music label, because they can get more money putting their own shingle on the internet, then the rights of labels that don't exist economically anymore don't have any meaning

    it will take time to arrive at this new world, so perhaps we have to wait a lot longer than i might wish

    to put it another way: there is a great legal framework in place concerning the rights of player piano music roll manufacturers

    but in world where there are no player pianos, except in museums, then what does that legal framework mean?

    likewise, i am not going to counter your legal arguments, your legal arguments are 100% correct

    but i am going to say that over time, the entire legal realm the arguments you are making exist in will become defunct

    it will take awhile, but you have an entire generation of young people who know what i am talking about. when such children are in their 40s and 50s, and are running whatever dried up remains of bertelsmann, coumbia records, etc. still exists, then what will any of this sound and fury really mean anymore?

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  21. Surprised they can even get the specific dorm room by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a former student of the U of O, former resident of the dorms, and former employee of the computer center, I can tell you that their DHCP servers switched the student IP addresses around all the time, at least when I was there. I'm surprised they can even pin it down to a specific dorm room. This seems totally fair.

  22. IP Address and a "Person" by thorkyl · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Lets see, If I where in a dorm room...
    I would set up my own router with an name like $*@&_YOU
    Then serve private IP to a firewall, then another to a wireless router
    Then server the floor wireless.

    Now, who did what?

    I think that is the core of the UofO rebutial

    --
    -- I am the NRA, enough said...
    1. Re:IP Address and a "Person" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd laugh at you as the Admin comes to your door with a huge fine and demands that you remove the device or have access revoked.

      I'm sure it's written into policy. Policy you are required to agree to when you enter into the institution as a student.

      Sorry, but you don't win this way.

    2. Re:IP Address and a "Person" by Bee1zebub · · Score: 1

      I suppose you think that all the internet traffic, for which oyu would almost certainly be billed, is a fair price to pay to stick it to the RIAA. If all your admins can trace the traffic to is your router, they will charge you for the excess traffic. Even if there is normally no charge for internet usage, there would still be some sort of excess usage fee for situations like this, or continuous torrenting.

  23. once there was a time by circletimessquare · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    grammar nazis weren't viewed as brittle pedantic mediocre minds

    oh no wait, there was never such a time

    grammar nazis are a joke and an object of derision

    i'm sorry your mind is so inflexible you need to be spoonfed perfect queen's english before your mind can engage with the message before you

    i understand that you can't focus on the message because the formatting is too much noise for your weak mind to overcome

    Perhaps then my improper formatting serves me in the end. It serves as a filter that brittle inflexible minds can't get past, and so they leave me alone. Perhaps then you understand that I prefer bad formatting and format badly on purpose. Even though I am quite capable of writing normally, I don't do it. On purpose.

    imagine that, turd

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:once there was a time by dnormant · · Score: 1

      I noticed in your post (#21211385) that you didn't capitalize or use periods. I didn't mind because what you were saying had reason and format (I'm not 100% behind what you said...). This post (#21212349) explains exactly why I didn't mind.

      you keep up your good work too

    2. Re:once there was a time by 6Yankee · · Score: 1

      You, of course, write your CV in the same way - because God forbid that you might end up working for "brittle inflexible minds"? Oh, you don't?

  24. Support of State Attorney General by peacefinder · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "The University of Oregon has filed a motion to quash the RIAA's subpoena for information on student identities in what is believed to be the first such motion made by a university with support from the state Attorney General."

    Amusingly enough, the University of Oregon's President used to be the state Attorney General. I suspect he had an easier time getting the current AG's support than most university presidents have.

    --
    With reasonable men I will reason; with humane men I will plead; but to tyrants I will give no quarter. -- William Lloyd
  25. Fight the power, RPI! by MikeCav · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Contrast this brave approach with Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute's decision to roll over and show its belly to the RIAA:
    http://www.poly.rpi.edu/article_view.php3?view=5716&part=1

  26. Glad for Oregon's stance by pdxguy · · Score: 0

    As a former Oregonian (couldn't stand the rain!), I'm glad to see the University taking this stance. Oregon may have issues, but their universities generally have their heads screwed on straight.

    Cheers for the Fighting Ducks - Go Ducks!

  27. i want to attenuate what said in my previous post: by circletimessquare · · Score: 1
    frankly, i admire you, i admire your work. i don't want you to think that i think your efforts are useless in the end. i am very glad you are there fighting this good fight, and it does have meaning in the end

    it is just that, at times, the existence of things like the RIAA, the jury verdicts for people like oj simpson and robert blake and phil spector (ironically, a music mogul), they leave me profoundly disillusioned with the law

    that is, in the case of the RIAA, the law seems less interested in morality and justice, and more interested in protecting the rights of corporations, and the famous and rich

    and in such a mindset, i say the legal battle cannot be won, because the odds are stacked against us, who are interested in morality and reason. and so i punt the outcome of this battle to the future, when the attack dogs of the RIAA have no more funding (as most certainly will be the case, as SCO illustrates: lawsuits are not a valid businessplan)

    but i don't want my disillusionment and cynicism to infect you. we need the likes of you. the fight is a good and important fight, no matter what the odds. to at least show someone somewhere that these slimeballs will not proceed unopposed. at the very least, that has meaning and value

    here are two quotes i'd like to share with you:

    But Mr. Obama sometimes seemed ambivalent about the law. In his 1995 memoir, "Dreams From My Father," he wrote that the law could be "a sort of glorified accounting that serves to regulate the affairs of those who have power -- and that all too often seeks to explain, to those who do not, the ultimate wisdom and justness of their condition."


    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/28/weekinreview/28liptak.html?ex=1351224000&en=4d08acb4582d35e9&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink

    and, from the great sidney lumet, david mamet, and paul newman:

    [Frank is giving his summation to the jury]
    Frank Galvin: You know, so much of the time we're just lost. We say, "Please, God, tell us what is right; tell us what is true." And there is no justice: the rich win, the poor are powerless. We become tired of hearing people lie. And after a time, we become dead... a little dead. We think of ourselves as victims... and we become victims. We become... we become weak. We doubt ourselves, we doubt our beliefs. We doubt our institutions. And we doubt the law. But today you are the law. You ARE the law. Not some book... not the lawyers... not the, a marble statue... or the trappings of the court. See those are just symbols of our desire to be just. They are... they are, in fact, a prayer: a fervent and a frightened prayer. In my religion, they say, "Act as if ye had faith... and faith will be given to you." IF... if we are to have faith in justice, we need only to believe in ourselves. And ACT with justice. See, I believe there is justice in our hearts.
    [he sits down]


    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0084855/quotes
    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  28. They still scare me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even though I don't have any P2P clients on my machines and am not downloading music at all, I am still afraid that they will sue me for my entire life savings.

    Maybe some enterprising hacker will use my computer to download stuff, and they will sue me for that. I have a firewall set up and am security-savvy enough to retain my geek card, but I know that there are outright brilliant blackhats out there and the possibility of being victimized by them (and then sued by the RIAA for it) is real.

    Maybe an ISP will simply give the RIAA wrong data, leading them to sue me. They will still want to take my computers from me and examine them. There they will find MP3's of music that I ripped from my own legally-purchased CD's (from 5 to 10 years ago...I don't buy their crap anymore). Since they are of the opinion that putting your music on your computer just for private listening (never even sharing it with anyone) is still stealing, they will still press charges, and I will still get cleaned out.

    I feel like the safest thing for me to do is to pay the damned settlement fee. The impact on my finances and life in general will be far less if I just pay up. It is wrong on many levels, and maybe it even makes me a coward, but I simply don't have the resources to "fight the good fight," let alone to bounce back if I lose it.

    I am considering completely purging my hard drive of even my legally purchased (and ripped) songs just to cover my ass. It sucks, and it probably makes some RIAA exec grin from ear to ear, but it sure would make me feel safer. Emusic and Magnatune are the only places I buy music from anymore, and they deliver it as a digital download, and the RIAA doesn't own copyrights to any of it, so I really hope that is safe to keep on my hard drive. It means I won't be able to listen to all of my music when I want to, which sucks, but hopefully it is only temporary. When someone who does have the means to make the madness stop actually makes the madness stop, I can then put stuff back on my hard drive.

    Until then, I am just too damned scared.

  29. Reppin the 503 by elislider · · Score: 1

    I really do love Oregon. Lived here all my life and its stuff like this that just makes me feel good. I have a TON of friends at UofO and it makes me feel good to know that someone cares about their rights and isnt being a corporate and political tool. Plus for a state school, UofO rocks

  30. Definitely a New Development Here by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1
    If all the "evidence" is revealed at this stage (I didn't see KaZaA screen names in the papers listed, although they should be available in the (possibly faked) screen shots), it should be possible to determine if the RIAA has any case at all this early in the proceedings. Perhaps they can just be kicked out now due to lack of evidence, saving everyone else a whole lot of money, and the RIAA a whole lot of publicity.

    This is the first time that I've seen where someone, most surprisingly an actual non-party, is attempting to require the RIAA to prove their case at this point, where they probably cannot prove it at all!

    One thing impressive about this. Who really wants to find out that the opposition to your case is coming in on the State Attorney General's letterhead?

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
    1. Re:Definitely a New Development Here by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 1

      This is the first time that I've seen where someone, most surprisingly an actual non-party, is attempting to require the RIAA to prove their case at this point, where they probably cannot prove it at all! One thing impressive about this. Who really wants to find out that the opposition to your case is coming in on the State Attorney General's letterhead? Good points, Nom.

      It will be amusing to see what kind of response the RIAA's lapdogs -- er, lawyers -- can cobble together, since the AG's motion is based on facts which the RIAA's own witnesses have admitted under oath.
      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
  31. Sorry by jajimo · · Score: 1, Insightful

    As a former employee of the U of O's IT department, I can attest that they search out rogue DHCP servers on the network and remove them. So I'm afraid that won't work.

    1. Re:Sorry by BryanClark · · Score: 1

      I think in GP's scenario, DHCP would be served out behind his router so wouldn't be dishing out IP addresses to the UofO network in general. IP addresses would only be fed to hosts on his private segment of it.

      Served... dishing... fed... man I'm hungry now.

    2. Re:Sorry by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Typical College IT, didn't read the entire post before coming to a conclusion. An incorrect conclusion, BTW.
      See if you can bother to read the entire post with some comprehension.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  32. Re:i want to attenuate what said in my previous po by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Maybe you're a more complicated person than I am.

    I'm a simple man.

    I see some bad guys picking on some defenseless people, I jump in and try to help. Whether I will ultimately win or lose is a matter of indifference to me, because I have no control over the ultimate outcome. What I have control of is that I am fighting on the right side.

    All I know about the motion the Oregon State Attorney General made on behalf of the University of Oregon is this:

    -it is legally right

    -it is morally right

    -it's the first time a university or an AG has stepped into this business since it began in February

    -the RIAA lawyers can make no intelligible response to it, since it is based on facts which the RIAA's own witnesses have already admitted under oath, and

    -it's a terrible blow to the RIAA, once which they never anticipated.

    So I'm smiling. And you should be too.

    --
    Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
  33. Glad to be a duck! by Leto-II · · Score: 1

    Woohoo! Makes me feel good to be a duck!

    --
    Do not anger the worm.
  34. well said ;-) by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    and when you said "more complicated person than i am" you are giving me more credit than i am due

    i believe cynicism is a poor replacement for heart, and you have heart. to hell with my pessisism, keep up the good fight! ;-)

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  35. Re:i want to attenuate what said in my previous po by uberdilligaff · · Score: 1

    AMEN brother!

    --
    Against stupidity, the Gods themselves contend in vain. --Friederich Schiller
  36. Of course it reduces the pool by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It still does not reduce the poool of people by any reasonable amount....

    If the room is dual occupancy, and there is evidence that the law was being broken using a PC in that room, and only one occupant of that room has a PC, then I'm sorry, but on balance it's looking like that person was the one breaking the law. Moreover, this is only 5 of the 17 Does. For another 9 of them, they do have the identity of the person whose credentials were used to access the wireless networking facilities, and apparently the argument is just that they can't prove the person who actually accessed the network was the person whose credentials were used.

    Now, seriously, the university is claiming that in 16/17 cases, it can't identify the alleged infringers without interviewing or forensic examination. But is it being asked to, or is it just being asked to disclose the relevant information it does have so that further discovery can take place? This isn't the court case, and the University's information isn't a ruling that the law was actually broken. However, if you've got the credentials of someone whose computer is caught red-handed breaking the law, or the circumstances do realistically indicate whose computer was being used, then I think that is justification for seeking that interview and/or forensic examination via the court system to further the case.

    I'm not a lawyer, so I can't comment on the legal technicalities that might be at work here, and I won't have much sympathy for the RIAA if it turns out that they've been abusing the system again. But on the face of it, this seems like a request for reasonable information from the University, based on a genuine belief that the law has been broken, and I don't see why it's inappropriate for the RIAA to attempt discovery here. If you start denying all discovery based on the possibility that someone with evidence against them may turn out not to be in the wrong, rather than conducting discovery and then examining the case in court, then it seems to me that you are breaking the legal system.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    1. Re:Of course it reduces the pool by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 3, Informative

      Except you're overlooking the fact that under the law the RIAA is not entitled to the identity information unless it has evidence, in a form that would be admissible at trial, sufficient to established that the "John Doe" whose identity is being sought has infringed the plaintiffs' copyrights. And the AG is so delicately and so accurately pointing out that the evidence does not so indicate.

      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    2. Re:Of course it reduces the pool by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      OK, maybe I'm out of my legal depth here, but let me propose a dubious analogy (recognising that obviously we're not talking about a life-and-death criminal case here). If a murder has been committed, and a smoking gun has been found, and there is forensic evidence on that gun that would strongly suggest a certain individual used the weapon in the recent past (though it might not have been the shot that killed the victim in this case), and a known source has information that links that forensic clue to the person associated with it, the analogous rule to what you're saying would be that the police couldn't get the known source to tell them who the past user was so further evidence could be collected prior to either bringing charges or clearing them. Do you have any rules about obstructing an investigation in your jurisdiction? If so, do they only apply to criminal cases, then? And so if, how is any plaintiff ever supposed to bring a reasonable case against someone who did damage them in a case like the real one here?

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    3. Re:Of course it reduces the pool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Except you are confusing police powers executed in the investigation of a criminal act to a civil case where there are no police powers being executed. Since the *IAA is not the police I can obstruct their investigation all I want and their only recourse is to litigate, if that. Once a judge orders you to comply, then you might get charged with contempt, but obstructing is reserved for official investigations of which this one is not.

      It would be more analogous to someone breaking your window and you find a bat in someone's yard with glass on it. You then demand the homeowner to determine who, if anyone, in their home broke the window without even proving that the bat was used in the act in the first place.

      The University is not required to do the *IAA's investigation for them and refusing to do so is in no way obstructing an official investigation, since the *IAA is not the police.

    4. Re:Of course it reduces the pool by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      Your example is no different than what the parent asked. It sounds like you are saying that the prosecution has no right to discovery just because they cannot yet prove that someone in the house did it. That's the entire point of discovery: to get that information.

      Prosecution: "Yes your honor, I found a bloody glove with Joe's DNA all over it, and his wife's blood, and he was at the scene, and his fingerprints are there, and they were overheard having an argument, and their is a rotting smell coming from the closet. We ask for discovery to go through the closet and look for a body."
      Defense: "But isn't it possible that their doctor secretly obtained their blood, DNA samples, and fingerprints, and forged the entire thing, then went into their house and yelled a lot, then placed it on the glove and put a rotting birthday cake in the closet?"
      Prosecution: "Could be..."
      Judge: "Well, then the prosecution cannot look into the closet."

      That's silly.

    5. Re:Of course it reduces the pool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Prosecution? Civil case = No prosecution. They are being sued, not prosecuted.

    6. Re:Of course it reduces the pool by DM9290 · · Score: 1

      I think you are confusing the police subpoenaing information that a known source has, with information the university does NOT have. The University does NOT know the identify of the alleged infringers. It knows the Dorm Room number where an alleged event occured, and it knows if the computer was a Mac or a PC. If the subpoena asks for an identity of an "alleged infringer", the University DOES NOT HAVE IT, and it is not permitted to simply do a half ass job and provide a room number in place of an identity which the university knows can't identify a specific person. It is obligated to provide what the subpoena requests: An Identity of the "alleged infringer" . To provide anything else would be obstruction of justice. A room number is not an identity.

      The university is saying that in order to confirm the identity it would need to perform interviews and conduct forensic analysis of computers in the control of other parties. The university is saying it does NOT have the identity of the alleged infringers readily available. It is not obligated to CREATE documents that do not exist.

      If you saw someone using a gun. And a subpoena says "disclose who was using the gun", you are simply providing information you have on hand. It is not an undue burden. But the university has no knowledge or documents which contain this information. It would be speculating. The fact that the university may have the power to launch an investigation does not equal an obligation for it to do so.

      --
      No one has a right to their *own* opinion. They have a right to the TRUTH.
  37. Good to see Hardy Myers stepping up on this one by peteforsyth · · Score: 1

    and yeah, go ducks!

  38. Re:RIAA is rubbish. Question here for the law type by Jeff+Carr · · Score: 1

    I'd give you one, but writing out a precise definition would be unduly burdensome.

    --
    The television will not be revolutionized.
  39. This is beginning to look predictable. by jskline · · Score: 1

    The fact is that these kids are in school and paying huge sums of money in tuition, books, et al., and the RIAA apparently feels that they are entitled to a part of that money regardless of deservedness. I guess they feel they will have a better financial yield scoopin' kids at school than they would trying to hang some single mother on an AOL dial-up connection that uses it for email only.

    --
    All content in this message is copyright (c) 2008. All rights reserved. RIAA is prohibited here.
  40. That is Oregon for you by tvlinux · · Score: 1

    Oregon Is the home of the Linux foundation, Linus, TVLinux, Silicon Forest, and many other Open Source and techie projects. The state trys to protect its citizens from evil. (Not enough from software monoplies, but trying).

  41. Safe by proxy318 · · Score: 1

    whether or not the computer used was a Macintosh or a PC
    Cool, I guess students using Linux of BSD or something else are safe.
    --
    Saying your "phone ran out of batteries" is like saying your "car ran out of gas tanks".
    1. Re:Safe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      whether or not the computer used was a Macintosh or a PC Cool, I guess students using Linux of BSD or something else are safe. Are you aware that Linux and BSB run on PCs?
  42. really, you don't say? by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    "Ancient ecosystems have very different rules from the modern legal system"

    i did not know that!

    thank you sir, for shining the light of your great intellect upon this discussion. i am mightily humbled

    i thought for sure that the jurassic period was exactly like business law, and that the paleozoic era was exactly like real estate law

    boy do i need to rethink my point of view on life now

    pffffffft

    i think you might suffer from a fallacy known as "taking the analogy way too seriously"

    i heartily await your next rhetorical salvo, in which you inform shakespeare that his love sonnets are invalid, because human love is not, in fact, a flowering shrub (otherwise known as a rose)

    you're a genius sir

    i mean that in the most sarcastic way possible

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:really, you don't say? by Xeth · · Score: 1

      Well, it would seem obvious that you'd know that, yes. And, yet...

      The difference between reasoning by analogy and metaphor is causality. If you use your analogy to make "new" information, than its reasoning, if you only use it based on the similarities you've already seen to convey understanding, then it's metaphor. The fact is, it's a very fine line to walk. When talking about entirely mental things like love, the line gets a little wider, since the thoughts involved affect the process itself to a great degree. However, when speaking about the defeat of an entity that will likely never know your thoughts, it's largely insignificant.

      The fact is, it seems to me that you're moving from analogy to new facts. Since the RIAA are easily characterized as dinosaurs, anachronistic beings that are no longer necessary, you suggest tactics analogous to the those used against the actual lizards. Ignoring certain things like:

      • The fact that people actively engaged in resisting the RIAA don't multiply like egg-stealing mammals. There is still a vast populace of music purchasers that do what they're told.
      • "Surreptitiously stealing eggs" (i.e. sharing RIAA songs) does not in fact weaken the dinosaur, it strengthens it (by increasing demand). As all those surveys show, that sharing will increase the amount of albums that are purchased.

      And so forth. Thinking in terms of the analogy will tend to make your mind overlook these kinds of things. It's confirmation bias, and it's inevitable. It's one of the fundamental problems with drawing premature analogies.

      Reasoning by analogy is an extremely easy trap for human minds to fall into, and you may not even realize that you're doing it. Believe it or not, our thoughts become sloppy when we're not looking at them, even if the kinds of mistakes that we'd make seem entirely foolish to the conscious. But, then, its possible that you've arrogated the sum of your intellectual skill to your conscious mind.

      Oh, incidentally, if you're wondering about the foe thing, it was some time in the past, and I don't really recall why.

      --
      If your theory is different from practice, then your theory is wrong.
  43. Re:i want to attenuate what said in my previous po by magus_melchior · · Score: 1

    In light of the high-profile cases you cited, I can understand why you feel cynical. The fact is, there are probably thousands of cases being heard every day, some being found in favor of justice, others being brought to different conclusions. And there's a few counterpoints to the popular belief that "he who has the deepest, fullest pockets wins." There's Leona Helmsley (yeah, I know, easy example), whose wealth couldn't save her from a conviction for tax evasion and fraud. Even though OJ's "dream team" bested the prosecutors in criminal court, the victims' families were able to get his wallet and then some in civil court (Blake's case ended similarly). Spector's case is a mistrial, not an acquittal, and prosecutors said they'll try him again. We often don't see or remember the ultimate conclusions of these cases, because the media companies are more interested in the ratings that the "courtroom drama" provides rather than the outcome. Everyone likes a violent prize fight, but few will watch a battle won by a technicality.

    Also, nobody's pockets are infinite, as you point out. Like the defendants in the above cases, the music labels lose money with each John Doe they try to fish out. I think you'll find that with each victory in court, no matter how small, will hasten the day when the labels find that they really are out of cash. I think the irony may then be that no one will believe them, as they've been whining about losing revenue despite the current boom in paid-for digital music.

    --
    "We are Microsoft. You shall be assimilated. Competition is futile."
  44. Re:well i would be foolish to debate you on legal by cdrguru · · Score: 2

    I believe you are wrong on the point that anyone can derive revenue from recorded music. We have spent the last 10 years or so proving that everything on the Internet is free. All micropayment and subscription plans for the general public have failed. Nobody is interested in paying for something from site A when they can have the same (or at least similar) content from site B. There are no barriers to entry on the Internet that prevent site B from starting up and offering something similar to site A. Today most of the revenue on the Internet is from advertising, not subscriptions or sales.

    I don't see any way artists can reverse this trend. It is going to be shared and redistributed for free no matter what the artist wants. They can't control this. Sure, they might get some money from dedicated die-hard fans but once their music reaches a level where it is "popular", that is the end of the revenue stream because it will be taken over by redistribution for free.

    It is over for recorded music sales. The stuff has no value anymore. Nobody I know would pay a dime for music when they can get other music, just as good, for free.

  45. UO's take on P2P by pkulak · · Score: 1

    I remember back in the day when I was a freshman. This was back when Napster was just fading and 100 other services (mostly DC) were taking its place. I had a conversation with one of the network admins and he told me that it all didn't bother them too much because the majority of the traffic was to other Universities, which went over Internet 2 pipes and didn't end up effecting the network bottlenecks all that much. I could have remembered that wrong, or he could have been full of crap, but it made sense to me. That may have all changed by now too.

    And by the way... Dixon for Heisman! GO DUCKS!

  46. Re:Hopefully More Push-back Follows.ARBITRATION CL by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1

    the courts are very reluctant to limit access to the courts under any circumstances.

    Try to get those arbitration only clauses in your terms and service, or license agreement, overturned. It was a BFD when the most liberal courts in the nation did finally overturn one such clase as "unconscionable" in California a few months ago.

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
  47. Anonymity good? by Sloppy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is all well and good when the party wanting the info happens to be the Bad Guy du jour. I wonder if there's any possible network abuse (spamming, sending death threats, any of the 4 horsemen (terrorist|drugdealer|kidnapper|childpornographer), etc) that might make people question the sense in not having a person accountable for a node's actions.

    Also, I suspect that if the university can't find someone to pass the buck to, then it's going to stop with them.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    1. Re:Anonymity good? by argent · · Score: 1

      I wonder if there's any possible network abuse (spamming, sending death threats, any of the 4 horsemen (terrorist|drugdealer|kidnapper|childpornographer), etc) that might make people question the sense in not having a person accountable for a node's actions.

      This isn't about anonymity, this is about due process. There's no question but that the RIAA will be able to get the necessary paperwork together, they just won't be able to shortcut things and use a bunch of J. Doe papers on a fishing expedition to get the university to do their work for them.

      Spamming is an interesting case. There are indeed a lot of people who are happy to claim an ISP is selling "pink tickets" to spammers when they won't identify the source of a spam to any random Richard Tracy, but if, in practice, they are able to respond to the spam and keep the spam they source under control it doesn't matter how they do it. When we came up with the Usenet II rules we looked at this situation, and decided that we didn't need to be able to unmask the source of spam, we just needed to hold the site responsible for preventing it. We didn't specify how they did it, we just made spam control a requirement.

      So while I agree that someone has to be accountable, you don't need to be able to terrorize people with a few public examples of ruined lives. The university may be the appropriate place to draw the line... but I suspect the RIAA doesn't want to follow through on that because universities tend to be harder to intimidate than young college students with entry-level incomes and half-finished degrees.

  48. Re:Hopefully More Push-back Follows.BARRATRY! by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1

    Everybody has a right to their day in court.

    Unfortunately, everyone can't afford their day in court - especially against a well-funded adversary willing to spend money wantonly that they know they will never recover from the Defendants. From what I see, in my opinion the RIAA is practicing Barratry, and that should fall under RICO somehow.

    The worst problem here is that nobody that the RIAA is suing is making a penny off of the act of filesharing. In a just society, the RIAA should only be able to collect Actual Damages plus legal fees. The question of the Constitutionality of these exorbitant Statutory Awards - particularly in light of the sending a message context, seeks to punish one person for the acts of 6 million. That's not just!

    I, for one, am not convinced that the RIAA members have ever lost even a single sale to filesharing. I do know for certain that their mantra of: each download = a lost sale is complete and utter garbage, and that they should be sanctioned severely every time they bring up the lie in court!

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
  49. Re:Surprised they can even get the specific dorm r by Leto-II · · Score: 1

    They keep records of which computer (well, which MAC address anyway) had which IP address at which time. They've done that for a long time

    --
    Do not anger the worm.
  50. Rules by pleappleappleap · · Score: 1

    1. Never change the deal.
    2. No names.
    3. Never open the package.

  51. It pains me to say it, but.... by Radical+Moderate · · Score: 1

    As a diehard Beaver, I never say this, but just this once:
    GO DUCKS!

    Actually, I might have thought it once or twice last Saturday when they played USC.

    --
    Never let a lack of data get in the way of a good rant.
  52. Re:i want to attenuate what said in my previous po by arminw · · Score: 1

    .....lawsuits are not a valid business plan.....

    Hey that sounds like an excellent sig for a /. user. You should copyright, patent, or trademark it!

    --
    All theory is gray
  53. They picked the wrong liberal hippy town by dbc23 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Having known people that worked in the very IT department that received these letters i can say they obviously know who it was. This is an act of defiance and not an attempt at a subtle one. Given the attitude of most of the residents of Eugene this is not at all suprising and the university will most likely let them drag this through courts repeatedly before giving them what they want.

    1. Re:They picked the wrong liberal hippy town by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If you think the Attorney General of the State of Oregon would be doing this for kicks.... think again.

      --
      Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
  54. Re:Hopefully More Push-back Follows.BARRATRY! by Hierarch · · Score: 1

    Barratry is not under RICO, as I understand it.

    While I'd also agree that the "illegal copy = lost sale" mantra is nonsense, I don't see it as sanctionable to bring it up in court, particularly if they have evidence (however slender) to back it up. (Outright fraud is another matter; manufactured evidence is perjury, after all.) Once the evidence is presented, it's up to a jury to determine how believable it is. That's a matter of fact, not a matter of law, in determining damages.

    Ultimately, the real problem with the legal system is, as you note, that not everyone can afford it. Of course, you can always file Pro Se, but your lack of experience will cost you severely. Sadly, a lot of US legal principles are just that: principles, with no basis in reality.

    One of my common rants on the subject is the lack of access to the laws, the text itself. In principle, you shouldn't need to pay to find out what the laws are, so you can follow them! In practice, you'd need to buy a very expensive book. The principle is still technically followed, since you can go to any jurisdictional seat and ask to review the books yourself, for free. (I've done this in fighting a parking ticket, pulling the statute from City Hall.) Can you imagine hopping on your horse and riding out to Washington, DC to review a federal statute because you can't afford to buy the book?

    This is improving with the Internet, but there are still some problems. For example, Texas building codes.

    --
    --Somebody infect me with a .sig virus, I'm too lazy to write my own!
  55. Re:well i would be foolish to debate you on legal by harl · · Score: 1

    You're a living slashdot meme!

    1. Do Nothing
    2. ???
    3. RIAA implodes.

    The problem with your position is that someone has to fight the RIAA. If you don't fight them on the legal front they can use the legal system to maintain and extend their position.

    They win some legal cases. They get some large settlements. They start using the settlements as evidence of lost revenue. Wrong but a good move. They go to congress and buy legislation. They establish a foot hold.

    Also your player piano description has a few problems. The main one being that some of the laws created about player piano rolls still apply today to every book, movie, and music made.

    --
    I find being offended by me offensive.
  56. RIAA free sticker by jeffeb3 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I want to see some media with an "RIAA Free" sticker on it so I know where to spend my money. I recently left grad school for a job that actually pays money, and now I don't really mind paying for records. I just want to know where to plop the cash so that I'm not feeding the beast that would have loved to attack me a year ago.

    1. Re:RIAA free sticker by SagSaw · · Score: 1

      RIAA Radar is a start.

      --
      Come test your mettle in the world of Alter Aeon!
  57. Re:RIAA is rubbish. Question here for the law type by Atario · · Score: 1

    "Unduly burdensome" here means they would have to do the RIAA's investigative work for them.

    --
    "A great democracy must be progressive or it will soon cease to be a great democracy." --Theodore Roosevelt
  58. More than that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the University is able to identify only the room where the content was accessed and whether or not the computer used was a Macintosh or a PC What of OUI assignments? Just look up the hardware vendor for the MAC addy that was leased the IP, and you can get the individual vendor of quite alot of OEM computers (HPs, Compqs, Dells).
    1. Re:More than that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, but that still doesn't prove WHO was on it.

  59. Re:well i would be foolish to debate you on legal by atraintocry · · Score: 1

    player pianos existed more or less simultaneously with radio, and slightly before the phonograph. your sentiments are nice but founded on bad info. also, the burden is on you to come up with evidence that such a "sea change" can or will happen. i'd love for you to be right, i really would. but my band isn't signed, and as of 2007, we'd be better off if we were, if only slightly.

  60. The RIAA by asleep79 · · Score: 1

    The RIAA is a bunch of greedy money loving bastards who would sooner sue their own mothers than do something useful in the world. What a legacy to pass on to your kids..."What does your dad do?"..."He ruins people's lives for a quick buck."..."So he's a hitman?"..."No, he's a lawyer". It's people like those at the RIAA that give lawyers a bad name.

    --
    -asleep
  61. Valid denial for Oregon, but what about elsewhere? by IndustrialComplex · · Score: 1

    This may be something unique to the University of Oregon, but I would be curious to see if the challenge of the subpoena would stand when applied to other universities.

    The network architecture at my college was similar. However there were more specific rules involved. In the case of my dorm, each student was assigned a particular IP address, even a physical port in the room. There is also an agreement that is signed by the student that they agree to control access to that access point. (Lots of other nitty details, no routers...etc)

    Without us falling into the trap of confusing what a judge would decide vs what we as a tech savvy community would want, would it be possible for a University's own access policies to be used against it in a refusal.

    For UoO, they do appear to have valid claim to deny the request, but it seems that if they were more 'precise' in delivering internet access then they would not be able to refuse the subpoena.

    --
    Out of modpoints but really liked a post? 1BDkF6TtmmeZ3yqXbz9yhdYVqRYnwFoXDj
  62. I beg to differ. by znerk · · Score: 1

    Today most of the revenue on the Internet is from advertising, not subscriptions or sales.


    A couple items you may have missed in your frantic rush to the keyboard to post your (incorrect) statements:

    World of Warcraft. iTunes. The New York Times. Countless other services that require small payments in order to enjoy them.

    WoW(tm) has over 7 million subscribers, each of them paying at least $13 per month.
    That's 91 million dollars a month. That's just a few million shy of 1.1 billion dollars a year.

    --
    I'm sorry, but your argument is made of fail.
    --
    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
  63. RIAA Lawyer Pr0n? by mengel · · Score: 1

    Would that involve making the lawyers watch while masked people pirate copyrighted music?

    --
    - "History shows again and again how nature points out the folly of men" -- Blue Oyster Cult, 'Godzilla'
  64. Re:Valid denial for Oregon, but what about elsewhe by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 2, Informative

    This may be something unique to the University of Oregon, but I would be curious to see if the challenge of the subpoena would stand when applied to other universities. The network architecture at my college was similar. However there were more specific rules involved. In the case of my dorm, each student was assigned a particular IP address, even a physical port in the room. There is also an agreement that is signed by the student that they agree to control access to that access point. (Lots of other nitty details, no routers...etc) Without us falling into the trap of confusing what a judge would decide vs what we as a tech savvy community would want, would it be possible for a University's own access policies to be used against it in a refusal. For UoO, they do appear to have valid claim to deny the request, but it seems that if they were more 'precise' in delivering internet access then they would not be able to refuse the subpoena. Actually, the holes in the RIAA's "identification" process are not only applicable to all of the other colleges and universities targeted, they're applicable to all of the "John Doe" cases, even those dealing with commercial ISP's.
    --
    Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
  65. Re:well i would be foolish to debate you on legal by DDX_2002 · · Score: 1

    Yes but... the way our legal system works, the legal framework regarding player piano music roll manufacturing gets adapted, updated and modified to cover this newfangled marconi device all the kids are talking about. The radio precedents then become the ones considered when analyzing whether the VCR is akin to the Boston Strangler, and those precedents are the ones that get used to consider Napster and so on and so forth. I haven't seen a carbolic smoke ball on a store shelf in a long time, but unilateral contracts are still valid. Donaghue and Stevenson are long dead, but the tort of negligence lives on, etc. etc. The RIAA may die, but whether making available is copyright infringement will probably be relevant long after the RIAA's last member label goes into Chapter 7.

    --
    MHO. YMMV. Any resemblance between this post and real persons, or reality in general, was accidental.
  66. As someone who is in Oregon by geekoid · · Score: 1

    I can assure you for a Beaver fan to say "GO DUCKS!" assures that they will be flayed by other Beaver fans.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  67. More like by geekoid · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Nice Porsche"
    "Thanks"
    "What's your father do?"
    "Lawyer"
    "Nice, What college are you going to?"
    "Either Harvard or Yale"

    Yeah, I'm sure they weep themselves to sleep at night.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  68. OTOH by geekoid · · Score: 1

    they will jump on anything that someone claims is 'green' without bothering with the tedious work of actually thinking.
    and they can not drive for shit, and no it's not all the Californians.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  69. Re:well i would be foolish to debate you on legal by radish · · Score: 1

    Nobody I know would pay a dime for music when they can get other music, just as good, for free

    I pay for music because I want two things:

    1) The best possible quality of recording (i.e. not compressed).
    2) The artists to be able to afford to make more great music.

    Sure I could avoid paying $10 for that CD I really like, but I (unlike, it seems, many people) can see a little beyond the immediate present and want to ensure that the artist is able to make more like it. I know lots of musicians and others in the music business, and I know how much time and effort goes into creating something great. It's not something you can do on the weekend while working a regular job, so cut the cashflow and you make it impossible for them to record the music in the first place. That would be a huge tragedy in my opinion.

    Mozart was paid to write music, as were Lennon, Cobain and Elvis - it's always been this way. It's not just music - authors, painters, film makers, dancers, scholars. They all enrich our lives and our culture but can only survive and reach the peak of their potential if they are financially supported by their work. Those who would let their own short sighted greed destroy that are the real enemies here, IMHO.

    Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying the current way of doing things is perfect, and I'm fully behind the university in this story in not giving way to these rather vague requests, but I strongly believe that making and recording music is a valuable activity and should be supported - not destroyed.

    --

    ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

  70. Good luck! by paladinwannabe2 · · Score: 1

    I've always had difficulty picking a side in this fight- On the one hand, we have the big, greedy, and deceitful RIAA, but it's not as if the file-sharers are paragons of virtue- I see them both as parasites on the back of the people who actually create things. Still, I'm counting on you (and others like you) to limit the damage the RIAA can do to fair use, privacy, and freedom of expression- not to mention all the innocents they sue along with the guilty. All these things are more valuable than my intellectual property rights. Good luck!

    --
    You are reading a copy of my copyrighted post.
  71. Resnet? by Azuma+Hazuki · · Score: 1

    If the U of O uses the Resnet system I think it does, this should really read "Windows or not Windows." At my university there is a "CAT" (client assessment tool) that scans Windows and forces one to install the latest Symantec AV and XP SP2 patches (that's right, only XP can run on the network). If you're using any OS but Windows you get to skip this. I know this because I tried to register using my XP image in VMWare and got the CAT forced on me, but was able to plug right in and register under my main OS (Gentoo).

    --
    ~Eien no Inori wo Sasagete~ Searching for my Hatsumi...
  72. As someone ELSE who is in Oregon by mdenham · · Score: 1

    I can assure you that for a Beaver fan to say "GO DUCKS", the Ducks must be playing a team ahead of the Beavers in the standings.

    And vice-versa as well.

  73. No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As much as some people try to justify it, there's no innocent reason to be monitoring or logging people's communications.

  74. gauge and shotguns by bobkoure · · Score: 1

    firing five shots from a sixteen guage shotgun at it and you bleed to death,
    When talking about shotguns, pick from 8, 10, 12, 20, 410 - and the smaller the number the larger the gun ("gauge" (I mis-spell it all the time, too) was an old English shot measure - basically the number of balls you could make from a pound of lead). Oh, and 410's actually a different kind of measure (not gauge) but none-the-less is still smaller than 20) - and 8GA guns are really really rare (I've only seen a black powder one)
    Just looking to help out for the next time you make a rhetorical point involving shotguns...

    1. Re:gauge and shotguns by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      Yes, you're right. A 12 guage shotgun has a larger bore than a 20 guage. Even larger than a sixteen guage.

      I killed my first rabbit with a double barrelled sixteen guage shotgun.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    2. Re:gauge and shotguns by bobkoure · · Score: 1

      Yeah, well, who expects shotgun nerds in the IT community.
      Actually, I don't shoot much at all - but my dad was a national-level skeet competitor (so there were scatter guns all over the house when I was growing up). He'd recently had some of his guns appraised and I was floored as to what they were worth. Not a blue-collar sport any more, I guess...

    3. Re:gauge and shotguns by someone1234 · · Score: 1

      I hope you never killed a mosquito with it :)

      --
      Patents Drive Free Software as Hurricanes Drive Construction Industry
    4. Re:gauge and shotguns by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      Nope, only rabbits. When rabbits are in season, mosquitos aren't.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
  75. ...weird... by shentino · · Score: 1

    This is the first time I've heard of a DDoS attack using the legal system instead of the internet...

  76. In other News by chicknfood · · Score: 1

    Riaa about to go the way of the Northern Spotted Owl http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern_Spotted_Owl if a tree falls on an RIAA lawyer in the forest... does anyone care?

  77. Are you saying that defiance is inappropriate? by argent · · Score: 1

    Having known people that worked in the very IT department that received these letters i can say they obviously know who it was.

    It doesn't matter whether the IT people know, it matters whether they're following an appropriate policy on the disclosure of information about the students. Lawyers and PIs on TV sweet-talk (I mean, social engineer) information out of bureaucrats all the time, and in the context of the TV show you're identifying with the investigator and you approve of the result. In the context of real life this kind of stuff can get the bureaucrats into all kinds of hot water... including legal hot water.

    And it doesn't matter whether the organization or individual trying to get personal information is a "good" guy or a "bad" guy. And it doesn't matter whether the target of the investigation is a "good" guy or a "bad" guy. It's inappropriate for colleges (or for libraries, or bookstores, or grocery stores, or banks, or any other organization) to promiscuously reveal private information.

    In fact, I think it might be worthwhile seeing if there's legal recourse for the people whose information has been inappropriately revealed in pervious cases. A new kind of class action suit.