Copyright Scholar Challenges RIAA/DOJ Position
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "Leading copyright law scholar Prof. Pamela Samuelson, of the University of California law school, and research fellow Tara Wheatland, have published a 'working paper' which directly refutes the position taken by the US Department of Justice in RIAA cases on the constitutionality of the RIAA's statutory damages theories. The Department of Justice had argued in its briefs that the Court should follow a 1919 United States Supreme Court case which upheld the constitutionality of a statutory damages award that was 116 times the actual damages sustained, under a statute which gave consumers a right of action against railway companies. The Free Software Foundation filed an amicus curiae brief supporting the view that the more modern, State Farm/Gore test applied by the United States Supreme Court to punitive damages awards is applicable. The new paper is consistent with the FSF brief and contradicts the DOJ briefs, arguing that the Gore test should be applied. A full copy of the paper is available for viewing online (PDF)."
University of California law school
That narrows it down...
The DOJ is basing their arguments on an action from 1919 where the small guy was able to be awarded appropriate damages from the BIG guy.
How can the media companies been seen as akin to the small guy and the individual consumer the BIG guy?
By Benjamin goggles of course!
Did you ever wake up in the morning, with a Zombie Woof behind your eyes? -- FZ
This is very much a positive development, though really the whole issue is eventually going to have to go before the Supreme Court. At least they seem to have been generally pretty decent in their handling of Constitutional and "IP Law" issues the past few terms.
In practical terms, it doesn't have to go to the Supreme Court. A few well reasoned decisions in district courts, or courts of appeals, will have sweeping effect.
The DOJ's position -- if litigated -- doesn't have the chance of a snowball in hell of being upheld. The RIAA's statutory damages theory is flagrantly unconstitutional, under the Williams test or under the Gore test.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
Whatever happened to improvisational near real time performances in the public domain.. rotfl.
Well anyway if someone wants a recording of the bad storms that rolled through here about 3 hours ago with some guitar recorded live.. here it is.
Tennessee Storms of April 10, 2009 and guitar
Like the universe..the net has a lot of alternatives, and not just mine. Stop being force-fed what you like.
Is this thing on? Check. Check.
yes, because "working papers" are important agents of legal authority and change (hint: they mean jack shit to the law, which is decided inside courtrooms, not on internet blogs and uploaded PDFs).
The 'working paper' is merely an earlier stage of a law review article. This working paper will almost certainly become a law review article.
If you think law review articles are not read by the courts and considered carefully you are wrong.
In UMG v. Lindor, the only one of these RIAA cases to litigate the constitutionality-of-statutory-damages issue, the Judge referred to 2 law review articles in ruling against the RIAA.
Throughout legal history, many important decisions have been guided and informed by legal scholarship in law reviews.
Yes cases are decided in "courtrooms" but scholarship is an integral part of each practicing lawyer's work, and of each Judge's work.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
So the Obama Justice Department has its head up its collective RIA-A$$. And their justification for this is that the Bush Justice Department had their own heads up in the same warm dark spot so it must be right. So how's all the Hope and Change working out for you?
I was disappointed in the low grade, obsequious briefs the Justice Department filed in SONY v. Tenenbaum and SONY v. Cloud. I was hoping for "change" but found none in this area. Nevertheless we are early in the game, and the Justice Department RIAA lawyers are all legally recused from dealing with these cases.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
these people are relentless and have enough of an agenda + litigation budget to try circuit-hopping until they get favorable rulings
You don't know them like I do. There is no way they will let this issue get fully litigated. Whenever they run up against a lawyer like me they will fold up their tent before letting this issue get decided. When they lose on this issue, the game is over for them. Without their ridiculous, draconian statutory damages threat, they are finished.
They might go to the mat in the Tenenbaum case, only because they look upon Prof. Nesson's unconventional legal arguments as easy prey. But I think they would be making a mistake in going to the mat even there, because Judge Gertner is not going to let Prof. Nesson control the legal parameters. She will determine them.
Most likely you will never see these issues fully litigated in the RIAA v. end user cases at all.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
I can name 5: Roberts, Alito, Scalia, Kennedy, and Souter. (yeah, I'm a pessimist)