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Jammie Thomas To Appeal $1.9 Million RIAA Verdict

CNet reports that the lawyers representing Jammie Thomas-Rasset have confirmed she will be fighting the $1.9 million verdict handed down in her case against the RIAA. "The Recording Industry Association of America said on Monday that it had made a phone call to Sibley and law partner Kiwi Camara last week to ask whether Thomas-Rasset wanted to discuss a settlement. An RIAA representative said that its lawyers were told by Sibley that Thomas-Rasset wasn't interested in discussing any deal that required her to admit guilt or pay any money. ... 'She's not interested in settling,' attorney Joe Sibley said in a brief phone interview. 'She wants to take the issue up on appeal on the constitutionality of the damages. That's one of the main arguments — that the damages are disproportionate to any actual harm.'"

204 comments

  1. Exxon Valdez, Anybody by MarkvW · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How does Jammie Thomas stack up against the EXXON Valdez case? EXXON got its punitive damages reduced. Why won't the same arguments work for Ms. Thomas? Any lawyers with opinions out there?

    1. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think they've actually paid out anything yet apart from the cost of the cleanup

    2. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by moon3 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Can we say bad analogy? I see no parallel between those two cases except that Exxon and Thomas are both being defendants.

    3. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by causality · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Can we say bad analogy? I see no parallel between those two cases except that Exxon and Thomas are both being defendants.

      I don't know for sure what the GP was saying. However, rather than balk at this, I will apply just a tiny bit of common sense and see where that takes me.

      Assuming that punitive damages were awarded agains Exxon and that Exxon argued that those damages were excessive and therefore unconstitutional, perhaps Thomas could make a similar argument. I am "assuming" that because there is no other way that the GP's statement could make any sense, therefore it must obviously be what he meant.

      Having established the strong likelihood of that, the question now is whether Thomas is some kind of special case that can't use those arguments.

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    4. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      Because EXXON basically IS the government? (You know, revolving doors and such.)

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    5. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So she should be made to pay the cost of cleaning any copyright infringing mp3s off her hard drive? Great idea.

    6. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by YenTheFirst · · Score: 1

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exxon_Shipping_Co._v._Baker

      basically: An Exxon oil tanker grounded, spilling oil and causing TONS of damage. Punitive damages were set at $2.5 billion, but reduced by quite a bit, to $500 million.

      The argument presented there was that punitive damages should be at least in the same ballpark as compensatory damages. This is the same argument many people believe apply to the Thomas case, since if her punishment was proportional to actual damages caused, it would be significantly less.

      Incidentally, there's a reason that there's such a high cap on punitive damages in infringement cases. If that weren't the case, large companies could attempt for-profit infringement, and even if they did get caught and had to pay damages based on actual damage, those fines would be largely covered by the profit made infringing!

      So, without excessive punitive fines to make up for the ease of copying, in theory, willful for-profit copyright fraud would be much more attractive, because of it's positive expected value.

      --
      It's not stupid. It's Advanced.
    7. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How does Jammie Thomas stack up against the EXXON Valdez case?

      If Exxon had been offered a chance to settle for $5000 at the start, they would have taken it.

      if Exxon had been offered a chance to settle for $5000 after their first court loss, they would have taken it.

      Hence, you can't really compare Exxon to Thomas, as Exxon is not stupid.

      EXXON got its punitive damages reduced.

      If Thomas gets lucky, and the statutory damages are reduced from $80k per song to the statutory minimum of $750 per song, it will still come out to more than the RIAA has repeatedly offered to let her settle for.

    8. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by causality · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Incidentally, there's a reason that there's such a high cap on punitive damages in infringement cases. If that weren't the case, large companies could attempt for-profit infringement, and even if they did get caught and had to pay damages based on actual damage, those fines would be largely covered by the profit made infringing!

      True, though that's why this is unjust. It's unjust because there is a staggering difference between commercial for-profit infringement and what Thomas has done. Measures intended to deter the former should never be used against the latter. It is my belief that it would be better for the RIAA and all of its member companies to go bankrupt than for our legal system to be perverted and used as a tool of revenge in this way.

      Incidentally, since when did our justice system start caring about making sure that commercial lawbreaking is not profitable? They certainly don't seem to care about this for antitrust cases...

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    9. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by mrchaotica · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Incidentally, there's a reason that there's such a high cap on punitive damages in infringement cases. If that weren't the case, large companies could attempt for-profit infringement, and even if they did get caught and had to pay damages based on actual damage, those fines would be largely covered by the profit made infringing!

      Wait, that doesn't make sense: the profit should be used up covering the fines for the compensatory damages (by definition!); punitive damages, even if proportional to the compensatory ones, would be over and above that.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    10. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, according to my reading of the Supreme Court opinion, the punitive damages were limited by Maritime Law. That is not applicable to the Jammie Thomas case at all, so it's not going to apply. Even if the damages were punitive. Which again, doesn't apply to Jammie Thomas.

      http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=US&navby=case&vol=000&invol=07-219 read the opinion yourself if you want.

    11. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by value_added · · Score: 2, Funny

      Assuming that punitive damages were awarded agains Exxon and that Exxon argued that those damages were excessive and therefore unconstitutional, perhaps Thomas could make a similar argument.

      Actually, the case involved both punitive and compensatory damages. The Supreme Court decided that a 1:1 ratio was the fair upper limit for punitive damages, and reduced it.

      As for the OP, my take is that he's simply way off in left field suggesting that a what happened in a given maritime case has any relevance to this copyright infringement case. The "bad anology" comment was correct. Hell, what's next -- someone suggesting that just because a "being a nice guy" defense works in traffic court, it should work similarly in federal court?

    12. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by CodeBuster · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I am no so certain that Thomas is being stupid by continuing to fight. There are some really good Constitutional points to be argued, particularly with regard to damages, and since she seems willing to go forward then I say lets see how far this goes. Her case, sympathetic or not, has already generated lots of publicity and is seen by many, at least within the technology industry, to be an important part of a larger debate on copyright going forward. If this case is going to be the showdown of the century with the copyright cartels then I say lets have it now; before the RIAA and their Justice Department cronies can get DMCA 2.0 and secret copyright treaties pushed through a distracted Congress without any substantial public debate.

    13. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by YenTheFirst · · Score: 2, Insightful

      (First off, I disagree with $1.92 million in damages. It's absolutely ridiculous, IMNSHO. I want to explain my point a bit further, though)

      Wait, that doesn't make sense: the profit should be used up covering the fines for the compensatory damages (by definition!)

      well, yes, and that works if and only if copyright infringement is always found out and prosecuted successfully.

      Imagine, for a moment, punitive damages were small or nonexistent. I start a DVD pirating company, selling copied DVDs for $5 apiece.

      I sell 100,000 each of two particular titles. my $5 is basically pure profit, because of the almost nonexistent cost of copying. If I don't get caught, that's, say, $450,000 per title profit for me. If I do get caught, I have to pay compensatory damages of $1,000,000. ($10/DVD).

      The profits from one or two titles (in this example) completely offset the fines from getting caught for one.

      So, as long as I only get caught for a third of my titles, I make a rather nice profit. While this example uses made-up numbers, the basic idea stands: Due to the low cost, and high profit potential, of copying copyrighted works, straight-up compensatory damages don't act as an effective deterrent

      As a side note about 'only getting caught for 1/3rd". In the Thomas case, do you think she really uploaded only 24 files, ever? She quite likely had uploaded more than that, it's only the 24 songs she's caught for

      Say Thomas had uploaded 100 songs, to 100 people, and somehow made $0.10 on each upload. (she didn't) The RIAA can prove 25 songs to 25 people (They can't). Straight compensation would be 25*25*$1, or $125. Her profits would be 100*100*$0.10, or $1000. A contrived example, yes, but it illustrates the idea. The expected value of for-profit piracy is a positive amount, without damages beyond straight compensatory.

      THAT SAID, the fundamental disconnect here is that Thomas's infringement WASN'T FOR PROFIT. In this situation, the law doesn't correctly account for reality

      --
      It's not stupid. It's Advanced.
    14. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by mrchaotica · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Imagine, for a moment, punitive damages were small or nonexistent.

      Why would I want to imagine that? It has nothing whatsoever to do with my point!

      I sell 100,000 each of two particular titles. my $5 is basically pure profit, because of the almost nonexistent cost of copying. If I don't get caught, that's, say, $450,000 per title profit for me. If I do get caught, I have to pay compensatory damages of $1,000,000. ($10/DVD).

      The profits from one or two titles (in this example) completely offset the fines from getting caught for one.

      Only in your idiotic and pointless strawman example. Back in reality, you get fined $1,000,000 in compensatory damages, eliminating all your profit, and then get fined another $1,000,000 in punitive damages, to act as a deterrent. That's what "compensatory" and "punitive" mean!

      ...straight-up compensatory damages don't act as an effective deterrent

      No shit, Sherlock; that's what the punitive damages are for! WTF is your point?

      Say Thomas had uploaded 100 songs, to 100 people, and somehow made $0.10 on each upload. (she didn't) The RIAA can prove 25 songs to 25 people (They can't). Straight compensation would be 25*25*$1, or $125. Her profits would be 100*100*$0.10, or $1000. A contrived example, yes, but it illustrates the idea. The expected value of for-profit piracy is a positive amount, without damages beyond straight compensatory.

      No, that's not how it works. There are only two possibilities: either you can prove* that she'd made the $1000 profit, in which case you set that as the amount of compensatory damages, or you can't prove that she'd made the $1000 profit, in which case you leave the compensatory damages at $125.

      In fact, it's a fucking tautology: if you can't prove it happened, then you have to assume it didn't happen. So, if the $1000 profit can't be proven, then the $1000 profit didn't exist. And since it didn't exist, it's irrelevant to the calculation of the damages, compensatory or otherwise!

      And then either way, you tack on the punitive damages (that are not "small or nonexistent," but rather in a proportional amount) in addition, to act punitively. But what you can't do is go around saying "I can't prove you made $1000 profit but I want to imagine you did, so I'm going to arbitrarily punish you based on the imagined offense instead of the real one!" And that sort of gross miscarriage of justice is what happens when the punitive damages stop being proportional to the compensatory damages, as is the case here.

      (* "prove" relative to the applicable standard of evidence -- "beyond a reasonable doubt" for criminal, "preponderance of evidence" for civil, etc.)

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    15. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More importantly, if you're already out 1.9million, wouldn't you spend a few more thousand in lawyer/court fees for the chance to have it lowered? It's simple gambling.

    16. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The defendant's profit has nothing to do with the damages: if I burn down your car I am not making any profit what so ever, I am even at loss spending my gas and matches, do you believe that no material damage would be caused in this case? You don't need to prove how much profit the defendant had made in order to claim damages.

    17. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by gnasher719 · · Score: 1, Interesting

      True, though that's why this is unjust. It's unjust because there is a staggering difference between commercial for-profit infringement and what Thomas has done. Measures intended to deter the former should never be used against the latter. It is my belief that it would be better for the RIAA and all of its member companies to go bankrupt than for our legal system to be perverted and used as a tool of revenge in this way.

      I personally disagree completely with the distinction between commercial or for-profit and non-commercial infringement. I think there should be fines that are based on the best possible estimate of actual damage. It seems obvious that a commercial infringer, who tries to make money from infringement, is much more likely to cause actual damage - if a commercial infringer makes money, it is very likely that there is actual damage at least equal to that amount and likely higher; Jammie Thomas on the other hand most likely didn't cause much damage at all. So in practice, commercial infringers tend to cause more actual damage and should be punished harder accordingly, but not because it is commercial, but because it is more damage.

    18. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by easyTree · · Score: 2

      No damage was done by her downloading/uploading. Damage has been done by the manipulation of the legal system in an attempt to stifle innovation and healthy human emotions such as sharing. Every time they get away with this kind of blatant abuse, it's one more nail in their coffin. Keep it up, fuckers.

      When the tide has turned, hopefully someone will go after the evil fucks and reclaim all the money extorted from ordinary people.

    19. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by Keeper+Of+Keys · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It would be a far more interesting test case if she came out and admitted she did it. Then they lawyers would have to make the case that (non-profit) file sharing is actually legal, and/or that the damages are unconstitutional. The last trial was just about the technicalities of whether the prosecution could prove she did it, and they did quite a good job of that.

    20. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by LeperPuppet · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm hoping to see newer anti-piracy messages that reference the Exxon Valdez. "You wouldn't leave a drunk captain in charge of an oil tanker"

    21. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by zaivala · · Score: 1

      EXXON has yet to pay the full damages awarded by the court, so I fail to see the comparison.

    22. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by AK+Marc · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I see no parallel between those two cases except that Exxon and Thomas are both being defendants.

      And that's enough or a parallel. I'm not fully up, but I think the Supreme Court said that punitive damages should be capped at no more than three times actual damages. That's simple, clear, and since there was no actual damage that can be demonstrated, should have punitive damage at 3x zero, for $0. After all, they never addressed her having them illegally, but uploading them, and there is no proof that anyone actually got them from her other than people that already had permission.

    23. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      QQ moar

    24. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by sjames · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily. For a large scale infringement, the actual damages would need to be based on the licensing cost rather than retail. If the infringer was abl to pull a better than 50 point margin, there would still be cash left after the punitive damages.

    25. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by PeelBoy · · Score: 1

      Except for the fact that Exxon wouldn't have been offered $5,000 to settle and if they felt like the settlement price was also unfair they wouldn't have settled.

    26. Re:Exxon Valdez, Anybody by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Well yeah, the real issue is the plaintiff's loss, not the defendant's profit. However, they're often correlated well enough to calculate one from the other -- or in other words, the defendant's profit (or potential profit) is often equal to the plaintiff's loss, so you could talk about them interchangeably (as I did).

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  2. I hope she gets a second opinion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Given the track record of her lawyers, she could end up with a life sentence.

    1. Re:I hope she gets a second opinion by Cylix · · Score: 1

      I was thinking something similar, but then again maybe their best bet was to get the maximum insanity.

      Without contrast some things are difficult to perceive. In this scenario, these damages are quite a bit more then the original figure.

      Though I'm not quite banking on it, but perhaps they wanted things to leave reality and enter the realm of complete silliness.

      --
      "You should always go to other people's funerals; otherwise, they won't come to yours." -- Yogi Berra
    2. Re:I hope she gets a second opinion by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 1

      Yes, indeed funny.

      But I think this was the plan all along, to determine what the actual realistic "damages" for this type of transgression is. Something perhaps in the "reasonable" range.

      --
      If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
    3. Re:I hope she gets a second opinion by Jurily · · Score: 1

      Without contrast some things are difficult to perceive. In this scenario, these damages are quite a bit more then the original figure.

      Quite a bit? $80 thousand per mp3. She could've produced a new album for each file from that money.

    4. Re:I hope she gets a second opinion by easyTree · · Score: 1

      But I think this was the plan all along, to determine what the actual realistic "damages" for this type of transgression is

      Zero, for example.

      Absence of benefit != loss and unless they used the RIAA's bandwidth, I'm not seeing any other source of loss.

    5. Re:I hope she gets a second opinion by Cylix · · Score: 1

      This was in reference to the original verdict which led a significant figure. The current figure dwarfs the original punitive damages vastly.

      --
      "You should always go to other people's funerals; otherwise, they won't come to yours." -- Yogi Berra
  3. Of Course by camperdave · · Score: 1, Insightful

    'She wants to take the issue up on appeal on the constitutionality of the damages. That's one of the main arguments -- that the damages are disproportionate to any actual harm.'"
    Of course they're disproportionate to any actual harm. That's the whole point. The damages are meant to be a deterrent against future abuses. The RIAA is sticking her head on a pike as a warning to others.

    --
    When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    1. Re:Of Course by Cowclops · · Score: 2, Interesting

      IANAL but if I recall correctly, punitive damages are typically considered unconstitutional if they exceed 10 times actual damages. Feel free to correct me on that one.

    2. Re:Of Course by Nomen+Publicus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And when did deterrents ever stop murders or kids making copies of songs for their friends?

      The big fines were intended to make professional copyright violations where some factory turns out hundreds or thousands of copies of fake product unprofitable. Using the same law to beat up some random person is disproportionate.

    3. Re:Of Course by sking · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It seemed to me that a disproportionate damage award may have been the strategy all along, given the performance of her attorneys.

      --
      The AntiJoey
    4. Re:Of Course by Overzeetop · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Which her lawyers believe is unconstitutional, hence the appeal. Making an example of one particular offender isn't the way the law is supposed to work. You transgress, you are punished appropriately. The problem is that the law, written in a different age, and with different parameters in mind, should not be applied in this fashion. Unfortunately, in this case, the defendant does not have the financial means to set this straight. The lawyers, with deep pockets and a public name to make for themselves, do have the means. There is no doubt in my mind that they are not doing this altruistically, but they happen to be fighting what many believe to be a poorly written statute and in that sense are fighting for the common good at the same time. I've got no problem with their desire to gain reputation in the process.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    5. Re:Of Course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      That's the whole point. The damages are meant to be a deterrent against future abuses. The RIAA is sticking her head on a pike as a warning to others.

      Punitive damages can only be awarded in effort to deter the defendant from committing the same infringement again. It is expressly forbidden to make an example of a defendant by awarding a grossly high settlement for the purpose of making others think twice before doing the same thing. It is also expressly forbidden to award higher damages for acts that were not included in the trial. For example, in this case, there were 24 files in question. It's possible the jury said "I'm sure there were a lot more" and award damages with that in mind. They can't do that.

      If either of those things occurred, the verdict is immediately nullified. I'm sure they will be raised on appeal, but they will be hard to prove. If you read the jury instructions on this case, it clearly explicates that they are to award damages ONLY for the files in question. There was even a neat little worksheet to help them with it.

    6. Re:Of Course by icebike · · Score: 1

      There is no doubt in my mind that they are not doing this altruistically, but they happen to be fighting what many believe to be a poorly written statute and in that sense are fighting for the common good at the same time.

      Its not clear how you can string those two thoughts together in the same sentence and not see the conflict.

      Fighting for the common good with no payday in sight is a pretty good definition of "altruistic" if you ask me.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    7. Re:Of Course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lurn 2 englesh comprehendshun

    8. Re:Of Course by Cylix · · Score: 1

      I recall something about exposure being important later in a legal career.

      I remember an interview with someone who would constantly attack items and submit something akin to open briefs on topics hoping to be heard.

      The game didn't seem to be so much about making change or simply righting wrongs, but rather simply get exposure so that one day he could sit on that same bench.

      I admit I know virtually nothing regarding politics and lawyers. Both tend to leave a sour taste in my mouth ;)

      --
      "You should always go to other people's funerals; otherwise, they won't come to yours." -- Yogi Berra
    9. Re:Of Course by Overzeetop · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Their payday is in marketing dollars, and it's very real. For example - I do training exercises, and spend time with local officials - free of charge - to help them understand the technical points of building codes. I do this for local contractors and architects as well. As a result, my name is "known" locally in the industry, and when a really tough case comes up, just about everyone says "you'd better get Overzeetop to look at this one." I'm so busy - in the middle of this recession and in one of the heavily affected industries - that I'm working 60-70 hours a week (no, that doesn't include /. time).

      Trust me - this is not to fill some magical well of karma. It's to make a name, and to make a name is to make money.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    10. Re:Of Course by camperdave · · Score: 0, Redundant

      For example - I do training exercises, and spend time with local officials - free of charge - to help them understand the technical points of building codes. I do this for local contractors and architects as well.

      Mike Holmes? Is that you?

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    11. Re:Of Course by Quothz · · Score: 1

      And when did deterrents ever stop murders

      Eh? But they do. Compare the murder rate in, say, Somalia to that of the US. Nations in anarchy or without effective police enforcement consistently have tremendously higher crime rates than countries with stronger police. Deterrents will never put a stop to crime, and I don't know whether there's good evidence that stronger deterrents are more effective, but there's absolutely no question that deterrents have a powerful effect.

      It's worth noting that the deterrent in question - civil action for file sharing - is applied pretty inconsistently. Only a tiny percentage of uploaders are targeted and some points of the law are still in question. Someone has probably researched how such things correlate to the effectiveness of the deterrent, but I haven't looked into it. Purely talking out of my ass, I suspect it weakens the social effect considerably.

    12. Re:Of Course by orkysoft · · Score: 3, Informative

      The deterrent is the chance of being caught. In Somalia, or any other country without an effective police force, the chance of being caught is zero, so there is no deterrent. The actual magnitude of the punishment has surprisingly little deterring effect, and in some cases can make crimes worse: back when capital punishment was applied to just about every crime, there was a big incentive to kill all witnesses to reduce the chance of getting caught, leading to many more murders than would otherwise have been the case.

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    13. Re:Of Course by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      That argument is wrong.

      The fines on big companies should be just as proportionate. And they are. Because there they get fined millions, but also SOLD millions of fake CDs.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    14. Re:Of Course by westlake · · Score: 1

      And when did deterrents ever stop murders or kids making copies of songs for their friends?

      Murder rates in countries with a tradition of strong and effective law enforcement tend to be quite low. List of countries by intentional homicide rate

      The extortion kidnapping as an organized criminal enterprise was effectively extinguished in the U.S. in the nineteen thirties.

      In Mexico it dominates the news. Mexico refuses to send French kidnap convict home [June 22]

      In the U.S. it isn't the kid who is being sued. It is her parent or guardian.

      The one the geek is always saying should bear the responsibility when things go wrong at home.

      The big fines were intended to make professional copyright violations where some factory turns out hundreds or thousands of copies of fake product unprofitable. Using the same law to beat up some random person is disproportionate.

      The civil judgment isn't a fine.

      It's an award of damages for your unlicensed wholesale distribution. You aren't distributing a fake - you are distributing the real thing.

      The production budget for a film like WALL-E is about $200 million dollars - double that for marketing and other costs.

      The film represents four or five years of full or part-time work of four hundred highly skilled artists and engineers - and raked in hundreds of millions of export dollars.

      Should it surprise the geek that the government doesn't want to see all that go away?

      Should it surprise the geek that talent at this level is more likely to be invested in sequels to Toy Story and Ice Age than in the original - adult-oriented - sci-fi and fantasy films he claims he really wants to see?

    15. Re:Of Course by westlake · · Score: 1

      Making an example of one particular offender isn't the way the law is supposed to work.

      It's the way the law always works.

      The lesson never sinks in the first tine around.

      The appellate court can reduce the award without ever reaching the constitutional issues that seem so enticing to the geek.

      That ends the case and leaves Thomas up the creek without a paddle.

      There is nothing more dangerous to a defendant than the lawyer who wants to make law.

    16. Re:Of Course by Temposs · · Score: 1

      Somalia is a war-ravaged nation of mostly desperate and very impoverished people. That has a huge effect on what actions people take. Desperate people take desperate actions. They will take any kind of work, do any kind of deed that gets them a meal. Having no effective police force, they look to ruthless people with power and resources who can protect them and their family from being killed or attacked or robbed. The ruthless alpha character by his nature must act in violence against rival factions to keep them at bay.

      In the US, people are mostly fat and more or less don't have to think about where their next meal is coming from. We have an effective policing that are likewise not desperate, and are minimally corrupt. This means we don't have to worry about protecting our families and we can think about moral considerations before we think about our very survival.

      This is why our murder rate is lower than Somalia's.

      --
      Knowledge is just opinion that you trust enough to act upon. -Orson Scott Card
    17. Re:Of Course by Krneki · · Score: 1

      Exactly, it doesn't make any sense.

      If I go to a CD store and I steal 2-3 CDs, if they catch me, do I have to pay 2M $?

      The punishment can't be bigger then the crime, we stopped to cut hands a long time ago for a reason.

      --
      Love many, trust a few, do harm to none.
    18. Re:Of Course by ae1294 · · Score: 1

      The production budget for a film like WALL-E is about $200 million dollars

      Why are you quoting movie cost info on a case that involves music? It's dumb to troll high on crack!

    19. Re:Of Course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bill "Sue Ann" Robins, is that you?

    20. Re:Of Course by cdrguru · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You are confusing retail with the price for distribution.

      If I want to buy a song for distribution, what do you think the price would be? I'd guess as a starting point you would figure out how much you might ever make, ever, from retail sales.

      So $100,000 a song might not be that low a price tag.

    21. Re:Of Course by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      YouTube. It is the model for the future and the model that is being embraced by young people.

      Sure, WALL-E was a $200 million dollar movie. Unfortunately, some folks think that a similar quantity of entertainment (per unit hour, I suppose) can be obtained on YouTube (or Shufuni...) at significantly less cost. Which then means lower or zero cost to the entertainment consumer. At least this certainly seems to be where things are going.

      I suspect that we are going to have to let them try this approach. It is unfortunate, but I believe that most "entertainers" of one sort or another have just about had their fill and are seriously questioning if it is all worth it. I'll bet that more than few folks in the big-name music and movie production houses are also wondering why they are bothering.

      Piracy is reaching out it tenacles everywhere and given the structure of the Internet today it is pretty much impossible to stop. Most people under 30 have enough knowledge to understand how to download pirated materials even if they don't know how to rip a DVD or CD themselves. They also have the attitude that if it is on the Internet, it is free. So why pay money for something that is free. Besides, they are already paying plenty for high speed Internet access and doesn't all this come with it?

      I think we are going to have to see if YouTube and amature production can replace professionals. Sure, I think I know the answer already, as do most people if they stop to think about it. But it is all incredibly seductive, this idea of getting everything they want for free. It won't work, but I don't see any real alternative on the horizon. I do know that until the value of professional media is displayed to people and their nose rubbed in it really well people will not be willing to pay.

    22. Re:Of Course by Krneki · · Score: 1

      If she was reselling those song and earning from those sells, they yes, we can talk about damage.

      But she was only listening to those songs. Or am I missing something here?

      --
      Love many, trust a few, do harm to none.
    23. Re:Of Course by Culture20 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's worth noting that the deterrent in question [...] is applied pretty inconsistently. Only a tiny percentage [...] are targeted[...]. Someone has probably researched how such things correlate to the effectiveness of the deterrent, but I haven't looked into it. Purely talking out of my ass, I suspect it weakens the social effect considerably.

      Slightly edited, this fits speeding laws, enforcement, ticketing, and the revenue stream of such. Imagine if speeding laws were enforced uniformly and swiftly (a la the GPS system suggested recently); no more ticket money. The RIAA wants this kind of money, so they'll be sure not to over-fish these waters.

    24. Re:Of Course by MushMouth · · Score: 1

      You Tube? That's funny, the only people who make any money with You Tube are the IT guts who keep it running, and then only due to the subsidy from search and Adwords. I have friends who are very funny, talented film makers, while they do put stuff on You Tube, stuff that they make in their spare time, which isn't all that much. What do they with the most of their time? Work for Pixar on Toy Story 3, make the Comcast Town ads, or for Lucas on that shitty Terminator sequel.

    25. Re:Of Course by Pentium100 · · Score: 1

      OK, distribution. So if I go to a retail store, steal 200 physical CDs, distribute them to my friends and get cought. Would I have to pay $2M?

      How may CDs could I steal to have to pay $2M fine for it?

      Remember, a CD is a physical object, the theft of which actually causes a very measurable loss (price of that CD). Uploading a copy of a song does not cause the same loss.

    26. Re:Of Course by westlake · · Score: 1

      YouTube. It is the model for the future and the model that is being embraced by young people.

      For as long as Google is prepared to foot the bill.

      But you don't have to produce for the twenty-something market.

      The geek always talks about "obsolete business models." He never considers the possibility that marketing to the geek is the obsolete business model.

      This new golden age of theatrical animation plays well to audiences of every age. It plays particularly well to the audience that will buy the DVD and Blu-Ray disk.

      The three disk set from Amazon that includes a digital download copy and sells for $25. Theoretically at least, that is 150+ GB of content or more than half of your neighbor's monthly download cap.

    27. Re:Of Course by easyTree · · Score: 1

      The RIAA is sticking her head on a pike as a warning to others.

      That warning is a necker cube. At the moment, I'm seeing it from the perspective of "you need to work together to bring down the beast."

    28. Re:Of Course by easyTree · · Score: 1

      Nations in anarchy or without effective police enforcement consistently have tremendously higher crime rates than countries with stronger police.

      Yah; but if you factor in all the cases of "fatally injured whilst 'resisting arrest'" it probably balances out.

    29. Re:Of Course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are missing the fact that she was uploading those songs i.e. distributing them.

    30. Re:Of Course by Krneki · · Score: 1

      I see, still she was doing it in a non profit way.

      I guess this is the main difference between USA and EU, in EU if you do it for non-profit reason the punishment is none or minimal.

      --
      Love many, trust a few, do harm to none.
    31. Re:Of Course by edittard · · Score: 1

      The civil judgment isn't a fine.

      Not in name. But it's so far from any sensible concept of damages (i.e repairing/replacing a loss) that in actuality, it is a fine.

      --
      At the bottom of the /. main page it says 'Yesterday's News'. Well they got that right.
    32. Re:Of Course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These lawyers aren't guarenteed a victory. They're not taking clients who can actually pay their fees, because they're preoccupied with this case. Doing something altruistic that happens to benefit you is still altruism. They've shown their motives already, and their motives are justice, not their careers.

    33. Re:Of Course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thomas caused damages to the RIAA members and since the exact damages were impossible to prove the court has set them according to law. In case of unauthorized distribution "non profit way" is increasing damages if anything, the less the price of an illegal copy the more are the chances it will be chosen over the legit one and more are the damages to the rightful owner of the work.

    34. Re:Of Course by Krneki · · Score: 1

      But a company is not a person, surely the freedom of a person comes before the freedom of a company.

      --
      Love many, trust a few, do harm to none.
  4. Pay up thief by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well she is clearly one of the biggest threats to this world. I think she's got off light. She should have had to pay infinity billion dollars and spend the rest of her life in Guantanamo Bay.

    1. Re:Pay up thief by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sadly this is tagged as funny. I think she should spend the rest of her life in prison.

    2. Re:Pay up thief by The+Outlander · · Score: 0

      I was going to suggest the death penalty but your suggestion of life in Guantanamo Bay seems a lot worse, with the death penalty at least she will be judged sometime soon

    3. Re:Pay up thief by vodevil · · Score: 1

      But if they close Guantanamo, she might have to come back to the states, and which prison would accept a person who has clearly committed such a heinous crime?!

    4. Re:Pay up thief by PiSkyHi · · Score: 1

      I can see you've really worked on your sense of humour.

    5. Re:Pay up thief by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      Don't worry, people now in Guantanamo are not going back to the US. Where they will go to is another matter of course - so send her to Gitmo and she'll be out of the country forever. Maybe ending up in some minuscule pacific ocean island state or so.

    6. Re:Pay up thief by An+ominous+Cow+art · · Score: 1

      Life in Guantanamo? Are you insane? What if the League of Evil breaks her out? No, this clearly calls for the death penalty.

    7. Re:Pay up thief by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can see you failed to take my comment seriously. To each his own.

      I think it would be fair and just. Before anyone rebuttals with many examples of "but but but it's not fair! there are far worse crimes which receive lesser punishment!", I will submit that in my opinion criminals get off too easy in all circumstances. Period!

      The nerf world, nanny state, kumbaya singing, idiocracy will be the downfall of our species.

    8. Re:Pay up thief by DrScotsman · · Score: 1

      She should have had to pay infinity billion dollars...

      That's the spirit toadwarrior! But I think a real number might be more effective.

    9. Re:Pay up thief by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      But I think a real number might be more effective.

      No, I think that fining her 900,000,000+1,234,567,890i dollars would be more effective

    10. Re:Pay up thief by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm, Club Gitmo... doesn't sound too bad actually compared to a pmita US prison.

    11. Re:Pay up thief by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was originally going to mod you +1 Funny, but then I realised; there are people in the world (namely the RIAA) who genuinely, honestly believe that. It's kinda like modding a holocaust joke +1 Funny, then you realise it's posted by a neo-nazi...

      From http://www.smh.com.au/national/movie-pirates-funding-terrorists-20090627-d0gm.html?page=-1

      "It has been recognised by governments ⦠that there is a link between movie piracy and terrorist funding."

      From http://news.cnet.com/Terrorist-link-to-copyright-piracy-alleged/2100-1028_3-5722835.html

      "Some associates of terrorist groups may be involved in IPR crime," Stedman said. "During the course of our investigations, we have encountered suspects who have shown great affinity for Hezbollah and its leadership."

      There was a big Slashdot thread about it a while back... http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/03/08/140216

      I genuinely believe there are some people in this world who believe that downloading a torrent of a movie that's been out for a year or more is akin to terrorism and should be punished accordingly. Given that the people who persue this woman (who, by the way, is obviously guilty) believe that she should spend the rest of her life as a debt-slave confims this.

  5. Worrisome Potential Precedent by resistant · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm worried that the Supreme Court, should it eventually take this case, might find a way to justify these hugely exorbitant awards on technically narrow and nit-picky grounds that nonetheless are broad enough in reality to make fighting the RIAA essentially a hopeless cause financially for most people. The Kelo decision shows the kind of sloppy reasoning that can lead to appalling results. It surely doesn't help that Jammie appears to be guilty of deliberate file-sharing and tampering with evidence after the fact. One could wish heartily for a much more sympathetic defendant.

    --
    A truly excellent pizza parlor is a delight unto the heavens. Treasure the sauce and the toppings!
    1. Re:Worrisome Potential Precedent by Overzeetop · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm not so sure, actually. If the defendant were not clearly guilty, the ruling might simply be overturned. In this case, with it pretty darned likely that she did do what did, the real case here is what kinds of limits should be set for recovering legal damages. Is non-commercial distribution really worth an amount equal to destroying the rest of your life? I would think that the plaintiff would need to show _actual_ damages, or be limited to a nominal fine. That is true for most litigation I'm involved in (architecture/engineering disputes). Unless you get into personal injury and pain-and-suffering cases, you've got to show actual damages and actual repair costs attributed _directly_ to the act. Consequential and incidental damages are very hard to win. Content industries insist on trying to chase the low hanging fruit (file sharers) because the law stacks the deck in their favor. If they can't provide an actual value, they get to select a prescriptive (that's not the right word...I know) value which is orders of magnitude larger than the original item.

      If they can't prove the actual losses, they should get 3x the value (or 5x or 10x, not 100000x). That means finding the people who downloaded the songs and (1) determining that they did not already own that song in another form (vinyl, magnetic, CD, or commercial download) and (2) that they would have purchased the item if it were only available through a commercial site. Simple cause-effect analysis.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    2. Re:Worrisome Potential Precedent by Will.Woodhull · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If I had mod points this morning, I would mod parent up. Sicne I don't have any at the moment, I'll argue why someone else should mod parent "insightful" or maybe "informative".

      If the defendant were not clearly guilty, the ruling might simply be overturned.

      This is exactly why I'm pleased that she is appealing the ruling on constitutional grounds. The appellate courts can (and should) look for every other possible basis for deciding a case before they start looking at constitutional issues and setting precedents. Since the preponderance of evidence says that the law was broken, this is now the first good test to see whether the law itself is good. And, ideally, whether the techniques of institutional barratry used by the RIAA and their member corporations are legal.

      --
      Will
    3. Re:Worrisome Potential Precedent by Solandri · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If the defendant were not clearly guilty, the ruling might simply be overturned. In this case, with it pretty darned likely that she did do what did, the real case here is what kinds of limits should be set for recovering legal damages.

      Agreed. If law said the sentence for drunk driving were 20 years, and you wanted to challenge the constitutionality of the long sentence, by definition the defendant would have to have driven drunk. That said, it would be possible to get a more sympathetic defendant in this case - maybe someone who unwittingly fileshared songs. e.g. They installed Kazaa, tried it briefly, and stopped using it not realizing it stayed active in the background sharing their legit MP3 collection (ripped from CDs they owned).

      If they can't prove the actual losses, they should get 3x the value (or 5x or 10x, not 100000x).

      Yeah, I can understand being awarded multiple times the value of the song. If she were penalized just 1x the cost of buying the songs (as some here have proposed), then you'd have nothing to lose by downloading. If you're caught, you only pay as much as if you'd bought it. If you're not caught, you get it for free. So clearly the penalty has to be more than the cost of just buying the songs.

      But the award in this case works out to $1.9 mil / 24 songs = $79k per song. If you look at the RIAA's 2001 marketing stats, they made about $500,000 per new CD release. If you figure a CD averages 8 songs, that's only $60,000 in annual worldwide revenue per song in the first year as a new release. i.e. The award has her paying more per song than the average revenue the RIAA gets per new song in its first year. You don't even need to check if the award is "cruel or unusual punishment." You can tell it's way too high because it makes it a better business model to sue filesharers than to actually sell the songs on the market. The initial $220k award was possibly unconstitutional. The current $1.9 million award is insanity and would destroy capitalism if it stands.

    4. Re:Worrisome Potential Precedent by selven · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The RIAA keeps their litigation against sympathetic defendants quiet and trumpets their successes against the more unsavory members of society. They have to - it's all a giant PR game.

    5. Re:Worrisome Potential Precedent by cdrguru · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      The problem is, the retail cost of the music is meaningless. She did not "buy" the songs for herself, she obtained them in a manner that assured they were available for others to download from her.

      You want to ask someone what the cost of buying one song for distribution is? It is almost certainly ore than $60,000 per song. Michael Jackson apparently has left a lot of songs recorded for his children. All estimates I have heard indicate that they aren't going to be in any financial difficultly, ever. I suspect they were counting on getting more than $60,000 per song for the distribution rights.

      There is no comparison between the retail price and the price for distribution.

    6. Re:Worrisome Potential Precedent by deblau · · Score: 1
      I don't know about architecture cases, but Congress considered your argument, and explicitly rejected it:

      (a) In General.-- Except as otherwise provided by this title, an infringer of copyright is liable for either-- (1) the copyright owner's actual damages and any additional profits of the infringer, as provided by subsection (b); or (2) statutory damages, as provided by subsection (c).

      17 USC 504. Subsection (c) provides, for each copyrighted "work", for a recovery of between $750 and $30,000. The minimum can be lowered to $200 if the "infringer was not aware and had no reason to believe that his or her acts constituted an infringement of copyright", and the maximum can be raised to $150,000 if the infringement was "willful". With all the copyright articles on slashdot, I'm surprised I have to keep repeating this.

      Thomas's lawyers could show that (1) Congress exceeded their constitutional authority in passing this law, or (2) that the law shouldn't apply in her case. The first is a very high hill to climb, since (despite what you might hear about activist judges) the federal courts are very deferential to the political wranglings that go into creating laws. That said, the law was written in different times, when today's primary mode of infringement hadn't even been contemplated. The second approach might get some traction, but it wouldn't help anyone else. Other defendants would still have to make the same "this law doesn't apply to ME" argument.

      --
      This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
    7. Re:Worrisome Potential Precedent by TheRaven64 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You are not reading the grandparent's comment. The average total income from selling a song is $60,000. That is, the total money made from selling every copy of a song that is sold, is $60,000. With this in mind, the average value of the copyright of a particular song is $60,000, because that is the total amount of money that can be made from owning the copyright. The cost of buying a non-exclusive distribution license for a song is going to be less than the cost of buying the copyright outright, and if the value of the copyright is $60,000 then the distribution rights will be less.

      There are, of course, some outliers. A small number of songs will make a lot more money, while a large number will make a lot less. If you picked a band at random from the list of those signed by the RIAA and offered them $79K to make their song available for download for free then they would most likely accept; there are very, very few who would make more money by not accepting your offer.

      The problem with the $79K award is that, if you work on the assumption that she is expected to be able to pay, then the damages an artist can get from a single count of copyright infringement is greater than the total income that they would otherwise get from selling music.

      If she is not expected to be able to pay - if the statutory fine set at a level intended to bankrupt infringers - then there is a good case for the level of the fine being unconstitutional. If, on the other hand, she is expected to be able to pay, then level of the fine is such probably unconstitutional under Section 8 because creating an economic environment where it is more lucrative to sue for copyright infringement than distribute your creative works will not 'promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts'.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    8. Re:Worrisome Potential Precedent by spire3661 · · Score: 1

      The Larry Flynt "Im the worst and if I can get justice, anyone can" train of thought does have its merits.

      --
      Good-bye
    9. Re:Worrisome Potential Precedent by Xebikr · · Score: 1

      What I would like to know is what is going through the mind of the jury? Who are these people who seem to think that copyright infringement is serious enough to ruin this woman's life over? They don't have children or grandchildren who download or upload music to other people? My experience with infringing copyright began when I was in elementary school and would make my own mix tapes. I would either use a double deck tape player to copy specific songs from other collections or I would stay next to the radio to quickly press the 'unpause' button when a song I liked came on. Sometimes I would *gasp* give copies of the tapes to my friends. Did they never do that? How did the RIAA find all those humorless technologically impaired corporate drones and get them all on the same jury. Seriously: What the hell?

    10. Re:Worrisome Potential Precedent by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      Here's the question, and one that is salient here: Is the "sharing" (i.e. non-commercial, passive distribution) of a copyrighted work - no matter how small or valuable/invaluable - considered worth more than the average American makes in nearly 3 years? That means a full album of 12 songs will financially ruin an individual for life. Is there proportionality in that?

      I think it's a valid argument.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    11. Re:Worrisome Potential Precedent by risk+one · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The problem with the $79K award is that, if you work on the assumption that she is expected to be able to pay, then the damages an artist can get from a single count of copyright infringement is greater than the total income that they would otherwise get from selling music.

      But, if that happened, then owning the rights to music would become more important to music labels than actually producing good music. The whole business of making music would become a perverse combination of hype and ownership on a multinational level. Then, their legal arm would grow stronger and stronger and it would begin a maffia-like extortion of insignificant music downloaders, ruining people's lives without regard for any kind of proportion.

      Imagine such a world.

    12. Re:Worrisome Potential Precedent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you look at the list of songs Jammie Thomas was found to have shared, you'll note that most, if not all of them are big songs.

      Aerosmith "Cryin'"
      Bryan Adams "Somebody"
      Def Leppard "Pour Some Sugar on Me"
      Destinyâ(TM)s Child "Bills, Bills, Bills"
      Gloria Estefan "Here We Are"; "Coming Out of the Dark"; "Rhythm Is Gonna Get You"
      Goo Goo Dolls "Iris"
      Green Day "Basket Case"
      Guns N' Roses "Welcome to the Jungle"; "November Rain"
      Janet Jackson "Let's Wait Awhile"
      Journey "Faithfully"; "Don't Stop Believing"
      Linkin Park "One Step Closer"
      No Doubt "Bathwater"; "Hella Good"; "Different People"
      Reba McEntire "One Honest Heart"
      Richard Marx "Now and Forever"
      Sarah McLachlan "Possession"; "Building a Mystery"
      Sheryl Crow "Run Baby Run"
      Vanessa L. Williams "Save the Best for Last"

      So if you're going to get an average, pull it from the top end, and ignore the bottom-end, which aren't relevant to the question here. And hey, if you want to call all of those people and offer them 79,000 dollars to make their songs available, go ahead, and tell us your results.

    13. Re:Worrisome Potential Precedent by jonaskoelker · · Score: 1

      justify these hugely exorbitant awards

      I've pondered this:

      If I were in the jury, I'd probably figure that she had done what she's accused of.

      I'd also figure that the statutory damages, which I hear the plaintiff requested, are at least $750 per song.

      That's $18000. Or 18000 songs. I'd have problems believing she actually did that much damage. Recall, statutory damages are there to allow the jury to estimate damages when they're hard to compute, but should reflect actual damages.

      So finding in favor of plaintiff is a dereliction of justice. So is finding in favor of the defendant.

      Damned if you do, damned if you don't. What's the jury supposed to do, then?

  6. Well DUH! by icebike · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously, who could not have seen this coming.

    This verdict had to have been the RIAA's worst nightmare. They had to know, as they left the courthouse that they had just snatched ultimate defeat from the jaws of temporal victory.

    NOW it all comes into play again, out from under easily impressed small town judges and professionally packed juries.

    The entire investigative tactic, the improper application of laws, (not to mention that little phrase containing the words "Cruel or Unusual Punishment") comes under high level review.

    They can't have wanted this. They would have been happy with 100K verdict. This is their worst nightmare.

    --
    Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    1. Re:Well DUH! by ae1294 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This verdict had to have been the RIAA's worst nightmare.

      I don't know about worst nightmare but you know something is up when they want to talk about a deal after they won the case!

    2. Re:Well DUH! by DJRumpy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I have to agree. This has blown this issue out of the 'techie' blogs and sites, and into the mainstream. I actually had non-technical folk ask me if I'd heard about it. This has far more visibility than I think the RIAA wanted. They may claim to be all about 'educating the public', but we know that's not the case: http://www.groundreport.com/Media_and_Tech/Judge-Orders-RIAA-Hearing-to-be-Televised-RIAA-Fil

      Any sensible person has to look at this and think WTF? I still have to wonder how they could have ever come out of this with such a large judgement for 24 songs unless the defense was being purposely stupid not to put too fine a point on it. It just boggles the mind that a judgement this large could come down with any sort of reasonable argument from the defense.

    3. Re:Well DUH! by MarkvW · · Score: 1

      Of course they talk settlement after they won the case! Nothing strange about that when the defendant has no way of actually paying the judgment.

    4. Re:Well DUH! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, The RIAA will now pay the price.

    5. Re:Well DUH! by causality · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This has far more visibility than I think the RIAA wanted. They may claim to be all about 'educating the public', but we know that's not the case:

      When a monied interests talks about "educating" anyone, you can be sure of one thing: they are using the definition of "educated" where "you are 'educated' if you agree with me."

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    6. Re:Well DUH! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The RIAA knows it's time is coming.

      $1,900,000 for a couple of songs? Any unbiased sane person can see that this verdict is completely .

      This story should be located under the business section of every news source out there.

    7. Re:Well DUH! by ae1294 · · Score: 1

      Nothing strange about that when the defendant has no way of actually paying the judgment

      From what I understand she has no way to pay much of any settlement at this point so what where they going to offer her?

      Well you owe us 1.9 Million but we'll take a hundred bucks and you can do some TV ads for us?

    8. Re:Well DUH! by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

      Three times now, they've asked her to pay $5000, admit she did it, and stop doing it. She's certainly wracked up more than $5000 in legal charges. I don't know if she's stopped doing it, but she hasn't admitted she did it -- in fact, she lied under oath.

      She either likes the attention and doesn't care how she gets it or she's a shill to legitimize the RIAA trials.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    9. Re:Well DUH! by ae1294 · · Score: 1

      She either likes the attention and doesn't care how she gets it or she's a shill to legitimize the RIAA trials.

      Hehe... You don't know very much about 'most' women do you? They are never wrong and will never admit they are wrong no mater what. You can have a gun to their heads and swear you are going to blow their brains out and just ask them to lie but it won't mater..

    10. Re:Well DUH! by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1

      This has far more visibility than I think the RIAA wanted. They may claim to be all about 'educating the public', but we know that's not the case: http://www.groundreport.com/Media_and_Tech/Judge-Orders-RIAA-Hearing-to-be-Televised-RIAA-Fil

      I think your analysis misses the point of the RIAA's actions. They don't want publicity for their actions at trial, they want publicity for "don't download music or you'll wreck your life." As such they got exactly what they wanted, no gory details of legal sausage-making and a headline grabbing verdict of "pay a metric crap-ton of money for using Kazaa". Now that they have their headline-grabbing verdict, they can try to get her to settle for a much lower amount to avoid the risk of a business model destroying verdict on appeal. All they really needed was the publicity for the danger of P2P downloads anyway - it's not like they needed the cash. They probably spent many times more on legal work.

  7. Am I Alone? by whisper_jeff · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Am I alone in thinking this is exactly what the (pro bono) defense wanted? As I see it, wearing my tinfoil hat, they wanted an insane fine to be imposed so they could defeat it as unconstitutional. They would then establish the "right" fine appropriate with the offense (many opinions on this but most agree it should be in the hundreds of dollars, not thousands - these are songs that sell for 99 cents a piece, after all...). Once that's established, THEN they can fire up their class action suit which is where the real money is to be made. I know I'm being all conspiracy-theory with this but I think most of us agree that the defense didn't exactly do the best job possible and they are very intelligent people so I'm left wondering why - why didn't they do the best job possible? And the only answer I keep coming back to is because there's no money to be made winning _THIS_ case but there's truckloads to be made from winning the class action suit down the road.

    1. Re:Am I Alone? by h4nk · · Score: 1

      nope, and I really hope you're right.

    2. Re:Am I Alone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IAAL and I always marvel at the absolutely bizarre legal theories that tech people seem to have around here.

    3. Re:Am I Alone? by causality · · Score: 1

      I know I'm being all conspiracy-theory with this

      These days, "conspiracy-theory" means "acknowledge that there is such a thing as long-term strategy." It can also be synonymous with "acknowledge that large organizations always act to further their own interests."

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    4. Re:Am I Alone? by geekboy642 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      IANAL, and I always marvel at the absolutely bizarre ways lawyers can twist laws to mean absolutely anything, assuming they've been payed well enough.

      --
      Just another "DOJ fascist authoritarian totalitarian bootlicker" -- Zeio
    5. Re:Am I Alone? by PiSkyHi · · Score: 1

      I'm with you, I have been reading many posters comments that seem to in some way admit she is a criminal, even if some wish she had a defense.

      Now, she may have been found guilty, but of what ?. If this does go the way I think it will, the class action is the deal that needs to be done and we all know it - it just can't keep going this way with RIAA, many people including many judges surely feel this way as well and for the RIAA going against the people who can help legislate, in a democracy, their time will come.

    6. Re:Am I Alone? by selven · · Score: 1

      It's an extremely risky strategy that way and Jammie will now have to sit through even more court sessions. Unfortunately she doesn't strike me as the kind of altruistic person who would do that just to establish a precedent for others.

    7. Re:Am I Alone? by foobsr · · Score: 1

      These days, "conspiracy-theory" means "acknowledge that there is such a thing as long-term strategy." It can also be synonymous with "acknowledge that large organizations always act to further their own interests."

      This should be a modded 'too insightful'.

      CC.

      --
      TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
    8. Re:Am I Alone? by xbytor · · Score: 1

      I made this point in an earlier thread. The defense new that they didn't have time to put together a proper defense. They knew they had several valid reasons for an appeal so let the case tank while they worked on their longer range goals.

    9. Re:Am I Alone? by MurphyZero · · Score: 1

      Well it's almost too insightful. Insightful would be to recognize that large organizations do not further their own interests, but people at high levels determine what those supposed interests are. And typically those people further the supposed large organizations' interests only when they further their own personal interests. Defense lawyers at least are very clearly trying to further their own interests. Their strategy may very well work but their profile has definitely increased. If their strategy fails, they may be known as a miserable failure, but at least they'll be known and that may work out better than being unknown.

      --
      Our founding fathers removed the guys in charge. Be American. Vote incumbents out.
  8. not necessarily disproportionate by bcrowell · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Okay, this is going to be wildly unpopular on slashdot, but I'm going to play devil's advocate and argue that the damages are not necessarily disproportionate to the actual harm.

    It's definitely not correct to calculate the actual harm like this: 24 songs, multiplied by a market price of $1 per track on iTunes, giving 24x$1= $24. She wasn't being sued for obtaining single copies of the 24 songs illegally for her own use, she was being sued for giving them to other people -- possibly a very large number of other people.

    Another possibility would be to take 24x$1, and then multiply by the number of people who actually downloaded the specific copies of the songs that she made available. There are a couple of problems with this. One is that nobody has any data on how many people downloaded those specific copies. Maybe zero people downloaded them. Maybe 10 people downloaded a particular song, each of them copied that copy 10 times for 10 friends, and so on, so that conceivably there are millions of mp3 files of that song out there that are all descended from Jammie Thomas's original. We just don't know, because the copies don't carry a history that allows us to know how they spread. You could argue that other people may have bought CDs of the same songs, ripped them, and put them online; again, there was no data about this at trial. And in any case, it's kind of morally obtuse to say that what she did isn't really so bad, because lots of other people were doing it as well. If you want to argue that what she did wasn't blameworthy, then you need to do it on other grounds, e.g., US copyright laws are unjust; well, I agree that US copyright laws are unjust, but we're talking about a court case here, so that's irrelevant. Suppose I set fire to the trees behind my neighbor's house, and around the same time 100 other people are also lighting matches and throwing them into the same bushes. My neighbor's house burns down, and he sues me. IANAL, but I doubt that the court is going to reduce the damages they make me pay by a factor of 100, on the theory that there were 99 other people attempting to do the same thing.

    So it seems to me there's a pretty strong logical case to be made that you should calculate the damages like this: 24x$1xNxBxLxD. N is the total number of people who downloaded the song (and, as argued above, not just the number who got a copy directly from the ones Thomas put up). B is a factor that takes into account that only a fraction of the blame is hers, but I argued above that setting B=1 is reasonable (or at least not so unreasonable that it's obviously unconstitutional). L is a factor that measures how much the industry really loses when songs of a certain market value are downloaded. The industry usually assumes L=1, i.e., that every illegal download equals one lost sale. We actually don't know what L is. It's possible that 75% of downloaders would never have bought the song (e.g., they're 12-year-olds who have no money), in which case L=.25. It's even possible that L is negative (illegal downloads publicize and popularize the music, thereby driving legal sales). But these things are all impossible to determine, so I don't think it's completely crazy to say L=1, as a ballpark figure. (Again, the issue isn't whether it's exactly correct, the issue is whether it's so crazy that it gives a result that is obviously unconstitutionally disproportionate.) And finally D is the deterrent factor. When you sue someone for copyright violation, you're allowed to sue for more than the actual damages. As an example, if you write GPL'd software, in many cases the market value of the software is vanishingly small because you're intentionally giving it away for free; nevertheless if you satisfy certain technical requirements, you're allowed to sue for more than your actual damages, i.e., D can be much greater than one. (This is one reason that the GNU project encourages authors of GNU software to formally register a copyright, and sign over the copyrights to GNU. If you don't file a formal copyright re

    1. Re:not necessarily disproportionate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Maybe 10 people downloaded a particular song, each of them copied that copy 10 times for 10 friends, and so on, so that conceivably there are millions of mp3 files of that song out there that are all descended from Jammie Thomas's original.

      As far as I know, this isn't a consideration. Damages have to be limited to the infringement by the defendant, not what someone else did because of the defendant's infringement.

      An example would be this: someone purchases a newspaper from a self-serve machine and holds open the door while he and 10 other people all take copies that they didn't pay for. The actual damages that the first person is responsible for are limited to the paper he stole. While he enabled others to steal newspapers, he did not commit the actual theft. He could be hit with punitive damages related to enabling others to commit the crime, but he cannot be sued for the $3.00 that was lost due to the 10 other people taking papers.

    2. Re:not necessarily disproportionate by maxume · · Score: 1

      Your 'logical' case that damages=24x$1xNxBxLxD rests on the premise that it is reasonable to hold a single person responsible for an arbitrary amount of distribution on the internet. This is nonsense.

      If you really think it is reasonable, I suggest you start figuring out how to prove that it wasn't you who killed my dog. I mean, for all I know, it was you.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    3. Re:not necessarily disproportionate by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      The maximum penalty for willfully infringing on someone else's copyright is $150,000 per infringement. That would $150,000 x 24 = $3,600,000 as a maximum penalty.

      The fact is that she was found to be infringing and was given a the minimum, then she challenged that and was found to be willfully infringing and given a median amount of $80,000 per infringement.

      There is a pretty strong logical case that one should calculate damages according to the applicable laws and not by one person's (probably selfish) desires.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    4. Re:not necessarily disproportionate by jedidiah · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actual harm should be related to actual revenue. It could be current revenue or it
      could even be the maximum annual revenue that these works ever generated. One key
      fact that seems to be glossed over here is that these are OLD works. Many of them
      would have fallen into public domain on their own by now if the law had not been
      recently changed to specifically favor Disney.

      The RIAA likely does not see 80K in a year from the 20 year old Richard Marx song involved.

      That clearly limits the likely possible damages here.

      In general, a statutory damage award 50% of the maximum probably should never
      be applied to a copyrighted work that is 20+ years old.

      After considering the issue further (based on this verdict) it seems that it
      might be unjust even to subject a professional bootlegger to this verdict.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    5. Re:not necessarily disproportionate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, your logic has totally broken down.

      Based on studies of consumer economics, L is demonstrably a staggeringly low number. At most it's in the low single digit percents. Seriously. Look up some papers on the economic difference between 1 cent and free.

      Your calculation for N is absurd. You can't count downstream infringements. If you do, than Jammie's own infringement was a downstream infringement. To use your own analogy, it would be ok for the house owner to sue each person who ever threw a match into that bush for the entire value of his house.

      Seriously, where do you get this from??

    6. Re:not necessarily disproportionate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Average seed-ratio in a fileshering network is very close to 1.0
      Even if we assume that all downloads equals a lost sale and use punitive damages of x10 there is no reason to why this case should not belong in small claims...

    7. Re:not necessarily disproportionate by kanweg · · Score: 1

      "So it seems to me there's a pretty strong logical case to be made that you should calculate the damages like this: 24x$1xNxBxLxD. N is the total number of people who downloaded the song (and, as argued above, not just the number who got a copy directly from the ones Thomas put up). "

      OK, but that would also mean that a person who downloaded a song from her cannot be sued by the RIAA because it already received the damages for that. It seems fair to me that Jammie has a right of recourse on the downloader, although I doubt that would make her happy.

      I think it is also fair that the RIAA proves that the 24 songs were not already paid for by someone else they had sued.

      Bert
      Who no longer has any illegitimate songs (and movies), but does have CDs now from several of the tapes he had when he was a student. If that makes the RIAA happy, I've bad news. iTunes allowed me to buy several songs for which I'd never bought the CD, but now I've effectively stopped buying music.

    8. Re:not necessarily disproportionate by fuzznutz · · Score: 1
      Okay Mr. Devil's Advocate. Some things to consider.
      • Statutory damages are not punitive damages.
      • There is limited bandwidth for uploads.
      • It is unreasonable to assume 100% upload bandwidth would be used for file sharing. The defendant would have shut down the program for disrupting other usage.
      • The time frame for uploads must be limited.
      • If L is calculable, why are they seeking statutory damages?
      • D must be zero (see point 1)
      • GPL violation suits nearly invariably target COMMERCIAL distribution.
    9. Re:not necessarily disproportionate by fuzznutz · · Score: 1

      And another thing...

      It doesn't even pass the laugh test. $2 million for 24 songs?????

    10. Re:not necessarily disproportionate by TerranFury · · Score: 1

      The "correct" method would be to model the network, and fine her the difference between the number of songs shared by the network without her presence and that number with her involvement. For an analogy, it would be the drop of current in a resistor network caused by the removal of a particular resistor. This would represent that actual harm that she did. Since this depends greatly on the topology of the network, this is of course not feasible without some assumptions. The theory of random graphs (see e.g. work by Bollobas) might be helpful here. Not that I'm really advocating such a mathematical approach to law.

      The upshot of this is that, assuming a relatively highly-connected graph (high Fiedler number), her impact is probably very, very small. For an extreme example, consider the difference in effective resistance between 100 1-ohm resistors in parallel and 99; it's tiny.

    11. Re:not necessarily disproportionate by ozydingo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I always appreciate a good devil's advocate argument. But you don't have to work through any math to realize that $1.92 million is a ludicrous figure for this small number of non-commercial, personal acts of infringement. At her salary, it's more money than she'll make in a lifetime (ok, fine, I worked through some math there, so sue me). Blindly using these same formulas one would conclude that amount approaching and exceeding several billion in damages would be justified for common cases of infringement when an individual has been sharing hundreds or thousands of songs. If you're looking at this mathematically, this is the point where you step back and look for a sign error somewhere, because you know the result can't be correct.

      And regarding your match analogy, IANAL either, but I think that yes, damages should be reduced if 100 others were involved. Why are you being held fully responsible for damages for which the responsibility demonstrably falls in the hands of others? Can your neighbor, after successfully suing you, go on to sue someone else for the same damages, thereby being allowed to receive 100 times the amount than if you alone had caused the damages? Yes, shared responsibility makes the logistics difficult, but avoiding difficulty is not an excuse for unjustly assigning the responsibility.

      Furthermore, with multiplicative formulas such as yours, it can be very unreasonable to ballpark figures as you have. Small errors in these numbers result in large errors in the result. And when the difference is between a reasonable fine and ruining someone's life, surely you can agree that it is unacceptable to simply ballpark the figures.

    12. Re:not necessarily disproportionate by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 0, Troll

      It is not actual damages, it is punitive damages. I always love it when dumbasses such as yourself decide that judges and juries should do things that are not in line with the law because it would make your life so much better.

      "I don't think we should be punished for doing something we know is against the law because we don't think it is wrong. And, if you insist on punishing us, it should be just a slap on the wrists!"

      Here is a better idea. Stop breaking the law. Stop infringing on other people's rights. Stop being assholes.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  9. uploads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just hopa that if they try to find out the actual damages someone points out that the average upload/download ratio in a filesharing network is ~1.0

  10. It was impossible to cause that much damage by slashqwerty · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If one does the math it is easy to see it was impossible for her to have caused $1.92 million damage. The offense occurred in 2004. Back then a typical cable modem had an upload speed of 256kbps shared with the neighbors. A typical song costs $0.99 on iTunes. An average MP3 is about 3MB. To upload 1.92 million songs would take 2,184.5 days (almost six years) with no protocol overhead, no downtime (infinite nines!), nobody using bandwidth to search for songs, no neighbors using any of the bandwidth, and no one in her house using the internet for anything but uploading files. Kazaa had only existed for three years at the time. She would have had to start before even Napster existed.

    We already know the plantiffs were unsuccessful in several of their download attempts (this was brought up at trial). So it seems many attempts to upload files failed which means it would have taken even longer to cause $1.92 million in damages.

    Oh yeah, also note today is Independence Day in the U.S. Four of the companies that sued her are headquartered outside the U.S. The one U.S. company has a CEO from Canada.

    1. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Direct damages, your calculations are probably correct. But the 100 people she gave songs to, also gave them to 100 people, exponentially.

      Personally, I'd have a huge garage sale, transfer all my money off shore, then relocate to a country (indirectly of course) that isn't extradition-friendly to the USA, but still has a nice lifestyle.

      Then I'd photograph myself giving them the bird against a plain white wall and mail it from a general address a few countries away. Like Peru, if I were staying in Uruguay.

      Just a thought.

    2. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by TheThiefMaster · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but the people she shared to would share too, and that's clearly her fault. They would never have got the songs and shared them without her.

      </sarcasm>

    3. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If one does the math it is easy to see it was impossible for her to have caused $1.92 million damage. The offense occurred in 2004. Back then a typical cable modem had an upload speed of 256kbps shared with the neighbors. A typical song costs $0.99 on iTunes

      Your first mistake is using the iTunes price. Last time I checked, if you get a song from iTunes, it does not include a license to make the song available for an arbitrary, untracked, number of uploads to other people. If you were to write to the rights holders for the songs involved and ask what it would cost to get a license for unrestricted, untracked, copying and redistribution, I am pretty sure they would ask for more than $1 per song.

      This is why it is often expensive for movie producers to use popular songs in their soundtracks. Did you think they just went to the iTunes store, downloaded a copy for $1, and then used it in their movies, without paying more?

      For movies, the licenses can be thousands of dollars per song. If she had to pay similar per song, and had to pay for all the songs she was sharing, not just the 24 that were brought up in trial, it would actually come in the ballpark of $1.92 million. However, that's not really relevant, and that brings is to your second mistake.

      The $1.92 million is not meant to represent actual damages. Actual damages are very hard to prove in most copyright cases, and so the plaintiff can elect to take statutory damages, which are defined in the statute (hence the name). They are from $750 to $150000 dollars, with the jury deciding where they go. The jury went for something in the middle of that, per song, for the simple reason that she was not very good at lying to them. Juries do not like it when clearly guilty defendants tell a shifting tale of several badly told obvious lies, and that tends to push damages up.

    4. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      "This is why it is often expensive for movie producers to use popular songs in their soundtracks. Did you think they just went to the iTunes store, downloaded a copy for $1, and then used it in their movies, without paying more?"

      Funny thing is, they often get paid for doing this. Ever notice how it started getting to the point where every movie has a popular song in it, or is it that every popular movie produces a popular song? Having a song in a popular movie makes that song that much more popular.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    5. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      no downtime (infinite nines!)

      I don't know where you come from, but here we call that 100%.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    6. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by clarkkent09 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That's all beside the point. The damages awarded were statutory damages as set by the law. It is impossible for the plaintiff to prove the actual damages because there is no way to tell how many people downloaded those songs that she uploaded so the law sets a default amount. On the first glance it seems that $80K per song is too high but then I don't know the technical argument for it.

      Tactically, I think she and her lawyers are making one mistake after another and she will eventually have to pay a lot more than she could have if she settled right away. Here is the part I don't understand: on one hand she is not "interested in discussing any deal that required her to admit guilt or pay any money" but on the other hand the main argument of the appeal is "that the damages are disproportionate to any actual harm." Doesn't it mean that she is admitting that harm occurred and only challenging the amount? It seems like her main argument is at odds with her unwillingness to accept any guilt or settle for any amount.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    7. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by TerranFury · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Juries do not like it when clearly guilty defendants tell a shifting tale of several badly told obvious lies, and that tends to push damages up.

      ...to $1.92 million. Assuming a household income of $50,233.00 (the median), and moreover assuming that the defendant will cease eating, receiving medial treatment, or paying for rent, water, or electricity from now on, it will take over 38 years to pay that off.

      The jury might as well have just ordered the woman executed.

    8. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by sumdumass · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Here is the thing, If Itunes is offering the song for $1.00, then it's safe to say that their distribution license is under $1.00 a copy. The Itunes comparison is still valid unless it's fair game to have licensing fees specifically higher then your getting in real life just in case you have to take an infringement case to court.

    9. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by sumdumass · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I believe she was the one who paid for the Kazza program and originally claimed that the content came with the membership.

      In that case, she could admit damages but not admit her own wrong doing because she acted in what appears to be a legal and lawful way.

    10. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by think_nix · · Score: 1

      If one does the math it is easy to see it was impossible for her to have caused $1.92 million damage.

      Yes exactly the point. I dont know all the details of the case. But why hasn't the defense called in some kind of "Statistic Bean Counter" /* with an idea of p2p technology of course */ to their defense ? Maybe would have swayed the judges decision ?

    11. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by think_nix · · Score: 1

      Direct damages, your calculations are probably correct. But the 100 people she gave songs to, also gave them to 100 people, exponentially.

      IANAL but I dont think that is justifiable, the MI would then have to call those other file sharers to the witness stand, also which they could plead the 5th ? Because it would indite themselves ?

    12. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by Khyber · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "But the 100 people she gave songs to, also gave them to 100 people, exponentially."

      Your argument makes absolutely no sense. She should be punished for the copyright infringement of others? Why haven't they tracked down those people yet, if they have so much evidence against her?

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    13. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Oh yeah, also note today is Independence Day in the U.S. Four of the companies that sued her are headquartered outside the U.S. The one U.S. company has a CEO from Canada.

      So... you're saying that only US-based companies actually have any rights in the USA, that suits against US citizens can only be brought by US-based companies, and that if a foreign-based company feels it's been wronged by a US citizen, the only thing they're entitled to is a "sucks to be you"?

      You've got a good point otherwise, but this particular bit of (literal) xenophobia didn't exactly increase your cred.

    14. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by Archimonde · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And this is what people just can't get a good perspective on. They are basically sentencing her to be a slave for the rest of her life and that is even more cruel than execution. Moreover when you have nothing it is extremely difficult to make large amounts of money. That 2 million would be very very difficult to pay off even if you are left after the sentence with all possessions you got (job, house etc). But probably they will take everything that woman owns and tell her to pay off the rest. But in both cases the woman is just a slave. She is not a prisoner like in some russian work camp, but all the freedom she has is to live and give everything she gets to some faceless corporation and that is slavery.

      I just find it despicable that those monsters (yes, those people should be put to jail) are ready and willing to destroy your life and seriously impact the life of your relatives just for a few shared files which are fucking sold for $1!

      --
      Trolls are like broken clocks. They show the truth two times a day. The rest of the day they talk nonsense.
    15. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by selven · · Score: 1

      The GP is not talking about that. He is talking about the (highly debatable) fact that every person whom she uploaded to gets the ability to listen to the song without buying it (presumably at the iTunes price). Therefore (once again this is highly debatable - if you pirate Photoshop that doesn't mean you're willing to shell out 700 bucks for it) the damages is equal to the purchase price * the number of people she uploaded to.

    16. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Last time I checked, if you get a song from iTunes, it does not include a license to make the song available for an arbitrary, untracked, number of uploads to other people. If you were to write to the rights holders for the songs involved and ask what it would cost to get a license for unrestricted, untracked, copying and redistribution, I am pretty sure they would ask for more than $1 per song.

      Correct. However, SoundExchange offers, to anyone who wants them, at $.0019/song/listener (2010 rates, have increased every year). If you can classify your peer-to-peer program as an Internet Radio Server then you can stream over 500 copies of a song for $99.

      If the downloader chooses to store a copy of the stream in a file, rather than just listening to it once, then they are the ones committing copyright infringement.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    17. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by vux984 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's all beside the point. The damages awarded were statutory damages as set by the law.

      Correct.

      However, statutory damages are supposed to be a reasonable substitute for actual damages when actual damages are difficult to compute. So its fair to point out that the 'statutory damages' are not only out of line, but are out of line for any case in this 'class' (of noncommercial p2p infringement), and that they are so out of line that that the statute itself is defective, even unconstitutional.

      On the first glance it seems that $80K per song is too high but then I don't know the technical argument for it.

      There is no technical argument for it. The statute was written to address and punish people who created and sold counterfeit copies of books, movies, records, etc.

      P2p internet sharing didn't exist. At the time to do any serious infringement, you needed replication equipment, and blank media, and so on... it would be time consuming and expensive. The people doing it would have to be deliberately engaged in this, and would almost invariably be charging money to cover their costs. It would almost have to a fairly large scale commercial enterprise to be of significant scale.

      The idea that a barely computer literate person could commit "massive unauthorized distribution infringement" on the same scale, at no cost whatsoever, as essentially a "side effect" of obtaining a few songs for their own personal noncommercial use, via a simple computer program and a few mouse clicks was simply unimagined by the statute authors.

      Doesn't it mean that she is admitting that harm occurred and only challenging the amount? It seems like her main argument is at odds with her unwillingness to accept any guilt or settle for any amount.

      Admitting harm occurred is not the same as admitting personal culpability for the harm.

      Suppose you came over to my house, twisted your ankle on the front step, and then sued me.

      I'm going to deny that I'm responsible. My front step is well maintained, with a solid railing, and a non-slip mat. It is level, clear of toys and other hazards. I refuse to accept guilt or settle. I have done nothing wrong.

      But that's not to say I'm going to deny you were harmed. Your ankle was twisted. I accept that.

      So you sue me, and the jury sides with you. So be it, that's life. Then the court awards you 20,000,000 dollars.

      And I'm in the same position as Jammie. I maintain I did nothing wrong, I agree you twisted your ankle, and am disputing the amount of the award.

    18. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assume her infringement + her lying is = to $80,000 per song * 24 = TOTAL $1,900,000 in damages to be paid / by $50,233.00 (her median income per year) = 38 YEARS OF SERVICE

      Now if she knocked off the judge she'd get 25 years max. That's an adjusted savings of 13 years!! Plus they'd feed her, cloth her and put a roof over her head.

      That's it I'm off to get my frag in before the RIAA comes to get me. Tah. ;)

    19. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here is the part I don't understand: on one hand she is not "interested in discussing any deal that required her to admit guilt or pay any money" but on the other hand the main argument of the appeal is "that the damages are disproportionate to any actual harm." Doesn't it mean that she is admitting that harm occurred and only challenging the amount? It seems like her main argument is at odds with her unwillingness to accept any guilt or settle for any amount.

      Well, you could deny guilt, but -- especially if the court has already ruled against you -- argue on general principle that the damages are excessive.

    20. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 1

      And this is what people just can't get a good perspective on. They are basically sentencing her to be a slave for the rest of her life and that is even more cruel than execution

      Or she could take the settlement for a few thousand dollars that the RIAA is still offering her.

    21. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no downtime (infinite nines!)

      What's wrong with 100%?

    22. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're missing the point. The idea is that even if you assume that everybody who downloaded from Jammie Thomas would have otherwise bought the song from iTunes (at 0.99$ per song), and you assume that she maxed out her bandwidth to the theoretical maximum for the last five years, you still don't get 1.92 million$ in damages.

      The point that AC is making is not that the absolute maximum in damages should be based on the money lost from her downloading the song instead of buying it, but on the people she distributed to downloading instead of buying.

    23. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by Archimonde · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The existence of an offer to settle doesn't change the fact that the original sentence is cruel and despicable.

      --
      Trolls are like broken clocks. They show the truth two times a day. The rest of the day they talk nonsense.
    24. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by kylemonger · · Score: 2, Interesting

      She won't be a slave. If she loses the appeals she can file chapter 7 bankruptcy and walk away from the whole mess. Not a happy outcome for her, but way better than having her wages garnished for the rest of her life. The RIAA knows they aren't going to see a penny of that huge settlement if they insist on breaking her; that's why they want to settle for a smaller amount.

    25. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      But you do not understand.

      If she killed someone, say the CEO of RIAA or some artist, she would probably get 25 years in prison.

      However, she caused a moneybin (moneybin - a lesser species than humand, identified by having lots of money and trying to rob everyone so that they have even more money) to virtually lose some MONEY. As everybody knows, HUMAN LIFE IS NOT WORTH ANYTHING, so that is why she will serve at least 38 years for MAYBE causing some loss of MONEY.

      Though I would like to see what the CEO of RIAA would look like when compensated for his loss in volts. $1.92M = 1.92 megavolts connected to him. Probably would look nice and send a message to other moneybins.

      my advice to anyone cought by the RIAA. Kill the CEO, you will get a lesser sentence, after all, human life is not worth anything.

    26. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by westlake · · Score: 1

      I'd have a huge garage sale, transfer all my money off shore, then relocate to a country that isn't extradition-friendly to the USA, but still has a nice lifestyle.

      Because you were too cheap to rent your videos from Netflix?

      I have wondered now and again why the geek who thinks in terms of the billable hour - and the salary of an IT Pro - wastes his time nursing a P2P download.

      The country that is hostile to extradition may also be hostile to transfer. French kidnapper to serve sentence in Mexico

      Lifestyles change. Regimes change. 1940 was not a good year to be an expatriate in Paris.

    27. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by hansamurai · · Score: 0, Redundant

      They don't want to settle because they want the smaller amount, they want to settle because they don't want to go to court against a defendant with balls. They've already spent ten to hundred times the results of the settlement on their lawyers.

    28. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      They are basically sentencing her to be a slave for the rest of her life and that is even more cruel than execution.

      Uh, don't know about you, but I think I'd rather be a 'slave' (which is silly hyperbole) than dead. And I don't even care that much about life.

      --
      Qxe4
    29. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where did you see an offer that is in the "few thousand dollars" range? That was the first offer, but do you really think the RIAA will agree to settle now on the original amount?

    30. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You left out how courts will not garnish more than a certain percentage of your salary, depending on your income level and expenses. There are protections in place to cover this sort of thing, and leaving it out does not increase the value of your position, but rather, weakens it considerably, since it appears you're exaggerating the depth of the problem.

    31. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by mangu · · Score: 1

      there is no way to tell how many people downloaded those songs that she uploaded

      Anyhow, wouldn't those (hypothetical) downloaders be the ones to prosecute? It takes two to tango, it seems unfair to blame everything on the one person they are prosecuting.

      If so much damage was caused by exponential downloading, let's see those downloaders.

    32. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The RIAA knows they aren't going to see a penny of that huge settlement if they insist on breaking her

      Surely they'd get a share of her assets as a creditor in the bankruptcy (assuming she has any)?

    33. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by easyTree · · Score: 1

      Maybe not but if I give you a frozen croissant and you stab someone to death with it, should I be blamed?

      Hint: no.

    34. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by easyTree · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yah but this argument couldn't possibly apply in this case. Have you seen the songs she downloaded. The only way they're gonna gain in popularity is by selling them before they've been heard :P

      This is the real reason the RIAA is so pissed. People get to hear how crappy their music is before buying it.

      </musicalTasteNazi>

    35. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by easyTree · · Score: 1

      mod parent up. +1 inciting death of RIAA executive ;P

      j/k :)

    36. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by easyTree · · Score: 2, Insightful

      --
      In free countries, how did the powerful become powerful? Have they done something you couldn't do?

      Yes; I have a conscience.

    37. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by easyTree · · Score: 1

      Yah; but
      (a) if they were gonna buy it why would they download it? then again, they *may still* buy it after downloading it in which case that part of her punishment is not applicable (unless they wait until the end of time to see if they do still buy it).

      (b) she's not to be blamed for their action. they downloaded it, not her; the riaa is just too fricken lazy to spend time extorting money from each 'infringer'. far easier to extort it from a single person. god bless the usa's corrupt legal system and the convenience it provides to corporate exortionists, woohoo!

    38. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Um, are you seriously accusing all powerful people of not having a conscience?

      --
      Qxe4
    39. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by easyTree · · Score: 1

      Um, are you seriously accusing all powerful people of having a conscience?

    40. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      No, of course not, but many do. I haven't done a poll, but the conscience/no conscience ratio seems to be about the same between rich and poor.

      Clearly the reason you think that it is impossible to become powerful with a conscience is because you don't see what things you can do to become powerful without violating your own conscience. That is your problem to deal with, really.

      --
      Qxe4
    41. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by Endymion · · Score: 1

      Upload speed of a cable modem? You're falling into the trap that the RIAA and others are playing.

      Potential upload speeds aren't relevant here. That's all fancy numbers thrown around, to justify large statutory damages by implying someone could have uploaded a lot of copies of any given work.

      Some simple math:
        - There are N people that want a song, and download it over P2P
        - Number of copies that have to be made: N
        - Number of people providing those copies: ~N, on most P2P networks
        - average (mean) copies made by any one person: (number of copies made)/(number of uploaders) => (N/N) => 1.

      On average, any given copyright infringer is making a single copy. Any discussion of damages, statutory or actual, needs to take this harsh reality into consideration.

      --
      Ce n'est pas une signature automatique.
    42. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by Endymion · · Score: 1

      see my other post to the parent comment

      it's not possible for someone to give out 100 copies of a song on most P2P networks.

      Do you get a share ratio of 100.0+ on bittorrent? ever?

      --
      Ce n'est pas une signature automatique.
    43. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by edittard · · Score: 1

      Of course. USA is number one ! NUM BER ONE!

      This is one of the reasons extradition, even dor serious crimes, is a one way street. The second is that the other governments are too stupid to say no.

      --
      At the bottom of the /. main page it says 'Yesterday's News'. Well they got that right.
    44. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1

      Though I would like to see what the CEO of RIAA would look like when compensated for his loss in volts. $1.92M = 1.92 megavolts connected to him. Probably would look nice and send a message to other moneybins.

      Amperes. It’s amperes you want, not volts.

    45. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by sjames · · Score: 1

      It's worse. As a slave, the corporation would provide her with food, clothing, and shelter. Crappy food, clothing, and shelter, but it's more than she's getting here.

    46. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by smchris · · Score: 1

      At the very least she would have to get him _in_ Minnesota where there isn't execution. Cross state lines and it's a federal case. Slimy little rape killer made that mistake up here the other year.

    47. Re:It was impossible to cause that much damage by rgarbacz · · Score: 1

      I think that damages should be calculated in a different way, because we do not talk about potential (very potential) revenues, but about damages.

      So, lets check the RIAA income from selling the very songs, compare it before, during, and after the alleged uploading, correct the comparison with the natural sales decline (from other similar songs considering popularity), do the simple math and then we can talk about actual "damages", and not wishful revenues.

  11. Damages by Quietlife2k · · Score: 1

    Ask a silly question - If the $1.9M was paid - would his not mean that anyone who downloaded the named tracks during the time period (the damage the $1.9M is expected to cover) could have a claim that payment has already been made and thus not be liable ?

    1. Re:Damages by selven · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Secondary uploaders are individually liable for the people who downloaded it from them directly (in theory) and everyone else even further down the chain from them (in RIAA logic). This means that the RIAA can collect fees from Jammie, from the people who downloaded off her and uploaded it, from the people 2 levels down, 3 levels down, and so on, effectively being paid hundreds of times for the same thing.

  12. At the rate she's going by Dunbal · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't be surprised if at the appeal her fine is raised to a round $20 million dollars.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    1. Re:At the rate she's going by Cowclops · · Score: 1

      Heh, this comment is supposed to be a joke obviously, but I'll point out in case anyone is worried: They can't actually increase the punishment after it has been decided, as that would be against due process.

  13. Jeez I hope they do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    230 plus years was a good run, time to break it apart and try again.

  14. What I think her penalty should be by selven · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Madoff - $60 billion, 150 years - $400 million per year Thomas - $2 million / $400 million = 0.005 years = 2 days in prison. It all works out nicely.

    1. Re:What I think her penalty should be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Prison shouldn't be used for civil infringement cases.

      The jury should have penalized her $653.06 or, if they were allowed to consider her destroying evidence as well, $1,959.18.

    2. Re:What I think her penalty should be by QuietObserver · · Score: 1

      Interesting logic. Too bad this isn't a criminal case. By the way, thanks for the laugh.

  15. How would they ever collect? by ArchieBunker · · Score: 1

    Ok heres a question for everyone. Say you make $30,000 a year. How are you expected to pay a judgment of nearly two million dollars? Thats more than you'd make in several lifetimes. Do they garnish a percentage of your wages or negotiate installment payments?

    --
    Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
    1. Re:How would they ever collect? by Technician · · Score: 1

      How are you expected to pay a judgment of nearly two million dollars? Thats more than you'd make in several lifetimes.

      I would guess that a trust account is set up with $1,000 in it and let the interest pay them until paid off at which time you get the principal back. Depending on interest, it could take a while.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    2. Re:How would they ever collect? by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      Charge people for downloading the music you are sharing?

      Google AdWords?

    3. Re:How would they ever collect? by selven · · Score: 1

      Good luck beating their interest with that tactic.

    4. Re:How would they ever collect? by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      You don't. You declare bankruptcy and get the judgment vacated.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
  16. Some Legal Background by Grond · · Score: 2, Insightful

    One commenter made a comparison to the Exxon Valdez case and other punitive damages cases where the damages award was reduced to be more proportionate to the actual harm. Unlike those cases, there is a statutory damages regime here, and long standing Supreme Court precedent establishes that courts must be very deferential to awards within the statutory framework. In particular, statutory damages are reviewed under a standard even more deferential than the already deferential abuse of discretion standard: whether the award is "so severe and oppressive as to be wholly disproportioned to the offense and obviously unreasonable." St. Louis, I.M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Williams, 251 U.S. 63, 66-67 (1919). Also see, Douglas v. Cunningham, 294 U.S. 207, 210 (1935) (Congress's purpose in enacting the statutory-damage provision of the 1909 Copyright Act and its delineation of specified limits for statutory damages "take[] the matter out of the ordinary rule with respect to abuse of discretion") (via). Appellate courts are also somewhat loathe to disturb jury verdicts. The standard in the Eighth Circuit, where the Thomas case was decided, is whether 'no rational jury' could have found as the jury did. Dace v. ACF Indus., 722 F.2d 374, 376 (8th Cir. 1983).

    You might say, well, the ratio of damages to actual harm here is roughly a factor of 80,000, so surely that is sufficient even under that high standard. The RIAA is likely to argue that only the increased damages due to willful infringement are punitive and that the the underlying statutory damages are not inherently punitive. Should it prevail on that theory, then the resulting substantially lower ratio is likely to be seen as constitutionally permissible. Furthermore, the Supreme Court has upheld ratios as high as 113:1, for example, and the ratio alone is not sufficient to overturn the award. Phillip Morris USA v. Williams, 549 U.S. 346 (2007).

    Another commenter made reference to the "cruel and unusual punishment" clause of the Eighth Amendment. The Eighth Amendment does not apply to civil cases (not even the "excessive fines" clause). See, Ingraham v. Wright, 430 U.S. 651 (1977).

    But the real crux of the issue is that the Copyright Act simply does not make an exception for individual non-commercial infringers. Assuming the facts of the case are accurate--and appellate courts do not like to disturb jury fact finding--then by the plain language of the statute Ms. Thomas is liable for a minimum of several thousand dollars in statutory damages. In my opinion the most likely outcome is that the appellate courts will let the verdict stand but strongly suggest that the legislature revise the Act to exempt individual non-commercial infringers from the statutory damages regime.

    1. Re:Some Legal Background by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      I think the jury was responding to two things. In the original trial she was found to be liable for damages of over $200,000 but the trial was thrown out because of bad jury instructions. In the second trial there were numerous attempts to deflect any fact-finding through obfuscation involving various technical strategies, including referring to the possiblity of a wireless router when no such device was ever used.

      Finally, to top things off, Jammie herself got caught having destroyed evidence (the original hard drive) and lying about it on the stand.

      None of these things made her out to be a person that was just being mistreated by the RIAA or the legal system. Her lawyers advised her rather poorly about strategies that did not attack the facts of the case but instead just tried to confuse matters. A strategy the judge and likely jury both saw through.

      She can appeal all she wants. If she were to get a third trial with the same strategy it is likely the award would be increased yet again.

  17. Damages are correct. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course she owes them that much in damages. I mean, not really for the silly downloading thing, but think of the terrible press the corporations are getting after suing so many innocent people. They're losing millions in bad publicity!

  18. You know... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's quite a bit of readers here on Slashdot with a deep hatred for the RIAA. Makes you wonder what would happen if we all paid NYCL a few bucks each so he could dedicate his skills on a fulltime basis for Mrs. Thomas (or other defendants)...

  19. how absurd by goffster · · Score: 1

    She wants to get it appealed to something that wont bankrupt her? $100 ?

  20. Punitive damages as deterrent by acb · · Score: 1

    Whether or not it was possible for her to cause $2m damage to the recording industry is beside the point; the damages are meant to be punitive, to make an example of her and act as a deterrent. Psychologically, for a deterrent to be effective, the severity of the penalty must be exponentially proportional to the likelihood of getting away with it; as such, the sky's the limit.

    1. Re:Punitive damages as deterrent by walshy007 · · Score: 1

      as such, the sky's the limit.

      so, what your saying is, it's fine for sharing an mp3 to basically make you the music owners slave?

      I dunno, I think if that were applied to enough people, some would perhaps dislike the slavery enough to perhaps murder their captors, I mean.. murder has less of a sentence than that.

      A person with nothing to lose can be pretty dangerous if you piss them off.

  21. Who Gets the Money? by GumphMaster · · Score: 2, Insightful

    From my reading here it is clear there are two amounts concerned in the judgement: compensatory damages and punitive damages. The former is supposed to compensate the winner for losses, and clearly goes to them. My question is, who gets the punitive damages? The deterrent represented by these punitive damage awards is a parallel to the sentence or fine in a criminal case, both of which are collected by the State on behalf of society. Is that the case in these civil litigations in the US, or does the winner claim that as well?

    --
    Patent litigation: A doctrine of Mutually Assured Destruction... in which everyone seems willing to push the button
  22. Duh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why exactly would you SETTLE after you WON? She can't pay the judgment but they can make her pay whatever she earns for the rest of her life.

    It would be like the prosecurtor proposing a settlement for Madoff because he can never do the 150 yrs in jail.

    Only one reason to offer another settlement after winning. You don't want this to go to a higher court.

  23. Would become by phorm · · Score: 1

    The whole business of making music would become a perverse combination of hype and ownership on a multinational level

    Would become? I think perhaps we're there already.

    1. Re:Would become by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      I don't know what's funnier, the post you replied to, or how completely you missed the point.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
  24. Actually they have to prove damages by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

    when she downloads a song in MP3 format, she is not stealing it from the RIAA so that they don't have a copy of it anymore, she is making a copy of an existing MP3 format. If the RIAA proves that she downloaded the song without paying for it, charge her $1 per song which was the going rate back in 2004. I fail to see how she did $1.92 Million in damages unless she downloaded 1.92 million songs.

    I remember when they busted Kevin Mitnick, they tried to charge him for the cost of developing the software he stole, his lawyers claim they couldn't charge him for the entire cost of developing the software as he only stole a copy of it and did not delete the original from the source. I forgot how Mitnick got out of that one, but they tried to make an example out of him by charging the full cost of developing the software he downloaded, instead of the actual cost of buying a license of said software.

    Let me put it this way, it is more like stealing a $1 pair of sun glasses from a store, you don't charge the shoplifter for the full price of developing the pair of sunglasses, but the actual price the sunglasses sold for. But it isn't even stealing sun glasses it is more like taking a picture of said sun glasses in the store and then sharing that picture with random strangers on the Internet. In fact this is more like the 1970's and 1980's when people bought an LP and then copied it to a cassette tape for their friends to listen to or recorded songs off FM Radio stations to Cassette tapes and shared them with friends. It is not the original LP they are stealing, but a copy of it or a copy of the recording of the song. This is legally no different than hearing the song on an FM Radio station for free, except she has control over what song plays and for how long. Will the RIAA go after people who listen to FM Radio songs next, or stop libraries from carrying Audio CDs that can be checked out for free, or the Internet Radio programs that play a random MP3 file as well? How can you justify a $1.92M charge, and that much damage was done? The answer is you cannot, because you don't know if the copy of the songs lead anyone to actually buy a legit version of the song after hearing the pirated version and liked it enough to buy a legal copy and other things by the singer or band who made the song they like. In that case a pirated copy of a song is no different than hearing the same song on an FM Radio for free because the FM Radio is sending out a copy of the song to every FM Radio tuned in to that station. This woman did the same thing an FM Radio station would do, beam up copies of the recorded song for free. You'll have to prove that she charged for each song in order to prove piracy and loss of sales, or else it ends up the same legal status as an FM Radio station or Internet Radio Station, etc.

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