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RIAA Confusion In Tenenbaum & Thomas Cases?

NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "There seems to be a bit of confusion in RIAA-land these days, caused by the only 2 cases that ever went to trial, Capitol Records v. Thomas-Rasset in Minnesota, and SONY BMG Music Entertainment v. Tenenbaum, in Boston. In both cases, the RIAA has recently asked for extensions of time. In Thomas-Rasset, they've asked for more time to make up their mind as to whether to accept the reduced verdict of $54,000 the judge has offered them, and in Tenenbaum they've twice asked for more time to prepare their papers opposing Tenenbaum's motion for remittitur. What is more, it has been reported that after the reduction of the verdict, the RIAA offered to settle with Ms. Thomas-Rasset for $25,000, but she turned them down."

18 of 229 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Real Life Action RIAA Lawyer Doll Says ... by jhoegl · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Well, Ill bet with those "winnings" they wont even cover lawyers fees.
    This may be what they are pondering over.
    Surprise, big corporate suing little Nanny "Apple Pie" Buttons is not profitable.
    Who would have guessed that one!?!?

  2. Total non-story by Grond · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Requests for extension of time are very common, and there's nothing unusual about the reasons given by the RIAA lawyers in the motions or for the length of extension requested. This seems like little more than an attempt to drive more pageviews to Mr. Beckerman's ad-laden site.

    1. Re:Total non-story by ari_j · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm going to step in and correct one thing. I wouldn't say that he's given "legal advice" here at all. That's a special creature that includes all sorts of ethical duties. What he has done, though, is provide a great deal of legal information, clarification, and insight. I would hate for a good deed to turn into a regret by people confusing legal information for advice. At the very least, he can be appreciated for being a contributing member of the community where most people in his position would not bother.

  3. Settlement by anagama · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I suspect Thomas will rue the day she turned down the $25k settlement. While whatever millions the jury awarded was obviously excessive, her lawyer's assertion that $1/song is appropriate is also excessive, but in the opposite direction. If the law's bite was no more than the cost of purchase for what you get caught illegally "sharing", there would be no incentive for people to be honest and pay for their music.

    Anyway, $25k is not an enormous life ruining debt. Yes, it is not trivial, but it is surmountable.

    --
    What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    1. Re:Settlement by Aphoxema · · Score: 4, Insightful

      She did the right thing, though. If she had given up in court at 50k, the next person might have to start over in the millions.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    2. Re:Settlement by Eskarel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This isn't about what her lawyer asserted, it's about what the judge ruled.

      She's actually very clever to not take the settlement. Aside from the fact that there may well be someone behind her bankrolling that 25 grand difference anyway, she's more likely than not to end up paying nothing other than court costs.

      The RIAA really doesn't want that 54k verdict to become official. It would set a legal precedent, one which would more likely than not be referred to, even in other jurisdictions. It's probably relatively close to a fair number(I can't recall the details of the case at the moment), but that's really not the point. I wouldn't be at all surprised if the RIAA ends up dropping the Thomas case. It'll cost them to do so, but it will severly limit their ability to extort and intimidate future defendents.

    3. Re:Settlement by CorporateSuit · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Anyway, $25k is not an enormous life ruining debt. Yes, it is not trivial, but it is surmountable.

      Considering the damages caused by the crime, $500 would be the high-ball figure for a sane punishment. Considering the act of downloading and uploading files is at least as common as speeding and done by millions of otherwise law-abiding Americans, that should be taken into account -- it's a bad law.

      --
      I am the richest astronaut ever to win the superbowl.
    4. Re:Settlement by melikamp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I support her cause because they cannot prove any damages at all. Them downloading a song does not actually cause them any damage.

      I also support her cause because, even if they could prove that her sharing resulted in X copies of the song being distributed illegally in a way which caused a loss of sale, then the actual damages to them would be something between X/10 and X dollars. Suppose X=25. Asking for $250 and the attorney fees would be just. Asking for $2500 would be an overkill, but they think they should get at least $25000 = 1000 times the damages, and that without ever proving the loss of a single sale.

    5. Re:Settlement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      aha, so because speeding is criminal, and occasionally deadly, it should have lower costs than a civil offense with no chance of causing physical harm to anyone?

    6. Re:Settlement by Urza9814 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      $54k is CERTAINLY excessive. As is $25k. This is not a criminal case. The payment is not a fine to discourage crime, it's a payment to cover the damages. She shared 24 songs. At $54k, that's more than $2k per song. And when you can buy those songs for $1 each, that's saying that she was personally and directly responsible for 2,000 people not buying each one of those songs. How is that in any way even possible? A single person sharing a single song will NEVER be directly responsible for _thousands_ of lost sales. It just doesn't work that way. And the RIAA has certainly not proven such a loss. And again, this is a civil case. The fine is not a punishment or deterrent, it is pure and simple restitution.

      For a reference:
      http://www.rbs2.com/cc.htm#anchor111111
      "In general, a losing defendant in civil litigation only reimburses the plaintiff for losses caused by the defendant's behavior."

    7. Re:Settlement by Rockoon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Anyway, $25k is not an enormous life ruining debt. Yes, it is not trivial, but it is surmountable.

      What it is, is unconstitutional.

      Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    8. Re:Settlement by grimJester · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Statutory damages are pre-established damages for cases where calculating a correct sum is deemed difficult

      This still doesn't mean they should be significantly higher than the actual damages. They're currently several orders of magnitude higher than any reasonable approximation of actual damages. Difficult to calculate != set the figure high to punish people more.

  4. Not settling by oldhack · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not settling will set the precedent for future RIAA damage?

    54k seems excessive, but probably way less than what the RIAA lawyers would like to charge for their time.

    --
    Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
  5. Let's play this out to the end, shall we? by Nefarious+Wheel · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I would like to see a definitive, ultimate outcome along the lines of the trend I'm seeing here -- reduction of Jammie's fine from the absurdly egregious down to a level she can afford without crippling her family financially for the rest of her life, over a few unlicensed uploads.

    Yes she broke the law, there should be a penalty for the infraction, but all the settlements so far have been unjustly high. And yes, I'd like to see it played out to the point where a precedent will be set and honoured.

    The RIAA are the worst of the world's ambulance chasers. They shouldn't be allowed to win these huge entitlements, simply because they can afford to make more noise.

    Justice should be the outcome of rule by law, decent and upstanding law, not simply "rule by the loud".

    --
    Do not mock my vision of impractical footwear
  6. Estimated actual damages by gweeks · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Estimated actual damages

    24 songs with a $.99 retail value. Assume the $.99 is the damage per song that a sale was lost on. (That's not the case actually as the wholesale price is the damage amount.) Assume every song downloaded is an actual lost sale. (Again not true, but simple for this calculation.) Assume a seed ration of 5, so for every song 5 copies were made. (Again not true, 5 is an insanely high ratio on P2P networks as 1:1 is common.) 24*.99.*5 = $118.80 actual losses incurred. 10 times that is the constitutionally recognized limit.

    $1188.0

    That's why RIAA doesn't want the constitutionality of the damages award adjudicated.

    1. Re:Estimated actual damages by Splab · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually I think $1188 fine would be better for RIAA, headlines with "millions in fine for copyright infrigement" while looking impressive is such a big number most people can't cope with it.

      $1188 fine is something people can releate to, that's the new television they where saving up for, the repair bill for their car or something similiar.

      Personally, if I got a fine for a bazillion dollars I wouldn't care, there is no way it would ever be repaid and they can't kill you, they might make life miserable, but there are ways around that - getting a fine for $1188 would suck hard, you can't justifiable go bankrupt, it doesn't pay to try to bail on it. Basically you would just have to suck it up and pay the damned thing.

  7. The courts are increasingly unfriendly to RIAA by mykos · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sooner or later everyone in the world will have heard music that they weren't entitled to hear, or seem movies that they weren't entitled to see, or read books that they weren't entitled to read.

    At that point, it's going to be hard to convince a jury people that a multimillion dollar corporation should be able to bankrupt a single mother with children because they liked music.

  8. Devil in the details by Arancaytar · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The last line seems to me (as a non-lawyer, mind you) more fascinating than the headline. Offering a settlement looks like betting on a stock price: The RIAA was willing to sell its $54,000 judgement for less than HALF that amount. They must expect to ultimately get less than that.

    And Ms. Thomas-Rasset (or rather her lawyer, since nobody would make a decision like that against their lawyer's advice) seems to share that view, since she refused the settlement. They must be confident that they'll pay less than $25,000, or even nothing.