Court Grants RIAA Summary Judgment Motions vs. Limewire
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "District Court Judge Kimba Wood has granted some of the RIAA's key summary judgment motions in Arista Records v. Lime Group. In her 59-page decision (PDF), she found Lime Group itself, as well as its CEO and a separate company, liable for intentionally inducing Limewire users to infringe plaintiffs' copyrights. The decision was not a final judgment, so it is not appealable. Additionally, it denied summary judgment on certain issues, and did not address any possible damages."
Sorry for the double reply. I meant include this in the previous reply:
A downloader is not responsible to know whether the place he is downloading from owns/licensed proper copyright. Moralely perhaps, but legally he should not, if for nothing else because it would be impossible to ascertain all the elements are owned by said parties and in many cases impossible to know beforehand.
I completely agree with your logic, but you are using logic to conclude what the law should say.
You then jumped from logic and "should" to a false assumption of what the law is, followed by a false assertion of what the law is. Silly rabbit. You assumed copyright law was logical, reasonable, or even sane.
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- - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.