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Parents Not Liable For Their Son's Illegal Music Sharing, Says German Court

An anonymous reader sends this quote from an IDG News report: "A German couple are not liable for the filesharing activities of their 13-year old son because they told him unauthorized downloading and sharing of copyrighted material was illegal, and they were not aware the boy violated this prohibition, the German Federal Court of Justice ruled on Thursday. ... The ruling of the Federal Court of Justice reversed a ruling of the higher regional court of Cologne, which found the parents were liable for the illegal filesharing because they failed to fulfill their parental supervision. That court said the parents could have installed a firewall on their son's computer as well as a security program that would have made it possible to only allow the child to install software with the consent of his parents. Besides that, the parents could have checked their son's PC once a month, and then the parents would have spotted the Bearshare icon on the computers' desktop, according to the Cologne court. 'The Federal Court overturned the decision of the Appeal Court and dismissed it,' the court said."

4 of 207 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Come on! by Krneki · · Score: 5, Insightful

    He was just downloading stuff, it's not like he was smoking cigarettes or drinking.

    Jesus.

    Piracy for personal use = total worth ignoring

    --
    Love many, trust a few, do harm to none.
  2. Re:Come on! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Parents should take alternate shifts so there's always one awake watching their child at any moment of the day or the night. Having more than one child should be forbidden because then watching them 24 hours a day would be impossible with only 2 parents.

  3. Re:Come on! by MozeeToby · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You watch over your 13 year old every minute of every day? 13 is more than old enough to have a private life and private activities, in fact I would argue that trying to deny them that would have a much worse effect on society than downloading music does. How long does it take to install some peer to peer software and hide it? 20 minutes? Maybe 5 minutes to queue up each song and move it to the device of your choice. Yeah, letting your teenager have 30 minutes on a PC without your supervision should be a criminal offense. Not digging through every file on the family PC should be a criminal offense. Not spying on your children should be a criminal offense. That all makes perfect sense.

  4. Re:That's not my computer... by Sesostris+III · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Children serving life without parole, rest of the world combined: 0

    Not quite true. There are also child prisoners in North Korea who are unlikely to be released.

    From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camp_22:

    Based on the guilt by association principle (Korean: [some Korean text that Slashdot won't print here], yeonjwaje) they are often imprisoned together with the whole family including children and the elderly.[12] All prisoners are detained until they die and prisoners are never released.[18]

    So no, not just the USA.

    Of course, if you meant the rest of the civilized world, then you'd probably be correct.

    --
    You never know what is enough unless you know what is more than enough. - Blake