Indiana Court Rules Melted Down Hard Drive Not Destruction of Evidence
An anonymous reader writes An Indiana court has ruled that a hard drive that was sent to recycling was not destruction of evidence. The ruling stems from a BitTorrent file-sharing case filed by Malibu Media where a defendant claimed that his hard drive had failed thanks to heavy use. Malibu claimed that the act was destruction of evidence and filed a motion demanding a default judgement. The court denied this motion suggesting that because the hard drive failed, there was no evidence to destroy in the first place.
That requires the plaintiff to spend money to have the analysis done which isn't part of the copyright extortion business plan.
I am becoming gerund, destroyer of verbs.
- person uses drive for illegal activity
- person receives DMCA notice
- person "catastrophically fails" their drive
- person receives subpoena
- person notifies court that sole evidence no longer exists due to drive failure.
Hence, your assumptions are flawed (for this case).
The ruling found that it was NOT illegal to destroy evidence before it is called for evidence. It is illegal to intentionally destroy evidence that has been called for by the court. There are also retention laws that cover certain situations. Setting data retention guidelines prior to the suit protects you from getting into this mess (if you can prove that you ALWAYS destroy your data after X days/ x failed writes/ etc. then you're not culpable if you do what you always do just prior to being served).
I know this because I RTFA'd
Defendant received notice of this lawsuit at the beginning of October 2012. []Defendant, however, did not destroy the hard drive until “late February 2013.” [] Thus, almost five months passed between the time that Defendant learned of the lawsuit and Defendant’s destruction of the hard drive. Had Defendant truly wished to hide adverse information, the Court finds it unlikely that Defendant would have waited nearly five months to destroy such information. Instead, Defendant’s continued use of the hard drive for the months after he learned of the litigation suggests that the hard drive contained no information to hide at all, or that Defendant did not intend to hide any such information.
The timing of Plaintiff’s amendment and the service of its complaint also detract from an inference of bad faith. Plaintiff amended its complaint to add Harrison as a Defendant on November 9, 2012. [] Plaintiff, however, did not serve the amended complaint on Harrison until April 2013, [], after Defendant had arranged to order the replacement hard drive, [], and after the recycling of Defendant’s hard drive. [] Furthermore, Defendant testified that the service of the complaint was the first time that he became aware that he was personally being sued for copyright infringement. []
You should have read the article. The argument is about what the defendant knows and the intention. The drive was sent to recycle BEFORE the defendant even knows a litigation is imminent. Hence, it is not possible to argue the defendant destroyed an evidence while he didn't know it was to become an evidence. The hard drive was destroyed in good faith by the defendant without an intention to interfere with legal procedures since there wasn't any at the time and he wasn't even aware any was eminent.
Achille Talon
Hop!
Magistrate Judge Stephen L. Crocker didn't like this tactic. He froze eleven of Malibu's cases in western Wisconsin, and ordered Malibu's lawyer to explain why she shouldn't be sanctioned for violating court rules. Filing paperwork with the Court with no purpose except to harass or embarrass an opponent is a big no-no. Judge Crocker wondered why Malibu would file a list of movies with embarrassing titles that Malibu doesn't own and can't sue over.
https://www.eff.org/cases/mali...
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
From what I understand, all it takes is one knock with a hammer to ensure platters are bent and can never be used again. And there is no known practical method to restore data after a single overwrite with 0s. Everything else is pure paranoia.
Overwriting with 0s will not perfectly overwrite the tracks. There is some slop on the read head positioning that will normally allow enough data to be recovered that the ECC can be used to rebuild the full data set. This can only be done by taking the platters out and putting them into a machine that is purpose built for the task of recovering such data. Having worked on part of the design of such a machine, I can tell you two things about it: First, it exists, and second, it is not cheap. I was told the cost of the one I worked on was $12M USD.
Physically deforming the platters will make the job much more difficult (expensive), but not impossible. A combination of clever chemistry and an electron microscope can usually recover data off a mangled platter. This process sucks because it has to be done by hand, but if its worth enough to you, there a couple of labs around the country that can handle that level of data recovery. A better way to ensure total destruction is to melt the platters outright. not only does the melting deform the platters, but sufficient heat will thoroughly destroy the data, even if the platter does not completely melt.
I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
I don't understand how the prosecution can ask for a default judgement without solid compelling evidence of a crime. Without a discovery of the drives contents I'm assuming they had other evidence.
First, part of the reason you don't understand this is because you are under the impression that copyright infringement for personal use is a crime. It is NOT. This is a civil matter, not criminal.
Generally speaking, copyright infringement is only criminal if you are doing it in bulk for profit. Historically, that meant what has been known legally for about 100 years as copyright piracy, which again in general refers to making unauthorized copies of copyrighted works and selling them.
It is today's media industry which has deliberately attempted to confuse you by labeling downloads of copyrighted material for personal use piracy. It is not. Piracy is a legal term referring to PROFITING from unauthorized copying of copyrighted works.
Now, back to the case at hand: being a civil matter, and not criminal, the court need not require probable cause in order to demand that evidence be produced (although it probably can't be seized beforehand. However, because of this, people have been known to destroy evidence after being served notice of a lawsuit. If they do that for the purpose of hiding the evidence, and the plaintiff can show that, it may be ruled spoliation of evidence, and could result in a summary judgment in favor of the plaintiff.
But despite this not being a criminal matter, plaintiff still bears the burden of showing that spoliation happened, via genuine evidence. In this case, plaintiff's claim of spoliation was not backed by evidence; it was a claim without substance. Defendant had a reasonable explanation for the drive's demise, and plaintiff could not show otherwise.
I also don't understand how a drive can be ruled as evidence if nothing is yet discovered on the hard drive.
Remember that this is a civil matter. Standards of evidence are different. If a reasonable person would believe that the drive contained evidence, a judge might ask that it be produced. It very much depends on the circumstances.