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The Courts Government Media News

Fighting RIAA Without an Attorney 407

2think writes "Yahoo News is reporting that Patricia Santangelo of New York will be taking on the RIAA in court without an attorney. It seems that Ms. Santangelo has committed over $24,000 due to her case and simply cannot afford to continue with the services of an attorney." From the article: "Her former lawyer, Ray Beckerman, says Santangelo doesn't really need him. 'I'm sure she's going to win,' he said. 'I don't see how they could win. They have no case. They have no evidence she ever did anything. They don't know how the files appeared on her computer or who put them there.'"
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Fighting RIAA Without an Attorney

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  • by The Ancients ( 626689 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @04:27AM (#14338816) Homepage
    Ok - maybe not. I guess this lawyer is the exception to the rule, stating that his client doesn't really need him.

    In a serious vein, if she wins it will set precedent and give hope to others that can't afford a lawyer.

  • Stupid? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 26, 2005 @04:29AM (#14338821)
    If they have no case hopefully she will be able to get back the money she has spent on lawyer fees. My concern is that she may lose and her case may create some sort of precedent. The only way she could lose a case like this is representing herself.
  • Well... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by dirtsurfer ( 595452 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @04:29AM (#14338824) Journal
    'I'm sure she's going to win,' he said. 'I don't see how they could win.

    Well, I don't know. Maybe her lawyer could stop defending her. Then they might win.
  • Lawyers (Score:1, Interesting)

    by networkzombie ( 921324 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @04:31AM (#14338827)
    Her former lawyer said this? Ham sandwich comes to mind. Remember O.J.? They have her IP Address. She did it. They have experts and they cannot afford the bad PR. She needs a lawyer.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 26, 2005 @04:35AM (#14338838)
    How and why is downloading something illegal? Wouldn't distribution be illegal because it's copyright infringement? But how or why is downloading be illegal?

    Isn't that just an extension of freedom of speech? The freedom to listen/watch?

    Is listening to someone, who didn't pay the RIAA, sing the copyrighted song Happy Birthday illegal? Or is flipping through a stack of unpublished/unlicensed photos illegal?

    Is it because there's a copy of something on the computer? Would streaming be more legal?

    I want to know what law is being broken. I looked this up in the internet and still have no definite answer. I simply need to know.
  • by rolfwind ( 528248 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @04:39AM (#14338843)
    I guess civil, otherwise she could just get a lawyer assigned to her.

    And will there be a jury?

    I don't think any jury would be willing to convict her. Which would set a nice precedent.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 26, 2005 @05:05AM (#14338892)
    There were 16,000 people charge, with 3,700 settled. Perhaps the remaining could get in contact with each other and band together for a class-action lawsuit, or simply a fund because if 1 person wins a case, precedent is set.
  • How do they know? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by maxcray ( 541911 ) <cnystrom@gmail.com> on Monday December 26, 2005 @05:07AM (#14338895)
    How do they know what is on her computer? Did they raid her house for a civil suit, or do they have some sort of remote monitoring software?
  • by catman ( 1412 ) <bjornst.skogkatt@homelinux@org> on Monday December 26, 2005 @05:19AM (#14338921) Homepage Journal
    I just want to know - how does the RIAA know that those files were on her computer?
    They may have a civil case against her - but I wonder if she has a criminal case against whoever searched her computer?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 26, 2005 @05:47AM (#14338962)
    Damn right! I know it means nothing posting AC, but I'd pledge 50 just get the satisfaction of kicking the RIAA in the nuts. Hell, it would make up for all I've saved on boycotting their rubbish for the last few years. But think beyond money here people. She is up against 'experts' in a civil lawsuit. What will be decided fundamentally affects us all and it will be decided on who can provide the most convincing case. And what are many of us here if not experts in technology and technology law? All this woman seems to have is spunky confidence and a will to stand up for herself. As a practicing computer scientist with 15 years experience I feel confident I could destroy their case on any *technical* point. Just off the top of my head without any knowledge of the case...

    Where did the hard disk come from?
    Was it AND/OR the OS cleanly installed and by whom?
    Who else had access to the machine, physical and remote?
    If the RIAA were able to access it
      i) did they trespass to do so?
      ii) does this not mean anybody else also had remote access to the machine?
    What evidence is there that the machine was not infected or part of a botnet?
    How did the RIAA get hold of any ISP logs?
    Do the logs conclusively prove a download was requested AND received?
    Do the logs conclusively prove she personally was the instigator, bound to that IP address/timeframe?
    If she had this data on her machine did she also have the means to decode it thus the means and intent to listen to it?
    Lets see a full audit of every piece of code on that machine!

    I'm sure y'all can do a lot better too. She shouldn't need to *hire experts*, she should have dozens of them gagging to jump into the fray and give the RIAA a bloody nose. I wonder why not. Is there something about this case that's not being aired?

  • by Pofy ( 471469 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @05:52AM (#14338972)
    >How and why is downloading something illegal?

    Because it is a copying of a file. it may in many cases (but not always) be a copyright infringement since copying is a right that belongs to the copyright holder. There are, depending on country), many cases when you CAN create a copy without it being infringement though.

    >Wouldn't distribution be illegal because it's copyright infringement?

    Distribution is one of the other rights of a copyright holder. Again, it can in some cases not be an infringement though. The making it available for others (on for example typical p2p networks would typically not fal under that though).

    >But how or why is downloading be illegal?
    >Isn't that just an extension of freedom of speech? The freedom to listen/watch?

    It is creating a copy, see above.

    >Is listening to someone, who didn't pay the RIAA, sing the copyrighted song Happy Birthday illegal?

    No, but then you are not creating a copy.

    >is it because there's a copy of something on the computer?

    On your computer, yes. Note that "copies" such as those in a cache or other temporary ones that are only created as a mean of using it is typicaly not infringement, it is when such a copy becomes sort of permanent or usable as a new copy (sorry for not knowing the correct english terminology) that you get an infringement).

    > Would streaming be more legal?

    Yes, as long as the streaming (that is, making it available or publish it) is also legal. Again, that vary some between coutries.
  • by hansreiser ( 6963 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @05:57AM (#14338980) Homepage
    You fail to understand the reality of our legal system if you think you have any legal rights when you lack an attorney. We live in a caste system. Judges simply do not read briefs unless they are written by lawyers. As soon as someone goes pro per, the lawyer on the other side always starts writing its briefs so that the judge does not need to read the other side's briefs, you can see the shift in language. Then, when you read the decisions, it is clear that the judge did not read the brief of the pro per party. Judges are former attorneys. They defend the interests of the legal caste. It is completely irrelevant what the merits of a case are when you lack an attorney. People who think otherwise think that the law is more than the ritual of language by which the herd enforces social position.

    Being in court without a lawyer is no different from being black in court in the South in the 1920's. They will find some way of explaining that it is your fault that you lost, some way to justify their legal decision, but there is no chance you will not lose.
  • by fabs64 ( 657132 ) <beaufabry+slashdot,org&gmail,com> on Monday December 26, 2005 @06:09AM (#14339002)
    Can't be bothered dismantling all of your "but..but.. it's COPYING!" arguments but couldn't help myself with this one.


    >Is listening to someone, who didn't pay the RIAA, sing the copyrighted song Happy Birthday illegal?

    No, but then you are not creating a copy.


    So, going by that logic recording that person singing happy birthday and then listening to it later WOULD be copyright infringement? bu.. I thought time-shifting was legal in the US?

    Equating downloading a file to "it's creating a copy and that's illegal" is bad voodoo, I could argue that I am simply on the receiving end of those bytes and recording them for later use, is that not the same as time-shifting a radio or television program?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 26, 2005 @06:17AM (#14339014)
    The thing that nobody seems to talk about is who is actually making the copy. I believe that the copy is made by the person who is uploading the file. The downloader recieves a copy(i.e. does not make one).
    This is the same as a guy selling illegal books on the street. He made the copies and is the one who infringed on copyrights no the people who bought from him.
  • by Pofy ( 471469 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @06:29AM (#14339029)
    >So, going by that logic recording that person singing happy birthday and then listening to it later
    >WOULD be copyright infringement? bu.. I thought time-shifting was legal in the US?

    That is why should have read and quooted and understood ALL of my answer. For example the few qords just following after the ones you quoted:

    " it may in many cases (but not always) be a copyright infringement"

    or perhaps the next sentence after that:

    " There are, depending on country), many cases when you CAN create a copy without it being infringement though."

    >Equating downloading a file to "it's creating a copy and that's illegal" is bad voodoo

    Were did I do that? See above.

    > I could argue that I am simply on the receiving end of those bytes and recording them for later use,

    Since you are the one initiating the transfer you are not just "recieveing", you are the one creating the copy.

    >is that not the same as time-shifting a radio or television program?

    In part, yes. But so what? What did that have to do with what I said? Now, go back and read the WHOLE post of mine, it is not that long you know....

  • Re:Well... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by RobotRunAmok ( 595286 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @06:30AM (#14339031)
    I'm guessing the RIAA will drop the case anyway and try to find someone with a bit more cash on hand next time.

    The RIAA does not sue individuals for the money. The RIAA sues individuals to garner press through which they intend to frighten entire populations of individuals into not downloading.

    This whole story is tailor-made to their efforts. The moral of it is, even when it is impossible to prove the illicit origin of music files on your computer, you still might be unlucky enough to be involved in litigation that can cost you big bucks. The message is, "parents: monitor the content of your kids' hardrives carefully, lest it end up costing you. Digital music just ain't worth the potential hassle."

    Intelligent strategy. But getting the story on slashdot during Christmas break is absolutely brilliant.
  • by VincenzoRomano ( 881055 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @06:32AM (#14339035) Homepage Journal
    If I were Mrs. Santangelo I'd simply say:
    "I use this OS named Windows. Files and programs appears every while without any intervention of mine.
    For example some days ago I was playing that nice disk by Sony BMG and some new programs and file appeared on my PC disk. I have asked about this to Microsoft and Sony and both say it's normal. So I don't mind when new files appear on my disk!"
    Moreover, if Mrs. Santangelo stopped her firewall/antivirus/low-caffeine program, if any, she could also prove that strange things happen to her computer thanks to a number of "special features" (someone dares to call them "bugs") of her pre-bundled PC.
  • Re:Well... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 26, 2005 @06:54AM (#14339075)
    If she wins, doesn't RIAA have to pay his legal expenses?
  • by henni16 ( 586412 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @07:24AM (#14339135)
    One other point about the logs:
    How did they make sure that their clock was in sync with the ISP's?
    Might matter in case of a dynamic IP address.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 26, 2005 @07:28AM (#14339143)
    IANAL but I've done two stints of Jury service. To my knowledge, in the UK, guilt has to be proven, not innocence [which is assumed] - and that the plaintiff did knowingly commit the crime.

    Surely all she has to do is fold her arms and deny all knowledge?

    The lawyer who had 24k off her then said "you're going to win" simply took 24k off her and left her in the shit. It's not the RIAA who've stiffed her, it's the lawyer by my reckoning...unless it's a smoke-screen to transfer her life savings into trusted care so the RIAA can't get their dirty mits on the cash.
  • by lasindi ( 770329 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @08:03AM (#14339188) Homepage
    If they really want to stop online piracy, they need to go after the makers of the software, not the poor people they duped into believing that they had "purchased" music.

    Filesharing software can also be used for legal downloading, and if the RIAA can punish the authors of file sharing software because users used the software illegally, that's very dangerous (of course, such episodes have already played out in the courts). As far as I know, these software makers never say that their software's license includes the cost of music licenses. If they did, that would be false advertisement. Unless that's happening users should be held accountable for how they use software, not the authors of the software.
  • Re:Well... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by h4rm0ny ( 722443 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @09:51AM (#14339385) Journal

    I'm not aware of any spyware or virus that would download random .mp3's onto your computer. Of course if any virus writer with an axe to grind out there chose to write a virus that connected to a P2P network and did this, then it would really cock-up any RIAA prosecution efforts.
  • by mumblestheclown ( 569987 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @09:59AM (#14339395)
    Hi. I defend the "traditional" view of copyright. I am not an "RIAA shill", but an intelligent person with a logical mind. Therefore, I will respond to you point by point.

    1. Copying and sharing, the basis of all human culture and advancement, are somehow heinous crimes in the digital age.

    This is what is known as "amphiboly" (look it up via google for a full definition.) Here you attempt to link the cuddly and innocent terms "copying", "sharing", "human culture and advamcent" with acts that break the social contract known as copyright. Copyright exists for a reason: the reasons should be well known to you by now and history and economics have shown UNQUESTIONABLY that the notion of copyright (and other IP mechanisms) (and the necessary enforcement that comes with it) are actually very useful for "human culture and advancement." While I'm sure you are just oozing with junior high logic as to why that is not so, the reality of the situation is that if you look accross ANY combination of industry, country segment, etc where there are strong IP regulations, in the overwhelming number of cases, having strong IP laws DO what they are designed to do: encourage production (and therefore, advance human culture.)

    2. Seeing something is the same as doing something.

    The problem with this argument is INTENT. When somebody downloads music off the internet that they do not have the righs to, they are generally VERY CLEARLY taking an action that any damn fool knows is illegal. Because the law views intent as important, this is why what is being done is bad. Plus, there is the fact that under many P2P programs, once you download something you automatically generally propagate it as well (consider how eDonkey works, for example).

    3. The US's laws apply to everyone in the world, and are superior to every other law

    Here you just like making cartoon attack against the USA. The fact is that in EVERYWHERE in the world where you are likely to be reading this (except for taiwan), IP laws have been harmonized to the point where the basics are the same. Sure, there have been some odd lower court rulings in Canada, France, etc, but generally these are eventually struck down and the basics upheld for the simple reason that all civilized countries are producers of IP and recognize that their economies (and therefore the welfare of the people) depend on IP laws being enforced.

    4. Legality is more important than morality.

    This is a general claim that we could also make of pirates who try to spin torturous explanations of "fair use" into how they can fairly share with millions of people anonymously. "Morality?" I dont know about morality, but I do know that strong IP rules make good economies which make higher standard of living for all - the link is blatantly obvious to anybody who has taken time to study this.

    5. Your property belongs to some corporation instead of to you.

    This is a nice attempt at a smear, but with no basis in reality. Many things are licensed, not sold, and we as a society have come to understand that there are necessary limits, for the good of all, to how intellectual goods can be distributed.

    6. Creativity cannot exist without cartels and monopolies.

    Oh stop already. This is cartoon nonsense.

    7. Guaranteed profits are better than freedom.

    Zzzzz..

  • by redcaboodle ( 622288 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @10:21AM (#14339433)
    Actually, so did our lawyer.
    When we asked him for assistance with auctioning of a flat my boyfriend half-owns, he just whipped out a lawbook and told us how and where to file the application, telling us we could do it without him and save his fee.
  • i have a question (Score:2, Interesting)

    by louden obscure ( 766926 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @10:45AM (#14339497)
    when was it proclamed that an *.mp3==cd track?
    thats like telling me my copy of ice harvest (a bt download)recorded with a camcorder at a movie theater==the DVD.
  • Come full circle (Score:2, Interesting)

    by murderlegendre ( 776042 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @10:46AM (#14339499)

    When I was a kid, growing up in the 1970's, I bought and listened to records. My friends and I would sometimes loan our records to each other so that we could 'share the love' - records weren't cheap, and sometimes it just didn't make sense for several of us to own the same title. Sometimes we took it a step further, and made a cassette tape of a record.. and shared it around that way. But in the end, the 'real music' was the record itself, not the copy on the cassette.

    Sometime in the early 1980's, I (well, may of us) got duped into buying CDs. Perfect sound, now and forever we were told. I sold my records and my collection of CDs grew, but for some reason, by the mid 90's I'd stopped buying and listening to my CDs. I was doing a lot less music listening in general, but when I was listening, it was to tapes of my old records and mix tapes / tapes of CDs that were floating around. At the time, I just assumed it was the natural progression and change of interests in my life, and life went on.

    Then something amazing happened. I struck up a friendship with a guy ten years my senior, who was a big vinyl junkie and in possession of some very trick analog gear - turntable, tube amps, etc. I was frigging blown away! From the first time the needle hit 'Zombie' by the Cranberries, I was sold. The reason I wasn't listening to my CDs, is that they sounded like shit, and I'd been duped by the Digital hype. The folly of my ways was apparent, and I immediately went out and sold all my CDs, and bought a turntable - as well as a simple little tube amp - and I was in heaven. Today, my LP collection is over a thousand titles and growing, and the music just keeps on playing.

    So what's the point of this boring backstory? It's this: Digital media, at least music, is a joke. It's not real, and it doesn't even sound like it. CD playback has gotten a lot better, and I don't begrudge someone for buying a new CD - especially if there is no vinyl release. But the idea of paying actual money for a crappy sounding compressed version (MP3) of an already crappy sounding CD is one of the stupidest things I have ever heard of. These $0.99 music downloads are completely worthless, and the record companies / RIAA know that. Not only are you getting a poor replica of a music track, but it's totally without any tangible value. You're just one hard disk crash away from losing every song you ever bought - but never really received.

    Sorry for the chiche, but the emperor really has no clothes - the entire business model of selling songs for download is nothing more than that - a model of business; a marketing breakthrough. And when you are selling worthless products on a large scale, you'd better be carrying a damn big stick. Or carrying a bunch of lawyers, who themselves have big sticks.. possibly with nails through them.

    Thanks for your time, and my regrets if this wandered off-topic. I think you get my point.

  • by Rocketship Underpant ( 804162 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @11:27AM (#14339615)
    "Here you attempt to link the cuddly and innocent terms "copying", "sharing", "human culture and advamcent" with acts that break the social contract known as copyright."

    I didn't agree to your silly social contract.

    "Copyright exists for a reason..."

    To pad wealthy pockets and protect stagnant business models? Or for political censorship, as was intended with the first copyright laws in England?

    "history and economics have shown UNQUESTIONABLY that the notion of copyright... are actually very useful for "human culture and advancement."

    Hardly provable and easily questioned. But then, one could argue that for all kinds of unethical laws.

    "When somebody downloads music off the internet that they do not have the righs to..."

    Again, you just fell for the fallacy that copyright covers receiving or listening to music rather than distribution.

    "The fact is that in EVERYWHERE in the world where you are likely to be reading this (except for taiwan), IP laws have been harmonized to the point where the basics are the same."

    You haven't travelled much, have you? The laws where I live are very different where I live. No DMCA, no ridiculous 120-year terms, etc.

    "I dont know about morality..."

    I concede that point.

    "Many things are licensed, not sold..."

    A license is a writ or contract giving permission to do something that is normally illegal or forbidden. I need no license to buy and use a CD or a book. Your use of the term is simply a common way to pretend that my property belongs to someone else.

    I guess you fall for most of the fallacies on my list. :) You may believe as you like, of course.
  • Re:Come full circle (Score:3, Interesting)

    by sharopolis ( 819353 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @11:53AM (#14339695)
    I hear this a lot. I think you're kidding yourself if you think that analogue equipmnet some how has more accurate sound reproduction than digital. Analogue media adds a lot of his hum and distortion, Im fairly sure this is objectively verifyable, and cannot re create a sound source as accurately as even the relatively low bitrate of a cd. Im really not an audio expert, so I can't give an authoritive debunking on the analogue myth, but I think it's pretty plain.

    Now a lot of people, me included, prefer their music to be a bit noisy and distorted, and prefer the fuzzy warm sound of vinyl, but to say that digital is a con is silly, To anyone that thinks that analogue is better than digital, try this:
    Record digitaly onto a computer your favourite vinyl, make sure it's done well, but don't go processing it or anything, then burn it onto a CD.
    Then with the help of a friend do a blind listening test, listening to both the original vinyl and the CD copy of the vinyl side by side and see if you can tell the difference.
    Try it with a few different tracks. All things being equal ie same amp and speakers etc, I'd be very surprised if there are many people out there that can consistently tell the difference between an original analogue recording and a digital copy of that same recording.

    The sound of a CD isn't a limitiation of the medium it's it's strength, it is capable of reproducing the vinyl sound almost entirely and what you're hearing when you listen to vinyl isn't more lifelike, it's more fuzzed and noisy.

  • Re:Well... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Bodysurf ( 645983 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @12:49PM (#14339855)

    >>"If I'm being sued, I settle out of court for fearing of losing more money. Even if she wins the case, she's lost more money than the settlement."

    >And that's exactly why it keeps happening and will keep happening until those getting sued do what some companies have done on patent claims: Team up and share legal expenses. As long as people roll over, it enables their behavior.

    Right again. The RIAA & their law sharks have a big portion of the other 16,000 (people who have settled) x $3,500 (settled) = $56M in settlement money to spend.

    They sue the same way those bastards at DirecTV did. They "carpet bomb" and fish with "dolpin unsafe nets" -- they don't care if they financially "kill" innocents along the way as long as they kill the bad guys or get a bunch of tuna.

    If they stop now, their fear is that the guilty will be led to believe that they can fight it too. If EVERYONE who was sued would fight it to the end, perhaps the bad guys would change their thinking. Blame the innocents who said they would rather settle for $3500 than fight it.

    The only way to stop this type of injustice is to change the civil legal system in various possible ways, such as:

    1. Have court-appointed attorneys, just like in criminal cases.
    2. Make it so loser automagically pays winner's legal fees.
    3. Change the burden of proof to be GUILTY BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT rather than a preponderance of the evidence.
    4. Allow a person in a civil trial to plead the 5th without negative inferences.
  • by numbski ( 515011 ) * <<ten.revliskh> <ta> <iksbmun>> on Monday December 26, 2005 @01:00PM (#14339883) Homepage Journal
    While I appreciate the comments here (read almost all of them...), may I sway this a bit?

    I don't care your religion. It's Christmas. Channukuk. Winter Solstice, yadda yadda. (I'm Christian).

    Is there anything we can do to help this lady? She's fighting the good fight, she's nearly broke. If there were ever a situation that Slashdotters could or should champion...come on guys.

    I'm late to this thread, but it's tempting to take up a virtual collection jar on this matter. $1 a person. How many people read Slashdot? We could probably come close to totally relieving this woman's burden and give her a fighting chance to win this thing.

    I'm serious. Anyone in?
  • Re:Well... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Bullfish ( 858648 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @01:23PM (#14339978)
    What you need is a proviso in the law to kill these nuisance law suits from organizations. Can't the court in the US make the RIAA pay all her legal costs if they find their case unfounded. In Britain, if a case is decided "wholly without merit", the person (entity) who brought the case is made to pay the legal fees of those they brought the case against.
  • Re:Stupid? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by despisethesun ( 880261 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @01:56PM (#14340121)
    It's doubtful that she could get that money back. The U.S. doesn't have a "loser pays" legal system like much of the rest of the world, which is a shame because it's sorely needed to prevent cases like this.
  • Re:Lawyers (Score:3, Interesting)

    by laffer1 ( 701823 ) <luke@@@foolishgames...com> on Monday December 26, 2005 @03:34PM (#14340676) Homepage Journal
    The problem is many judges don't know what an ip address is. If an "expert" gives a definition of an ip address and how one is obtained and its not brought up about how easy it is to spoof one, she will lose.

    She needs an "expert" of her own. Anyone with network security experience that the court will accept as an expert.

    Hell i have a "secure" wireless access point in my apartment. I changed the password, turned on WPA2 personal, mac address limiting, and told it not to announce itself. It could still be cracked by a neighbor and used for downloads. Until the general public accepts that wireless is insecure, the RIAA has a real chance in court. Heck isps can get hacked too. I used to work for one awhile back. During my 2.5 years there, we had our dns server rooted 5 times and our mail and web servers each rooted once. Of course running bind 4 in 2000 was stupid in itself. We had spammers and people attacking other servers. One time they even replaced the ps command so we couldn't see their programs running. My old boss is living proof that an idiot setting up linux is a bad thing. At the time I ran the windows servers which did not get rooted because i was psycho about patching and disabling everything.
  • attorney's blog (Score:3, Interesting)

    by meeotch ( 524339 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @04:23PM (#14340933) Homepage
    Check out her Attorney's blog here [blogspot.com]. Some of the comments are pretty rough.
    This doesn't exactly sound like what you said a month ago "We will fight to the end. Anyone who knows me knows that I don't take on something unless I am prepared to fight to the end. Also, anyone who knows me knows that the one thing I can't stand is a bully. The RIAA will give up long before we do, because sooner or later it will dawn upon them that their attorneys are taking them for a ride."

    So if you feel the case is so airtight, are you abandoning Ms. Santangelo in order to save the RIAA money? I mean since you said she would get damages involving the RIAA paying her legal costs once she wins. I'd still like to believe in you, but the fish stinks at the head.

    Ouch!

    mitch

  • RTFA Slapnuts (Score:1, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 26, 2005 @05:10PM (#14341137)
    Santangelo and Beckerman were confident they would win a motion to dismiss the case, but Judge Colleen McMahon ruled that the record companies had enough of a case to go forward. She said the issue was whether "an Internet-illiterate parent" could be held liable for her children's downloads.

    What do you think an f.r.c.p. 12(b)(6) motion is?
  • by Catbeller ( 118204 ) on Monday December 26, 2005 @06:17PM (#14341417) Homepage
    I've been speculating on the Mafia-RIAA connection for years. How else does such a weenie interest group get such favorable legislation from Congress? The consumer electronics industry and the PC manufacturing companies make far more money than all the record companies combined. Yet the congressmen roll over for the RIAA every time. Why? It isn't money -- the RIAA can easily be outspent (outbribed, whatever).

    The Mafia's been connected with record companies for decades. Is it uncommon knowledge that to oppose the RIAA is to oppose people who can have you disappeared into a blast furnace?

    Is it?

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