Investigating the RIAA's Billion-Dollar Claims 211
zrosener writes "I've put together a site with a lot of information on the cases. I created
diagrams and explanations of the file sharing systems these students created
that the RIAA is suing them for - and how they are functionally and
technically very similar to Microsoft's tools built right into windows,
and how they are dissimilar from Napster's." Good detective work.
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Good detective work? (Score:5, Funny)
If you see an ad for the Internet King, skip it. It's a scam.
"I put together a site ... (Score:2)
New to the /. effect, naive or malicious? You decide.
Re:Good detective work? (Score:3, Insightful)
ok, so what. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:ok, so what. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:ok, so what. (Score:1)
Yeah Look at the article (Score:4, Insightful)
no money in touring? (Score:3, Interesting)
Most bands on major labels end up costing money rather than making it. That's what happens when you spend hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars on every album.
Primus spent five grand on their first album and ten grand on their second; even their third album, which was released on a major label and had a co
Re:no money in touring? (Score:3, Interesting)
George Harrison got burned (Score:2, Insightful)
they do get publishing money, in Albini's case the song writers get $.07 per song per album sold minus ascap fees, if we assume 10 songs then the writers are getting $150,000
And they may not even get that. To the best of my knowledte, before a songwriter publishes a song, there is no reliable way to check whether or not that song infringes the copyright in another musical work. George Harrison got burned by this [columbia.edu].
How do you solve the problem of accidental infringement?
Ask Albini what he thinks of S
jackass? (Score:3, Funny)
Bush - the band
Oh thanks. I had forgotten about Bush [bush-music.com].
jackass
What does jackass [jackassthemovie.com] have to do with Bush or any of the other bands you listed?
Re:Yeah Look at the article (Score:4, Insightful)
BULLSHIT. You can't justify stealing with that argument. What they're saying is, "Most of our investments fail." Would you be satisfied with that performance rate as a business? If you accept that premise, why should a successfull artist have to support 99 crappy artists?
The answer is of course they're lying. They own the studios that record the albums, they own the song writers who write the songs, they own the plants that press the cds. It's called vertical integration. They produce the album as cheap as possible, CLAIM it costs a fortune, and pocket the rest :)
Do you really think the owners of record labels sit around and say "You know the thing that sucks about this business, we're always loosing cash." If that were the case record companies would go out of business all the time when their income sources (artists) dried up.
Re:+4 Insightful? (Score:2)
Wrong wrong ... :) I *am* an artist, music is my family is in the music business, and I choose to give my music to greatfull fans for free rather then give it to the ungreatfull RIAA for free. I also own an ENORMOUS collection of albums (800 or so) o
Site Down (Score:5, Funny)
The magnatism of your power lines is out of wack and now you have totaly lost your connection to the net.
Wish they would fix these silly power lines right so the broadband would give us the 2GB capacity.
2GB? (Score:3, Funny)
Wish they would fix these silly power lines right so the broadband would give us the 2GB capacity.
You think you've got it bad? Hell, my service only puts out 60 Baud and all I seem to get is 010101010101010101010...
RIAA Math... (Score:5, Funny)
2) Claim inflated losses for each potential viewer lost * theoretical maximum recieved from each one.
3) Sue.
4) Profit!
Don't laugh. It's their real-world business model.
Tuition's bad enough! (Score:5, Insightful)
Tuition's high enough these days--there's no need for RIAA to go after these kids' with lasers strapped to their lawyers' heads... I wouldn't mind paying for SACD-quality recordings, if only I could buy them easily and efficiently (read: online, one click at a time).
Re:Tuition's bad enough! (Score:4, Insightful)
You cheap bastard
If they offered exactly what you ask for for $1.50/track (still much better than having to buy a $15 CD with 10 sounds just to get the 3 you want), you'd still pirate them and say they're only worth $1. Then if it's $1, you'd say it's only worth 50 cents.
Tuition's bad enough, but vinyl sounds better. (Score:2, Interesting)
The tuition price comment was a joke- everyone knows students at Princeton, RPI, etc can afford another few billion added to their debtload
What I'm asking to pay for is a higher quality recording than is available from audio CD or mp3.
The recording industry has high quality masters for practically all recorded songs, and the RIAA has more choices than just (1) Dying from piracy, or (2) turning against its customers.
I'll buy higher quality recordings (ye
Re:Tuition's bad enough! unis could make a buck! (Score:1)
Re:Tuition's bad enough! (Score:5, Insightful)
The other thing is that now media is so cheap, it may just force people to swap CDs and DVDs with their ripped music.
While this has always happened, it has not been the mode of choice. At least with the p2p networks, they could monitor them and do something about the worst excesses. Maybe they could even have worked out a way of taxing the university for the amount of fileswapping. This would have made the university admins keep things under control.
By forcing this activity further underground, they will have even less idea how much is going on
Re:Tuition's bad enough! (Score:2)
s/lawyer/mutated sea bass/g
Error: 0 Replacements made, search and replacement terms are identical
Re:Tuition's bad enough! (Score:5, Insightful)
How is a $1bn dollar punitive fine anything other than cruel and unusual?
Oh, wait. The RIAA is doing this to several people, making it cruel and usual, which is much better.
Re:Tuition's bad enough! (Score:2)
More like the... (Score:4, Funny)
I mean really, if you're going to submit your own site, there's no excuse for an instant slashdotting.
no mirror=sadist (Score:5, Funny)
must like the slashdotting effect.
Re:no mirror=sadist (Score:1)
there's some people that are always willing to host a mirror.
i'm one, i like to see just how much traffic i can take
my site addy is up there...lol, im going to go knock on wood now
Re:no mirror=sadist (Score:4, Funny)
Maybe he should have "first post!"ed the text of his site?
Re:no mirror=sadist (Score:2)
Bittorrent (Score:2)
A question of intent (Score:5, Funny)
As with so many other legal issues, it's a question of intent. With student-written file sharing systems, you are intentionally sharing your files with the whole world. With Windows File Sharing, you are unintentionally sharing your files with the whole world.
Re:A question of intent (Score:2, Insightful)
That's bullshit. Nothing is shared by default when you install windows. You have to share it intentionally. The windows search function can search exactly the way these spiders do. All these kids did is cache the index of file shares on the local network to make the searches faster.
Re:A question of intent (Score:5, Interesting)
Besides that, it still doesn't change the fact that the files were accessable and locatable without these student's spider programs. If the RIAA wants to nail them for the files they actually had and were sharing, that's fine. I hope , however, that the judge will see how rediculous it would be to essentially find directory services illegal.
Re:A question of intent (Score:3, Informative)
i hate to defend microsoft when it comes to security, but you're making us all look bad with these stupid claims. the $c $d etc. shares are enabled by default, but you need an administrator account to get in *and* that administrator account needs a password. if the person running the machine is a click+drool newbie a
Re:A question of intent (Score:2, Insightful)
As has been stated numerous times in various places, in many cases, it is not the tool that infracts
Minuis the Diagrams equals the suck. (Score:5, Informative)
$97,800,000,000
Defendants
Defendant: Daniel Jonathan Peng
Princeton University, Sophomore
Quick Links
# Complaint - hosted by findlaw.com
# Analysis of the Complaint - written by Joseph Barillari
# Wake (Cached / Mirrored) - created by Daniel Peng
Daniel Jonathan Peng maintained and developed an application / website called "wake" that allowed users of the website: http://wake.princeton.edu (cached) to search for files shared on Princeton University's Local Area Network. It appears that Wake was a front end to a SMB file spider that searched and catalouged all "shared" files on computers connected to the Princeton's LAN. SMB, also known as Samba, is a file sharing protocol developed originaly by Microsoft. It is a widely used and established technology for sharing files between computers accross a network. RIAA charges include contributory copyright infringement accusing that Peng "has taken a network created for higher learning and academic pursuits and converted it into an emporium of music piracy where copyright infringement is simplified down to the click of a computer mouse", and of direct copyright infringement for "copying and distributing hundreds of sound recordings over his system without the authorization of the copyright owners". Fred Van Lohmann, Senior Intellectual Property Attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, volunteered to represent Peng in court.
Defendant: Jesse Jordan
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Freshman
Quick Links
# Complaint - hosted by findlaw.com
# www.chewplastic.com (Cached / Mirrored) - created by Jesse Jordan
Jesse Jordan maintained and developed a website called "chewplastic" that allowed users of the website: http://ww.chewplastic.com (cached) to search for files shared on Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute's Local Area Network. It appears that chewplastic.com deployed an application called "Phynd", also an SMB file spider, to search and catalouge all "shared" files on computers connected to the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute's LAN. RIAA accuses Jesse Jordan of direct and contributory copyright infringement.
Defendant: Aaron Sherman
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Senior
Quick Links
# Complaint - hosted by findlaw.com
# www.flatlan.com (Cached / Mirrored) - created by Aaron Sherman under the direction of Mukkai Krishnamoorthy, Associate Proffessor of Computer Science at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
Aaron Sherman under the direction of Associate Proffessor Mukkai Krishnamoorthy developed a network application called FlatLan. It is also an SMB file spider, designed to search and catalouge all "shared" files on computers connected a Local Area Network and capable of searching this catalouge through a web interface. The software was distributed for free and deployed on a many different school networks including Bryant College, Lehigh University, Michigan Tech, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Rice University, University of Texas, and Western New England College. The RIAA accuses Sherman of direct and contributory copyright infrigement. The complaint also states that Sherman "started a commercial enterprise to further profit from thee acts of infringement". The details to Shermans' "commercial enterprise" are shown a cache www.flatlan.com's "Products" page (cached) where he offers to sell "a complete Flatlan suite with unlimited FlatLan client licenses!". Apparently the RIAA took him up on this offer and through "trade association, have themselves purchased from the Defendant his software for $500".
Defendant: Joseph Nievelt
Michigan Technological University, hell of a coder
Quick Links
# Complaint - hosted by findlaw.com
# www.mtu.flatlan.com (Cached / Mirrored) - created by Joseph Ni
Re:Minuis the Diagrams equals the suck. (Score:2, Informative)
SMB, also known as Samba, is a file sharing protocol developed originaly (sic) by Microsoft.
Saying SMB is also known as Samba is like saying HTTP is also known as Apache. SMB is a protocol while Samba is an open source product that uses that protocol.
might be useful for the defence (Score:5, Insightful)
Given that you made the effort to prepare this work, I suggest that you take it the final step and send it to the lawyers in charge of defending the students against this lawsuit by the RIAA, or if they have none yet, try to get it to their hands.
Oh, one more thing. You might want to send it anonymously; you never know, you might be sued next. (I'm only half-joking).
Been tried before to no effect (Score:5, Insightful)
Legal fees won't hurt these students (Score:5, Interesting)
Besides, I bet there are some lawyers who would do this pro bono since it is a high profile case dealing with students who most certainly can't afford it.
The different story is they might win (Score:2)
RE: "Cat's Cradle" (Score:3, Interesting)
Fair call, both realisticly are parasites. Both are competing for the same thing. One leverages money and connections (sociopoli
Partial Mirror (Score:1, Informative)
I have a partial mirror. I have not been able to get the images yet.
Re:Partial Mirror (Score:1)
right here [no-ip.com].
Five times fast. (Score:3, Interesting)
Down after 10 posts! (Score:4, Funny)
Apparently, you haven't yet heard of the Slashdot Effect. Still, with a Slashdot User ID of 518655, I guess you're still a newbie. No offense, of course!
Good Detective Work? (Score:3, Informative)
SMB!=Samba.
Likening SMB spiders to Windows' search is a pretty big jump, IMO. I can't get to the demonstration of linked near the bottom of the site, though (http://zacker.no-ip.org/slipperyslope). Was there a good explanation there?
Also, is there a legend for all of the icons used in the pictures?
Re:Good Detective Work? (Score:2)
Likening SMB spiders to Windows' search is a pretty big jump
It only seems that way since the author left out a single, crucial sentence. "If you point your Windows search at My Network Neighborhood, you will essentially be running a SMB spider." Further explanations would be nice, such as "A SMB spider is just like MS Windows Search functions. It retrieves directory listings and catalogs them." And so forth. All these guys did was add another layer or two on top of software that did the same function
SMB Facts (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.ossir.org/ftp/supports/96/netbios-3.
I hope the rest of the information in the article was better researched.
Enjoy,
Re:SMB Facts (Score:2)
http://wake.princeton.edu (cached) to search for files shared on Princeton University's Local Area Network. It appears that Wake was a front end to a SMB file spider that searched and catalouged all "shared" files on computers connected to the Princeton's LAN. SMB, also known as Samba, is a file sharing protocol developed originaly by Microsoft.
Re:SMB Facts (Score:2)
What is this? (Score:4, Funny)
Actual Submission (Score:1, Flamebait)
Some punk put up a site with information detrimental to the RIAA. It's running on a 286 and he pays by the megabyte - all on his daddy's credit card! Please post a story about his eensie weensie site and turn his server into a smoldering pile of melted goop while bankrupting his papa.
Smooches Roblimo,
H. Rosen
I hope you got a big fat pipe to your server (Score:1, Redundant)
Saying that on
So what? (Score:2)
So what?
An online Starcraft RPG? Only at [netnexus.com]
In soviet Russia, all your us are belong to base!
Viewing it out of the corner of my eye, (Score:3, Funny)
MIRROR: http://www.ews.uiuc.edu/~zrosen/ (Score:3, Funny)
Billion-Dollar Claims? (Score:4, Interesting)
Oh. Looks like it was a typo ...
From here [freep.com] --
Only 98 billion dollars? Carry on!(I still wonder if they'll take a check. Or how about PayPal?)
/. Effect study (Score:2, Funny)
This is an experimental study into how to reach the next level of computing called "vapor computing" the idea behind it is to so over stress your sytem that you turn your computer into vapor. Thus reaching the next phase of computing power, vapor computing. Please help me in this by going to my site and constantly hitting refresh. My webserver is only in the liqued phase of computing right now.
Rational damage calculation (Score:5, Interesting)
The basis used by the RIAA for calculating damages in all these cases is fundamentally absurd. They take the number of copies, multiply by the highest recent retail they can find, and draw a big red circle around the result.
In order to accurately estimate the true damages, a little flashback to microeconomics class is in order.
Recall that for the combination of any given product and any given consumer, there is a price below which the consumer will buy it (sometimes that price will be zero or lower, but there is a price).
There is also a price below which the seller will not sell it.
The space between these two prices is where purchase transactions are viable.
So, in order to calculate the losses, we need two things:
The second of these is naturally much more complicated. Different buyers have different price thresholds. Across a population, the aggregate of these prices can be approximated with a function (I'll spare the math). This function can be estimated by using price elasticity data that sellers accumulate as part of their normal market analysis. Of course, it differs in different demographics so it's important to use a demographic that matches the arena in which the pirated material is distributed.
Once you have these two things, you can calculate the real losses quite simply. Say there were 1000 copies of something that the seller was willing to discount to $20 and had never sold for more than $30. Say further that the buyer curve for the distribution demographic was nice and simple, ranging from $0 to $50, with 80% below $20. Treating everything higher than $30 as $30 (since that's the highest price the product had been available for), you'd get something like $5000 in actual losses (forgive me, my back-of-the-napkin calculus is not good).
Meanwhile, the RIAA would claim that the loss was $30000, 6 times higher than reality.
The difference is explained by copies in the hands of people who would not have otherwise bought the product for a price at which the manufacturer was willing to sell it, and which therefore do not represent a legitimate market.
Re:Rational damage calculation (Score:3, Insightful)
Basically, the rule of thumb is to sue for about 1/2 of what you can get. And that value is then doubled to be what you can get so the lawyers get their 1/2.
Re:Rational damage calculation (Score:2)
The price they can charge for a song is directly related to the supply.
Dilute the supply, and the optimum selling price goes down.
It's not likely that you'll hear the RIAA complain that piriacy forces them to lower their prices,
but it's a real consequence of the economics.
If you want to do a real analysis of the record companies loss,
this lower price should be part of calculation.
-- this is no
Re:Rational damage calculation (Score:3, Informative)
17 U.S.C. Section 504(c).
Re:Rational damage calculation (Score:5, Interesting)
Why?
Educated people have chosen not to go into politics during the last four decades. They don't even PARTICIPATE in politics. What makes you think this kind of enlightenment is going to sudennly take over the judges and lawyers?
It bothers me that they can find a lawyer that will even prosecute a case like this. I think that before you can claim $XX of losses, you should be required to present credible proof that you endured the losses. Where is this on their tax returns? Would it have been fraudulent to claim the capital losses there? I'd like to know why a loss that cannot be claimed for the IRS, can be the basis of a lawsuit. You shouldn't be allowed to have it both ways.
Re:Rational damage calculation (Score:2)
I'm with you in spirit, but not in practice.
There's a difference here, though, between actual losses (ie, your investments are worth as much as they used to be) and 'theoretical' losses (because of person XYZ's acts, we lost this much revenue). They're claiming it like it was a burglary...someone breaks into your house and steals your Monet, you can bring them before a court but I doubt the IRS will let you clai
Re:Rational damage calculation (Score:3, Informative)
> damages in all these cases is fundamentally
> absurd.
True.
> They take the number of copies, multiply by the
> highest recent retail they can find, and draw a
> big red circle around the result.
False. They take the number of works they claim were infringed and multiply by $150,000, the maximum statutory damages permitted by law. The result is _not_ $97 billion.
Re:Rational damage calculation (Score:2)
I'm not sure absurd is strong enough: they alleged that these students caused losses that represent the GDP of some nations!
Re:Rational damage calculation (Score:2)
Re:Rational damage calculation (Score:2)
The central issue is that "content" is a different entity from material goods. Pretending that that a music recording is a physical entity made sense when it was tightly tied to a physical media. Over the last few decades this has ceased to be the case.
The whole concept of "intellectual property" is based on the assumption that
RPI Student Newspaper Links (Score:5, Informative)
Lots of letters to the editor and a few articles.
SMB not a Microsoft invention (Score:2, Informative)
Re:SMB not a Microsoft invention (Score:3, Informative)
SMB was an IBM invention. Do you remember the old DOS Lan requester? Thats when it first appeared, not on a DEC, but DOS. The protocol allowed us to share printers, drives etc. on OS/2 and DOS systems.
The link you provided in no way states that Digital had anything to do with SMB (I guess the moderators are asleep today). 3Com had more to do with this than anyone.
Do you have any other references?
My references are:
Client/
Re:SMB not a Microsoft invention (Score:2, Informative)
Why hasn't NetIQ been sued? (Score:5, Interesting)
NetIQ has had a product called MP3 checker [netiq.com] available for years, which does essentially the same thing as Wake, Phynd, and all the others. It even prints out a pretty list for you so that you don't have to run it over and over again.
Like I said, I know you're not just a bunch of effeminate bullies, so it won't phase you at all that NetIQ is a partner of Microsoft. Go sue!
ChewPlastic Forum (Score:4, Informative)
Important details are missing (Score:3, Informative)
*Whoops*
Dear ol' RPI (Score:2)
It's not like it's anything new... My CS neighbor in Warren Hall back in '95 built a rather comprehensive web-based search engine... but back then, it wasn't taboo to share.
Without the filesharing on the internal net, I never would have found the Crystal Method, Filter, Moby or Delerium
Damage Reversal? (Score:4, Interesting)
That would give a natural limit to such amounts.
-Max
Re:Damage Reversal? (Score:2)
Wow. It's the RIAA vs. Progress (Score:3, Insightful)
What I noticed about the software/services described here is that 1) they could be extremely useful to large organizations (e.g. General Motors) for locating existing resources within the company WAN and 2) they are all to some extent research projects.
I think this is a pretty clear-cut case of the RIAA attempting to hinder technological progress in defence of its business model.
They're not going to win, though. This software is useful for all sorts of things, not just music piracy. It infringes as much as Google does.
This suit is bullying, plain and simple. I just hope the defendants have good lawyers.
And I hope the RIAA gets busted for barratry over this.
No monetary value (Score:3, Interesting)
(note: I know there are alternatives to MP3 but the desire for simplicity in my explanations prevailed)
1. The RIAA would have the burdon of proof that all logged transfers of MP3 files in their calculations were copyright violations and not students within fair use (i.e. students owned the CD and didn't want to spend time ripping).
2. The RIAA would have the burdon of proof that each and every copyright violation (see #1) resulted in a lost sale. Many who download MP3 files never would purchase CDs anyway, whether or not MP3 technology existed. In essence, the RIAA has to prove that the customer in each case would have actually bought a CD, had it not been for the search engine.
3. The RIAA would have to demonstrate that the purpose of the software was for music trading. It seems to me that this "spider" indexed everything. From the description of the software, it doesnt seem to be exclusively for media files. Media files are indexed along with all other content, as the software doesn't know whether an MP3 file is for a garage band posting their stuff or a video file is of someone dumping soap into a fountain to make it bubbly. Same goes for software - People may very well want to check out what the Computer Science department is chugging out.
Hopefully whoever presides over this case will throw it out as frivolous. In my opinion, this is similar to somebody suing "Perfect Kitchen Silverware Company", because someone was murdered with a knife manufactured by the company.
100 billion dollars? (Score:2, Funny)
It was much funnier when Dr. Evil said it.
Next subpoena? (Score:2)
OMG (Score:2)
So RIAA is now going after people who write and maintain SMB spiders now?!? Is this for real? SMB search spiders have so many uses beyond piracy. Just because they're college kids doesn't mean that they're automatically guilty of piracy. Does that automatically mean that the network was used for cheating and plagiarism? SMB/CIFS comes boxed with just about every major OS (Win, MacOS, Linux, xBSD) and is available for just about every other OS. Just because these guys developed some search software do
Re:And it's already slashdotted... (Score:4, Informative)
Because that would be a violation of the sites' copyrights, and could get OSDN and Slashdot sued.
Any more brain-busters?
Re:And it's already slashdotted... (Score:2, Interesting)
> copyrights, and could get OSDN and Slashdot sued.
>
>Any more brain-busters?
Exactly. This is why google no longer caches pages...err...never mind.
So if google cache is OK, why would this be any different?
Re:And it's already slashdotted... (Score:5, Interesting)
a.) Google just provides the link and the info, not the poster's interpretation of it. Not sure if you've noticed, but pretty often the article description is way off from what's posted on the site being linked to.
b.) You have to approach Google to get Indexed. Not the casae with Slashdot. With Slashdot, people run around the web and look for stories.
c.) The point of using Google is to go find the site, cache is intended to be used in case the info's gone or if the server's down. Slashdot, on the other hand, would be causing the server outage. If the target site generates ad-revenue, they're going to have a beef with it, especially if Slashdot's ads appear in the cache. Illegal? No. Sticky issue? Well you don't want to piss off the people hosting the interesting content, right?
Then there's the whole matter of hosting the bandwidth. The reason why Slashdot doesn't get slashdotted is because it's minimal imagery and server load etc. A good chunk of the sites we end up on have lots of graphics etc. Slashdot can either host them and require significantly more bandwidth (more ads as a result?) or not host the images and end up in the trouble mentioned in point 3.
Could it be done? On a technical level yes. Can it be done to everybody's satisfaction? Possibly, but it takes more work than just setting up a mirror server.
I think Slashdot's doing just fine having the users that made it in paste the info.
Re:And it's already slashdotted... (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:And it's already slashdotted... (Score:4, Insightful)
Even if you don't have access to your web server, configuring a web application server (such as Tomcat, Cold Fusion, or ASP.NET) to limit connections before it goes into a "low bandwidth" or "static" mode (kind of like CNN did during 9/11). I know a lot of these sites are personal sites, but most seem to be PHP or Perl sites which assumes that a coder of some sorts is involved.
Meta tag? (Score:2)
Why couldn't a meta tag be created to allow permission for mirroring?
<meta name="mirror" content="allow"> Have the W3C declare it an offical tag meaning anyone is allowed to put exact copies on other sites.
Then again, if the site operator is submitting the story, why doesn't he/she put the document on some p2p systems, and submit a magnet url? Oh, that's right, the DRM cartel will sue him/her, and submit a bunch of bogus DMCA complaints, shutting down his/her site and kicking him/her off his/her I
Re:And it's already slashdotted... (Score:1)
Oh shit! Why didn't you suggest that 2 years ago when Slashdottings started to happen?!?
Re:server struggling (Score:5, Informative)
another try:
This site contains information on the recent lawsuits filed by the RIAA against 4 college students for contributory and direct copyright infringement seeking damages of up to ninety seven billion eight hundred million dollars.
$97,800,000,000
Defendants
Defendant: Daniel Jonathan Peng
Princeton University, Sophomore
Quick Links
# Complaint - hosted by findlaw.com
# Analysis of the Complaint - written by Joseph Barillari
# Wake (Cached / Mirrored) - created by Daniel Peng
Daniel Jonathan Peng maintained and developed an application / website called "wake" that allowed users of the website: http://wake.princeton.edu (cached) to search for files shared on Princeton University's Local Area Network. It appears that Wake was a front end to a SMB file spider that searched and catalouged all "shared" files on computers connected to the Princeton's LAN. SMB, also known as Samba, is a file sharing protocol developed originaly by Microsoft. It is a widely used and established technology for sharing files between computers accross a network. RIAA charges include contributory copyright infringement accusing that Peng "has taken a network created for higher learning and academic pursuits and converted it into an emporium of music piracy where copyright infringement is simplified down to the click of a computer mouse", and of direct copyright infringement for "copying and distributing hundreds of sound recordings over his system without the authorization of the copyright owners". Fred Van Lohmann, Senior Intellectual Property Attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, volunteered to represent Peng in court.
Defendant: Jesse Jordan
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Freshman
Quick Links
# Complaint - hosted by findlaw.com
# www.chewplastic.com (Cached / Mirrored) - created by Jesse Jordan
Jesse Jordan maintained and developed a website called "chewplastic" that allowed users of the website: http://ww.chewplastic.com (cached) to search for files shared on Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute's Local Area Network. It appears that chewplastic.com deployed an application called "Phynd", also an SMB file spider, to search and catalouge all "shared" files on computers connected to the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute's LAN. RIAA accuses Jesse Jordan of direct and contributory copyright infringement.
Defendant: Aaron Sherman
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Senior
Quick Links
# Complaint - hosted by findlaw.com
# www.flatlan.com (Cached / Mirrored) - created by Aaron Sherman under the direction of Mukkai Krishnamoorthy, Associate Proffessor of Computer Science at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
Aaron Sherman under the direction of Associate Proffessor Mukkai Krishnamoorthy developed a network application called FlatLan. It is also an SMB file spider, designed to search and catalouge all "shared" files on computers connected a Local Area Network and capable of searching this catalouge through a web interface. The software was distributed for free and deployed on a many different school networks including Bryant College, Lehigh University, Michigan Tech, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Rice University, University of Texas, and Western New England College. The RIAA accuses Sherman of direct and contributory copyright infrigement. The complaint also states that Sherman "started a commercial enterprise to further profit from thee acts of infringement". The details to Shermans' "commercial enterprise" are shown a cache www.flatlan.com's "Products" page (cached) where he offers to sell "a complete Flatlan suite with unlimited FlatLan client licenses!". Apparently the RIAA took him up on this offer and through "trade association, have themselves purchased from the Defendant his software for $500".
Defendant: Joseph Nievelt
Michigan Technological University, hell of a coder
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# Complaint - hosted by findlaw.com
smb != samba (Score:3, Informative)
Re: In Post-Saddam Iraq... Guards Investigate YOU! (Score:1)
No one expects the Republican Guard.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:That was silly (Score:2)
zacker.no-ip.org has address 130.126.70.42
> host 130.126.70.42
42.70.126.130.in-addr.arpa domain name pointer arh2130.urh.uiuc.edu.
Looks ResNet-ish to me.
Re:That was silly (Score:1)
Other then that, posting yourself to slashdot, AND having images on your site. That's just plain stupidity.
I posted a comment one time related to interesting places for computers, and I had my gallery, and that wasn't even a real "slashdotting" and it was on my ADSL, constantly doing 80kb/s out and I felt like I was on dialup. (The comment was +5)
But then again
Re:That was silly (Score:4, Funny)
and i have have some pictures on my site [no-ip.com], as well as in some of the articles mirrored
Maybe he did it for bragging rights.
"Hey man, i got
the ladies love that.
Re:congrats ,..... your site is slashdotted (Score:1, Funny)