Judge Rules Kazaa Distributors Can't Sue Labels 32
evenprime writes "Sharman Networks tried to file an antitrust lawsuit against record labels and movie studios. They alleged that the companies forced piracy to occur by conspiring to keep authorized and copy-protected versions of their songs and movies off Kazaa. U.S. District Judge Stephen V. Wilson
just dismissed Sharman's claims."
Related story: webcasters threaten RIAA (Score:4, Informative)
HOW much are they paying their lawyers? (Score:4, Interesting)
Seriously, they ought to consider suing their council for legal malpractice. I can't believe they would waste time with such an absurd argument. It's a silly argument, and the only thing it does is serve to postpone the final showdown. If it is indeed a delaying action, well, it's not the best way to do it, as it only weakens Sharman's credibility.  Making silly arguments doesn't strengthen your position; it only makes you a laughingstock *cough*SCO*cough*
Sharman had best get its ass in gear if they don't want to end up being the next napster.
Re:HOW much are they paying their lawyers? (Score:5, Insightful)
The people downloading music are of two types: the computer literate and the mostly ignorant masses.
Computer literate folks are likely to be following the cases and have some degree of knowledge about the latest DRM legislation. Most of you all know how the cases are going, you read them every day on slashdot.
Most of everyone doesn't. When the RIAA says: "Don't do this, it's against the law!", and it gets reported in the national media, people will stop downloading. It has nothing to do with whether or not they're right, they have media control, so they can change the opinion of the public. KaZaA et al. can only gain media attention by being sensationalist, and they generate press coverage this way.
Here's the crux of the "generate press coverage" arguement: most people tend to ignore the correction of information. Told a statistic, you will likely go on believing that statistic even if you are later alerted to the fact it's false. Since KaZaA can't generate "real" positive press coverage, it has to resort to this type of marketing.
No one will hear that the judge says KaZaA can't sue. Everyone will hear that KaZaA says it's doing the right thing by making music available. That's the point. It weakens their arguments to the small group of tech-elite, and widens their appeal to the masses.
Re:HOW much are they paying their lawyers? (Score:1)
Then how come music downloading has gone up since they threatened to start suing people?
All people, not just the computer literate, don't like being told what or what not to do.
In Other News... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:In Other News... (Score:2)
I know you're being funny, but the metaphor bugs me a bit. It doesn't bug me because of how you wrote it or what you're saying, but because it sort of resembles arguments that Jack Valenti has made on this topic. "Nobody would complain if gas stations used a stronger lock to protect their gas."
It'd be more like "A number of bank customers were arrested today because they took a crowbar to an ATM and duplicated cash that f
Why of course. (Score:3, Funny)
"They alleged that the [record labels and movie studios] forced piracy to occur by conspiring to keep authorized and copy-protected versions of their songs and movies off Kazaa." (emphasis added)
Of course. I am sure that without this so called "conspiracy" (quote and quote) Kazaa users would post "copy-protected" songs and movies, which no one would be able to copy whatsoever. Of course, that is exactly what would happen --- people would share unplayable media and everyone would be happy.
Re:Why of course. (Score:1)
As for software piracy and copy protection, protected media can be broken, as proven this classic event some time back: http://news.com.com/2100-1023-274721.html
You have no clue what you're talking about (Score:1, Informative)
Re:You have no clue: it was frivolous (Score:1)
Re:McDonald's Frivolous Lawsuit (Score:4, Informative)
She should have thought of that (Score:1, Insightful)
She should not have tried to balance a liquid labelled "hot" in such a precarious place. The incident resulted from her choice(s).
McDonald's did not spill hot coffee: she did. This case is a perfect example of why we need tort reform to get rid of similar lawsuits.
Re:She should have thought of that (Score:3, Informative)
If the coffee had been knocked off or something similar it would be the same thing, it was known to be too hot.
I used to laugh at the coffee-lap incident too, until I got more of the facts.
People like coffee hot (Score:2)
I don't buy thta because coffee drinkers like their coffee hot. The complain when it isn't.
I worked at McDonalds at the time, in reaction to the result I (At the time it was my personal job to make sure all tempatures were in spec, checking weekly, my boss said go with the lower limit on coffee so I did) turned our coffee tempature down to the lowest setting, (140 degrees f) and got complaints about the quality of the coffee after that. Eventially we turned to the upper end of the range acceptable (160
Re:People like coffee hot (Score:2)
Setting the temperature high makes it harder to taste, because you slightly burn your tastebuds when you first start drinking it. Instead of going with the non-jackass method of getting better coffee, the temperature was set at a dangerous level.
Re:People like coffee hot (Score:2)
Not true - Prior to this suit, McDonalds had what many considered the best coffee you could get short of making it yourself or going to a "specialty" coffee shop such as Starbucks.
And, more relevantly, they had this reputation precisely because they served it so hot - Believe it or not, the "experts" on coffee brewing suggest using water at 202-205F. McDonalds only used 180-195F.
And, even ignoring the negligence issue on t
Re:People like coffee hot (Score:2)
Re:People like coffee hot (Score:2)
here's [franke.ch] more. not expecting coffee to be hot is simply stupidity.
Jokes aside... (Score:3, Insightful)
Consider the following three situations:
1) You buy a new CD. You go to listen to it in your car, only to discover that it won't play, since most audio CD players actually use CD-ROM drives that have difficulty (by design of the CD, not the player) reading copy-protected (ie, "broken") audio CDs. Solution? Download the album, of which you legally own a copy, and burn it to a non-broken CD.
2) You buy a new CD. Since you listen to 99% of your music while sitting at your computer, you just keep it all as Ogg files on your HDD. This shiny new 12cm hunk of plastic won't play on your PC, nor can you rip it to ogg. So, you download off the net, for personal use only, an already-ripped-and-encoded version of the album you have a legal right to listen to.
3) You purchased a copy-protected CD a year ago, and while you usually make backups of all your CDs, for obvious reasons you could not do so in this case. Your dog eats that CD. Not wanting (or legally needing) to purchase the same CD again, you download a copy of the CD off the net.
All COMPLETELY LEGAL reasons to "pirate" music off a service such as Kazaa. And, they all reflect the exact argument made in this case - That, if not for the annoying copy protection that renders a nice new CD nothing more than a round hunk of plastic and foil so far as your PC cares, such people would not have needed to download that music in the first place.
Does this describe the most common reasons to "pirate" music? That depends. A hit-of-the-week by the latest boy-or-girl pop group, probably not. For anything else, I don't consider one of the above (or some other similar and legal scenario) as all that unlikely.
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Jokes aside... (Score:1)
Kazaa needs to tell its users they are right (Score:2, Insightful)
They have a distribution channel of 100M sites. They should beam down all sorts of stuff explaining why what the users are doing is right.
Possible arguments:
a) Making a copy of a song does not deprive the artist of anything. They have all of their assets and all of their goods and all of their money. You don't take anything from the music company. The music companies are just saying that they have a right to take your money whenever you talk about an artist.
b) Since music companies want you to pay whe