Charter Cable Sues To Quash RIAA Subpoenas 324
mattOzan writes "Charter Communications, the third largest cable provider in the United States, has filed a motion in St. Louis, Missouri, to block the RIAA's requests for the identities of about 150 Charter customers in the St. Louis area. In the over 1100 subpoenas that have been issued so far, Charter claims they are the only major ISP that has not provided the RIAA with 'a single datum of information.'"
Subpoenas? (Score:5, Troll)
Re:Subpoenas? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Subpoenas? (Score:2)
Re:Subpoenas? (Score:5, Informative)
The party being subpoenaed (here Charter Communications) has the right to challenge the subpoena in court.
Re:Subpoenas? (Score:5, Informative)
I'd like to clarify a bit here, for other readers.
They must submit a sworn statment that they have a copyright on something - anything (or that they represent a copyright holder). This sworn statement is pretty meaningless, I can file such a statement that I am the copyright holder of this post.
Aside from that sworn statement, the paperwork must make a claim that the target of the subpeona commited infingement. Not only is this NOT a sworn statement, it can be an entirely baseless statement.
This paperwork is then given to the court clerk, NOT a judge. The court clerk's only job is to make sure you didn't botch the paperwork. He is then required to give rubberstamp approval. The involvement of the court is pure formality, in effect the DMCA grants copyright holders the power to issue subeonas. The process lacks any actual judical review.
The DMCA is an insanely lopsided peice of legislation, written by the copyright lobby for the copyright lobby. This "expedited subpeona process" granted to copyright holders is just one of many abuses written into the law. God forbid copyright holders should be forced to go through the NORMAL and LEGITIMATE subpeona process, just like EVERYONE ELSE.
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Even if the RIAA looses the fast-track subpoena (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Even if the RIAA looses the fast-track subpoena (Score:5, Insightful)
But that will cost them money.. and the more it costs them to keep up this campaign of lawsuits, the less likely they'll collect enough in settlements to draw a profit from it; and if it's not profitable, they won't do it.
Re:Even if the RIAA looses the fast-track subpoena (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Even if the RIAA looses the fast-track subpoena (Score:2)
Re:Even if the RIAA looses the fast-track subpoena (Score:2)
AFAIK, RIAA member companies *are* profitable -- just less so than during the dot-com boom years.
I agree with your point, though.
Re:Even if the RIAA looses the fast-track subpoena (Score:2)
And who isn't?
Actually, I imagine they're really missing the glory days of people who were upgrading from vinyl.
Re:Even if the RIAA looses the fast-track subpoena (Score:5, Insightful)
At the risk of being Offtopic... I know it's fashionable to bash MS and their products, but this statement is simply silly. What you're referring to MS doing with the X-Box is called a "loss leader." They make the platform at a loss with the hopes of making up the dividends on the individual games. All the major consoles do the exact same thing as do manufacturers of printers (ever wonder why you can get a printer for 80 bucks, but the carts are 15-30 bucks each, not to mention paper?), and several other industries.
Comparing this to the RIAA subpoenas and lawsuits is just silly, and is pretty much karma-whoring via MS bashing.
Re:Even if the RIAA looses the fast-track subpoena (Score:2)
"looses"? Even in the right tense, it would be wrong. Why does the word "lose" baffle so many?
Re:Even if the RIAA looses the fast-track subpoena (Score:2)
Why does correct English elude them so?
Re:Even if the RIAA looses the fast-track subpoena (Score:2)
Expecting laborers to be highly literate is rather absurd.
Re:Even if the RIAA looses the fast-track subpoena (Score:2)
To quote Jules Winnfield: "English, motherfucker!"
Go Charter (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Go Charter (Score:2)
Re:Go Charter (Score:2, Interesting)
Of course, my geographical location isn't exactly a metropolitan area. I might just be lucky because there aren't nearly as many customers here than there is for the rest of you
Re:Go Charter (Score:2)
Re:Go Charter (Score:2)
it's already getting slow (Score:3, Informative)
10/03/2003
Charter Communications Inc. filed a suit on Friday seeking to block the recording industry from obtaining the identities of Charter customers who allegedly shared copyrighted music over the Internet.
Charter filed papers in U.S. District Court in St. Louis in a bid to quash subpoenas that the Recording Industry Association of America issued seeking the identities of about 150 Charter customers.
"We are the only major cable company that has not as yet provided the RIAA a single datum of information," said Tom Hearity, vice president and associate general counsel for Charter, which is based in Town and Country.
The recording association has subpoenaed information as part of its effort to crack down on illegal distribution of copyrighted music. So far, the group has filed suits against 261 people, none of them in the St. Louis area.
Charter's move Friday suggested that Charter had undergone a change of heart on the issue. On Sept. 23, after the association issued its first subpoenas to Charter in St. Louis, a Charter spokesman said the company would "fully cooperate."
However, Hearity said that statement meant only that the company would "cooperate in the sense that we're going to operate within the legal process."
Representatives at the association's headquarters in Washington could not be reached.
New Buisness Plan (Score:5, Funny)
2. When asked by the RIAA to give out names, purposely give out names of people who do not use the internet much, and definetly don't use Kazza
3. Sue RIAA, claiming damages.
4. Profit!!!
Re:New Buisness Plan (Score:4, Funny)
Oh hold on a sec, the RIAA just called, something about stopping the lawsuits and pairing up with MS to support Linux.
Re:New Buisness Plan (Score:2)
Re: Frivolous McDonald's Lawsuits (Score:2)
(1) I will probably get modded down for this, but here goes. Regarding the 'fast food made me fat' suits, I happen to be taking a course from one of the major attorneys pushing this field. He apparently was a also major player in the early part of the tobacco suits as well. He uses these frivolous-seeming suits, as well as media attention, to try and further public issues.
Taken one by one, suits such as the "McDonald's made me obies
Re:Frivolous McDonald's Lawsuits (Score:2, Informative)
Hundreds of people complaining over the course of several years is a little different to a bunch of obese idiots who believed McDonalds ashburgers are "the healthiest thing in the world." I wouldn't even eat one
Re:Frivolous McDonald's Lawsuits (Score:2, Funny)
Also, I've never seen this anywhere, but that McDonald's is on a very steep hill, and when you're coming away from that drive through, the parking lot goes downhill very fast. You don't open a cup of hot coffee sitting between your knees while driving down a steep hill. Isn't that common sense?
Re:They are the same: 100% frivolous (Score:2)
- McDonald's is a big enough juggernaut to pretty much ignore what anyone wants.
- McDonald's keeps it's coffee hotter than industry standard.
- McDonald's actively suppressed information regardind the "very few (clumsy oafs).
This last point is grounds enough to string up the McDonald's board by it's testicles. Unfortunately, that method of remediation is not open to us.
The good fight. (Score:3, Insightful)
It is interesting to note that Paul Allen [corporate-ir.net] is the chairman of Charter, and has been since he bought the company in 1998. Perhaps this will give fuel to the entertainment industry to say that technology, technology companies, and anybody tainted by either, are evil? (See here [macworld.com].)
Nonetheless, it is important that formidable companies stand up to the entertainment industry and its henchmen. Charter and Verizon (see story [com.com]) are two folks who you'd want on your side.
justen
Re:The good fight. (Score:2)
In your referenced article, Disney accuses Mac of promoting piracy. Well, in some degree, they do.
Re:The good fight. (Score:3, Interesting)
But I'd like to disagree with part of and seek clarification on part of your second comment.
How does Apple promote piracy on their Mac platform? Do they do so anymore than, as you mention, Dell, or other technology companies? And Michael Eisner did, actually, attack other companies, including hp, which
Re:The good fight. (Score:2)
But in terms of Apple promoting piracy, I don't think its so much deliberate as it is that Apple caters to a certain market. Dell caters to home PC users who don't know a whole lot; Apple caters to, if not more knowledgable users in general, at least more media-savvy. iMovie is a good example of this; at least part of Apple's marketshare are digital media pros; many of the others are hobbyists.
Apple's customers often have iPods, DVD burners, broadband
Re:The good fight. (Score:2)
Re:The good fight. (Score:2)
I know I'd prefer OSX over Windows any day (being solely a Linux user on my desktop, though), if only I could afford it, but I don't think I'm representative of most Mac users. But since the Mac customer base is so small, all those media pros definitely play a big role.
Re:The good fight. (Score:2)
Claim (Score:2)
Charter claims they are the only major ISP that has not provided the RIAA with 'a single datum of information.
I could've sworn Soutwestern Bell hadn't furnished any of its customers' information at the RIAA's request either...
They said cable company not ISP (Score:2)
"We are the only major cable company that has not as yet provided the RIAA a single datum of information,"
The fight continues. (Score:5, Interesting)
Making this many enemies is never a good thing for an association that relies on purchases from the people that they have upset.
Re:The fight continues. (Score:2)
Only 2 subpoenaes to AOL ?? (Score:5, Interesting)
Either all AOL users are very nice honest people (not bloody likely), or they are all (minus 2) so inane they only know the "you've got mail!" part of the internet, or somebody at the RIAA is on AOL's payroll
Re:Only 2 subpoenaes to AOL ?? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Only 2 subpoenaes to AOL ?? (Score:2)
Re:Only 2 subpoenaes to AOL ?? (Score:4, Insightful)
Conversely, it could just be possible that the average AOL subscriber is so computer-savvy that he actually knows how to disable uploading in his P2P software, or at least knows to point his upload folder to an empty directory.
Well
Re:Only 2 subpoenaes to AOL ?? (Score:2)
They don't have to be. They just need to be able to use it and know someone who knows how to install and configure the thing.
Re:Only 2 subpoenaes to AOL ?? (Score:2)
Re:Only 2 subpoenaes to AOL ?? (Score:2)
Re:Only 2 subpoenaes to AOL ?? (Score:2)
Re:Only 2 subpoenaes to AOL ?? (Score:5, Insightful)
What I'm wondering is, how they managed to find two people to subpoena from AOL.
Re:Only 2 subpoenaes to AOL ?? (Score:2)
Maybe they sent subpoenas for the firewalls, those dastardly individuals downloading terabytes of music files!
Re:Only 2 subpoenaes to AOL ?? (Score:2)
To the best of my knowledge, this is true only of outbound web traffic. AOL users do receive a dynamically assigned, "real" IP address when they connect, just like customers of other dialup ISPs. They can indeed participate directly (i.e. no firew
Re:Only 2 subpoenaes to AOL ?? (Score:2)
Re:Only 2 subpoenaes to AOL ?? (Score:2)
Re:Only 2 subpoenaes to AOL ?? (Score:2)
Re:Only 2 subpoenaes to AOL ?? (Score:2)
Yes, but why subpoena them at all then? either AOL cooperates and releases users' identities voluntarily because they're in bed with the RIAA, or they don't. Why 2 supoenas? It should be either 0 or hundreds
Re:Only 2 subpoenaes to AOL ?? (Score:2, Informative)
users of netzero and MSN not sued (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:users of netzero and MSN not sued (Score:2)
statistics of riaa (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.riaa.com/news/marketingdata/yearend.as
note that the sale of cd's has dropped less than 10%, and that the sale of DVD video and DVD audio has risen far more. The riaa doesn't seem to talk about that much, does it?
Re:statistics of riaa (Score:4, Insightful)
Yep they ignore a few blinding facts. You get a lot more for your cash with a DVD and the prices match the age of the thing they are selling. Why can I buy a DVD of a 30-year old feature film like 'Bullet' (and enjoy it) for 5 GBP but I still have to pay around 20 GBP for a CD of 'Dark Side of the Moon'. I would like a CD copy of that album but not at that price!
Re:statistics of riaa (Score:2)
Think of the situation as a fairy tale. Like a person who couldn't figure out what the cause of the problem is and just started to make assumptions and blames.
I can understand why no one thinks that way though. I mean the ending would be too much like a typical horror book rather than a fairy tale:
"Oh wait a minute, maybe it's simply because of the music we choose to represent and the popular culture is getting old......maybe if the music representatio
Props to charter (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Props to charter (Score:2)
Very Pragmatic of Charter (Score:4, Interesting)
Imagine parents hear that one of their neighbors got sued by the RIAA because their kid was misusing the internet. They most likely have a vague idea of what the net really is and even less idea what their kid does with it. The likely response pull the plug. The net is just not that big a deal in their lives.
Cooperate ... within the legal process ... (Score:4, Interesting)
This is a very insightful comment because it reflects that Charter top-brass probably understands that the legal system is an essentially incomplete system.
If they are smart enough, and can raise the higher-level-than-legal-level issue of social good using the statutes provided by the legal system, they might be able to create an assertion in the legal system that talks about its own unprovability in court, in which case the court might - not fully comprehending the incompleteness of formal systems - look for the validity of the assertion in the social system, wherein they will discover that it is ridiculous for the RIAA to claim no legitimate uses of the P2P.
And Equally ridiculous for the RIAA to claim that by supressing all economic activity not under its control it has somehow raised the total level of economic activity. Reflecting upon how patently untrue the RIAA has been so far, may cause the courts to self-reflect upon their own behavior, in which case there may be a spark of intelligence ... upon which my sig will come alive. As my current sig is Die Die Metallica, Die Die RIAA, Die Die My Darling , its coming alive will cause the death of the RIAA, and Charter may never have to prove the assertions it made fully understanding the unprovability of its assertions ....
Sorry, if have been caught up in some strange loops. I was just rereading Hofstadter's GEB and could not help but ...
hooray for charter! (Score:3, Offtopic)
Maybe it's just... (Score:2)
that a datum is like lay's potato chips... it's hard to have just one. So everyone has more then one datum, hence they have data.
But I really need to know... (Score:3, Informative)
just how much of this benevolent change in heart was motivated by the competing DSL providers standing up for their customers [slashdot.org]. They were busy licking RIAA's feet while the telcos were saying this [slashdot.org], this [slashdot.org] and this [slashdot.org].
Re:But I really need to know... (Score:2)
hysterical: "operate within the legal process" (Score:2)
Charter's move Friday suggested that Charter had undergone a change of heart on the issue. On
Sept. 23, after the association issued its first subpoenas to Charter in St. Louis, a Charter
spokesman said the company would "fully cooperate." However, Hearity said that
statement meant only that the company would "cooperate in the sense that we're going to
operate within the legal process."
As opposed to not operating within the legal process? Of *course* they're going to operate wit
why the excitement? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:why the excitement? (Score:2)
BTW, the RIAA is not entitled to shit. It's allowed to access the information by the law. Legal 101.
Re:why the excitement? (Score:2)
I believe the word you wanted was "rogue", not "vigilante".
Re:why the excitement? (Score:2)
Something else that's bothering me (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Something else that's bothering me (Score:2)
Re:Something else that's bothering me (Score:2, Informative)
Beware of Cookies and JAVA!
If they don't bully the hotspot provider into filtering ports, they'll be tracking you by dropping a sugar coated RFID bug in your coffee. That's in case your location or the weather don't allow the satellites to scan the UV-readable barcode on your forehead, and you're out of view of the cameras in-store, at nearby traffic signals and those watchful ATM machines. Although your IP is more than lik
Ok, what are the moderators smoking today? (Score:2)
Re:Something else that's bothering me (Score:2)
Logic Error (Score:3, Funny)
*head explodes*
How Charter kept RIAA away (Score:5, Funny)
Hello and welcome to Charter Communications' legal support department. Your call is very important to us. Please listen to this menu carefully since options have changed. If you are calling about your lawsuit against us because your cable bill is too high, please press 1 now. If you are calling about your lawsuit against us because we double billed you, please press 2 now. If you are calling about your lawsuit against us because we have not paid your program provider fees, please press 3 now. If you are calling about your subpoena to divulge the names and credit card payment records of customers that are sharing music online please press 4 now. If you are calling about our violations of local ....
*** beep *** (pressed 4)
[click] [click] [pause] [click] [click]
Hello and welcome to Charter Communications' copyright enforcement department. Your call is very important to us. Please listen to this menu carefully since options have changed. If you are calling about your neighbor recording premium movies, please press 1 now. If you are calling about our customers that are downloading music on the internet, please press 2 now. If you are ....
*** beep *** (pressed 2)
[pause] [click] [click] [pause]
Hello and welcome to Charter Communications' music piracy department. Your call is very important to us. Please listen to this menu carefully since options have changed. If you are calling about a subpoena you have already sent to us, please have your subpoena registration number handy and press 1 now. If you are calling to register a new subpoena with use, please have the account number of the customer this subpoena refers to handy and press 2 now. If you are calling to obtain a customer account number, please have the name of the customer handy and press 3 now. If you are calling to obtain the name of a customer please have the IP address and time handy, and press 4 now. If you are ....
*** beep *** (pressed 4)
[pause] [click] [pause] [click] [pause]
Hello and welcome to the Charter Communications' online customer identification system. Please have the IP address and time the customer was online handy. If you already have an identification system authorization number, please press 1 now. If you do not already have an identification system authorization number, and wish to register to obtain one, please press 2 now. To repeat this ...
*** beep *** (pressed 2)
[pause] [click]
Hello and welcome to the Charter Communications' online customer identification system user authorization registration system. Please listen to this menu carefully since options have changed. If you are already a Charter Communications home cable customer, please press 1 now. If you are already a Charter Communications business internet customer, please press 2 now. If you are not a Charter Communications customer and would like to sign up for Charter Communications' cable service in your home or business today, please press 3 now. If you are not a Charter Communications customer and do not wish to sign up for cable service at this time, please press 4 now. To repeat ....
*** beep *** (pressed 4)
[click] [click]
Hello and welcome to Charter Communications' business relations department. Your call is very important to us. Please listen to this menu carefully since options have changed. If you are calling about an existing business relation that is satisfactory to you, please press 1 now. If you are calling about an existing business relation that is unsatisfactory to you, please press 2 now. If you are calling to establish a new business relationship, please have your business name and taxpayer identification number handy, and press 3 now. To repeat this ....
*** beep *** (pressed 3)
[pause] [click] [pause] [click] [pause] [click] [pause]
Hello and welcome to Charter Communications' business rel
Re:How Charter kept RIAA away (Score:2)
Re:How Charter kept RIAA away (Score:2)
Re:How Charter kept RIAA away (Score:2)
How about a "Classic Posts" section of Slashdot?
Re:How Charter kept RIAA away +6 FUNNY! (Score:2)
SBC was fighting first (Score:3, Informative)
here [bizjournals.com]
here [sbc.com]
and here [wired.com]
I'm confused... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I'm confused... (Score:2)
We want them going after people they aren't going after now, and stop going after people they are going after now.
Rinse and repeat.
Re:I'm confused... (Score:2, Insightful)
"I will not knowingly contribute to the RIAA if possible (CD-R TAX unavoidable. god the tax is bullshit when they are suing those fucks.)"
Those fucks? In the US, the music CD-R tariff largely goes to musicians, composers and performers, not the RIAA. RTFL [copyright.gov]. Musicians, composers and performers are the good guys. Not "those fucks."
I wonder why...? (Score:2)
I wonder why...? [grin]
Is this the same Charter Communications... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Is Charter Microsoft? (Score:3, Informative)
"Years ago, Charter Communications Chairman Paul Allen envisioned a Wired World - a global broadband network that would interconnect every home, facilitating the convergence of television, computers, the Internet and communications.
Today, Paul Allen is Charter's largest shareholder. And with interests in more than 100 other world-class enterprises and investments dedicated to improving the way people live, learn, do business, and experience the wo
Re:Is Charter Microsoft? (Score:2)
Re:Bog them down with litigation (Score:5, Insightful)
Ummm... if you really want to boycott the music industry... you'll have to stop listening to the radio too. They do get paid each time a song is played.
Re:Bog them down with litigation (Score:2)
Re:Bog them down with litigation (Score:2, Funny)
Pssst. They are not supposed to know about that backchannel in every radio set that we use to spy on them. They must continue to think that their radio consumption is private.
chl
Re:Bog them down with litigation (Score:2, Funny)
If a song is played on the radio and no one is tuned in to hear, does it make any royalties?
Re:Bog them down with litigation (Score:2, Informative)
"Ummm... if you really want to boycott the music industry... you'll have to stop listening to the radio too. They do get paid each time a song is played."
The artists and composers get this money. Licensing for radio airplay is handled by ASCAP and BMI, two non-profit societies that are operated by and for artists. They are not related to record companies or the RIAA.
In short: the money doesn't go to record companies or the RIAA.
I am aware that artists and composers are also part of "the music indu
Re:Bog them down with litigation (Score:2)
"But aren't the artists the copyright holders?," you ask.
No. The RIAA member companies are. At least most of the time anyway.
Re:Bog them down with litigation (Score:2)
i don't know how far it is possible in the states to give up your rights on something you made though, so the recording company might end up owning the rights totally(afaik/iirc couldn't happen here where i live on the same scale). iirc the beatles members don't have the righ