RIAA Security Expert's Quest For Reliability 170
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "In the ongoing case of UMG v. Lindor, Ms. Lindor has now moved to exclude the trial testimony of the RIAA's 'expert' witness, Dr. Doug Jacobson. Jacobson is the CTO and co-founder of Palisade Systems, Inc, and a teacher of internet security at Iowa State, but in his February 23rd deposition testimony she argues he failed to meet the reliability standards prescribed by Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. and Federal Rule of Evidence 702. The Groklaw and Slashdot communities participated in both the preparation of the deposition questions, and the vetting of the witness's responses."
Geez too many links (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Geez too many links (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Geez too many links (Score:5, Funny)
Clicking it will result in a temporal vortex opening up and taking away your internets.
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1. The designation of "foe" was by mistake.
2. I don't know what the heck you are talking about with "revenge" and "sock puppets".
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Yikes. (Score:3, Funny)
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Ask me! (Score:4, Funny)
Wait, what am I doing? On second thought, they can kiss my skinny pasty-white nerd ass.
Moderately Amused (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Moderately Amused (Score:5, Interesting)
I posted this before, but this should be required reading for anyone interested in the subject:
http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20070302
And it's not just refuting the sham expert, it's about refuting the RIAA's strategy in general, and it's worked. The RIAA has much higher hurdles to jump now. Extorting money from random people just became much more expensive.
--
BMO
Awesome. (Score:3, Insightful)
2cents I also think that the RIAA and everyone from them can fornicate themselves with an iron stick.
I can see the troll/flamebait mods coming already.
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Dear RIAA, Sincerely yours, The Internet
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Am I the only one (Score:5, Interesting)
There are plenty of weak points in the RIAA's case as a whole. One could attack the chain of identity leading to the defendent - is the infringing activity traced to the correct IP, and is the IP at that time actually the one that belonged to Ms. Lindor, and can we be reasonably sure the activity took place on her computer, and we don't even know that she was the one at the computer so would she even be liable... The chain of identity is probably the best weak point in their case, but you could also argue that the damages are negligable and fight the absurd statutory fee, or that perhaps no uploading took place and the torrent was all seeded one way.
There are a number of legitimate arguments to be made, but the point I'm getting at is I don't see how the deposition of Jacobson attacked any of them sufficiently to prove or disprove his competence as an expert witness. Slashdot was quick to point out the minor screw-ups in his testimony, but many of those statements were perfectly fine in the context of explaining the technology to a layperson. Some of the "holes" in his argument were so unlikely that I would not even consider them reasonable doubt in a criminal case. Do you really think someone actually decided to frame the woman by filesharing wirelessly and changing her MAC address and internal NAT mappings to mask the presence of a wireless router? I don't.
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When there is a search space of a size small enough that the entirety of it can be searched, one can produce evidence documenting that something is not present within that space.
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Regardless, he states that no such evidence exists, and that he will swear to the absence of it. Since he is the exp
This is a civil trial... (Score:2)
And in civil trials, it's referred to as the plaintiff. And, actually, in criminal court (where 'prosecution' is the appropriate word) the government is required to share any evidence it collects with the defendant, even if it doesn't plan to use that evidence itself.
But this is all irrelevant, and kind of pedantic of me. What is important here is that Dr. Jacobson, through his own admissions, can't be used as an expert witness. The RIAA should have known this, and found
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Instead of saying "I found no evidence of animals", he was expected to record "I found no monkeys. I found no elephants. I found no really really big elephants. I found no zebras..." The information is simply redundant given that it can be summarized to a very simple line, but I suppose it's just good lawyering that one would draw out the point for as long as possi
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Wrong - the "expert" was expected to indicate that he did/did not find evidence of file sharing/distribution - and I would expect the methodology or proof of either to be documented if I were that "expert" - who in their right mind on the other side of the court from the RIAA wouldnt ask "And you came to that conclusion how? Prove it. You just made a statement, so prove it." I know I would. Jacobson's answer of "gee I didnt think to document it", "gee I dont understand", etc to me did/would look ridiculous.
Re:Am I the only one (Score:5, Informative)
The main argument is that all of his testimony is based on assuming the ISP and MediaSentry provided accurate information. MediaSentry and the ISP are not going to testify. In his deposition, the RIAA "expoert" stated he has no idea how MediaSentry or the ISP came to their conclusions. The cases sited require that the expert testimony start with verifiable facts, not with unverifiable information provided by third parties that will not even be in court.
Furthermore, the sited case law requires that the expert use peer reviewable methods. The RIAA's "expert" made up his own methods that have never been published or reviewed. So he can't be considered an expert by the court.
I kind of hope the judge refuses this motion. The RIAA's "expert" made enough errors in his deposition that he will be made a laughing stock on the stand.
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From what I read, it didn't sound like they explored the whole mac address / ip address relationships and spoofing enough. Anyone that could present her mac address to the network DHCP server would likely get the same IP that her computer last acquired. If she
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Irrelevant - this is not a criminal case. They only need to show balance of probability (or whatever the similar phrase is in that jurisdiction).
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Meh, I think it may depend on the ISP. When I lived in Maryland, I seem to remember that I had two or three IP addresses that I would end up getting virtually all the time, but the lease terms were also 23 hours & 59 minutes. Now, living near Norfolk, I get 20-day leases, but I've gotten different IP every time I've looked at my firewall.
In any event, to be usable as
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From WordNet (r) 2.0 [wn]:
site
v : assign a location to; "The company located some of their agents in Los Angeles" [syn: {locate}, {place}]
cite
v 1: make reference to; "His name was mentioned in connection with the invention" [syn: {mention}, {advert}, {bring up}, {name}, {refer}]
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I think another explanation would not be that someone was framing the woman, but was using her computer to serve files (through a security exploit) so that they may escape detection. In fact, with the rise of large "botnets" I bet that this is probably commonplace. I have witnessed this firsthand on my family membe
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This touches on a fundamental conflict in technology and computer science: That there is a difference between what is practical and real, and what is mathematically possible. One can prove that it's possible that a number of factors ca
Dr. Jacobson is alright. Just not as a witness. (Score:3, Interesting)
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Secondly, he states that because the IP Kazaa reports in the IP payload matches the IP header, the computer wasn't NATed. I don't know the Kazaa protocol well enough to say for sure, but I would guess that it would be smart enough to not advertise a private address and d
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I don't remember him specifically saying that a network card does not have an IP address, but I think I do remember him attributing IPs to computers. I do not consider this to be a mistake because there's no reason why we can't consider a single NIC to be part of a personal computer. Really, why make a distinction between the two unless there's more than o
Re:Am I the only one (Score:4, Informative)
You missed the part(s) where he continued to state that the public IP address identifies one, and only one, computer. Even after admitting the existence of NAT, he kept returning to this assumption.
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If the judge reads as carefully as you do, this witness is a goner.
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Re:Am I the only one - ARE YOU AWARE...? (Score:2)
Are you aware that some of the words Mr. Beckerman ask him about are in the Code of Ethics of the organization he claims certification membership in?
I thought not.
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IANAL, but have been following this, and here is my interpretation. Mr. Beckerman can feel free to correct me if I am wrong and/or expound on this if there are points I have missed.
Because Mr. Beckerman and Co have done far more through their actions than what you suggest. While your suggestion may get Ms Lindor off, their method has set precedants and/or invalidated numerous of the methods and sources of information that the RIAA heavily rely upon to make their cases. Thus, in effect, the RIAA must work
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Trust me, either I'm objective, or I have a bias against the RIAA, not for it. I'm no Slash-heretic. I read the whole transcript several weeks back when it was current news, and I didn't see anything so horribly wrong as to exclude him from being considered an expert witness. Someone mentioned that his methods haven't been peer-reviewed - fine, maybe that's a good reason, but I'm talking specifica
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It is a well known principle in the law, and fully recognized in many judicial decisions, that a witness who will lie about little things will usually lie about big things too.
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Why exclude? No real problem with his testimony. (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:Why exclude? No real problem with his testimony (Score:5, Insightful)
Your comment makes no sense. He was not "supposed to investigate" anything; he was "supposed to" testify about the investigation that was done three (3) years earlier.
As to whether he was "out of his area", he probably was... but that's not my fault, that's his, for pretending to be something he's not, and it's the RIAA's, for inducing the man to pretend to be something he's not. While I may have been asking him things he couldn't answer, they were not irrelevant to his report and his proffered testimony; they were directly relevant to what he falsely claimed.
I'm sorry to have to tell you that your knowledge of law is quite limited. There is no "prosecution"; this is a civil case. There is no concept of "reasonable doubt" in a civil case.
Yes his testimony is helpful to defendant. But this is not a game; this is a federal trial where one side is suing someone for tens of thousands of dollars. Under clear standards of law his testimony is inadmissible and must be excluded. I would be a pretty dumb lawyer if I allowed the RIAA to bring this guy anywhere near a courtroom.
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You're arguing phrasing here; when I said he was supposed to investigate something, I obviously meant that the investigation was for later testimony given the context.
As to whether he was "out of his area", he probably was... but that's not my fault, that's his, for pretending to be something he's not, and it's the RIAA's, for inducing the man
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Then when I correct your misuse of legal terms, you say
Sorry I'm not as
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Which is better? a) let the expert witness testify because you know he's no expert and will only make the side he's trying to help look stupid, or b) show beforehand that he's not competent, and on that basis don't let him testify. Oh, and use this in court to demonstrate that the RIAA doesn't vet their "experts". The grandparent is thinking a) is maybe the better course of action. I'd definitely go with b). Why wait to demonstrate their stupidity? So you can make them look even dumberer? When you've
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Your post is incorrect at its very core. (Score:2)
I said he never corrected me because he never said what the correct terms were.
Where, in either one of those statements, did he actually tell me what the correct terms to use were? Pointing out errors is not the same as correcting them.
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He didn't give you a correct term to use, because there is no real correlation between them when you go from criminal to civil suits.
A prosecutor is a state employee who is persuing resolution of a criminal complaint. In a civil case, the rough equivalent is the plaintiff - the person complaining.
The reason he stated that there is no concept of reasonable doubt is because that again is criminal law. In civil suits, only a preponderance of evidence is required. That is simply that it is more likely than no
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Personally, I don't think that letting him near a courtroom would make you a dumb lawyer - I think it would make you dumb, PERIOD.
.... his confusion rega
Even without any technical knowledge - just analyzing his statements using logic - there are so many inconsistencies in what he says that it is impossible to conclude that he has any "expert" knowledge even within the field he's claiming to be an expert in
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They ask if he is in a professional body, but all he has is a doctorate in computing, and training in forensics, which puts him head and shoulders above others in the field in terms of qualifications.
He's an engineer, he did what they ask of him.
I'm surprised there wasn't a more structured procedure for the examination of the disk, I know if I was billing the RIAA for my time I'd be sure to send them long documented lists of things checked for, even if the c
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The problem was not so much as his testemony about the HD & his findings, as he was also supposed to testify about the process of identifying the IP address & ownership of the account using the IP address. Be
Please actually read it or learn about computers (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Please actually read it or learn about computer (Score:2)
By that I think he meant that he could demonstrate that she did not have a wireless router, and therefore that the computer belonged to her. Yes, a friend could have come by and plugged in, but ruling out wireless squatters as a scapegoat is a significant achievement for the plaintiff.
> "His report has this error shortly after his credentials: [...] He doesn't ment
My point exactly. (Score:2)
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Ruling out a wireless router would be beneficial to the plaintiff, but I don't think he did. He specifically noted that her computer was setup for DHCP. My wireless router can be setup for DHCP also. It seemed from his d
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He ruled out NAT by showing that a kazaa packet from her external IP address contained an internal IP address (in the data payload of the packet) that matched. If NAT had been present, it would have been translating her public IP address to a private one in the range of 192.168.1.x (for instance) and the
Re:Please actually read it or learn about computer (Score:2)
Re:Please actually read it or learn about computer (Score:2)
Actually, I hadn't read his original report, and did not know he was making this claim (I don't recall this being in the deposition either, but I could have just missed it - it was a
Re:Why exclude? No real problem with his testimony (Score:2)
(1) the testimony is based upon sufficient facts or data, (2) the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods
In this instance, the facts upon which he is basing his testimony amount to an assumption that the ISP and MediaSentry information is perfectly accurate, and his results are the product of a proprietary, non-peer-reviewed procedure, using proprietary software and with no known erro
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There are a few commenters who are missing the point of the motion, which is what the article is about.
Thanks for reminding them.
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There are a few commenters who are missing the point of the motion, which is what the article is about.
How do you figure? (Score:2)
1) "The prosecution's own expert witness says the defendant's computer was not used for filesharing, but they brought this case anyway."
2) "Well, we removed all evidence due to technicalities. The prosecution couldn't have known this would happen until after the suit was filed."
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Rega
Open Source MediaSentry? (Score:2)
MediaSentry is the software that detected the sharing of files and provided the initial IP address that was used to subpoena the account information. It's list of files available and the IP address of the computer that was sharing them is central to the case. In Florida [lockergnome.com], drunken driving cases have been thrown out because the manufacturer of the breathalyser wouldn't disclose the source code or internal workings. I think the defendant should have a right to inspect the MediaSentry source code. Otherwise
Artists funding this action (Score:2)
Beautiful South
Cardigans
Def Leppard
Texas
Peter Gabriel
Razorlight
Sheryl Crow
By buying CDs or digital tracks by these artists, you are helping to fund this lawsuit. Please stop!
UMG's artist lists can be found at:
http://new.umusic.com/Artists.aspx?Index=0 [umusic.com]
http://new.umusic.com/Artists.aspx?Index=1 [umusic.com]
http://new.umusic.com/Artists.aspx?Index=2 [umusic.com]
http://new.umusic.com/Artists.aspx?Index=3 [umusic.com]
http://new.umusic.com/Artis [umusic.com]
Re:Unreadable (Score:5, Informative)
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The submitter may also want to hold off on TFA-linking world record attempt too. This is Slashdot, we seldom read one linked FA. Asking us to read, like 10 of them, just isn't going to happen.
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To be fair, several of them were either links to previous stories in this case on Slashdot, or links to previous stories on this case from other sources... I think the second link was the only new one.
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I agree (i.e. please mod parent back up) (Score:2)
Re:What does this mean? (Score:5, Funny)
Other. I'm the guy with the gun.
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/pedantic
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(Course, I had been drinking a bit, so I suppose I should watch it sober to be entirely sure....)
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Better, at this date, they can't call in a new one. You only get 1 shot at the litigation & you aren't supposed to change tack in the middle of the case. They are basing all of their testimony on MediaSentry's & the ISP's data, but they don't have any information on how that data is acquired, what the reliability of the data is, or what variables make it more or less likely to be accurate. Because
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Since you obviously have evidence for your well-considered conclusion, I don't see why you don't give the RIAA a call and offer your services. I suspect they'll be looking for someone pretty soon.
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I hope that tells you something about her guilt or innocence.
But yet.. (Score:4, Insightful)
More importantly though, these cases indirectly impact many other activities, many of which I think the great majority of the community feels are not unethical, which involve limits of copyrights, security, DRM, etc.
And speaking as somebody who's a US citizen who knows a fair amount as an amateur about the law and constitution as written documents, these cases, as well as the SCO entries, are certainly educating me greatly about how the law is actually practiced outside of my personal reading of it. Routine trial motions are relevant when they deal with something that is important to track, especially when most of the community doesn't know what's a routine motion and what isn't. I personally hope that at the very least everybody from the US learns from these, since being able to describe with accuracy and detail the problems we have with the current state of the laws is the only way that all the letters, e-mails etc to legislators are going to have any measurable impact.
Re:Routine Motion (Score:5, Insightful)
This was the first time in 25,000 cases that the RIAA's expert was deposed.
The RIAA says he is their only witness to copyright infringement.
They used the same expert in all the cases.
And it turns out his testimony would be inadmissible at trial.
I think that's pretty important and not at all "routine".
In fact in 32 1/2 years of working in the litigation field, I've never even heard of anything quite like this.
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How many of those 25,000 cases went to trial...? (Score:2)
I'm pretty sure that this is the first case out of those 25,000 that's actually made it to trial.
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Ray, I know you mean well, and I'm glad that you post here.
Having said that, you have to stop accusing everyone who disagrees with you of being an RIAA troll. This is Slashdot; people will argue with you for the sake of argument. That doesn't mean they're on some sinister agency's payroll, though.
I will consider what you are saying, and take it to heart.
But this AC wasn't "disagreeing" with me, he was trying to discourage people from reading and participating:
nothing to see here. Move along.
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1. I removed you from my "foe" list many months ago. You, however, continue to have me listed as your "foe", which means I won't normally get to see your comments.
2. It isn't true that you have been posting here for a lot longer than I have been posting RIAA litigation news. You only joined after these stories started being posted.
3. I have no problem with argument and disagreement; I live for it. What I don't like is someone hiding their ulterior motives, which is what the PR flack trolls do o
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Give me a break.
I have enough enemies over at Holme Roberts & Owen. What I need is friends.
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Re:Is this the end of MediaSentry? (Score:4, Informative)
If this court makes this ruling (and while IANAL, I would grant this motion!), could this be grounds for challanging all future MAFIAA supenas?
1.Yes.
2. Yes.