MIT Student Plans to Take on RIAA 169
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "MIT's online newspaper, The Tech, reports that a student named as a John Doe by the RIAA is planning to fight back against their questionable legal tactics. The anonymous student told The Tech that he is 'the victim of a fishing expedition by the RIAA,' and is 'disappointed that MIT isn't going to step up ... Other schools like Boston University and the University of Oregon have resisted RIAA subpoenas of student records more actively than MIT has, he said'. Maybe his attorneys will be able to get some assistance from some of the Harvard Law School students in Professor Nesson's 'Evidence' class, who have been assigned — as part of their coursework — the drafting of a motion to quash an RIAA subpoena."
Guilty till proven innocent? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Guilty till proven innocent? (Score:5, Informative)
Bah, few people here are lawyers, but even a layman like me has learned that RIAA files civil lawsuits. In a civil lawsuit there is no "guilty until proven innocent" or "innocent until proven guilty". The burden of proof is to show 51% likelihood of one party being right (kinda like a speeding ticket decision made by a judge. There's no assumption you're innocent, he goes by who seems more credible).
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Actually, my feeling is that the penalty the RIAA & MPAA deserve it to have their corporate charter st
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1. Obtain information from your ISP giving more information on how your account was tied to the copyright violation. Maybe they made a mistake, or perhaps the telephone line (heh) used was not tied to you in any way.
Well, we've already had *several* highly publicized ISP errors in this process. ISPs have LOTS of old info, telephone companies often have worse info. At least several years ago when I worked for a contractor for
Legal defense fund? (Score:3, Interesting)
If this guy has a legitimate legal defense fund, I'd throw a few bucks his way.
(I won't throw money at "John Doe" though. X's bass player probably has enough cash as it is... )
Sue MIT (Score:5, Funny)
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In an Oct. 4 statement, Dean for Student Life Larry G. Benedict and Jerrold M. Grochow '68, vice president for Information Services & Technology, said, "Unauthorized downloading and sharing of copyrighted files is illegal
Downloading is not illegal. Sharing (or publishing) a copyrighted work without authorisation is illegal.
MIT repeats this falsehood on their copyright website: http://web.mit.edu/ist/topics/security/copyright/ [mit.edu]
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But your statements aren't true. Making a copy of a copyrighted work violates copyright law. Pure downloaders almost never get caught, which I suspect is the reason for this fallacious belief.
Now, that said, my personal belief is that downloading should never be illegal, primarily because it's virtually impossible to know for sure that you're downloading from a legitimate source.
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If you can cite the specific law that states that receiving a copy of a copyrighted work is illegal, I'll retract the comment.
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So you're saying if I make a backup of my CDs I'm breaking the law, or if I photocopy a page out of one of my books?
These are covered under special exemptions to copyright law known as fair use. Fair use is an affirmative defense, meaning that the copyright holder can bring you to court, show that you have an unauthorized copy of their work, and then you explain how it got there. If the judge agrees that the copy was fair use, he will dismiss the case.
This website [goldengate.net] appears to suggest that mere possession of an unauthorized copy may cause you to be liable for copyright infringement:
Your possession of the unauthorized copy, no matter how brief, still constitutes an infringing act. If the copyright holder happens to catch you with unlawful copies of their works on your hard drive, deleting it won't make a lawsuit go away should they decide to take legal action.
Now that said, copyright violation
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I don't know where you got your law degree from, but you may want to ask for a refund.
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Be Smart About This (Score:4, Funny)
Instead, use the name of the jock down the hall that you hate anyway.
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Good Homework Assignment (Score:3, Insightful)
John Doe (Score:5, Funny)
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Undue burden (Score:2, Interesting)
So what exactly would be defined as an undue burden? Their request for the student's private information, or their exorbitant damages?
Recording Industry vs The People (Score:5, Informative)
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He should definitely let his counsel know about Recording Industry vs The People [blogspot.com] which is a wonderful source of briefs, documents from related cases, decisions, and other strategies and tactics used by others defending cases against the RIAA and the music labels. Perhaps NewYorkCountryLawyer [slashdot.org] or his firm can help him out if can scrape together a few bucks to pay their fees.
Thanks, Codebuster. Actually I was hoping some of these [blogspot.com] lawyers [blogspot.com], who are already up in Cambridge, could jump in.
Honestly (Score:2)
Take away their revenue stream. And I'm not advocating downloading their* product for free. I'm advocating stopping "consuming" their products altogether. If you listen to their music, you're effectively endorsing it and giving value to what they're peddling.
Okay so we have the problem that mainstream music is a large part of our (western) culture. And that is a problem.
* Of course by "their" I mean "their member companies", since the RIAA itself doesn't actually produce an
A good defense is a better offense (Score:2, Interesting)
New legal justification open downloads of music (Score:3, Insightful)
It does not matter what the source is or what format we have it in. We are purchasing a license to listen at our leisure to a song or watch a movie. We can have a thousand copies because we can only listen to one at a time. Somebody needs to argue this in court. That we are in fact purchasing a license to listen, not a piece of plastic or a digital file of zero's and ones.
This is the New legal justification for open downloads of music or copy righted material:
In fact the record labels need to, I think legally provide, free downloads of music. The record companies have not provided a way for me to enjoy my license to listen if the CD gets scratched, as it is now they force us to buy a new license they should probably reimburse anyone who has had to buy more than one license because of damage media.
I noticed about 10 years ago CDs became very easy to scratch not the bottom but the top.
Because the carrier medium can be damaged we should all be able to get a download of a new instance of the song we paid for from the Internet if we purchased the license to listen to it. Since the record companies have not provided a way for us to get a replacement copy the Internet downloads can ethically be justified.
Truth is we don't need the record companies anymore. We can all buy from the artists direct and vote with a link what is most popular. I would be happy to pay the creative talent directly without the huge middle man cut. Another things is corporate pressure to maintain the status quo system cannot be put on artists by large corporations.
Hopefully someone will get this into the hands of the attorneys for the defendants.
Technically based on quantum physics there is only one copy of a piece of music in the universe. This exists in the intangible realm; all tangible manifestations of this one copy are simply a physical conveyance of this one real instance. It is an information universe, everything is ultimately just information.
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That really depends on which argument the RIAA/MPAA is spouting at the moment. The 'you purchased a license' argument is used when they are trying to expand copyright to extend past things like 'right of first sale'. However the 'you purchased the CD' is used to try and block format shifting & force you to buy the MP3/ringtone/whatever.
So what exactly you purchased when you bought that CD is somewhat mutable.
Re:He'd best make sure he saved his receipts (Score:5, Insightful)
If that were applicable, then Wal-Mart could accuse me of being a shoplifter and sieze all my assets and I'd be liable for all the items that I don't have reciepts for that they stock.
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Normally, I would agree, but in this case I'm quite sure the RIAA would attempt a motion for summary dismissal of said suit (as having been made in bad faith) if they can find any evidence of what might possibly be called 'piracy'.
IANAL, of course, but it seems as though that'd be the first thing they'd look for.
Re:He'd best make sure he saved his receipts (Score:4, Informative)
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I wouldn't suggest that if I were you.
(Sidenote: Wal-Mart wouldn't be that thick-skulled, given that they're noted for saving every shred of information about their customers, including transaction records (cash or otherwise), and video surveillance. If you've stolen from them, they already know about it, and have hard evide
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If that were applicable, then Wal-Mart could accuse me of being a shoplifter and sieze all my assets and I'd be liable for all the items that I don't have reciepts for that they stock.
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An important point:
You do not need to prove ownership of the files. It is not illegal or wrong to have the copies, it is illegal to distribute copyrighted material.
They have to prove you distributed the works. There is already precedent that RIAA's argument of "merely making available" is not sufficient.
Re:He'd best make sure he saved his receipts (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:He'd best make sure he saved his receipts (Score:5, Informative)
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Precisely because they don't want to set a precedent that their methods are bullshit and constitute criminal harassment on a massive scale. So if they drop every case they will lose, and fight the few they can win, they set a precedent that what they are doing is right and the courts support them. And in the mean time they send thousands more letters asking people for a few grand to continue the fight or they will be next. Paying up doesn'
Re:He'd best make sure he saved his receipts (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:He'd best make sure he saved his receipts (Score:4, Funny)
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Hot Coffee, San Andreas.
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Relax, buddy. Guilty isn't even an option here. It's a civil suit. I don't believe any courses at MIT cover such trivia, but it's the sort of thin
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Good luck in choosing your bullies, then.
Real world bullies usually have good connections and the (green-backed, with the RIAA) stamina to draw you out over a long time. Bullies are mostly supported by authority because they keep people in line and people who stand up to things are not welcome.
You are much more likely to be punished for hitting the bully back then the bully is for hitting you.
I suppose MIT will just get rid of the student in question and the RIAA will starve him out unless his daddy is a
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Mitch Hedberg taught me everything I need to know (Score:5, Funny)
Huh? (Score:2)
Huh? There's no legal requirement for showing where you bought your firearms, at least in my jurisdiction. I've bought them off guys at the range, at yard sales, estate sales, etc., and often without a paper trail. Even where there is a paper trail, as when I buy from a licensed dealer, there's no requirement that I keep any records. Assuming the existence of such a requirement makes no s
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Unlike most slashdotters (i presume
Re:He'd best make sure he saved his receipts (Score:5, Insightful)
First you have to ask... how exactly do they know that the file was a copyright infringement? Did they listen to it? Do they even represent the artist that he is supposedly committing such an atrocity? And in that wing of logic, not knowing what the file contained, couldn't it be an 'intent to commit copyright infringement' by simply listening to the file and "verifying" it? After all, what if the file was called "Tool - Loud Noises.mp3" and it is his attempt to make music from his power tools... not from Tool the band. What gives them the right to download and listen to the file and not me? And how else would you positively know that copyright infringement is taking place?
That aside, you can't reasonably expect that I (or anyone) is going to have a receipt for their CD of Michael Jackson - Thriller that they bought in 1991. With that, nothing keeps someone from going to the local flea market and picking up an old used copy (providing they didn't have the original CD, whatever the reason).
The whole setup is a scam. People HAVE to be getting paid off for this to keep going forward the way it is... especially when the RIAA legal opposition grows by the day.
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[joke stolen from the show Psych, with no shame]
Re:He'd best make sure he saved his receipts (Score:4, Informative)
You may have forgotten, but originally the RIAA was an advocacy group for the promotion of recording artists and labels, created (as I recall) almost as a sort of union, in order to have more negotiation clout when dealing with distributors and media outlets.
However, this core mission has been long since lost since they took up this ill-conceived crusade against the "dangers of piracy"--as such, the public opinion (which does matter, given that said opinion can influence legislation, amongst other things) has, largely, turned against them, reducing them to a simple dichotomy of "Us Against The Pirates!" The RIAA has, by its own actions, essentially rendered itself next to useless.
Re:He'd best make sure he saved his receipts (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:He'd best make sure he saved his receipts (Score:5, Interesting)
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Even if digital distribution and mp3s/flacs etc didn't exist, the internet is such a powerful tool for organizing that people would create mail share/trade trees and do it like that (the way deadheads a
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Re:is this guy totally innocent? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:is this guy totally innocent? (Score:5, Funny)
Why does this matter? (Score:2)
It needs to be well over 99% before it's even worth talking about. It's innocent until proven guilty, not innocent until 75% likely.
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Wrong wrong wrong wrong (Score:5, Insightful)
The RIAA had his IP address, and traced him. This is like a burglar complaining that the cops investigated a burglary and traced the goods to his house.
This is an example of the RIAA and their tactics, and of what they hope to achieve.
They have convinced this guy that they are the cops. They are NOT.
Please everyone - do your best to not further their agenda by buying into their spin. They are not the cops. People who infringe on copyright are not pirates. Committing copyright violation is not theft.
Re:Wrong wrong wrong wrong (Score:5, Informative)
But it is illegal.
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So, your point is.. what, exactly?
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Although, I still think your analogy is still accurate. In that the RIAA are going after the easy "criminals" so t
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Copyright infringement just gives control freaks anxiety attacks.
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Re:Wrong wrong wrong wrong (Score:5, Insightful)
Not the argument I'm making.
My point is that theft and copyright violation are not the same thing, as the RIAA would have you believe. Why would the RIAA push this particular viewpoint? Because it's easy to despise a thief, that's why. But legally, a copyright violator is something different. So they're trying to spin it so that lawmakers and juries will look at copyright violators and SEE thieves. It helps their agenda to do this.
But they're not the same thing or we wouldn't need a law about copyright violation on the books, seeing as how we already have one there for theft.
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Turn the question around.
Why does the Geek shy like a virgin from an association of words and ideas that was current when the Black Flag still flew over the Caribbean?
It is pathetic and futile to argue that the word "thief" must given the same meaning in casual usage as it has in criminal law. The geek must know in his heart that will have no more success here than he has had in reclaiming words like "hacker."
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Turn it around again.
If we could convince the entire world to call all people who commit copyright violation "Fluffy Marshmallow Bunny Liberator of Ideas", wouldn't you think that a senator would have a hard time making a draconian law against that?
Words mean things. The words you choose matter. Ask anyone in advertising if I'm right.
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It is pathetic and futile to argue that the word "thief" must given the same meaning in casual usage as it has in criminal law.
Perhaps you should define what "thief" means, in casual usage, then. Weaselmancer has the right idea in defining "thief" as it is defined in the criminal law regarding the natural property. At least we have something concrete to talk about.
If you then just blur the word as "thief in casual usage", without defining or even attempting describe consistently what it means, the word itself means as much as "Dieb" or "doduk", at least for the purpose of this thread.
Suggest a reasonable definition for "thief" in
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The other key difference between crimes and torts ("tort" is the legal term for copyright violation, breach of contract, etc.) is the question of who pays to prosecute the offender. Taxpayers (i.e., you) foot the bill for prosecuting crimes; in principle, a crime is an offense against society as a whole - a public offense - so the government handles the prosecution. That's why criminal cases are "The People vs. So-and-So" and civil litigation isn't.
A tort is a private offense: If you breach the terms of
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From http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/steal [reference.com]
This definition doesn't explicitly say that stealing removes an object from the owner's use, merely that you took something without permission.
(ie, making a copy is taking a copy, and if you were not authorized to make that copy you are stealing it)
>1. to take (the property of another or others) with
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Towards the first definition:
I can copy someone else's arrangement of bits, and all I'm doing is pushing electrons around... electrons that I paid to be able to manipulate. The fact that those electrons represent something doesn't matter apparently.
So, taking that approach to #2, plagiarism online can't exist either, since the ideas were never affected. The original post is still there, so my copying of it wouldn't cause any harm.
Since plagiarism does exist and is rightly forbidd
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> It's because it DOES matter
No, it's because the word "steal" carries enough meaning to fit with what is being talked about.
(from another post)
From http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/steal [reference.com]
This definition doesn't explicitly say that stealing removes an object from the owner's use, merely that you took something without permission.
(ie, making a copy is taking a copy, and if you were not authorized to make that copy you are stealing it)
1. to take (t
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Okay, but then neither is "identity theft", or "stealing secrets".
In these three cases no one is being deprived of anything. Except, arguably:
and finally:
So which is it? All or none o
None (Score:2)
Stealing someone's identity is fraud.
Stealing secrets is espionage.
Stealing music is copyright violation.
Stealing a car is theft.
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Argh... (Score:2)
I just knew after I posted that someone would get cute and want to play some word games. Ok, I'll clarify:
"Stealing" someone's identity is actually called fraud. It is not stealing because you still have your identity afterwards.
"Stealing" someone's secrets is actually called espionage. It is not stealing because you still have your information afterwards.
"Stealing" someone's music is actually called copyright violation. It is not stealing because the artist still has their music afterwards.
Steal
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And you know what? I completely agree with you. Now can you please repeat what you just said the next time a
Didn't notice it was you (Score:2)
Sorry if that previous post came off as a little grouchy. Thought it was someone else splitting hairs. You had asked a legitimate question earlier, so sorry 'bout that.
Yeah, I'll keep repeating this every time the "OMG stealing music is teh theft!" idiots chime in on an IP issue.
I'd like to file a bug report. (Score:2)
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I fail to see how any of that implies guilt. Infringing upon someone's copyright IS illegal and is probably discouraged by MIT. They're not saying not to go grab the latest Ubuntu distro...
I don't agree with how the mafIAA handles their copyright cases, but as the law stands, it's well within their rights to go after infringers.
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You raise an interesting point of grammar. Personally, I'd be inclined to say "an RIAA," because unless you say "reeya," RIAA starts with a vowel sound - "ar."
The wikipedia article for English indefinite articles [wikipedia.org] states that "an" is "now used before words starting with a vowel sound, regardless of whether the word begins with a vowel letter." However, there is also no citation given for that statement.
On the other hand, a brief Google search turns up 55,000 results for "an RIAA" and 61,000 for "a RIAA."
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As an employee of a major public university who handles such complaints, the vast majority of the "stop it!" type simple take-down requests are bittorrent related. These "pre-subpoena" notices are almost all Limewire/Gnutella, likely because they can say, "you had eleventy hundred songs in your shared folder @ $750/song, please settle" versus the single file at a time model used by torrents.
I have never seen a single proceeding brought by the RIAA which did not involve "Limewire/Gnutella" or other similar Fast Track client. I have never yet seen a single case based on BitTorrent.