RIAA Drops Case, Should Have Sued Someone Else 195
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "Once again the RIAA has dropped a case with prejudice, this time after concluding
it was the defendant's daughter it should have sued
in the first place. In the case of Lava v. Amurao, mindful that in similar scenarios it has been held liable for the
defendant's attorney fees (Capitol v. Foster and Atlantic v. Andersen), the RIAA went on the offensive. In this case there was actually no attorney fee motion pending, making their motion all the more intriguing. The organization argued that it was the defendant's
fault that the record companies sued the wrong person, because the defendant didn't tell them that his daughter was the file sharer they were looking for."
does the jedi mind trick work on the RIAA (Score:5, Funny)
Re:does the jedi mind trick work on the RIAA (Score:5, Funny)
I'll leave the determination of the answer to the parent poster's question as an exercise for the reader.
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And the "solomon" typo of BumbleFinger.
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Stupid RIAA (Score:5, Insightful)
Why aren't judges allowed to look upon all RIAA suits with some level of mistrust. They've been proven wrong in so many cases that it is criminal. YES CRIMINAL. Someone should go to jail for all the crap they've put people through.
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Re:Stupid RIAA (Score:5, Interesting)
Its time to fight fire with fire
Re:Stupid RIAA (Score:5, Informative)
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/08/17/1728225 [slashdot.org]
How successful it's going to be, well...that remains to be seen.
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Re:Stupid RIAA (Score:5, Insightful)
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If the going gets tough, then they'll hopefully get going.
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You can do that, and I suggest that you do, but they will just use it against us by saying that the decline in sales proves that people are pirating.
Win/lose situation?
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Well, they could try to get laws passed forcing all internet users to pay them $5 per connection - I mean, such a concept got rave reviews here on social^h^h^h^h^h^hslashdot yesterday.
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They can accuse you of deleting the files (Destroying Evidence). They can accuse you of not turning over all your hard drives/CDs/tapes/floppies/ etc.
Re:Stupid RIAA (Score:5, Funny)
I agree. I'm pirating as fast as I can!
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Re:Stupid RIAA-Stupid ISP (Score:5, Funny)
Then you're probably not on Comcast.
Yeah! Let's drive RIAA affiliates out of business! (Score:5, Interesting)
How about we stop buying their shit?
Done. [riaaradar.com] I haven't knowingly purchased RIAA affiliated music in years. Yet I still buy and download quite a lot of non-RIAA music. I don't even listen to those radio stations anymore. You know the ones... they play the same 50 RIAA songs all week long. I listen to my local college station. Not every song they play is a hit, but you're guaranteed to hear different music every day. Don't have a decent college station? You can even listen online! Here's my local station. [wknc.org] They're awesome. They even stream in ogg. Their playlist [wknc.org] is online too, so when you hear a song you like, it's easy to check for RIAA-ness. [riaaradar.com] If the RIAA bastards have anything to do with the music, just don't buy it. According to iTunes, I've purchased 12 songs this month. Not one thin dime went to RIAA affiliates.
PS. Fuck You U2. After reading your press release of late, [slashdot.org] I will never buy your shit. EVER. Nothing you can say or do will change that. You've joined the ranks of Metallica. Go straight to hell. I hope you get hit by a bus the next time you cross the street. You have the gall to ask "Who's got our money and what can we do?" Allow me to answer that here, since I'm required to join you website to send you feedback: "Who's got our money" The customer has the money. It isn't yours unless earn it. "What can we do?" You can drop dead. I'll never buy your music. I'll never support you in any way. I will will actively discourage anyone I know who might. Big mistake assholes. One happy customer might tell one person. One angry customer will tell everyone he knows.
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FTFY.
It's not like it's food, water or shelter. It's amazing how much none of this stuff really matters when you couldn't care less about the product in any form or method of delivery.
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They need to be fought, not suffocated.
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My impetus was not this round of abusive suits, it was their blatant purchase of the DMCA, which I consider to be a much more heinous crime.
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And now they've got buyers remorse. They traded something they didn't have (the right to hold ISPs responsible for hosted content, repudiated in e.g. the Netcom decision) for something they wanted (extrajudicial takedown), and they're STILL not happy with the "deal". So they'll just purchase a change to it. And the rest of us are just supposed to go along and nod our
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Um, that's the reason they're doing all those lawsuits. They claim everybody stopped buying their shit and started 'stealing' it. Here, have a copy of the memo...
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I still go out to the occasional film, still get the occasional track. I don't claim to be without sin, but I'll cast as many damn stones at them as I choose -- the parable only works when you're judging your peers, not those who claim t
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Re:Stupid RIAA (Score:5, Insightful)
#4 sounds like it would be incredibly difficult to prove. I think the only chance the plaintiff would have would be to assert that RIAA was prosecuting the case for the purpose of inspiring fear in other potential targets of litigation, even in the face of evidence suggesting the plaintiff's innocence in the original suit.
Anyone else have any ideas?
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A suit for malicious prosecution would be a civil matter. Hence, the standard would be a proponderence of the evidence. So you would only have to convince 12 jurors that the purpose was
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A suit for malicious prosecution would be a civil matter. Hence, the standard would be a proponderence of the evidence. So you would only have to convince 12 jurors that the purpose was more likely improper than proper.
Probably incredibly difficult also.
Not really. The only reason for suing someone for copyright infringement that isn't improper is that you had a reason to believe you committed copyright infringement. So you would have to show that they had no reason to believe this. As soon as you have refuted any evidence that they bring for your copyright infringement (not to a degree to convince the judge, but to a degree that the then plaintiff who may have withheld information to the judge should know better), and they continue, then it is improper.
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Nope. Wrong.
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They did have probably cause that this guy was the file sharer they were looking for. It was the IP address of his computer, in his house, that they were looking for.
Nope. Wrong.
"[N]either the parties' submissions nor the Court's own research has revealed any case holding the mere owner of an internet account contributorily or vicariously liable for the infringing activities of third persons.....In addition to the weakness of the secondary copyright infringement claims against Ms. Foster, there is a question of the plaintiffs' motivations in pursuing them..... [T]here is an appearance that the plaintiffs initiated the secondary infringement claims to press Ms. Foster into settlement after they had ceased to believe she was a direct or "primary" infringer."
-Hon. Lee R. West
District Judge
Western District of Oklahoma
February 6, 2007
Capitol v. Foster 2007 WL 1028532
Nice going, civilizedINTENSITY. The truth will set us free.
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Why should anyone tell them who anyone is? Shouldn't the RIAA be held for wrongful prosecution or whatever it is, for bringing suit against the wrong person?
If it's clearly negligent, yes, but in this case they got the correct house, and the parent is trying to play games, in my opinion.
Obligatory car analogy: Imagine if they could prove your car was used in a hit in run case, and that it wasn't stolen but started with the original keys. The cops are going to lean on you pretty hard until and unless you
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Re:Stupid RIAA (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Stupid RIAA (Score:4, Funny)
Face the grim reality of propably never having grandchildren ?-) Seriously, only on Slashdot...
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So what if someone breaks into your house while you're on vacation, stays a while and downloads a ****load of music? Do you have to find out who the intruder was? How can they prove it wasn't some unknown persons and the computer owner is innocent? What about if your daughter's bf comes over while you're out and they download or upload songs? My point is... how can they ever prove who is responsible?
They don't have to. In civil cases, the burden of proof is much less. If they have a large pile of evidence that you did what they claim you did, and you claim that it was actually someone that broke into your house (even though the police have no record of your reporting a break-in), you will lose the case.
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The RIAA knows that someone at a given IP address at a given time was making songs available to others for free, because they can query the computer at that address and get back a list of songs on that computer, and they can download the songs and listen to them. So they can prove that IP address X had copyrighted fi
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Unless they are paying you to provide such a service.
Shouldn't the RIAA be held for wrongful prosecution or whatever it is, for bringing suit against the wrong person?
Since this is civil law it would be more a case of filing a counter suit against them.
Why aren't judges allowed to look upon all RIAA suits with some level of mistrust.
A judge is onto going to look at such a suit once one has actually been filed with a court. Quite possibly not until a hearin
Sue the daughter (Score:2)
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Presumably if the daugher was underage the suit would still be ongoing for exactly that reason.
From the Plaintiff's Memorandum of Law in Support of their Motion to Dismiss with Prejudice:
"Plaintiffs also intend to file a separate lawsuit against Defendant's adult daughter, XXXXXX XXXXXX, whom Plaintiffs recently learned is the person directly responsible for the infringement." [emphasis added and name redacted by me
Oh, suuure, they'd have listened. (Score:5, Interesting)
How often do you suppose they hear that? And has it -ever- worked?
Out of curiosity...I know that there's a principle where spouses cannot be forced to incriminate one another; does this sort of thing extend to children?
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IANAL.
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I've never heard of it applying to the parent-c
Common Law Protection (Score:2)
As a result, the wife wasn't a separate legal entity from the husband, so testifying against him was pointless.
Burden of proof... (Score:5, Insightful)
But then again, I was also under the impression that the best way to make money is to sell things to your customers instead of sue them, so call me old fasioned.
Re:Burden of proof... (Score:5, Informative)
This is an important advantage to the plaintiff, in this case the RIAA, because they don't have to have rock solid proof to convince the judge/jury of wrong doing. This is why OJ Simpson was not convicted in his criminal trial, yet was so in his civil trial.
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Only they could get away with it. (Score:5, Insightful)
Sue my daughter... (Score:3, Funny)
(yes, why didn't the defendant say that?)
Hmm... (Score:2)
Pointless beating around the bush... (Score:3, Insightful)
All of these articles about the minor skirmishes in *AA's war against infringers are boring and serve no purpose other than to provide yet another forum for some people to say: "Copyright infringement is wrong, like stealing," and for others to claim: "No, it is not exactly the same as stealing, and therefore good." The exact details of each legal encounter don't change anything, and are only useful to the practicing lawyers...
Unlike the emacs vs. vi flamewars, this one can, actually, be resolved with some certainty, and whoever can be convinced is convinced already...
Perhaps, our distinguished editors can delegate these articles to some peripheral subsection instead of the front-page?
Re:Pointless beating around the bush... (Score:5, Informative)
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Better to give it away for free. http://www.azoz.com/music [azoz.com]
something Interesting to check..... (Score:3, Interesting)
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It'd be no more interesting than "it'd be interesting to see if cops ever broke the law".
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As for the cop breaking the law analogy. It happens. But the cops are held to the same laws we are, and often get punishments on the harder side of what you could get. The logi
I'm not obligated to help you (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I'm not obligated to help you (Score:5, Funny)
Dude, thanks for covering for me
it's the "I'm an asshole" defense by RIAA (Score:3, Interesting)
some day, some where, somebody is going to take them up on that offer. they can be fined and jailed for abuse of the federal court system.
The RIAA Has Moved That Its Claims Be Dropped (Score:3, Insightful)
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From Argument (A)(6) "Plaintiffs are simultaneously moving for summary judgement against Defendant's Counterclaim."
And that filing:
Plaintiffs' Memorandum of Law in support of motion for summary judgment dismissing counterclaim* http://www.ilrweb.com/viewILRPDF.asp?filename=lava_amurao_080128PltffsMotSumJudgCounterclaimMemo [ilrweb.com]
So it's probably more accurate to say that the
So if he told them (Score:2)
Lava? (Score:2)
Knowingly Suing The Wrong Person... (Score:2)
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The RIAA watches too much TV (Score:2)
On TV shows like "Matlock" or "Perry Mason" the defense proves their guy innocent by not just establishing reasonable doubt, but going out and solving the case and dramatically revealing who really committed the crime. Unfortunately for the RIAA, the real world doesn't work that way, and the defense is not under any obligation to figure out for them who the true copyright-infringer is, just to show that the evidence does not support the accusations against the defendant.
RIAA not stupid (Score:5, Insightful)
Soviet regime. (Score:2)
LOL.
U.S. and its capitalism slowly degrades into weird Stalinism. The case reminds me of way Stalin and Brezhnev regimes had dealt with unwanted people.
In Soviet times, if something happens, regime always looked for scapegoat. They'd took some guy they do not like off street and claim that he did
Just a thought, but.... (Score:2)
If they're both going to pollute the planet with their litigious nonsense and racketeering, we should at least be getting some entertainment value out of it all.
Yeah... (Score:2)
Maybe they'll go away? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Maybe they'll go away? (Score:4, Informative)
I wish... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I wish... (Score:4, Insightful)
Another thing to add about that comic: the same folks who give credence to intelligent design tend to be in the same political circles as those who advocate mountaintop removal mining. [wikipedia.org] So, as the comic says, the universe doesn't require that anyone believes in the mountain, but if enough people don't want the mountain to exist anymore they'll just erase it. In a generation it doesn't matter if anyone believed in the mountain or not...it's gone.
Moral of the story? Don't underestimate how far people are willing to go.
Re:*yawn* (Score:5, Funny)
Now I have to produce a criminal? (Score:3, Insightful)
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Re:5th amendment? (Score:4, Informative)
That said, the RIAA is a bunch of douchebags, and I hope EMI pulls their funding. That should start a cascade of flagging support that ends in the destruction of that ridiculous cabal.
Re:5th amendment? (Score:5, Informative)
I hope EMI isn't the only one that pulls their funding.
And that Congress declares the RIAA as racketeering bunch of a-holes....(under RICO).
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Riiiiiiiiight. In an election year?
(amusing note: the captcha is "saviors")
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That's what term limits are for.
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If everyone refuses to pay for big label music, both older music (where they make a lot of their money) and pop music, the big labels will eventually go out of business. This is a GOOD thing. The big labels crush their competition through unfair business practices. For example, Payola
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So, just plead the fifth and if pressured cite Trammel v. US - they'd have to take it up with the Supreme Court to challenge you after that.
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Re:Squeal or else! (Score:5, Interesting)