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Piracy The Courts Government Movies The Internet News Entertainment Technology

Judge Dismisses Movie Piracy Case, IP-Address Doesn't Prove Anything (torrentfreak.com) 164

An anonymous reader quotes a report from TorrentFreak: In what's believed to be a first of its kind ruling, a federal court in Oregon has dismissed a direct infringement complaint against an alleged movie pirate from the outset. According to the judge, linking an IP-address to a pirated download is not enough to prove direct copyright infringement. In the Oregon District Court, Magistrate Judge Stacie Beckerman recently recommended dismissal of a complaint filed by the makers of the Adam Sandler movie The Cobbler. According to the Judge both claims of direct and indirect infringement were not sufficient for the case to continue. What's unique in this case, is that the direct infringement claims were dismissed sua sponte, which hasn't happened before. To prove direct infringement copyright holders merely have to make it "plausible" that a defendant, Thomas Gonzales in this case, is indeed the copyright infringer. This is traditionally done by pointing out that the IP-address is directly linked to the defendant's Internet connection, for example. However, according to Judge Beckerman this is not enough. In response to community backlash, Oculus has decided to change its DRM policy (again) to allow HTC Vive games to play on the Oculus Rift virtual-reality system.
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Judge Dismisses Movie Piracy Case, IP-Address Doesn't Prove Anything

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  • Oculus (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 28, 2016 @09:05AM (#52405157)

    How the fuck is old news regarding DRM on VR systems related to this case?

    • How the fuck is old news regarding DRM on VR systems related to this case?

      Yeah I didn't get the tie in at all either. Slashvertisement?

      • Beating the same horse over and over and over. Cause it's fun, dun' it before. Easier than being original.

        • I see absolutely nothing wrong with the summary. Perhaps you all have an overly-aggressive ad blocker that's damaging the front page. In response to community backlash, Oculus has decided to change its DRM policy (again) to allow HTC Vive games to play on the Oculus Rift virtual-reality system.
        • Beating the same horse over and over and over.

          Please note that beating your horse voids its warranty.

    • I was wondering the same thing then I remembered I was on Slashdot.
      • Yes, this is Slashdot. But these complete non-sequitur concluding sentences seem to be somewhat new. Or maybe they're just happening more frequently (and with a higher level of disconnectedness from the main summary).

    • It's also incorrect old news, as both the link and article are backwards: it's actually easing the restriction of Oculus Rift games on Vive.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      My guess is that they make these additional statements by some algorithm that is completely stupid. The link here seems to be copyright.

  • by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2016 @09:07AM (#52405161)

    The case was likely dismissed on grounds of questionable sanity.

    No one in their right mind would even bother stealing that movie.

    • The case was likely dismissed on grounds of questionable sanity.

      No one in their right mind would even bother stealing that movie.

      Obviously a case of "Diminished Responsibility"

    • I would say this would be grounds for a fair use claim.

      Surely no one would watch more than say 30 seconds of that film before deleting it and opting to watch paint dry instead.

  • by Fusen ( 841730 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2016 @09:14AM (#52405209)

    As much as I disagree with the copyright system across the globe, and would be a hypocrite to say downloading is wrong.

    Surely the judge has got it wrong here? If this sentence is true "To prove direct infringement copyright holders merely have to make it "plausible" that a defendant, Thomas Gonzales in this case, is indeed the copyright infringer." then the IP address linked to the defendant's contract with the ISP is surely "plausible"?

    • by Vitani ( 1219376 )
      I imagine that just because he pays the bill (I assume he does) it does not mean that *he* downloaded the film. Anyone using his connection could have done it and so the judge is saying that the prosecutors have to prove it was *him*. I imagine.
      • Re:Plausible? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Fusen ( 841730 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2016 @09:33AM (#52405341)

        Which is exactly why I repeated 'plausible' three times as my point is, lets bring out the car analogy, if Mr Johnson owns a car and that car is caught speeding by a speed camera. It is PLAUSIBLE that Mr Johnson was speeding as it is his car. It's entirely plausible. It doesn't mean it wasn't Mrs Johnson driving or Mr Johnson's kid. It may have been stolen and it wasn't anyone in the Johnson family. But it is definitely PLAUSIBLE that it was Mr Johnson.

        Exactly the same applies in this case, if the only requirement is whether it is plausible, then surely the IP belongs to Gonzales' account with the ISP so it is plausible it was him.

        • Even if it is plausible, plausibility isn't the standard for a tort conviction. The standard is "preponderance" [wikipedia.org], or "balance of probabilities", or "more likely than not", or 51 percent probability. If your access point has three or more users, the probability drops to one-third or less unless the copyright owner can show more evidence that you performed the infringement.

        • Fair point, but maybe the judge thought 'plausible, even though in the law as written, is not a high enough bar for conviction'.

        • I think the first thing to note is that I doubt laws uses "quotes" to define a term like "plausible". So it is suspect that what was in the summary is not accurate/official/legal (surprise, surprise).

          Given that, I'll try and make an car analogy work.
          * Let's start with; yes, one person is the registered owner of the car so it is possible that that person is responsible for any infraction involving the car.
          * It is also possible that anyone else in the house could have taken the keys and borrowed the car witho

          • by Fusen ( 841730 )

            I'm fully in agreement that an IP address proves nothing in a case like this. I merely wanted to question the (we've all agreed quite clearly wrong) summary.

        • by rhazz ( 2853871 )
          Not a great argument in Ontario. Up here if your car is caught by a red-light camera, the owner of the car (or the plate at least) is responsible for paying the fine. Normally running a red light also gets you demerit points on your licence, but you cannot receive any demerit points via a red-light camera because they can't prove it was you. So in this analogy, you might still be responsible for copyright fines as the owner of the connection.
          • That would require a law saying that the owner of a connection is liable for all copyright violations on his or her connection. Unless you run a service that exists primarily to facilitate copyright violation, and an internet connection doesn't qualify, you aren't liable for copyright violations just because they're from your connection. (Note: IANAL. Of course, this being Slashdot, ramblings from pseudonymous unqualified people substitute nicely for actual legal advice.)

    • Re:Plausible? (Score:5, Informative)

      by tal_mud ( 303383 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2016 @09:42AM (#52405391)

      In the continuation of the article it says:

          "That an outsider could be the pirate is not unlikely. The defendant operates an adult foster care home where several people had access to the Internet. The filmmakers were aware of this and during a hearing their counsel admitted that any guest could have downloaded the film."

      So indeed the judges ruling is reasonable...

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        This could apply to pretty much any internet connection. Most residential ones are shared with multiple users, if not just open due to poor configuration or one of the ISP deals where customers can use your wifi and in exchange you can use theirs.

        Since, as the bill payer, you are under no obligation to investigate on behalf of the rights holder, there isn't much they can do to identify who downloaded the file, if indeed it was even downloaded. Most trackers include a few random IP addresses and often these

      • In the continuation of the article it says:

        "That an outsider could be the pirate is not unlikely. The defendant operates an adult foster care home where several people had access to the Internet. The filmmakers were aware of this and during a hearing their counsel admitted that any guest could have downloaded the film."

        So indeed the judges ruling is reasonable...

        It's almost as if that was a relevant fact that should have been included in the summary of the article.

        • by PCM2 ( 4486 )

          Ha! I love cases like that. A friend of mine had to go to court once because he was working the front door at a crowded bar and a police officer issued him a ticket (in his name) because the bar was too noisy. In court, my friend defended himself:

          Friend: During the incident, do you remember me saying that I was just there to check IDs, that I had no control over the volume of the music, and that you would need to enter the bar and speak to someone else who could address it?
          Cop: Yes, I remember that.
          City Att

        • It's almost as if that was a relevant fact that should have been included in the summary of the article.

          Well - that's where Slashdot has gone downhill.

          Same with the article about the gear shifter. What the summary should've mentioned is:

          Though shift patterns â" things like P-R-N-D â" are standardized, the designs of shifters themselves are not. FCA's shifter was unusual in that it resembles a classic floor-mounted gear selector that can be physically moved between different transmission modes, but FCA's lever always returns to the center position, making it impossible to tell by feel alone which gear you're in.

          It always returns to the center position. Why wasn't this mentioned in the summary?

          Same as with this article's summary: why did it not mention that the filmmakers admitted that anybody in that foster care home could've downloaded stuff. And therefor this ruling makes sense.

          Slashdot editors: do it right or don't do it all.

    • You are not correct on two fronts. IP spoofing is a common tactic for hiding one's identity on the Internet. If an IP showing in logs was enough to prove guilt, how about we give your IP to a Botnet and let them DOS something, like the Pentagon, masquerading with that IP. Would you be okay with the IP in logs being held as the gospel truth when you are facing multiple felonies and a long prison sentence?

      The second front you are incorrect on, is that in Western justice systems one is assumed innocent. N

      • You are not correct on two fronts. IP spoofing is a common tactic for hiding one's identity on the Internet. If an IP showing in logs was enough to prove guilt, how about we give your IP to a Botnet and let them DOS something, like the Pentagon, masquerading with that IP.

        Unless you're also hacking some routing tables, IP spoofing doesn't work for downloading stuff over BitTorrent. It would work for something like a DDoS, where you don't actually care about getting any data back, but not for downloading stuff.

        • by sjames ( 1099 )

          Depending on the ISP setup and/or the home network setup, that may not be as hard as you think. Add in an open (ish) WiFi and it becomes entirely likely the downloader was a neighbor or someone borrowing WiFi from the street corner or parking lot.

      • by Fusen ( 841730 )

        I'm not sure why you are saying I'm wrong, I was questioning the summary. It seems to be the summary that was wrong.

        • by s.petry ( 762400 )
          I didn't say you were wrong, I said you were not providing a complete picture. Read my post again without being defensive.
          • But you seem to have completely misread my question. I was making a point out of the summary stating it only had to be 'plausible'
            I know full well about how an IP isn't concrete proof

            • by s.petry ( 762400 )

              Apology for mixing up posts. I did state you were wrong, and I expressed exactly how you were wrong. If you wish to counter my claims and demonstrate that IP spoofing does not work, and that common law principles of presumed innocent until proven guilty are wrong please do so with facts.

              My position is based in facts I know, and can be swayed with additional facts.

              When you present a question and provide your own answer, the question becomes rhetorical in nature and is no longer a valid question.

      • For criminal proceedings, the accused is legally innocent until proved guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. For civil proceedings, the defendant can lose due to a preponderance of evidence, which is pretty much on a "more likely than not" basis.

  • SubjectisSubject (Score:5, Insightful)

    by p0p0 ( 1841106 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2016 @09:18AM (#52405231)

    In response to community backlash, Oculus has decided to change its DRM policy (again) to allow HTC Vive games to play on the Oculus Rift virtual-reality system.

    Someone is bad at multitasking. One article at a time mates.

    • Nono, This is the Wookie defense in action. You are in court for piracy, have your lawyer bring up the fact that Oculus has taken away their DRM. As this makes absolutely NO sense, they must acquit the defendant!

      • I still can't figure out what everyone's so upset about. In response to community backlash, Oculus has decided to change its DRM policy (again) to allow HTC Vive games to play on the Oculus Rift virtual-reality system.
  • by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve ( 949321 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2016 @09:20AM (#52405245)
    The link above states some very good reasons why the judge acted this way and there are some unique circumstances in the case that prompted her decision. The defendant runs an adult care center where the IP address is associated and the plaintiffs knew this. The judge ruled that there are a variety of people who could have infringed the copyright other than the defendant (ie. family members, staff, adult residents at the center) and despite fully knowing this, the plaintiffs chose to insist that the defendant was the only possible person who could have downloaded the movie and they used the IP address as "proof". The judge basically said it's not proof of anything and they're acting in bad faith by insisting that it is proof so she issued her ruling. It's possible that better behavior by the attorneys could have led to a filing that she would have accepted so we shouldn't conclude from this that this necessarily means going forward that these types of lawsuits won't be effective any more.
    • by Fusen ( 841730 )

      Ah, that makes sense then.

      Although it does mean that this sentence in the summary is simply wrong - "To prove direct infringement copyright holders merely have to make it "plausible" that a defendant, Thomas Gonzales in this case, is indeed the copyright infringer."

      If it was true, it doesn't matter how many other peoples shared the internet connection.

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2016 @09:51AM (#52405441)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • In response to community backlash, Oculus has decided to change its DRM policy (again) to allow HTC Vive games to play on the Oculus Rift virtual-reality system.

    --BeauHD.

    -1. Offtopic.

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