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Crime The Courts

Prenda 'Copyright Troll' Lawyer Sentenced To Five Years In Prison (torrentfreak.com) 91

John Steele, one of the attorneys behind the 'copyright troll' law firm Prenda, has been sentenced to five years in prison. The attorney was one of the masterminds behind the fraudulent scheme that extracted settlements from alleged pirates. Because of Steele's cooperative stance, his sentence is significantly lower than that of co-conspirator Paul Hansmeier. TorrentFreak reports: During a hearing this morning, U.S. District Judge Joan N. Ericksen convicted Steele to a five-year prison sentence. In addition, the disbarred attorney must pay his victims little over $1.5 million in restitution. Today's sentencing ironically comes 11 years after Steele was first admitted to the bar. The lower sentence, compared to Hansmeier, comes as no surprise. It was specifically recommended by the prosecution, which stressed that Steele didn't shy away from the ugly truth of his crimes and was very cooperative following the indictment.

According to the U.S. Department of Justice, Steele deserved a significant prison term. However, his cooperation and genuine remorse should be taken into account. Based on the sentencing guidelines Steele faced a potential prison sentence of more than 12 years, but Assistant U.S. Attorney Benjamin Langner recommended five years in prison instead. Judge Ericksen went along with this recommendation. The Judge noted that courts "are not a tool in the box for anybody's hustle," adding that the five-year sentence was "imminently fair," as the Star Tribune report. "I condemn the actions that you took in committing this crime. I congratulate you, however, on the actions you took" in responding to the charges, Judge Ericksen said.

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Prenda 'Copyright Troll' Lawyer Sentenced To Five Years In Prison

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  • Copyright by definition is a bought law to give distributors the privilege, of taking the result of the work of artists, erect an (actually imagnary) monopoly to create artificial scarcity, so they can extort people into paying them money for all eternity, without them themselves ever having to work.

    Both monopolies and artificial scarcity are ... normally ... major crimes.
    As is taking money without working for it. Which is usually called theft, robbery, racketerring, or, in its mildest form, usury.

    And all,

    • by nagora ( 177841 ) on Friday July 12, 2019 @06:43AM (#58912640)

      You're right up to a point. The problem is with transferable copyright. If an artist or writer creates something, I have no problem with them having copyright until they die. I could even live with that copyright being passed on for a limited period of, say, 16 years to help provide for children after the creator's death. I don't see any moral issues with any of that.

      What I do object to is copyright being sold off to people who had nothing to do with the creative process. The idea that vision can be transferred doesn't make a lot of sense.

      • I wold like to see all IP be made a personal right of the creator of work, as inalienable as free speech. All of our problems with IP come from treating it as real estate. If you invent something and patent it, every exploiter of that patent would have to maintain a contractual relationship with you as creator. No making to assign away your rights and then kicking you to the curb.

        • Which creator? (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          One of the current problems with copyright is that the creator of the 'world' often has derivative copyright ownership over all the underlings working on it, even though all those underlings add their own character, flair, flavor, etc to the works.

          Think about Star Wars, George Lucas' involvement in it, then Ralph Quarrie, Lucas' wife, the hundreds upon hundreds of LucasArts/Games employees, all the authors involved in the extended universe, the 3rd party game companies creating licensed works.

          Our copyright

          • Certainly there would have to be a provision for collaborative work. Shared equity in IP could be established by a sworn list of name and percentage equities filed with the IP itself. A patent might be shared equally by all six developers of FartStudio For iPhone, or it may be agreed that the lead singer of Anatomic Cucumber gets 30% of the copyright, the other three get 20% each, while the drummer’s daughter gets 10%, because she thought up the title.

          • One of the current problems with copyright is that the creator of the 'world' often has derivative copyright ownership over all the underlings working on it, even though all those underlings add their own character, flair, flavor, etc to the works.

            Those are work for hire [wikipedia.org]. They have copyright ownership because they are works created by employees as part of their job or under contracts specifying that they were work for hire. The law on this is quite clear and well established.

            Our copyright situation is even messier because people like to gloss over the collaborative effort put into almost every creative work. If it takes a community to raise a child, what does it take to raise a story or media franchise?

            It takes a company. Was that really a question?

      • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

        You're right up to a point. The problem is with transferable copyright. If an artist or writer creates something, I have no problem with them having copyright until they die. I could even live with that copyright being passed on for a limited period of, say, 16 years to help provide for children after the creator's death. I don't see any moral issues with any of that.

        What I do object to is copyright being sold off to people who had nothing to do with the creative process. The idea that vision can be transferred doesn't make a lot of sense.

        I'm fine with transferable copyright. Owning a copyright turns that copyright into an asset, and people should have a right to sell/transfer/barter away that asset if they so choose. However, in doing so, that copyright should have an automatic expiration date of, say, 25 years. This limit should be automatically imposed on all transferred copyrights, including inheritance to children/spouses. That limit should also go off of the initial transfer only, as in additional transfers past the original transf

        • disclosure: one of my hobbies is creating indicators. The silly idea of knowing the future is amazing, and I laugh at myself all the time trying.

          Asset's ( not depending on the type ), need to be transferable to establish a market price.
          the law set(s) a limit on the life of the asset already, and reducing the asset's life will just
          make it harder for the market to determine value, therefor artist should ( in theory ) paid
          less. Time has a value.

          I would like to use an example :

          Gold ( the metal ) and Current pop

          • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

            disclosure: one of my hobbies is creating indicators. The silly idea of knowing the future is amazing, and I laugh at myself all the time trying.....I've been able to use Billboard 200 for albums to determine how long an album will be making
            money

            Using the Billboard 200 I've been able to figure out which concerts seem to be the best to go to IE: stable sales
            for 9 weeks and consistent rise for over 6 months, indicates that it should be a fun concert for me. I don't go
            to many so I want to make sure I'm watching something that is really good. ( KID ROCK concerts are amazing )

            No offense, but you have some strange hobbies. That being said, I would totally subscribe to your newsletter.

            • There is only offense when malice is being attached to it. With that said, Nope I don't have a newsletter,
              but if you have something that seem to cycle it might be interesting. I'm always willing to look and
              gather data. Be surprised on what you can find out

              for example : I created an indicator when I was young back in the early 80's, I would measure
              how many columns of help wanted ads were in the NY-Times every sunday paper employment
              section. This has an interesting correlation ( correlation and causation ) of

        • by lgw ( 121541 )

          I'm fine with transferable copyright. Owning a copyright turns that copyright into an asset, and people should have a right to sell/transfer/barter away that asset if they so choose. However, in doing so, that copyright should have an automatic expiration date of, say, 25 years. This limit should be automatically imposed on all transferred copyrights

          Have my virtual insightful mod. That's a very smart way to solve the problems, while retaining appropriate rights for, authors of works that are still commercially viable after decades.

          I'd add that copyright, if transferred, should revert to the author after 25 years if still living (and if authorship is clear - not generally the case with movies).

        • Owning a copyright turns that copyright into an asset, and people should have a right to sell/transfer/barter away that asset if they so choose.

          Copyright assets should be taxed like other forms of property, and for the same reasons. If you're not making good use of the copyright, enough to pay the tax assessment at least, then the work should revert to the public domain after two years of nonpayment. Once public domain, the copyright is lost forever. No more bullshit about magically restoring copyright because Disney demands it.

          • Not sure where you live, but the vast majority of assets (in the USA, and I think it most countries?) aren't taxed at all. If I buy an expensive piece of artwork - or even a fancy car but don't care to drive it, just display it as though it was artwork - I needn't ever pay an additional cent in taxes beyond any that occurred as part of the transaction.

            Real estate ("property") is the major exception, and I'm not sure what "same reasons" you're talking about. Copyrights (and other IP) neither have inherent sc

            • Copyrights (and other IP) neither have inherent scarcity the way real estate does

              There exist only a finite number of melodic hooks of a given length in the Western musical scale. If notes can be (to an approximation) one of the seven scale degrees and either short or long, that's 14 possibilities. To calculate the number of distinct melodic hooks of a given length, you take the number of distinct notes and raise it to the power of the length minus 1. Let's say 8 notes are enough to establish "substantial similarity," per Bright Tunes Music v. Harrisongs Music. This means you have only 1

        • I'm personally in favor of going back to the original 14 years plus a one-time renewal of 14 years, but a fixed 25 year span would be good also. Just as long as copyright doesn't last essentially indefinitely. I published a book in 2016. Copyright currently lasts until 70 years after the death of the creator. If I died in 45 years (at age 88) and willed the copyright to my youngest son (born in 2007), the copyright would expire in the year 2134 when my youngest son was 127.

          If my son had a child when he was

      • What I do object to is copyright being sold off to people who had nothing to do with the creative process. The idea that vision can be transferred doesn't make a lot of sense.

        Nope. What doesn't make sense is not being able to use that "vision" as an asset when an artist doesn't want to turn himself into a marketing droid.

        (or isn't capable of doing so, or needs a bunch of expensive materials to realize the vision in the first place, or any number of other things...)

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by Anonymous Coward

          If the copyright ended with the death of a creator, many creators would suddenly have tragic "accidents" to get rid of this so restrictive copyright...

        • by lgw ( 121541 )

          I could NOT live with a transferable copyright of even 16 seconds. (well I can as I am actually alive). Copyright is intended to protect the creator. Once he is dead, he does not need any protection anymore.

          Do you not have children, or do you just not like them?

      • Im not THAT opposed to selling off copyrights. As a musician thats long held onto the fantasy of making a career thats better than "Get $50 and 2 free beers at a bar gig" It'd be nice to at the end of that career, sell off the right to set up the family.

        But in reality the industry is structured that if your music is bankable, you sell it odd at the start of your career for penuts then get fucked in the ring by the people you sold it too while struggling to make ends meet.

        A friend of mine had 3 #1 australi

      • Copyrights should be like trademarks. As long as someone is defending them they should be valid. Once that defense stops they slip in to public domain. That person can be a trust, a cooperation, individual or a family. At some point a copyright will not be worth defending an will slip into the public domain.

      • by Ksevio ( 865461 )

        I have no problem with them having copyright until they die. I could even live with that copyright being passed on for a limited period of, say, 16 years to help provide for children after the creator's death.

        But remember the purpose of copyright - to promote progress of arts. How does copyright lasting that long promote arts? How many people think "I really want to write a song, but I'm worried that 50 years after I die, my great grand children won't be able to cash in on it anymore"

        You say 16 years after they die, I'd say 16 years after it's written depending on the medium. If an artist wants to keep making money, they need to keep producing art - that would progress the arts.

  • by Viol8 ( 599362 ) on Friday July 12, 2019 @06:50AM (#58912660) Homepage

    ... once you've been caughtt. Someone truly remorseful would have handed themselves in beforehand.

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday July 12, 2019 @06:56AM (#58912678)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Mod up!
    • by Anonymous Coward

      The whole thing's distinctly second-rate.

      [the jugdge] convicted Steele to a five-year prison sentence => No, he SENTENCED him.

      the five-year sentence was "imminently fair" => It was EMINENTLY fair.

      the disbarred attorney must pay his victims little over $1.5 million => *A* little over $1.5 million.

      The ironing is amazing.

    • It's like rain on your wedding day!

    • by lgw ( 121541 )

      "Ironically". I do not think it means what the editors think it means.

      Why do dumb people say "that's not irony" when they try to seem smart?

      Irony 2. n. incongruity between the actual result of a sequence of events and the normal or expected result.

      He passed the bar hoping to use to law to his advantage and prosperity. Ironically, it was the law that laid him low.

      It's like rain on your wedding day.

      • Off-topic, but: "Expected" != "Desired". Anybody who has good reason to expect it won't rain on their wedding day either didn't plan the big day more than a week in advance and was prepared to postpone it until the day before, or lives in somewhere with weather patterns far more regular than anywhere Alanis Morissette ever did.

        Similarly, passing the bar isn't an expectation of never being thrown in jail (or at least, it damn well shouldn't be). By that standard, it would be ironic if I were ever jailed, as

  • by fluffernutter ( 1411889 ) on Friday July 12, 2019 @07:36AM (#58912804)
    I'd prefer if they changed copyright laws so this wouldn't be possible, rather than just sending people to jail.
  • by Beeftopia ( 1846720 ) on Friday July 12, 2019 @08:07AM (#58912908)

    FTA: "The Judge noted that courts "are not a tool in the box for anybody's hustle"" - but that's not true. Lots of people make a living via the legal system. Large swaths of the plaintiff bar are looking for that big case that's going to yield the big payout. Just sayin'. The courts most assuredly are a tool in the hustle toolbox. These clowns got hung by their balls because they crossed the wrong people.

    • by Jaime2 ( 824950 )
      What you are describing is acceptable to most judges. Those big payouts create an incentive for a skilled professional to search high and low for abuses of the law. In theory, that's a good thing. The comments in this case refer to a bad actor using the courts as a threat even when the law is not on their side. The mere threat of taking someone to court with a completely meritless case is enough to get a modest payout from someone not willing to hire a lawyer and publicly declare that they downloaded porn.
    • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

      These clowns got hung by their balls

      Now there is a ideal.

  • He was so remorseful that he retained the vast majority of the money he made from this scheme.
  • This is great, the "Feel Good" story of the day.

    I've been waiting for this prick to go to prison and I'm very happy to see it finally happen.

    I thought he'd probably get a suspended sentence or some other bullshit adjudication. It's nice to see a little justice in the world.

  • ... if Steele and Hansmeier got into the tattoo business and got sued for copyright infringement.

    Are prison gang tattoos eligible for copyrights?

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by jwhyche ( 6192 )

      An we send another one to prison to take up space on the public doll. Our prisons are already too full of non violent offenders? Take the money back and repay his victims; apply appropriate fines. Then take his ass out back, strap him to a pole, and give him 10 lashes with a raw hide whip.

      • And then post the video on pornhub for free for BDSM lovers to fap to.

  • That he didn't get in trouble until he sued AT&T. He made $3 million up until then.
  • Today's sentencing ironically comes 11 years after Steele was first admitted to the bar.

    And, how is this ironic?

  • 'The Judge noted that courts "are not a tool in the box for anybody's hustle . . ."'

    Wow, wish there were more than judges that felt that way. Would be nice to have more that are ready and willing to rule against the scum intent on doing exactly that.
  • courts "are not a tool in the box for anybody's hustle.

    Judge moonlights on comedy circuit?

    So the courts aren't willing to arbitrate in any dispute for a fee?

An Ada exception is when a routine gets in trouble and says 'Beam me up, Scotty'.

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