Cox Appeals $1 Billion Piracy Liability Verdict To 'Save the Internet' (torrentfreak.com) 51
Late 2019, Internet provider Cox Communications lost its legal battle against a group of major record labels. Now it's appealing it. From a report: Following a two-week trial, a Virginia jury held Cox liable for its pirating subscribers. The ISP failed to disconnect repeat infringers and was ordered to pay $1 billion in damages. Heavily disappointed by the decision, Cox later asked the court to set the jury verdict aside and decide the issue directly. In addition, the company argued that the "shockingly excessive" damages should be lowered. Both requests were denied by the court, which upheld the original damages award.
Despite the setbacks, Cox isn't giving up. The company believes that the district court's ruling isn't just a disaster for Internet providers. If it stands, the verdict will have dramatic consequences for the general public as well. This week the ISP submitted its opening brief at the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, hoping to reverse the lower court's judgment. The filing begins by placing the lawsuit in a historical context. "The music industry is waging war on the internet," Cox's lawyers write. First, the music companies went after thousands of file-sharers and software companies such as Napster. When those tactics didn't deliver the desired result, Internet providers became a target.
Despite the setbacks, Cox isn't giving up. The company believes that the district court's ruling isn't just a disaster for Internet providers. If it stands, the verdict will have dramatic consequences for the general public as well. This week the ISP submitted its opening brief at the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, hoping to reverse the lower court's judgment. The filing begins by placing the lawsuit in a historical context. "The music industry is waging war on the internet," Cox's lawyers write. First, the music companies went after thousands of file-sharers and software companies such as Napster. When those tactics didn't deliver the desired result, Internet providers became a target.
We need to support the ISPs (Score:5, Insightful)
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I live where this is already true. Comment sections were removed everywhere. Basically no "peer review", news sites can freely spread propaganda.
Re:We need to support the ISPs (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:We need to support the ISPs (Score:4, Insightful)
It is a horrible move. The idea of a completely privately run police force enforcing rules outside of the the legal frameworks of our courts has been a wet dream for the MAFIAA for decades.
To your example though, it's more akin to suing Ford for not tracking the user's use of the truck and failing to stop the truck when it was used for bootleg DVDs. They aren't really going after the provision of service, but rather the fact that the company is unwilling to play private police (actually more like private police, judge, and jury) on the record industry's behalf.
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I think of it as cutting off someone’s phone line because they played music over the phone.
Re:We need to support the ISPs (Score:5, Interesting)
As for Cox, in this case, that is a tough one. The DMCA rules are quite vague, but also clear in certain aspects. The law requires the company to have a policy in place to terminate repeat offenders. It just doesn't really say much about what that policy should be. Cox's problem is that they had a policy in place, and were actively circumventing it. I don't agree with the law, but Cox very much went against it.
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Re:We need to support the ISPs (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: We need to support the ISPs (Score:2)
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The thing is that like Youtube, the internet will be swarmed by 3rd parties who have only the most tenuous claims to keep knocking people offline. Hope you didn't tick off any teenagers lately!
Re:We need to support the ISPs (Score:5, Interesting)
If you are an ISP, you can't afford to allow any content owned by Sony Music, Universal Music Group, Warner Music Group and EMI to travel across your networks. Block it all. Just to be sure.
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If you are an ISP, you can't afford to allow any content owned by Sony Music, Universal Music Group, Warner Music Group and EMI to travel across your networks. Block it all. Just to be sure.
Unfortunately if you're an ISP you're also a monopoly and this act of blocking will violate anti-trust laws. I like your spirit but it's a sure fire way to get your ISP's business killed. Cox already has its hands full appealing one lawsuit from a well funded advisory without having to worry about another.
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Unfortunately if you're an ISP you're also a monopoly
Not where I like. There's Comcast, Ziply (ex-Frontier) fiber and several cellular data providers. And some of them do block content, including a local newspaper.
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Not where I like. There's Comcast, Ziply (ex-Frontier) fiber and several cellular data providers. And some of them do block content, including a local newspaper.
You having some choice doesn't make an ISP any less of a monopoly. They are a textbook definition of one, and as such vindictive blocking will be seen as an antitrust violation. Most likely the local newspaper can't give enough of a shit to take them to court.
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I'm rooting for logic, common sense, and law (Score:4, Insightful)
Personally I'm rooting for logic, common sense, and following the law.
It seems like so often people want a court case decided based on who the litigants are, rather than what's right or wrong in the case.
I Concur? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I Concur? (Score:4, Funny)
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Why not have someone's power cut off if they are pirating? That will stop them.
Mod this up...this is exactly the logic
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In my experience, Cox is the least worst of the bunch. And that's a pretty low bar. Municipal networks are starting to catch on, so maybe we have a chance for competition and competent laws.
stop buying (Score:4, Insightful)
I stopped buying recorded music over a decade ago. I only buy movies for the kids. With collective action consumers can change things for the better.
The statutory damages that these companies can get are ridiculous and excessive.
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Must be a boring life. Do you also not Stream music (money going to the record industry)? Do you not have Amazon prime (money going to the record industry even without a premium music subscription)? Do you not listen to the radio (money going to the record industry)?
The idea that users can vote with their wallets in this case only really works if you live in an off the grid bomb shelter in Utah and refuse to turn on the radio.
The problem here is that these companies insert themselves into the financial stre
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You always seem to come at people with ad-hominem attacks, its really not necessary.
All you have to do here is look at where the RIAA revenue comes from, and they tell you here:
https://www.riaa.com/u-s-sales... [riaa.com]
The RIAA sees the most revenue from 'Paid Subscriptions' - $7B in 2020 or 57% of all revenue. I don't have any of those paid subscriptions. And I don't use most of RIAA's other revenue streams either (LPs, CDs, Album Downloads, Song Downloads, etc).
Any ad supported streaming I might do contributes to
Good luck, Cox (Score:5, Insightful)
Even the worst ISP is worth supporting against the Copyright Robber Barons.
Free the ISP! (Score:1)
Demand common carrier!
As much as I dislike those coxuckers (Score:2)
So Honda is liable if I transport pirated DVDs? (Score:2)
This makes no sense whatsoever. This is the equivalent of Honda being held liable because someone transported a car load of pirated DVDs to a friend's house.
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Its like them suing Honda because they couldn't read your license plate accurately enough.
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Just as the format of IP addresses defined. The music industry tried to sue individuals but cannot verifying exactly who was using a given IP address. So they went upstream to force the ISPs to deal with it.
Re:So Honda is liable if I transport pirated DVDs? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'll donate a few bucks (Score:2)
To Cox's legal fund, they need to win
could be a good thing. (Score:1)
forcing everyone to go to mesh networking so that isps cant disconnect them if they wanted will improve free speech for everyone.
Re: could be a good thing. (Score:1)
wifi 6 mesh hardware has been out for a few years now and is faster than most wired/cable offerings.
Electricity providers (Score:5, Funny)
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If they do that I'm going to record my music on hand cranked cylinders using vibration and horns. Ain't no school like the old school.
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Better than a Michael Bay film.
One sided (Score:4, Interesting)
The problem is that the law is one sided.
Sure, please do have rules that will ban me or any other users after so many strikes.
But, we should also have rules to ban companies from making any further DMCA accusations after that many strikes as well. So, if Disney asks to block 10 IPs, and they turn out to be downloading Ubuntu, Disney gets no more rights to send DMCA take-downs anymore. At least as long a period as a regular user will be banned.
(Not sure which company was the perp, but Ubuntu thing definitely happened):
https://news.slashdot.org/stor... [slashdot.org]
However they will keep the laws one sided. It is what they paid the senators for after all.
Policing (Score:1)
Best solution - Fix the IP Laws (Score:2)
Is music piracy even a problem anymore? (Score:2)
Fake "damages" (Score:1)
As always, this implies that peope would have licensed those works otherwise. Which is of course total bullshit. As if I's calculate anyone passing my hot dog stand without buing a hot dog as a "theft" of a hot dog.
And it's not even real people. But pure speculation. "Estimated" numbers.
For works they did not even make, but commissioned.
And the original creators won't even get anything from it.
So it's just blatant organized crime. That's all.
Re: Fake "damages" (Score:1)
Weird (Score:3)
It feels weird to be on the side of an ISP in a legal matter.