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Aerothas
07-31-2009, 06:32 PM
Second piracy case to go thru the US courts.

First: A mother of two charged $1.92 million for 24 songs
Now: A student charged $700k for 30 songs

Man, I'm fucked if they find me.


US file-sharer gets $700,000 fine
A US student has been ordered to pay $675,000 (£404,000) to four record labels for breaking copyright laws after sharing music online.

The Boston University student, Joel Tenenbaum, had admitted in court that he had downloaded and distributed 30 songs at issue in the case.

It is the second such case to go to trial in the US.

In the first case, a woman in Minneapolis was ordered to pay $1.92m for sharing 24 songs.

On Friday, the jury ordered Mr Tenebaum to pay $22,500 for each infringement. The maximum that he could have been fined was $4.5m.

Following the ruling, he said he was glad the fine had not been in the millions.

"That to me sends a message of 'We considered your side with some legitimacy'," he said, according to the Associated Press news agency.

But his lawyer said the verdict was not fair and that he planned to appeal.

'Loved technology'

Mr Tenenbaum used a computer at his parents' home and at his college to download and distribute digital files.

Prosecutors working on behalf of the record labels focused on 30 shared songs.

Under US law, the recording companies are entitled to $750 to $30,000 per infringement.

“ It was like this giant library in front of you ”
Joel Tenenbaum
However, the jury can raise the amount to $150,000 per track if it finds the infringements were wilful - a matter that they will debate now that the judge has ruled Mr Tenenbaum violated copyright laws.

In the Minnesota case, the jury awarded $80,000 per song.

On the stand, Mr Tenenbaum admitted that he had downloaded more than 800 songs since 1999 and that he had lied in pre-trial proceedings when he suggested that other family members of friends may have been responsible for downloading songs to his computer.

"I used the computer. I uploaded, I downloaded music," he told the court under questioning from his own lawyer, Charles Nesson.

He said he had used Napster and then Kazaa to download the files.

"It was like this giant library in front of you," he said.

In opening remarks on Tuesday, Mr Tenenbaum's lawyer said he "was a kid who did what kids do and loved technology and loved music".

Recording companies had been slow to adapt to the internet, he added.

But prosecutors argued that file-sharers take a significant toll on the revenues for artists and others involved in music

The recording industry has recently changed its tactics in file-sharing cases, preferring to settle quickly for much smaller amounts.

However, cases such as those against Mr Tenenbaum, which were already filed, are proceeding to trial.

The four recording labels involved in the case are subsidiaries of Universal Music, Warner Music and Sony.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/technology/8177285.stm

Lonskils
07-31-2009, 10:40 PM
This is so funny. "If you see the RMI before you die, you tell him that he can't protect their music"

Sabertootth
07-31-2009, 11:14 PM
Reported!!!!

Aerothas
08-01-2009, 11:04 AM
This is the second case obviously that has gone through the court system. My question is how or why the record companies picked these two people to prosecute? I know ISPs frown upon torrent downloads (my friend got a warning last summer to stop or be cut off/prosecuted). But why these two people? And why only a certain number of songs?

Andaas
08-01-2009, 01:19 PM
The people prosecuted were people that the research company the RIAA hired to investigate piracy were able to identify (based on IP addresses/ISP provided connection logs, and user names used on Kazaa and other file sharing systems years ago).

The reason only a limited number of songs are specifically charged are that the researchers only investigated maybe 100 specific shared songs (they had to download a song, verify that the song downloaded was the property of the rights owner, and then collect the information about the sharer). Sure, most of these sharers may have had 100's or 1000's of songs being shared; but the RIAA probably only had 50 or so of each genre under scrutiny, so most people are showing up with 25-40 songs as shared.

It's important to note that of all of the RIAA settlements and prosecuted cases, that none of the cases involved sharing via torrents. All of the issues with torrent sharing have been directed at the websites where users download torrents (and not the copyrighted material).

Aindayen
08-02-2009, 03:01 AM
When in doubt....deny it all~

Ain