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Judge Deals Blow to RIAA 229

jcgam69 writes "A federal judge in New Mexico has put the brakes on the RIAA's lawsuit train, at least in the US District Court for New Mexico. The case in question is part of the RIAA's campaign against file-sharing on college campuses and names "Does 1-16," who allegedly engaged in copyright infringement using the University of New Mexico's network. In a ruling issued last month but disclosed today by file-sharing attorney Ray Beckerman, Judge Lorenzo F. Garcia denied the RIAA's motion to engage in discovery. This means that the RIAA will not be able to easily get subpoenas to obtain identifying information from the University."
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Judge Deals Blow to RIAA

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  • by TheRealMindChild ( 743925 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @08:28PM (#19588855) Homepage Journal
    Yeah well, California legalized pot and we saw how that caught on...
    • Re:Yeah well... (Score:5, Informative)

      by xdotx ( 966421 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @09:49PM (#19589505) Homepage

      California legalized pot


      No, they did not.
      California decriminalized [norml.org] pot, it it still illegal. Cannabis is still a Federal schedule I controlled substance [usdoj.gov].


      " Typically, decriminalization means no prison time or criminal record for first-time possession of a small amount for personal consumption. The conduct is treated like a minor traffic violation." - www.norml.org

    • by ThatsNotFunny ( 775189 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @12:15AM (#19590383)
      Well, according to the headline, this Judge is not smoking Pot. He's Dealing Blow.
  • by hedwards ( 940851 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @08:34PM (#19588901)
    Where the RIAA goes from here. They have managed over the last couple of years to really put the screws to people by skirting various legal and technical constraints. If this were to hold up they would have to engage in litigation more the way that normal organizations do it.

    I imagine that they'll probably appeal until they get their way, but that won't be cheap for anybody. The best thing that the RIAA could do for themselves is actually follow the procedural rules, as in the long term a witch hunt only lasts as long as there are angry villagers to burn the resulting witch.
    • by QuantumG ( 50515 ) <qg@biodome.org> on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @08:41PM (#19588973) Homepage Journal
      The RIAA will just pay the ISPs for this information instead of demanding it with legally.

      Then, maybe in another 5 years or so, someone will sue their ISP for selling the information and the ISP will claim they own it, just look at the Terms Of Service and then the person suing will claim they signed up before those terms came into effect, and then the ISP will point out the part in the terms of service that have always been there that says they may update the terms whenever they feel like it.

      Of course, the RIAA will recover this as just another cost in the lawsuit.

    • by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @08:47PM (#19589035) Journal
      ... in the long term a witch hunt only lasts as long as there are angry villagers to burn the resulting witch.

      Actually, witch hunts (at least the "Spanish Inquisition" kind) worked by targeting the deep-pocketed serfs and, once they were convicted, splitting their assets between the church's witch hunters and the local governmental nobles. (That's why they didn't get going very well in England - where the swag would all go to the King.)

      Similarly the RIAA witchhunt will continue until either the RIAA can't profit from it or the courts (the "governmental nobles") stop allowing it.

      (Remember, too, that the RIAA can profit from it by dunning its members, even if it's not making money off the accused. The members may go along with that, thinking that the witch hunt is profiting THEM some other way - such as by diverting some fraction of music users from "pirated-content" downloaders to purchasers.)
      • by Sentri ( 910293 ) *
        A serf is an indentured labourer who works on the land of the lord (not lord god, lord farthingsworth etc), I cant remember the term but you probably meant freeholder or something like that
        • by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @10:03PM (#19589595) Journal
          A serf is an indentured labourer who works on the land of the lord (not lord god, lord farthingsworth etc), I cant remember the term but you probably meant freeholder or something like that

          Actually they went after both.

          Serfs often had other assets: houses, tools, money, jewelry. Also, serfs weren't just interchangeable workers, ala migrant farmhands. Serfdom was a two-way obligation. Serfs typically (depending on country's rules, of course) had an inherited right to farm a PARTICULAR chunk of land for a cut of the profits.

          If the serf (or his ancestors) had put in a lot of work on the land (like by putting in deep wells, constructing good buildings, treating the soil right, etc.) he would improve its value, both to the lord and to himself. The serf could become very well-to-do if his land produced lots of crops, the plants were hardier and resisted plant diseases, his wells didn't run dry while everybody else's did, his animals survived bad weather, etc.

          Of course when there was a bad year and everybody else's wells ran dry or crops failed and mistreated, starved, and overcrowded animals got sick, while Mr Hardworking Serf's crops, livestock, and wells did just hunky-dory, it could easily be used to start rumors of witchcraft.

          Once the pesky serf was eliminated, not only were his liquid assets divied up, but the Lord was free of his obligation to let the serf continue farming this particularly good hunk of land. The lord could then add it to his personal estate, farm it with his household staff and get ALL the profits, make a new serfdom arrangement on better-for-the-lord terms with another family, etc.
          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            "etc." includes "sell it to a freeholder and add a nice hunk of change to his treasury (or pay off a bunch of his own debt)."
          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by Weedlekin ( 836313 )
            "Serfs often had other assets: houses, tools, money, jewelry."

            They didn't have houses because they weren't allowed to own land, or leave the plot they were tied to without permission.

            "Serfs typically (depending on country's rules, of course) had an inherited right to farm a PARTICULAR chunk of land for a cut of the profits."

            They had no rights, because feudal courts refused to hear claims of villeins (the class most serfs belonged to) against their lords, so a lord could simply expel a villein and his entire
    • I imagine that they'll probably appeal until they get their way....
      They can't appeal; it's not an appealable order.
    • by Doctor_Jest ( 688315 ) * on Thursday June 21, 2007 @12:56AM (#19590607)
      I'm voting for straight to hell.

      This is nothing more than racketeering on their part. Shakedowns for money from people who can ill-afford to defend themselves from the illegal manner in which the RIAA tries to get information, much less from the baseless charges that stem from IP addresses and somehow having a share on the internet that has copyrighted material unprotected (yes, there are exceptions, but the "big wide net" technique should be, and thankfully has, been curtailed.) They don't WANT you to go to court... they want to get rulings regarding you without you even knowing, which smells EXACTLY like shady tactics. It's about time a judge told them to FOAD. They aren't law enforcement @ the RIAA. If they've got proof... bring it... let the person you're accusing get his/her day in court and go from there. (funny that is how our legal system is supposed to work...) If not, go away and please, for the love of pete....shut up. Stop clogging the already burdened legal system with yet more ill-advised and often unsubstantiated claims of infringement. It's not stopping, deterring, or otherwise curtailing the actual IP infringement in countries around the world (China, Russia, etc.) and it's not going to. We've got too many people suing over tainted peanut butter to clog the bloody system with this nonsense.

      If they suspect someone of wholesale infringement... gather the information through law-enforcement as any other entity would and stop trying to short-circuit the system and get payouts from people like you're their bookie. I mean that big blue stupid disclaimer at the front of EVERY STINKING MOVIE they MAKE tells us the FBI investigates this sort of crap... :)

      I have lost all faith that this will ever get better... and it seems that the *AA's are intent on destroying themselves rather than acknowledge some infringement exists, but that the vast majority are not guilty... and that we cannot simultaneously violate our own labor laws buying goods from China on the one hand while at the same time scolding them about IP protection. It's Ri-goddanged-diculous.. (sanitized for your protection.) We can't have it both ways... we can't stop it with a technological solution (it's a moral problem... Just like his Steveness said...) and we sure can't have inflated loss claims and dire threats of a non-essential industry going under due to "theft of IP." (sorry, they don't make pacemakers, nuclear weapons, or medicines.. so why are they trying to align themselves on that level?)

      It's enough to make you puke. ;) So, I stay away from major labels. If that brands me as a "pirate"... well, I've got one thing to say to that:

      "ARRRRRRR!" (you knew it was coming... it's funny... laugh. heh)

  • Instead of lawsuits (Score:3, Interesting)

    by freedom_india ( 780002 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @08:34PM (#19588907) Homepage Journal
    Instead of paying RIAA money by the shovel, the labels should wake up and realize the utter futility of RIAA and stop paying their lawyers.
    Instead the labels can put more effort into a more generous licensing model, pay artists slightly more, and release tracks as MP3 in iTunes.
    They could also try to identify real talent (Nor Ashlee) and promote them free of cost until the artist wants to sign an agreement.

    The labels should wake up to the reality that paying lawyers shitload of money does not mean they win every lawsuit.

    Spend on the money on identifying new lines of operations, and promoting music (schools concerts, etc) and STOP insisting on getting paid each time i sing a tune in the bathroom.

    Labels: The more your RIAA goons try to restrict us, the more customers you are losing to emusic.
       
    • by geekoid ( 135745 )
      "real talent (Nor Ashlee) ..."
      Contrary to what you or I would believe, a lot of people like that music.
      There has always been trash music that a generation like, and then pretty much forgets about.
      OTOH, all the songs that play on an 80's station are songs I despised when they were released, and still do. Most people seemed to have liked them. This is true about the 70s and the 60's.

      Yes, it's mind boggling, but true.
      ANother example : Disco Duck. hugely popular, even had it's own dance. Complete crap that make
    • by tkrotchko ( 124118 ) * on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @10:48PM (#19589849) Homepage
      The mistake you're making is imagining the RIAA is some sort of independent body that record labels pay, and the RIAA is busy on their behalf doing stuff that is just done with so much as a phone call.

      In fact, there is no difference between the RIAA and the record labels. They are the same. The RIAA is essentially a beard for the record labels so that you say "those bastards at the RIAA, they're suing the children". Meanwhile, the lawsuits are the creation of the record labels completely.

      To put it another way, the RIAA won't sneeze without specific instructions from the record labels.
  • by D4rk Fx ( 862399 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @08:35PM (#19588911) Homepage
    So did the Judge get busted for selling cocaine to the RIAA, or did the RIAA get busted for buying it?
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by jschroering ( 611063 )
      I'm not sure, but at least the judge isn't allowing the RIAA to weed through the defendants' computers.

      This seems like it could be a major crack in the RIAA's cases all over the country.

      Maybe this will speed up the process of the end of these lawsuits.

      (Okay, okay, I'm done.. :)
    • by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @08:59PM (#19589127) Journal
      So did the Judge get busted for selling cocaine to the RIAA, or did the RIAA get busted for buying it?

      Unlike ISPs, which have either knuckled under or put up a very weak defense of their users, the university-as-ISP decided to put some effort into defending its students' interests against the RIAA.

      For-profit ISPs have little to lose (beyond their own inconvenience) in handing over logs, and each customer represents a very small revenue stream. Bean counters might decide that failing to defend them costs the ISP little, while defending them costs more than they can ever recoup from that customer's fees.

      Universities have a lot invested in each student and receive a lot from each in the form of tutition and various grant monies, along with other rewards from their success. And they have a lot to lose in other intangibles (such as security of their papers, reputation when recruiting students, staff, and faculty, etc.) So letting students swing in the wind is not just a bad idea academic-freedom wise, it's bad financially as well. (Doubly so if the RIAA's target is a faculty member, staffer, or administrator. Letting one of those get hit, or even distracted, by an RIAA suit comes right out of the University's "intellectual capital".)
      • Unlike ISPs, which have either knuckled under or put up a very weak defense of their users,
        Let's give the Devil his due. RIAA v. Verizon [eff.org]. Sorry, no help for AT&T subscribers; they're working on ratting you out even before you've started downloading.
        • Unlike ISPs, which have either knuckled under or put up a very weak defense of their users, ... RIAA v. Verizon.

          Good point. Make that "Unlike most ISPs...".

          Rah, Verizon!
      • Universities have a lot invested in each student and receive a lot from each in the form of tutition and various grant monies, along with other rewards from their success. And they have a lot to lose in other intangibles (such as security of their papers, reputation when recruiting students, staff, and faculty, etc.) So letting students swing in the wind is not just a bad idea academic-freedom wise, it's bad financially as well.

        There's also the possibility that a university student could have easier acces
  • About time... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by RobertM1968 ( 951074 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @08:39PM (#19588945) Homepage Journal

    ... finally a judge that is requiring the RIAA to follow the law and due process.

    One more nail in the RIAA's coffin - the question is what type of backlash can others (music buyers, other "potential infringers", artists, etc) expect now that it is getting harder and harder for the RIAA to conduct "Business As Usual"?

    • .. finally a judge that is requiring the RIAA to follow the law and due process. One more nail in the RIAA's coffin -
      Yes, this was a good one.
    • ... finally a judge that is requiring the RIAA to follow the law and due process.M/blockquote>

      But isn't that the problem, that the RIAA does follow "the law" and that "the law" allows this sort of miscarriage of justice to continue? If the law didn't allow the process that the RIAA uses, they couldn't use it. The law needs to be changed...

  • Curious phrasing (Score:5, Interesting)

    by TubeSteak ( 669689 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @08:39PM (#19588947) Journal

    In a ruling issued last month but disclosed today
    What they really mean is that:
    1. nobody attended the court to hear the motion being ruled upon
    2. nobody read the court filings after the ruling
    3. nobody bothered to get a transcript of the trial to see what happened.

    In other words, the trial wasn't all that important to [news organizations].
    And why wait a month to 'disclose' the ruling?
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by dagoalieman ( 198402 )
      Or perhaps the RIAA media engine wasn't trying to get this published like they do anything remotely looking like a success for them?

      (And yes, they do have a media team. It actually may be the most successful part of this operation so far in terms of money earned (via sales from deterred infringers). If one could call any of it a success....)
    • Re:Curious phrasing (Score:5, Informative)

      by NewYorkCountryLawyer ( 912032 ) * <{ray} {at} {beckermanlegal.com}> on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @11:09PM (#19589965) Homepage Journal
      It was an ex parte motion.... i.e. no one other than the RIAA knew of its existence.

      The judge rejected it, realizing that there was no reason in the world for the motion to be ex parte rather than on notice.

      I.e., the judge was looking out for people who weren't even aware the case was going on... he was doing exactly what a judge is supposed to be doing in such a situation.

      Since the judge ordered the RIAA to confer with the University of New Mexico, that's how the order came to their attention.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Wait - judges aren't allowed to deal blow, least of all to the RIAA
  • by siddesu ( 698447 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @08:47PM (#19589029)
    This isn't a blow for RIAA in any way. This is a win for a fairer usage of legal system to punish copyright offenders.

    The issue in question is the abuse of the discovery process by the MAFIAA -- they use subpoenas to get identities without the people involved knowing about it; they then then proceed to racket the people directly by offering them a 'cheap' settlement without giving the people a chance to mount defense.

    The ruling only says that MAFIAA has to work out a process with the university to allow people to contest the subpoenas before their identities are revealed. This seems only fair, and it is not a blow, but a remedy instead.

    If someone is caught violating the law, defend themselves, lose and are found guilty -- or decide to settle out -- things still work as intended, only they get a chance to be informed and contest charges.

    Of course and as usual, the MAFIAA has the audacity to say informing people about the subpoenas is doing 'irreparable harm' to them. Yep, sure it does, since it would require them pony up some proof instead of racket.

    To which the judge notes that RIAA will not suffer 'irreparable harm' because of that, since if they can produce proof they can still sue for damages and collect.

    So, i don't see any victims in this ruling.
    • Sure it is (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Sycraft-fu ( 314770 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @03:20AM (#19591317)
      It is a blow because their whole scheme relies on being able to make this happen easily and cheaply. They need to be able to easily identify people based on very shaky evidence, and bully them in to settling. They cannot afford to have to go through a real trial in each case. Despite what they like to pretend, they are not losing millions of dollars per person, and the people they sue don't have that kind of money. Plus, if they start losing cases, that sets legal precedent and can make future cases that much harder. So for this to keep working they need things fast and easy.

      A big part of that is easy discovery. They need to be able to just hand the court a list of John Doe suits with IPs and demand that ISPs hand over subscriber info with no argument. If they have to actually go through the proper proceedings it may become quickly not worth their time, especially since they are likely going to need to get better evidence beforehand.

      These are not solid lawsuits we are talking here, hence why they've never actually won a suit (at least not that I am aware of). They've bullied plenty of people in to settling, and dropped suits that went to trial, but they've never actually argued in court and won. They'd do it, if it was a strong, legit case but it isn't.

      Hence this IS a blow to them.
  • Well, it's a start (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Daniel Dvorkin ( 106857 ) * on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @08:47PM (#19589031) Homepage Journal
    It's nice to see a judge applying some common sense to these RIAA fishing expeditions. You know what would be nicer? If the universities showed some spine. Something along the lines of: "Our students pay $x thousand per year to attend our institution. They entrust us with their future, their physical well-being, and every single piece of personal information they have. We have an obligation not to allow every scum-sucker who wants a piece of them to abuse that unique relationship." (As a public institution, UNM could also add something like, "The citizens of the great state of New Mexico do not allocate a substantial portion of their money to us so that ..." etc.) Honestly, if universities didn't knuckle under as easily as they do, most of these cases would probably never make it to court -- or if they did, it would be the RIAA vs. universities instead of individual students, which would at least be something closer to a fair fight.
    • by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @09:07PM (#19589183) Journal
      You know what would be nicer? If the universities showed some spine. ... "They entrust us with their future, their physical well-being, and ... personal information ... We have an obligation not to allow every scum-sucker who wants a piece of them to abuse that unique relationship."

      AIUI that's exactly what the University did, which is what got this decision from the court.

      If the ISPs had shown similar spine the RIAA would have hit this wall long ago.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      It's nice to see a judge applying some common sense to these RIAA fishing expeditions. You know what would be nicer? If the universities showed some spine. Something along the lines of: "Our students pay $x thousand per year to attend our institution. They entrust us with their future, their physical well-being, and every single piece of personal information they have. We have an obligation not to allow every scum-sucker who wants a piece of them to abuse that unique relationship." (As a public institution, UNM could also add something like, "The citizens of the great state of New Mexico do not allocate a substantial portion of their money to us so that ..." etc.) Honestly, if universities didn't knuckle under as easily as they do, most of these cases would probably never make it to court -- or if they did, it would be the RIAA vs. universities instead of individual students, which would at least be something closer to a fair fight.

      Daniel, you are absolutely right that the universities need to show some spine.

      But I have a hunch that the University of New Mexico is doing just that.

      • Sorry, I guess you'd be in a better position than I am to know the particulars of the case. ;) I made a snap assumption that UMN had given in to the RIAA demands and that it was individual students fighting this battle, as was the case at OSU and Boston. If that's not the case ... well, good for UMN!
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Whiteox ( 919863 )
      That's why traditions are so important.
      Universities were the 'bastions' of knowledge. Check out the old gates at Oxford Uni (UK) and you will find that it shows axe and sword damage as authorities and other groups wanted to enter its domain without invitation.
      I know that in the early years of Australian universities, police had to be invited in and generally had no access otherwise!
      Although I can't speak on US universities, you will find that in other countries, universities are(were) a protected institutio
  • 6th Amendment (Score:3, Interesting)

    by moderatorrater ( 1095745 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @08:48PM (#19589043)
    The article mentions a New York judge that ruled the opposite way in a similar case. Pardon my ignorance, but can anyone explain exactly how it's deemed even mildly legal for the RIAA to file suits against individuals and have motions against them when they're not allowed to face their accuser due to secrecy? This seems like an open and shut case to me.
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by teebob21 ( 947095 )
      The 6th Amendment:

      In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defense.

      The RIAA is filing in civil courts on their own behalf, for financial satisfaction in the matter of copyright infringement. It is constitutional for the defendants to never know the true identity of the accuser in a civil matter. For example, my alma mater high school district was sued on behalf of a current student by the ALCU after the district did not stop a parent from reciting the Lord's Prayer at graduation. Neither the district nor student body knew who the plaintiff was.

      IANAL,

      • by ari_j ( 90255 )
        You're on the right track, but remember that this isn't a case of an anonymous plaintiff, but rather of unknown defendants. Part of what the RIAA is trying to find out through discovery seems to be the identity of the people they are suing.
        • The MAFIAA tactic is to threaten to sue, extortion being the common term for this. What they ought to do is get their proof in the form of connection logs, etc, either sue a John Doe and win and then find out the identity, or show some sort of probable cause and let the university / ISP privately contact the John Doe, who could then hire a lawyer to fight, anonymously, disclosure of the logs.
          • Whatever their tactic may be in general, this order was issued as part of an actual lawsuit, Capitol Records, Inc., et al. v. Does 1-16, Civil No. 07-485 WJ/LFG (D. N.M.). The order [ilrweb.com] is available online, for instance. Note the language "Plaintiffs, companies who own copyrights in various sound recordings, bring an action against unnamed Defendants, Does 1-16, for copyright infringement."
      • I suppose we could argue as to whether or not the 7th Amendment implies the right to a trial with those same restrictions.

        For example, my alma mater high school district was sued on behalf of a current student by the ALCU after the district did not stop a parent from reciting the Lord's Prayer at graduation. Neither the district nor student body knew who the plaintiff was.
        Wouldn't it have been the ACLU?
    • Re:6th Amendment (Score:5, Interesting)

      by NewYorkCountryLawyer ( 912032 ) * <{ray} {at} {beckermanlegal.com}> on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @11:14PM (#19589995) Homepage Journal

      The article mentions a New York judge that ruled the opposite way in a similar case. Pardon my ignorance, but can anyone explain exactly how it's deemed even mildly legal for the RIAA to file suits against individuals and have motions against them when they're not allowed to face their accuser due to secrecy? This seems like an open and shut case to me.
      I agree. I can't for the life of me imagine why any judge in the United States ever signed an ex parte RIAA discovery order. It's completely contrary to well settled legal principles for them to have done so.
  • by mrsam ( 12205 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @09:10PM (#19589211) Homepage
    ... file-sharing attorney...

    Yo, Ray! Stop sharing those files, you rascal!
  • Isn't it usually, "Judge blows RIAA"?
  • by Grouchicarpo ( 523517 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @09:33PM (#19589373)
    College Student: Dad, I was, like, downloading tunes and stuff, and like, the University lawyer guys said that the CD guys were gonna bill me for, like, thousands of dollars.

    Judge Garcia: WHAT?!? We'll see about that...

    • The parent post is funny, but in a way it confirms what we all know really happens, kids do download music in violation of copyright laws.
      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by QuantumG ( 50515 )
        Yeah, I know a lot of kids that do it too. Of course, they're all over the age of 25.

    • Re:The Real Story (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @03:17AM (#19591295)
      It's generally funny what you write, but in its core it's just simply true: People do download music without paying for it (deemed illegal currently), even people who're normally very law abiding, who wouldn't even steal an apple from the store or wouldn't even think about speeding on the freeway at 3am with nobody in sight.

      The reason is that people understand laws concerning stealing apples and speeding. They make sense. When I steal an apple, I take something away from the store. When I'm speeding, I might not be able to stop my car in time to avoid the death of a person. Laws like this make sense and they are generally supported by the people. More or less, when you look at speeding and how many people don't care, but still, those laws are being upheld by the majority simply because they can understand and support those laws.

      Copyright laws are very hard to understand by most people. And even harder to uphold once you understand them. It's easy to follow the "I wouldn't have bought it anyway and I'm not depriving anyone of it, because it's still there" logic. Abstract ideas like the devaluation of goods by eliminating an artificial shortage are hard to explain. And make no sense (I mean, try to explain why it's good for an economy or an individual when there's a shortage, now try to explain why it's supposedly good when you create that shortage artificially).

      And laws that don't have at least the support of a sizable portion of the population have no chance to be upheld by the majority. Especially if said majority is used to the situation before the creation of the law and sees no benefit in its creation. For reference, see prohibition.
      • Re:The Real Story (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Gazzonyx ( 982402 ) <scott.lovenberg@gm a i l.com> on Thursday June 21, 2007 @06:32AM (#19592179)

        Copyright laws are very hard to understand by most people. And even harder to uphold once you understand them. It's easy to follow the "I wouldn't have bought it anyway and I'm not depriving anyone of it, because it's still there" logic. Abstract ideas like the devaluation of goods by eliminating an artificial shortage are hard to explain. And make no sense (I mean, try to explain why it's good for an economy or an individual when there's a shortage, now try to explain why it's supposedly good when you create that shortage artificially).
        You post was very well thought out and worded, I salute you! Now, that aside, I have to say that this is exactly what FDR had to do during the depression. People were starving and he had guys going out and slaughtering pigs and leaving them to rot... Otherwise the price would never rise; I couldn't imagine having to try to explain that, let alone make the executive decision to have it done.

        I'm reminded of an illustration that I once heard (perhaps read here on slashdot - can't recall) about software. Imagine if you paid (calm down FSF dudes, it's an illustration.) for say, an eclipse plug-in. I say that merely because I'm looking at the copy of Flex Builder 2 that I got yesterday, but perhaps it's better if we think of more expensive development tools. Anyways, for arguments sake you buy some development tool for $1000, you don't need it, but you'd rather not write all your Java in vi. (I'd call you a wuss, and go on about Real Programmers writing in blood and such, but I digress...) So, this non-essential tool that you've bought set you back a paycheck and you're gloating to your geek friend Bob making sure to milk the pricetag as much as possible hoping he'll be envious and you won't feel like a fool for having paid so much. Then Bob tells you that he's been using the same tool for a month and he downloaded it for free. You feel like a fool and suddenly your uber-expensive purchase has been devalued (I think this is marginal value, or utility value in marketing speak, but I don't know) since it's not a rare item. Bob and Steve are developing using it and are telling all their friends who are also downloading copies and now this software has absolutely no value to you.

        I'm skipping a good chunk of details and the illustration doesn't hold up when comparing tools to entertainment, but I think the bottom line still carries fairly well.

        That's the best I understand it, and that's so foreign to anyone who doesn't work with software on a daily basis. My mom would go "yeah, so...". Anyways, just my $.02.

        • Re:The Real Story (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @07:20AM (#19592391)
          As someone who sends out PayPal payments to artists that have their music on their page for download and a "please donate if you enjoy it" button, I wouldn't see that as an issue. Yes, I'm aware that there are people who use the software/music I "buy" for free, legally or illegally (depending on the license).

          I don't see it so much as devaluation, I see payment as some kind of commendation. I like your software/music/movie/whatever, and there's no other way for me to really show it (aside of the cheap "wow, good stuff" letter) than throwing a few bucks your way.

          I also don't see the "bragging value" of a piece of software you bought, especially not if it's development software. I don't care if you're developing on some dated GNU C++ compiler or the ultimate enterprize team-enabled and all-plugins-included edition of the latest VCC, what I care about is what you create with it.

          By the standard that there's someone who can get something for free, you must never buy anything or pay for anything. Not for your haircut, not for your oil change, not for unclogging your sink. All that and more can be had for free. Does it devalue the service? I don't think so.

          Paying for something is to me more a sign that the payer thinks the receiver of the payment is "worthy" of it. That he "earned" it. And that decision should be in the customer's hand, not the seller's.
          • While I do agree with you on the software topic (I really do use vi and gcc... IDEs only if complexity requires them), I think that you've missed something when you said

            By the standard that there's someone who can get something for free, you must never buy anything or pay for anything. Not for your haircut, not for your oil change, not for unclogging your sink. All that and more can be had for free. Does it devalue the service? I don't think so.

            What is the most valuable resource that any of us has? Time. Everything else can be bought, stolen, leased, or borrowed. Time is finite and there's no getting it back. When someone provides a service you compensate their time. I could cut my own hair, provided that I make the initial investment in supplies, but it's going to take me a

      • opyright laws are very hard to understand by most people. And even harder to uphold once you understand them. It's easy to follow the "I wouldn't have bought it anyway and I'm not depriving anyone of it, because it's still there" logic. Abstract ideas like the devaluation of goods by eliminating an artificial shortage are hard to explain. And make no sense (I mean, try to explain why it's good for an economy or an individual when there's a shortage, now try to explain why it's supposedly good when you create that shortage artificially).

        Excellent post, but I think there's another element that needs to be added.

        I think the average person is perfectly capable of understanding the idea that artificially prohibiting copies for a few years encourages creation and distribution and increases the amount of stuff flowing into the public domain and is therefore a good law for them to honor... BUT it's not explained that way to them, and, in fact, the media industry doesn't *want* them to understand it that way. Why? Because the media industry

    • Re:The Real Story (Score:4, Insightful)

      by jimicus ( 737525 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @04:10AM (#19591551)
      You jest, but sooner or later it's inevitable that the RIAA will take a reasonably competent lawyer (or someone who's directly related to one) to court - if they haven't already done so.

      But the RIAA have this habit of dropping cases very quickly once they discover it's not going to be an easy win.
  • ...file-sharing attorney Ray Beckerman...
    Ray Beckerman shares files! It must be true, I read it on Slashdot!
  • by erroneus ( 253617 ) on Wednesday June 20, 2007 @10:02PM (#19589589) Homepage
    That's the most horrendous story of judicial misconduct I have ever read since this story! I mean a JUDGE! Dealing Blow!!! To the RIAA of all people? I mean, did they find out where he was getting it? Was it any good?

    (Yes, this is probably the worst mis-read headline ever! Muhahaha!)
  • In the US constitution, citizens have the right to face their accusers in court. If the judge had allowed the trial to proceed without the Does being identified, those actual persons accused would essentially have been on trial without their knowledge, until they learned that they in fact were one of the Does in the case.

    Finally, a story in the media where the little guy gets the protections that the constitution specifies! Thank $_deity.
  • by PMBjornerud ( 947233 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @02:47AM (#19591143)
    Are the addresses for judges freely availiable in the US? Work address should do fine, no need for personal.

    When reading this, I just kept thinking to myself: What if lots of people that are against RIAA tactics sat down and wrote a short letter each? Some positive words showing him that this is an issue that people actually care about. It's obvious that there are a lot of supporters on the net.

    BTW, how many praise-letters does a judge need before it itself would become a news item?

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