Oregon AG Seeks to Investigate RIAA Tactics 114
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "Turning the tables on the RIAA's attempt to subpoena information from the University of Oregon, that state's Attorney General has now filed additional papers to conduct immediate discovery into the RIAA's 'data mining' techniques. These techniques include the use of unlicensed investigators, the turning over of subpoenaed information to collection agencies, and the obtaining of personal information from computers. The AG pointed out (pdf) that 'Because Plaintiffs routinely obtain ex parte discovery in their John Doe infringement suits ... their factual assertions supporting their good cause argument are never challenged by an adverse party and their investigative methods remain free of scrutiny. They often settle their cases quickly before defendants obtain legal representation and begin to conduct discovery.'"
Common Sense!? (Score:5, Insightful)
Can't wait for updates to this one.
Re:Common Sense!? (Score:4, Insightful)
One of these things is not like the other, one of these things just...doesn't belong!
Re:Common Sense!? (Score:4, Funny)
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Apparently it is getting less and less approved by the state.
Criminal? (Score:5, Interesting)
Because I'd sure love to see MediaSentry/BayTSP get shafted like MediaDefender was. With any luck, the latter will go out of business given that they lost the better part of a million dollars over the email leak and they were already operating pretty far into the red.
Also, is there any chance of this opening them up to lawsuits from those who were "investigated"? In other words, might Oregon (or other) residents be able to file a class action even if they already settled with the RIAA?
I'd love to see more lawyers set their sights on the RIAA. When you declare war on your customers (and yes, even "pirates" buy stuff, unless they're boycotting them now), you're NOT going to win the war.
The best defense is a good offense (Score:2)
Finally the offense against the RIAA is beginning to snowball. Boycotts are all very well, but this is better. No more avoiding them, waiting around to find out who the RIAA is going after next, and then springing to their defense. Been enough damage done by these rabid dogs, finally they're getting shot. Though, I'd feel better if some more mainstream states got in on the action-- Oregon has a reputation for being pretty far out sometimes. Still, it's a good start.
What's next on the offensive? A ca
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At least one of the items listed could lead to criminal prosecution. If the AG decided to file charges it would have an enormous effect. And if other AGs in other states indicate they might follow that lead it will be some mighty nervous times for the Media Sentry boys and the lot.
This sounds hilarious eh I mean fun (Score:5, Interesting)
What does this mean, if I read it correctly is this really the state department responsible for prosecuting CRIMINAL cases who has launched ON THEIR OWN an investigation of RIAA methods?
Is Oregon some red state of the US? Is the prosecutor involved to old to care about his career?
I hate to get excited over nothing but this seems like a major setback for the RIAA and their underhanded tactics. A real criminal investigation? Neat.
Re:This sounds hilarious eh I mean fun (Score:5, Funny)
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Way to go me! Posting without sleep again.
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Re:This sounds hilarious eh I mean fun (Score:4, Informative)
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Yeah, but they are also heavily armed. The state is an interesting mix of liberals and rednecks.
Actually, Portland, Eugene and Ashland are fairly left, and the rest of the state is more conservative.
It's a great place to get things like organic beef, raised by small family farms. Take the best of the hippies and the rednecks, and you get a nice place to live
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(Disclaimer: Oregon native and current resident)
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Not literally druids, I assume you mean.
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Heh, well I'm a bit late to chime in with the rest of the answers, but:
cue Night of the Living Rednecks [wikipedia.org] for the Dead Kennedys' take on that.
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I have actually lived in Oregon for the past 15 years (PDX for the past 12 and 3 before that down in Eugene for law school). I also help manage our family-owned tree farm outside Corvallis. So I am very familiar with Oregon's conflicted politics and that my prior description of Oregonians is a gross generalization. I suppose what I was truly getting at is that we tend to be such iconoclasts that trying to apply such a simplistic label
Re:This sounds hilarious eh I mean fun (Score:5, Informative)
Bah (Score:2, Insightful)
This crap is entirely too complicated.
Let's grab our pitchforks!
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Most American universities have named names. The U of O has refused to help the RIAA, and the AG is helping them out. I don't think this filing will have much effect beyond this case.
Oregon is a blue state (Steven Colbert called us "California's Canada").
Re:This sounds hilarious eh I mean fun (Score:5, Interesting)
Is anyone else really surprised, that with such a myopic attitude, that the recording industry has resorted to these sorts of tactics? It's like, come on man, businesses change...every business changes and any CEO worth his salt adjusts to those changes. Stupid assholes got caught with their pants down and now they want to change the laws of the land to take us back to 1997 when they had complete control.
The funniest thing about it to me, is at 16 year old I could see where the music industry was going. My stance on Napster was always "Create a service where I can buy songs for 99 cents a pop, get the songs I want and not an entire CD and I'll pay for the material"; iTunes came along and I have not illegally obtained a piece of music since then. Here's to Apple getting 20% more market share because I want to see this guy fail big time.
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Better yet, this quote: " Instead of figuring out a way to exploit the new medium, they alternated between ignoring it and launching lawsuits against the free file-sharing networks that cropped up to fill the void. Mor
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The problem is that I don't think there is a business model that really leaves the record companies in any form that we, and more import
Re:This sounds hilarious eh I mean fun (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.brendastardom.com/arch.asp?ArchID=719 [brendastardom.com]
They never did really listen to him.
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Well, in their defense, that's because in one second he's talking about a revolutionary new business model for music distribution, and in the next he's talking about some Nuclear-Powered Pansexual Roto-Plooker.
Zappa was brilliant, but also very weird, and they probably had a hard time distinguishing when he was being which.
Besides, they never got their prototype roto-plooker working.
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The U of O has refused to help the RIAA, and the AG is helping them out. I don't think this filing will have much effect beyond this case.
As the investigation does include such things as (from NewYorkCountyLawyers' page):
--MediaSentry appears to have been conducting an investigation without an investigator's license, in violation of ORS 703.405 and ORS 703.993(s), which is a crime
...I would think that it *may* be the basis of criminal charges against them. Now, while this is an issue specific to Ohio law, the good thing is most states have very similar laws/statutes regarding such matters... that means, if OH makes this into a criminal case against the RIAA, two things happen: (1) They can no longer use such "investigative" tactics in OH, and (2) other states with similar laws can (a) by their own
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Finally ... (Score:2, Insightful)
Finally (Score:5, Interesting)
(see comment about chickens before hatching)Although as I type this I recall the new restrictive copyright laws in Switzerland and Canada. This has tempered my optimism, but still I think things are finally changing.
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Real life is much like Dragonball Z, in that way...
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Please make your opening statements.
Rrrrrrraaaaaaaaa!!
Rrrrrrraaaaaaaarrrrrrrrggggggggg!!!
Rrrraaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhh!!
20 minutes later...
Rrrraaaaaaaarrrrrrhhhhhhh!!
Court will recess for 23 hours, 30 minutes.
About time!!!! (Score:5, Interesting)
1. Other states copy this (not to mention the feds).
2. The RIAA gets some sense and backs down.
3. The public can enjoy their music without fear of being involved in a witch hunt.
I'm likely dreaming, but one can dream can't they?
Re:About time!!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
I think it's likely that file sharing as it exists will die a death in the not too distant future. I also think that's its the reason for most of this draconian crap to start with, we are, as it were, all to blame.
Its very easy to point the finger at the RIAA and blame them. You can indeed get angry at them for their methods, but not their aim, which is to shut down illegal file sharing.
Even if, and I doubt this bit, it is harming the recording industry, who gives a crap. What I'm thinking about is the billions that could be made, boosting the economy, by providing cheap streaming media content. That's what the RIAA should have been concentrating on. I'm astonished that they had all that money, all those lawyers, and they still donkeyed it from day one.
Personally I long for the day when I can dial up the days entertainment on the net and have it delivered to me as and when I want, in the form I want, via a nice fat pipe to my house. I expect to pay for it too. I can't be alone in this thought.
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Anyway, that's what I want. And they can go ahead and track what shows I'm watching and add targeted commercials. I don't care (I just don't need to see anymore Vagisil ads, sorry I don't have any use for that product.) just give me the media I want, how and when I want it.
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Why not? Nobody is being hurt. Copyright is actually the curtailing of the public's inherent rights. Government doesn't create rights, it curtails them. I see the need for copyright, the author should be the one to benefit financially from their work as a reward for creating it or incentive to create new works. However there is no harm in one who copies the work without financial rew
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Is it?
I've been writing a novel for a few years, and I hope, if it gets published (reviewers have thus far raved, but I'm not ready yet), that I will be able to gain a reasonable return for my work. Ok, I don't care if people download it for nothing as well, I may even negotiate for a free audio version, but all the same, I want to retain the right to control my work.
You might find you feel the same if you produce a work. The choice is of c
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I entirely agree that YOU, the AUTHOR should have the right to get the fruits of your labor.
You should be protected by copyright, for a reasonable time.
However, what typically happens is that your publisher will only publish your work if you assign the copyright to them. You will get something, but it probably won't bear a direct relationship to the success of your work, simply what the publisher thinks they can make and how badly they can screw you.
Copyright (and patent) law nee
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I know of the thing about assigning them copyright, I wouldn't do it, even if it meant cutting my money.
Musicians can sell direct, Authors can't, at least not that I know of.
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Sure they can! It's called self-publishing, and depending upon the expected circulation of your work, you might find it a viable alternative. To give you an example of an (admittedly already well-known) author that is doing just that, check out the Intergalactic Medicine Show [intergalac...neshow.com]. As it happens, Card is one of my favorite authors and I subscribed years ago.
In any event, I'm not a lawyer, but I'd strongly suggest you talk to a good attor
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>> Is it?
Yeah, pretty much. The whole point of copyright is to enrich the public domain, in fact Jefferson went so far as to call copyright "a loan from the public domain." So yes, copyright is very much a curtailing of the public's rights, with the express expectation that the public would be the ultimate beneficiary from that very explicit tradeoff. The current state of affairs is, I'm afraid, not remotely aligned with th
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So yes, I do get angry with that bunch of arrogant, self-aggrandizing, hypocritical, blood-suckin
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Re:About time!!!! (Score:4, Insightful)
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Anything else requires someone else controlling my actions online.
Don't get me wrong...if I put up a file sharing website, and have ads on it, I should be on the chopping block. But p2p should be protected.
Otherwise you might as well just fold up the internet and go home--which isn't going to happen.
Next in Congress... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Next in Congress
A bill appointing the RIAA and its investigators as deputy federal marshals.
Though sconeu's comment was humorous, keep in mind that the RIAA is trying to do the equivalent by getting the government to sanction/approve their actions or grant them the power to do such things. That effort is focusing on multiple methods of ensuring it, from (1) granting them immunity from prosecution for using such illegal tactics/abusing the court system and/or (2) making it legal for them to use such methods that would otherwise be considered circumventing due-process and abusing/railroading the l
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The Gist of the Argument (Score:5, Interesting)
Taken from the blog Recording Industry vs The People
I think they have enough ammunition here to put the RIAA on the defensive. It'll be interesting to see how this plays out, especially what counter-arguments the RIAA comes up with. This smells like the SCO all over again.
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don't get my hopes up, RIAA declaring its bankrupt would be jut to much to ask for
Turn about is fair play (Score:4, Insightful)
They stalled on another case when they were asked to prove their methods. I believe the AG may have something there with investigator license which could turn into criminal charges for maybe both the RIAA and the company they hired to do their dirty work.
Re:Turn about is fair play (Score:4, Informative)
Opening the door to counter-suits? (Score:1)
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Re:Opening the door to counter-suits? (Score:4, Funny)
Put on John William's Imperial March from Star Wars, close your eyes, and imagine rank after rank of Armani-clad, briefcase-wielding warriors descending upon RIAA headquarters. Would that not be a sight to behold?
This is what has never made sense to me... (Score:2)
The RIAA has consistently done(or not done?) this. Yet they still win in the courts. Can anyone explain to me how they have convinced judges that a). they have accrued damages against their constituent companies without hard data and b). what links do they provide at all to the courts? IP's? MAC addresses?
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Given a case that sounds legal, and enough money disparity between the two parties, the richer party can usually just call 'expert witnesses' all day long until people start to believe them. Since the other side can't afford their own witnesses, they will have trouble defending themselves.
USA: The best justice (Score:2)
Re:This is what has never made sense to me... (Score:5, Insightful)
In this case, a number of promising avenues haven't been explored because nobody got good attorneys to bring them up. So the issue gets waived, the court accepts the RIAA's version because it was "undisputed". Recall the RIAA suits have been going on for a number of years, but it was only a couple months ago that this PI licensing issue was even mentioned -- because nobody ever did their homework before.
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Re:This is what has never made sense to me... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This is what has never made sense to me... (Score:4, Funny)
That must be why the Oregonians are angry!
Wag the dog... sort of (Score:1, Troll)
Oh yea ! bring it !! (Score:5, Funny)
and i mean it !
Oblig Mr. Burns quote (Score:2)
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He says "Excellent..." -- hmm, we need a menacing punctuation.
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IANAL, BIPOOTV
Maybe... (Score:1)
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Isn't this a form of wiretapping? (Score:5, Interesting)
These techniques include the use of unlicensed investigators, the turning over of subpoenaed information to collection agencies, and the obtaining of personal information from computers.
I've always wondered how these non-government agencies can get away with this kind of behavior without someone bringing them up on some kind of wiretapping/DMCA charge. Seems like the RIAA would be in violation of the CALEA [wikipedia.org] to me, as well as the DMCA - since they must circumvent access control to gain the kinds of information they claim to have. (And yes, I do count bluffing universities that they have to hand over IP addresses as circumvention - it's Social Engineering, and it's as old as hacking itself).
They're not cops. Why do they have cop powers? I know for a fact if I do *any* of the crap they're doing, I'll go to jail.
Why not them?
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And I agree. the people ordering these kinds of illegal behaviors, and the people carrying them out should all be arrested.
OTOH, maybe all I have to do to protect my self from action if I were to break into the MPAA/RIAA computers is to incorporate a 'Security Investigation' company.
hey nycl (Score:2)
At This Point In Oregon (Score:4, Interesting)
An IP address and a timestamp does not identify a particular computer. It might, at most, point to a cable modem, dsl modem, wireless router, none of which store or share files.
Adding a screen snapshot of a list of files of unknown content doesn't improve in that identification.
An IP address and a timestamp and a screen shot of file names doesn't identify an individual.
None of the above shows that any copyrighted work was ever distributed illegally.
Finding copyrighted music files on a hard drive is no evidence of illegal downloading.
To recap, the RIAA has:
No way to identify an individual.
No way to identify a computer or tie it to an individual.
No proof, or ability to get proof, of illegal downloading.
No proof, or ability to get proof without having tapped internet connections of any distribution to anyone but their own investigators, who frankly don't count legally.
No case at all to justify their invasion of a user's privacy, and the extortion attempts to follow as they insist through their lying mouths, "We have already secured the information necessary to win against you in court!
The RIAA also has yet to prove in nearly all these cases that they are the current copyright holders of the very songs they seek to sue over, often presenting original copyright certificates in the names of companies that are no longer even in existence, and individual artists who have since died.
Yes, the courts need to put a direct and firm end to all this nonsense.
(Note to file sharers: Don't use your own personal, or nick, name as your KaZaA handle.)
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It may, there are other factors to consider. Such as "Does the person at that IP own more then one computer? do they live with someone else who could have done it?" It does not say who was at that computer. Meaning it can be used for begin an investigation;however it doesn't mean they have any evidence to arrest/browbeat anybody.
P
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If the Oregon AG is at the top of his game, he's already reading all the comments here from some of the most technologically knowledgeable, and pissed off, people in the country. It would be the true waste of a resource to not be doing so.
Will anybody lose their job over this? (Score:1)
Great news, but we shouldn't celebrate prematurely (Score:1)
However, I'm not going to crack open the champagne unless some sort of criminal prosecution actually comes out of this.
Oregon AG? (Score:2)
Dave Frohnmayer (Score:2, Informative)
I'm sure he talks to the current AG once in awhile.
RIAA needs to learn to stop going after law schools.