Judge in Capitol v. Thomas Considers New Trial 234
Jay Maynard writes "The judge in Capitol Records v. Thomas said today he's thinking about granting a new trial because he may have committed a 'manifest error of law' in his jury instructions. He says that his instruction that simply uploading music to a P2P network without any proof that anyone actually downloaded it may conflict with a case in the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals that said 'infringement of [the distribution right] requires an actual dissemination.' Briefs are due by May 29, with oral argument July 1. The judge invited friend of the court briefs by May 29, as well." NewYorkCountryLawyer links to the Judge's order itself (PDF), in which the Judge notes that he may (in NYCL's words) "have overlooked controlling Eighth Circuit authority, the case of National Car Rental v. Computer Associates, which held that you can't have a violation of the 'distribution right' without an 'actual dissemination of copies or phonorecords.'" Update: 05/15 18:54 GMT by T : Note that while the linked story as well as Jay Maynard's summary use the term "upload," Thomas wasn't uploading the files themselves, only making them available.
Huh? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Funny)
Quite muddying the waters. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Just because I don't have the authorization to offer a song for download, doesn't mean that the person downloading it doesn't have permission to download it. And for the purposes of copyright infringement, the fact that the other party had permission would limit my liability to making available. Since no unauthorized copy was created. And likewise if you reverse the situation if I have permission to allow the uploads, and the person on the other end doesn't have the authority to download, it's still a non-starter.
Which is where the arguments get difficult to prove, in order to prove it's case the RIAA has to demonstrate that somebody who wasn't authorized to download the materials did so. And that furthermore the downloads were offered on purpose rather than by accident.
It would not be valid to claim that I've engaged in copyright infringement if somebody broke into my computer via a rootkit and placed things into a p2p share without my permission. Nor would it be permissible to hold me accountable if I weren't aware that somebody else had put things up for share without my knowledge. As long as I had engaged in the due diligence necessary for the scenario, it wouldn't be my liability.
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Basically we're looking at a rematch in the "making available" debate. The original verdict nailed the defendant to the wall for making tracks available for download. Now the judge is thinking that was based on incorrect instructions he gave the jury about how to understand the law.
For "upload to a p2p network", substitute "place on a shared drive readable/searchable/indexed by a p2p network".
I remain on the fence on this one. I don't believe that literally "just making available" should be illegal; I also don't believe that putting the track on a p2p share is "just making available" because of the implicit advertising of availability. I understand the argument that you can't have distributed if nobody downloaded, but I find it hard to believe that my liability should depend so absolutely on the actions of others.
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
Consequently, if you make a poison and children find and drink it, is making the poison now somehow worse?
Food for thought...
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Lye, ammonia, hydrogen peroxide, bleach, ant spray, toilet cleaner, oven cleaner, paint thinner, benzene, and lots of other things are poisons that we typically use in small amounts with proper precautions, but which can be deadly in sufficient amounts.
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Please replace 'poison' for 'human-poison'. Or perhaps 'homosapien-icide'? Whatever the word you want to use, I'm attempting to illustrate the link between intent and actual result.
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Can't one just substitute "poison" with "guns", to which it's obvious that making a dangerous weapon != using dangerous weapon on technical terms.
All this "wrong" or "worse" talk is about feelings, of which should not be involved in facts. Just because you "feel" it's wrong to make poison does not mean it *is
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Interesting)
1. Reproduce - This one is long, see next paragraph.
2. Distribute - downloading is not distributing.
3. Performed - downloading is not performing.
4. Publicly display - downloading is not a public display.
5. Make into a derivative work - downloading is not making a derivative work.
So the only possibility is reproduction. To my knowledge, no law or court case has addressed this specifically so all we have is conjecture. It could be argued that the downloader made a copy. What I think would really be the case is that the downloader requested a copy, but it was the uploader who actually made the copy from his hard drive to his network card. The reason I make the distinction is precisely because copies for copyrighted works are made all the time on a single machine. When I play the Flobot's "Handlebars" a copy goes from my hard drive to memory and at some point has to go through the CPU. So we can't obviously count every single time a copy is made. If we did, then every router that it went through would be held liable for making a copy. So the downloader requests a copy, then the uploader makes a copy, and that is where copyright infringement has occurred.
It's kind of like a guy on the street with a DVD burner and a list of movies he has. He can advertise it all he wants without committing copyright infringement. Then someone comes up to him and asks for one of his movies. He puts a blank disk in the burner, burns the requested movie onto it, and then passes the disk to the requester. The guy on the street committed copyright infringement at the point that he burned the movie onto the disk (reproduced) and handed it to the requester (distributed), but at no point did the requester commit copyright infringement. In the same way, the downloader did not commit copyright infringement.
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Copyright law restricts distribution rights, it does not apply to someone who is receiving a copyrighted work. In the P2P world, it's the sharer who is committing copyright infringement.
Now you're confusing physical theft
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Bad Analogy (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Bad Analogy (Score:5, Funny)
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If children eat rat poison, was the manufacture wrong to make rat poison?
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Funny)
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Just so. Every first-year law student learns on the first day of Torts class that a tort offense (a category that includes copyright infringement) has four elements, all of which must be proved in order to collect a remedy from the defendant:
1. The defendant must have had a DUTY to the defendant (such as a duty to respect the copyrights of the plaintiff).
2. The defendant must be guilty of a BREACH of that duty (e.g., by participating in the unauthorized copying or distribution of a work under copyright)
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The next logical extension if this case is allowed to stand is that you can be prosecuted for putting down a book you are reading in a public place and not taking adequate care to secure it.
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Interesting)
The next logical extension if this case is allowed to stand is that you can be prosecuted for putting down a book you are reading in a public place and not taking adequate care to secure it.
Right. I don't see how such an act fails to meet the criteria for "making available".
William Patry (copyright expert and Google general copyright counsel) has a very nice post about the "making available" precedent here [blogspot.com].
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Moreover, since the real crime (taking a risk with others' well-being that was not yours to take) is the same, I maintain that the difference in liability is largely an emotional reaction of our legal system, proving that to some people crimin
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Yes, "making available" might be illegal (not sure under what law; there's no "reckless endagerment" equivilent for copyright), but it's not unlawful copyright distribution unless there's a distribution.
negligent homicide:reckless endangerment::felony copyright distribution:?
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
This is one of those times where someone else has to do something in order for what you do to be considered a crime. But advertising availability isn't copyright infringement. You infringe when you distribute. So if no one has downloaded, you haven't distributed, thus you haven't infringed copyright. It's a very dangerous thing to start saying that intent is enough to convict a person of a crime. Intent ought to be considered when a crime has occurred, but to outlaw intent itself sets very bad precedent.
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Would I be guilty of infringement?
My property is the one emitting the photons, the photographer is 'just' the one collecting them. In the case of a fileserver (p2p or otherwise), the other party has to request the packets...
Who's more guilty, me with the print of the photograph that I don't own reproduction rights to, or the person with their fileshare exposed to the internet
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Actually, it is perfectly legal to reproduce photographs that you don't have reproduction rights for; it is, however, illegal to make them available for public viewing (such as putting them in your front window).
By putting something in your front window, you are violating the "public performance of a copyrighted work" law. The equivalent with music would be playing the music out your window so that others could record it.
What is happening with
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Can sculptors file a lawsuit for unequal treatment under the law, for discriminatory protection for different types of USEFUL arts, such as the different protections afforded musicians and sculptors? Or can an artist who creates a statue which is placed in a public park place a camera on or in the statue and sue everyone who looks at the statue for copyr
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Whether hanging a painting in a restaurant constitutes a "public performance" probably depends on the relationship between the artist and the restaurant owner. If the artist sells the work to the restaurant, title is transferred to the restaurant owner who can do with the work as she pleases. If the painting is leased or loaned to the restaurant by the artist, then the disposition of the painting needs to be cov
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Re:Huh? (Score:4, Informative)
In other words, you possess a collection of components which are all individually legal to possess, but
You don't have to express any intent to do so, you don't have to assemble anything. Just being in a position to do so makes you a criminal.
Distribution doesn't actually need to take place: (Score:2)
http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap5.html [copyright.gov]
so just uploading to a publicly accessible computer is infringement.
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Re:Huh? Summary Judgment (Score:3, Informative)
Summary judgment is allowed if there is no genuine dispute over the material facts. Motions for summary judgment are often brought after discovery and before the trial. Many issues are often decided at summary judgment.
However, some pretty absurd disputes make it to trial. One might survive summary judgment on a claim that another wrongfully took your life...who says I'm alive? That's a question for a medical expert, and I'll produce one at trial who will say I'm not alive (at trial, you may not have such
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I thought that it was also the case that a motion for summary judgment could be granted when the facts were in dispute, but even if you consider the facts under dispute in the way most favorable to the one defending against the motion, they would still lose as a matter of law.
E.g. I'm suing y
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Don't play stupid; "gay marriage" doesn't mean "marriage between a man and a woman where one or both is homosexual," it means "marriage between people of the same gender."
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A gay man isn't going to hit on your woman. I have no idea why so many guys don't like gays, unless they're going to the bars where men hit on them instead of their women.
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Hell is being forced to live in a world of morons like you.
and the little girls all want ponies. I want to go to bed with a supermodel, but just because I want something has no relevance in the real world.
So are you suggesting that it be made illegal for girls to have ponies or for you to sleep with a supermodel, just because the former may or may not happen, and certainly the latter will not?
IMO what you do in private is none of my damned business. I don't care if you're hiring
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"Either let any human being marry any other human being." Can an adult marry an infant? Can siblings marry?
"do away with the concept of legal marriages completely." A fine idea. Many of those agains
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Informative)
Basically, they might have to do it all over again, because the judge told the jury the wrong test to apply to determine if she broke the law.
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Interesting)
I would add that:
the judge didn't just make an error. He made the error because Ms. Thomas's lawyer, who should have told the judge about the National Car Rental case, didn't, and because the RIAA's lawyers -- who had an obligation under the Code of Professional Responsibility to inform the judge about the National Car Rental case -- also didn't.
So I expect one angry judge on July 1st.
Interestingly the chief architect of the RIAA's legal behavior won't be able to be there July 1st, as that's the day he starts his new job [slashdot.org] as a state court judge in Colorado. So one of his clones will have to take the heat for this misconduct.
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You were watching this trial. Wasn't there an argument just at the end of the trial where the Defendant said "There's this case here that you should follow" and the Plaintiff's lawyer said "I argued that case. That was an entirely different argument altogether and doesn't apply here."
Maybe it was a different case being cited, but I could swear that the argument happened. I seem to remember being surprised that the Defendant's lawyer didn't respond with arguments as to why the case was appl
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Mr. Beckerman - You were watching this trial. Wasn't there an argument just at the end of the trial where the Defendant said "There's this case here that you should follow" and the Plaintiff's lawyer said "I argued that case. That was an entirely different argument altogether and doesn't apply here." Maybe it was a different case being cited, but I could swear that the argument happened. I seem to remember being surprised that the Defendant's lawyer didn't respond with arguments as to why the case was applicable.
Without a transcript I can't say, but I am inclined to think that Judge Davis didn't make it up when he said that neither counsel brought it to his attention.
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Will that violation of ABA Rules have any repercussions either on the new trial or for Mr. Gabriel personally?
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And yes.
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After granting the instruction 15 change insisted upon by Mr. Gabriel, and after Wired reported on the recommendation given by Ms. Thomas' attorney, it took courage for Judge Davis to make such a motion sua sponte.
My question now is: after the battle is truly joined, and the RIAA have cited Capitol v. Thomas in numerous stages of contested cases and in what some have claimed are improperly joined dragnet cases mea
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Re:Huh? (Score:5, Informative)
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We are in an adversary system. No lawyer and no judge knows all of the law. It's far too vast.
So, why isn't there a data base with a search engine?
Just wondering. I am aware that it's probably mostly on paper, but lots of old books (heck, pulp and pr0n) are being scanned in - law seems a bit more important to me.
Wouldn't it make a lot of sense to make emailing (scanning/OCR'ing) all docs the SOP of the courts, instead of printing and faxing them? Then it would be easy to stuff everything into local/state/federal archives and running an index.
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
And yet citizens, who have even less expertise in law than lawyers and judges, are expected to obey the law and can be punished for not doing so.
What do you call a legislator at the bottom of the ocean? A good start!
This meme has to stop (Score:4, Interesting)
The basic citizen, with whom you seem to be so concerned, doesn't need to know the laws for reporting to the Securities and Exchange Commission. They don't need to know the laws about chemical pollution. If you get involved in specific activities, you're responsible for doing those activities in a manner consistent with the law. You don't need to retain information on the proper disposal of refrigerants, because most people will never deal with it at all, and most of those who do can simply follow the instructions. There's no persistent knowledge required.
There is no functioning legal system possible such that every person could ever understand the totality of law. It's a ludicrous idea, unless you're willing to throw out courts and jurisprudence altogether. People handle themselves just fine with a basic sense of right and wrong. Exceptions really are exceptions.
There is no single citizen actually responsible for knowing and obeying more than a tiny fraction of the law that a typical lawyer should have command of. People are socialized and raised to a sufficient degree of knowledge, most of which should be expected of a citizen without needing to be codified in law in the first place. Knowing how to be a decent person gets you nine-tenths of the way there. It's sadly a fading characteristic.
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DVDs come with warnings and reservations. CDs, software, and books come with copyright notices. You never even need to read the Copyright Act to be responsible for knowing that you're not allowed to reproduce these works and distribute them to others. Socializing has imparted people with that basic knowledge, and what uses are allowed: commentary, quoting for criticism, mixed CDs, recording TV shows for later viewing. People are also widely aware
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So you watched "Juno" too, huh?
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Re:Huh? (Score:4, Informative)
- Offering it to be downloaded may not be "nice" but no laws are broken until somebody actually DOES download it. So said the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals - the appellate court above the one where this trial was held. This court within the 8th Circuit and must follow the decisions of law made above it. (The 8th Circuit, and the Supreme Court above that, are its "controlling authorities".)
- Unfortunately, neither the defendant nor the RIAA mentioned this to the judge and he didn't think of it himself. So he told the jury that (as the RIAA claims), "making available" is a crime. OOPS! The jury then convicted and asked for a BIG punishment.
- Since then he noticed (probably got a lot of letters about) the ruling. So when the defendant's attorneys filed a complaint that the punishment was too big and asking for the judge to reduce it, the judge said: "I goofed. Sorry. (But nobody mentioned this ruling from my boss court during the trial. Tisk, tisk.) And the law lets me fix that by ordering a new trial (where I'll be careful not to make this goof again). And the law lets me tell you that when I'm answering you about this other issue (which will just go away if we hold another trial.) So both sides send me your written thoughts about this by June 5 and we'll all get together and talk about it on July 1. Then I'll decide what to do. (Hint: If the defendant asks and the plaintiffs don't have a good argument why not, I'll order a new trial."
- The RIAA's methodology only shows that the content is available on the server, not that anybody downloaded it. So once there's a new trial they'll have to come up with evidence they didn't present at this one. (I think the judge might ask them if they have such evidence and give them an opportunity to just go away and let the defendant off if they don't, rather than scheduling another trial they can't win.)
Nope (Score:2)
nope:
(C) by the distribution of a work being prepared for commercial distribution, by making it available on a computer network accessible to members of the public, if such person knew or should have known that the work was intended for commercial distribution.
http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap5.html [copyright.gov]
Bolded by me.
Re: Yup. (Score:4, Insightful)
And the 8th District Court of Appeals agrees with me, so while IANAL, I'm going to go with what they say.
Translation (Score:3, Insightful)
Further Translation: A higher authority already had an established precedent which contradicts his instructions to the jury.
It appears this further backs the statement that simply "making available" isn't enough.
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Brett
Legalse to English translation (Score:2, Informative)
WAIT!! (Score:5, Funny)
sigh...
I guess the courts getting a clue later is better than not at all...
Basically, it's like this: (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Basically, it's like this: (Score:5, Insightful)
This is really a beautiful moment for our democracy, to see a judge on his own realizing his mistake, and instead of just sitting on it, doing something about it. I have to say... this is a big man.
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You'd think that Ms. Thomas's lawyer would be jumping up and down trying to tell this to the judge. If there is a new trial, does she have to keep the same lawyer?
Which takes guts (Score:5, Insightful)
Rather than just referring to him as "the judge in Capitol V Thomas", his name is "Judge Michael Davis." If anyone happens to know him, I'd say that it's about time to congratulate him for being man enough to step up and make this admission.
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Like, tall, fat, or both?
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He realized that his mistake ruined a person's life and now he has magnanimously given the person another chance.
Is the standard to which judges are held? That is sad.
Re:Basically, it's like this: (Score:5, Interesting)
You can never expect that human actions will be without error. Judges, & lawyers all make mistakes like the rest of us. What stands out about this is that he did something about it. His actions are remarkable, and I applaud him.
If everyone else held themselves to the same standard, we wouldn't have this BS in the courts.
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Re:Basically, it's like this: (Score:4, Informative)
Does Media Sentry count? (Score:4, Interesting)
If MediaSentry downloads do not count as infringement, then the RIAA is pretty much screwed. It's going to be virtually impossible for the RIAA to prove distribution over the internet between independent parties. The only possibility I can think of is if they start getting trace data from ISPs showing P2P traffic.
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Well if MediaSentry is considered an agent of the RIAA who is a agent of the copyright holders, then no it does not count although IANAL so I don't know if this legal logic has been tested.
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I've seen that logic before, but is it true? The P2P user is not authorized to distribute the file, regardless of whether or not the downloader is another P2P user or an agent of the RIAA. Isn't that correct? Otherwise I guess you're saying that the RIAA implicitly gives you a distribution license if they download the song from you.
What I think people get confused by is that if the P2P
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It'll be interesting, if there is a new trial where the RIAA has to prove distribution, whether the judge considers MediaSentry downloads to be proof of infringement.
I think you are missing a very important point. The first trial was a jury trial. Any subsequent trial will probably also be by jury. It matters a lot more what the jury thinks about MediaSentry's "evidence" than what the judge thinks. The original case was lost because the lawyers for the lady were incompetent. I'm sorry, but it's true. The jury reported that they were convinced that when the PC had "missing files" it was because the woman had the PC cleaned to get rid of incriminating evidence.
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I'd say that, as they are being paid by RIAA for this explicit purpose, they are being paid by the copyright holder to violate copyright.
I'd say that makes MediaSentry an authorized agent of the RIAA and labels, and de facto can not infringe.
Of course, they (MediaSentry) could pay some guy to download files and send IP's to them - but that makes Joe here an agent to the agent, and (probably) can't violate copyright either.
So trace data (which will be encrypted, probabl
Just Another Reason I Ignore Judges Instructions (Score:4, Interesting)
Just don't get caught. Judges don't like us thinking for ourselves and will punish you for it. Funny, jury instructions were the result because they consider us too stupid to think for our selves. We're not educated enough about the law to decide right from wrong... What about when the populace becomes wiser than the system?
Like if you find the defendant possessed 'n' ounces of 'y' then you must find the defendant guilty of distributing 'n'. Err no... Judge, I will find the defendant guilty of distribution if you've proven to me he was selling it. All kinds of sites on jury nullification exist that argue the error of judges instructions.
I remember one jury I was on. We were instructed at lunch break we were not allow to visit the restaurant and intersection where the incident took place. Bullshit. Me and several others, the first thing we did was to have lunch at the McD's where it all happened and discovered the Police were lying in their testimony (go figure). Oh ya, we weren't allowed to talk about it between ourselves either and we ignored that too. Without these facts we probably would have convicted an innocent man. Screw judges instructions. I can make up my own mind whats right and wrong and don't need the judge thinking for me.
Remember, the RIAA lead lawyer is being promoted to State Judge... You really want to listen to what he thinks or decide for yourself right from wrong?
-[d]-
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Hear that? That sound like dominoes knocking one another over? With a huge pot of RIAA money precariously balanced on three dominoes at the edge of the table? YEAH, I heard it too
Very good news. Almost seems like Friday now.
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common phrase amicus brief. Even for the uninformed it should not be hard to figure out given the similarity to amicable.
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