Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Courts Government Media Music News Your Rights Online

Oregon Judge Says RIAA Made 'Honest Mistake,' Allows Subpoena 175

NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "In Arista v. Does 1-17, the RIAA's case targeting students at the University of Oregon, the Oregon Attorney General's motion to quash the RIAA's subpoena — pending for about a year — has reached a perplexing conclusion. The Court agreed with the University that the subpoena, as worded, imposed an undue burden on the University by requiring it to produce 'sufficient information to identify alleged infringers,' which would have required the University to 'conduct an investigation,' but then allowed the RIAA to subpoena the identities of 'persons associated by dorm room occupancy or username with the 17 IP addresses listed' even though those people may be completely innocent. In his 8-page decision (PDF), the Judge also 'presumed' the RIAA lawyers' misrepresentations were an 'honest mistake,' made no reference at all to the fact, pointed out by the Attorney General, that the RIAA investigators (Safenet, formerly MediaSentry) were not licensed, rejected all of the AG's privacy arguments under both state and federal law, and rejected the AG's request for discovery into the RIAA's investigative tactics."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Oregon Judge Says RIAA Made 'Honest Mistake,' Allows Subpoena

Comments Filter:
  • Honest? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Gewalt ( 1200451 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @06:44PM (#25252289)

    The words "honest" and "RIAA" don't even belong in the same sentence. /sigh

    • Re:Honest? (Score:5, Informative)

      by NewYorkCountryLawyer ( 912032 ) * <ray@NOsPAm.beckermanlegal.com> on Friday October 03, 2008 @06:49PM (#25252329) Homepage Journal

      The words "honest" and "RIAA" don't even belong in the same sentence. /sigh

      Yes. Truly amazing. The RIAA lawyer tells the judge that the University will destroy the data if the motion is not granted. Leaving out the fact that the University told him that the data has been preserved. And the Judge "presumes" that that was an "honest mistake"?

      • Appeal? (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Do you know if this is this an appealable order? Can they go anywhere from here, or are they stuck with this judge?

        Is there any way to point out to this judge that there's a pattern of conduct here? Or was that in the brief and ignored by the judge? (I think I read these papers, but it was quite a while ago.)

        I'm just curious, because it seems like the judge has decided that, whatever the law says, this matter is a waste of their time so they'll give the RIAA whatever they want and ignore the law to get i

        • Re:Appeal? (Score:5, Informative)

          by NewYorkCountryLawyer ( 912032 ) * <ray@NOsPAm.beckermanlegal.com> on Friday October 03, 2008 @08:27PM (#25252987) Homepage Journal

          Do you know if this is this an appealable order?

          Good question. Actually, there's a split of authority on the subject. In several circuits the order is appealable as of right. In at least one circuit, the order is not appealable as of right. I don't happen to know how they would rule in the Ninth Circuit.

          • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

            by wasted ( 94866 )

            ...I don't happen to know how they would rule in the Ninth Circuit.

            The Ninth circuit will rule whichever way that sets a precedent that requires an incredibly broad or perverse interpretation of the Constitution, goes against the voters' wishes, and/or angers the Republicans. The trick is to figure what ruling best fits that description.

            • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

              by TheSpoom ( 715771 ) *

              See, this is totally why I'd always appeal to the Ninth Circuit. Whatever happens, it'll be a hell of a ride.

          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            Last I heard, the Ninth had the dubious honor of being the most oft-overturned Circuit of them all.

            Of course, considering that this (my home circuit) apparently contains stupid judges in Oregon, and all of San Francisco, this should be no surprise to anyone.
          • What would this be appealable? According to the article:

            >>>allowed the RIAA to subpoena the identities of 'persons associated by dorm room occupancy or username with the 17 IP addresses listed'

            I don't see how this is any different than subpoening (sp?) the persons who are associated to a physical address (say a crakhouse). Although it's likely a lot of these people will turn-out to be innocent, that's why court rooms exist - to weed-out the guilty from the not-guilty.

        • Re:Appeal? (Score:5, Insightful)

          by MrNaz ( 730548 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @09:37PM (#25253369) Homepage

          "it seems like the judge has decided that, whatever the law says, this matter is a waste of their time"

          Never attribute to laziness (or anything else for that matter) what can adequately be explained by a bribe, particularly when an organization like the RIAA is involved.

          • Re:Appeal? (Score:4, Interesting)

            by Rogerborg ( 306625 ) on Saturday October 04, 2008 @02:04AM (#25254497) Homepage
            You are correct, sir

            I guess the *AAs are finally figuring out that it's far, far cheaper to buy a few judges than a lot of lawyers, propagandists, lobbyists and Congress vermin.

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by nomadic ( 141991 )
            Never attribute to laziness (or anything else for that matter) what can adequately be explained by a bribe, particularly when an organization like the RIAA is involved.

            I've always wondered, every time a story comes up about a judge making a ruling we don't like, there are inevitably several accusations of bribery. You all don't actually believe it, right? I assumed everyone is just venting, but anyone who literally believes the RIAA bribed a federal judge in order to get a ruling they wanted on a disco
            • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

              by MrNaz ( 730548 )

              Given that this judge's decision flies in the face of established legal doctrine, industry practice and plain old common sense, I don't see how this can be anything other than either a) the judge being incredibly stupid or b) bribed.

              As a practical matter, if a federal judge was that greedy, why would he or she be a federal judge?

              Greed for money and greed for status are the same disease. Judges start out their legal career, not deciding to become a judge for the bribe money, but they get there and realize th

              • by nomadic ( 141991 )
                Given that this judge's decision flies in the face of established legal doctrine, industry practice and plain old common sense, I don't see how this can be anything other than either a) the judge being incredibly stupid or b) bribed.

                I've read the opinion at issue. It makes a convincing argument regarding legal doctrine, and at the very least there is nothing plainly and clearly incorrect about it.
                • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

                  I find this rather illogical:

                  1. Under the law, the Judge can't issue a subpoena to obtain the identity of John Doe unless the plaintiff has evidence that the John Doe committed copyright infringement.

                  2. The University of Oregon showed, and the Judge agreed, that the RIAA's evidence does not show that the John Does committed copyright infringement.

                  3. The Judge correctly quashed the subpoena.

                  Here comes the illogical part.

                  4. Then, instead of ending it there, he tells the RIAA they can issue a new subpoen
                  • by nomadic ( 141991 )
                    The way I read the opinion is that the judge quashed the original subpoena not because the plaintiff didn't have evidence that John Doe committed copyright infringement, but rather because the subpoena placed an undue burden on the university to actively investigate who was using which IP addresses to transfer files.

                    The judge brought up the technical difficulties involved in determining the identity of the alleged file sharer not to invalidate the propriety of the RIAA issuing the subpoena, but merely to s
      • Re:Honest? (Score:5, Funny)

        by CorporateSuit ( 1319461 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @07:40PM (#25252675)

        Yes. Truly amazing. The RIAA lawyer tells the judge that the University will destroy the data if the motion is not granted. Leaving out the fact that the University told him that the data has been preserved. And the Judge "presumes" that that was an "honest mistake"?

        RIAA: If you don't grant the motion, they'll destroy all the data!
        Judge: What makes you come to that conclusion?
        RIAA: Because that's what we would do!

        • RIAA: If you don't grant the motion, they'll destroy all the data!
          Judge: What makes you come to that conclusion?
          RIAA: Because that's what we would do!

          Good one.

      • Re:Honest? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by BlackSabbath ( 118110 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @08:07PM (#25252839)

        I'm sorry Ray, but just how does an outside observer not draw the conclusion that the legal system is inherently corrupted? I know you can't answer the question (at least not publicly) and I and many others support your valiant efforts. However, its hard as someone from outside the US to not see your country as just the world's biggest banana republic. Where the law has the appearance of granite and the firmness of quicksand. A legal system whose flexibility is only ever exercised to the favour of power, never the other way. As an amateur student of early American history and the founding of your nation, I just find the underlying hypocrisy galling and the fall of the republic utterly disheartening.

        • Re:Honest? (Score:5, Informative)

          by NewYorkCountryLawyer ( 912032 ) * <ray@NOsPAm.beckermanlegal.com> on Friday October 03, 2008 @08:49PM (#25253109) Homepage Journal

          I'm sorry Ray, but just how does an outside observer not draw the conclusion that the legal system is inherently corrupted? I know you can't answer the question (at least not publicly) and I and many others support your valiant efforts. However, its hard as someone from outside the US to not see your country as just the world's biggest banana republic. Where the law has the appearance of granite and the firmness of quicksand. A legal system whose flexibility is only ever exercised to the favour of power, never the other way. As an amateur student of early American history and the founding of your nation, I just find the underlying hypocrisy galling and the fall of the republic utterly disheartening.

          I'm not here to be an apologist for erroneous decisions like this. In my blog post [blogspot.com], after reporting the facts, I then wrote this editor's note:

          Is it just me, or does this decision make no sense whatsoever? The Judge recognizes that the RIAA's investigation is insufficient to actually point to a copyright infringer, and that the only way to determine that there was a copyright infringement is to conduct a further investigation....but is directing the University, anyway, to turn over names of people who the Court recognizes may be completely innocent?

          And I wrote a lengthy article [blogspot.com] for The Judges Journal, the quarterly publication of the American Bar Association written for the judges' section, for publication in its "Access to Justice" issue, in which I criticized this type of poor judicial work as creating an uneven playing field, and made 15 specific suggestions as to what judges like this needed to do that they were not doing.

          The difference between you and me is that I can't afford the luxury of getting 'disheartened'. But I do get angry. And an illogical, indefensible decision like this one ticks me off.

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            I'm sorry if I offended you. I totally understand that you are not an apologist for the entire legal system. I just marvel at your tenacity. As for my disheatened state being a luxury, as a citizen of another country, I can do very little to influence outcomes in the US (other than offer opinions in forums like this). At home (in Australia) however, I am slightly more involved in issues that I believe in.

            Good luck to you and all like you.

            • I'm sorry if I offended you. I totally understand that you are not an apologist for the entire legal system. I just marvel at your tenacity. As for my dishea[r]tened state being a luxury, as a citizen of another country, I can do very little to influence outcomes in the US (other than offer opinions in forums like this). At home (in Australia) however, I am slightly more involved in issues that I believe in. Good luck to you and all like you.

              I wasn't offended. I just wanted to make it clear that I'm neither unaware of, nor afraid to criticize, the failings of a system that could allow a decision like that to be generated -- a decision that makes us a laughingstock among thinking people everywhere -- just because I work within that system.

              • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

                by rohan972 ( 880586 )

                I just wanted to make it clear that I'm neither unaware of, nor afraid to criticize, the failings of a system that could allow a decision like that to be generated

                You could not be so unafraid to criticize a judge in Australia. Just check this response on one of the Brisbane Times blogs http://blogs.brisbanetimes.com.au/bluntinstrument/archives/2008/07/post_1.html [brisbanetimes.com.au] JB: Actually yr right about me forgetting to unload on the majesty of the Law. I should have. Although, without a First Amendment we are much more constrained in the criticism we can make of the bench. Contempt of Court applies swiftly and mercilessly.

                You can also be given jail time here for refusing to a

                • You could not be so unafraid to criticize a judge in Australia.

                  I guess you don't know me very well.

                  I can assure you, were I in Australia -- and were the bullies operating there and Australian judges similarly allowing them to run roughshod over our legal system and over the rights of innocent people -- I would be making a similar outcry. (Although I'd probably be having more fun doing it.)

                  And to tell you the truth, from the Australian lawyers I've met, I'm really skeptical that they would be any more timid than I; they don't seem like chickens at all. The RIAA runnin

          • Re:Honest? (Score:4, Insightful)

            by causality ( 777677 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @10:24PM (#25253561)

            The difference between you and me is that I can't afford the luxury of getting 'disheartened'. But I do get angry. And an illogical, indefensible decision like this one ticks me off.

            The way you discourage illogical, indefensible decisions like this is to (with due process of course) impose sanctions against such judges and/or conduct independent investigations into whether there is anything that remotely looks like the judge is receiving money or other favors from the RIAA. If this is possible at all, it should be easy considering that this will not be the first time that the RIAA's tactics have (I'll be nice and say) been questionable. You then follow up by conducting an investigation into the RIAA's tactics, including whether or not the likes of MediaSentry are in fact breaking the law by acting like unlicensed private investigators (why is this not a completely separate issue from the lawsuit at hand?) because as those in power so enjoy telling us, "they shouldn't care if they have nothing to hide".

            I felt that way when I first saw this summary but I am certainly not a lawyer and so I do not feel that I am qualified (without doing lots of research at any rate) to say whether this judge's actions are illogical or indefensible in the context of legal proceedings, in the sense that many perfectly legal practices are complete unenlightened bullshit to me, but now that a lawyer such as yourself has cleared that up for me the rest seems quite simple. Yes I know that as someone who does not understand the nuances of law as you do, I very well may be coming off like a complete armchair amateur so if you point that out, I'll understand, but either way I am grateful for people like you who can be a part of the system without also being blind to things about it that probably need to change. I wish that insiders with your honesty were not the small minority that they seem to be.

            • The way you discourage illogical, indefensible decisions like this is to (with due process of course) impose sanctions against such judges and/or conduct independent investigations into whether there is anything that remotely looks like the judge is receiving money or other favors from the RIAA. If this is possible at all, it should be easy considering that this will not be the first time that the RIAA's tactics have (I'll be nice and say) been questionable. You then follow up by conducting an investigation into the RIAA's tactics, including whether or not the likes of MediaSentry are in fact breaking the law by acting like unlicensed private investigators (why is this not a completely separate issue from the lawsuit at hand?) because as those in power so enjoy telling us, "they shouldn't care if they have nothing to hide". I felt that way when I first saw this summary but I am certainly not a lawyer and so I do not feel that I am qualified (without doing lots of research at any rate) to say whether this judge's actions are illogical or indefensible in the context of legal proceedings, in the sense that many perfectly legal practices are complete unenlightened bullshit to me, but now that a lawyer such as yourself has cleared that up for me the rest seems quite simple. Yes I know that as someone who does not understand the nuances of law as you do, I very well may be coming off like a complete armchair amateur so if you point that out, I'll understand, but either way I am grateful for people like you who can be a part of the system without also being blind to things about it that probably need to change. I wish that insiders with your honesty were not the small minority that they seem to be.

              What about the judges on the editorial board of the American Bar Association's "The Judges Journal", who invited me to write an article about the unequal access to justice in these cases [blogspot.com]? They're "insiders".

          • by TheLink ( 130905 )
            Well at least there's you who's working to make things better.

            It's hard for the rest of us to not have "contempt of court" though ;).
          • by Whiteox ( 919863 )

            As an Australian and Libertarian, I would agree with Mr Sabbath that the US judicial system is becoming a parody of what it used to be. We are a little better off here, but as I (and many others see it), our judicial system has its faults, particularly with inconsistent sentencing matters.
            .

          • I know exactly what it's like to be at the receiving end of a judge who is clueless - due to the idiocy residing in the British court system it has taken a year longer to get someone who defrauded me into bankruptcy. This is what you get when people no longer have to take responsibility for their actions.

            But I digress: what's next? Surely there must be a way to get insanity like this corrected? Or would it need a solid public outcry and exposure before this gets corrected? This decision disgraces the sy

          • by Moryath ( 553296 )

            Sorry to say this Ray, but this one is beyond the pale.

            The judge needs to be investigated - for incompetence, for monetary anomalies, for improper connections.

            In addition, there needs to be one hell of a set of appeals of this unimaginably corrupt decision.

            I was waiting for this to be a joke... but I bet the judge's thoughts, even while penning the decision, were on counting the big bag of money the MafiAA lawyers had just laid at his feet.

        • Re:Honest? (Score:5, Insightful)

          by causality ( 777677 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @09:34PM (#25253343)

          I'm sorry Ray, but just how does an outside observer not draw the conclusion that the legal system is inherently corrupted? I know you can't answer the question (at least not publicly) and I and many others support your valiant efforts. However, its hard as someone from outside the US to not see your country as just the world's biggest banana republic. Where the law has the appearance of granite and the firmness of quicksand. A legal system whose flexibility is only ever exercised to the favour of power, never the other way. As an amateur student of early American history and the founding of your nation, I just find the underlying hypocrisy galling and the fall of the republic utterly disheartening.

          I was just going to make a quick post in which I would say something like "this seriously makes me wonder just how difficult it is to impeach a judge," then I saw your comment. I can say that from inside the US it also looks like the world's biggest banana republic. Nothing is as it should be and this is only becoming more true as time passes.

          The reason why I refer to the general public with terms like "sheep" or "sheeple" or "bovine idiots" is because they accept this without question. No threat to their money, their liberty, or their well-being is ever sufficient to prompt them to think critically and stop accepting the party line(s) at face value. All it takes is for the talking heads on CNN or Fox News to frame a phony debate in the form of a false dichotomy and they buy it, so long as the phony debate is nuanced and there's lots of chatter about it. The truth is, if there were any real philosophical differences between the two parties concerning the role of government, it would not take 9 months of campaigning to point them out.

          WIth the exception of a very few, no one with any real media presence points out that the only disagreement between the Democratic candidate and the Republican candidate is how to carry out the expansion of the size and power of government. One candidate wants to expand the size and authority of government for reasons A, B, C while the other candidate wants to expand the size and power of government for reasons D, E, F and that's the basis of the election. There is no mention of whether it should be expanded, whether what we are doing now is remotely sustainable and whether continuing down the same path is going to help or harm the country.

          What you point out about the legal system is unfortunately just a symptom of a much deeper problem. The real problem is that the media and the economy have become increasingly centralized over the last century and the number of people controlling both could probably all be seated comfortably in a relatively small room. For example, when the news outlets first started talking about the idea of bailing out Bear Stearns, I knew without doubt that it was going to happen, that the false debate and "controversy" only served the purpose of providing the appearance of legitimate dissention because without it, the people might actually wake up and realize that all is not as it seems. Americans need to seriously ask themselves whether they have ever once seen a major decision like this that a) was hyped up in the media and given lots of coverage and b) went against the desires of a monied interest. The sad thing is that not only do most Americans not understand these things, most of them seem like they don't want to understand -- apparently the latest celebrity gossip or sports scores or artificially hectic lifestyles (the new status symbol) are much more important to them. While I think that these people deserve what's coming, it saddens me that many who do not share their willful ignorance are going to suffer as well because everything is global now; there is no more "small and local". I hope that those outside the USA realize that no matter how you feel about Americans, the soverignty of the USA is just about the only thing that is currently standing in the way of a one-world government or a system of 2-3 global factions in the "but Oceania has always been at war with Eastasia" sense and that the USA is not being run by people who act like they want to maintain that soverignty.

          • by Xenographic ( 557057 ) on Saturday October 04, 2008 @01:36AM (#25254411) Journal

            I was just going to make a quick post in which I would say something like "this seriously makes me wonder just how difficult it is to impeach a judge," then I saw your comment.

            It's funny you should ask that, because Oregon has early voting, and if they're anything like my state, they should have ballots in hand soon. I already voted this morning, in fact, even though the election isn't until November. You know how after you vote for the presidential election, senators, representatives, propositions & whatnot, there's that HUGE list of judges that you vote "yes" or "no" on? That's a vote to recall them.

            So if you see one Michael R. Hogan, mark your ballot "no" and you're voting not to retain this guy (in other words, you're voting to fire his ass). If you don't have an early ballot, you can also do it at the polls in November, assuming you remember that long.

            If a majority of voters vote this guy out, he's fired, but it rarely happens unless a judge ticks off enough people.

            • Sometime after October 14th, my wife and I will see a ballot here in Oregon. They usually make sure you have them two weeks before election day. You then drop it off in the mail, or you can skip the stamp and drop it off at city hall and the like.

              And yep - exactly as you described... the judges and such have yes or no check marks for retention.

              Thing is, (and you note this) nobody knows or remembers such things, so the majority just pick a yes or no on whim (unless a party affiliation is listed, then the vot

            • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

              by agibbs ( 729458 )
              Judge Hogan is an Article III Federal judge. This means that he is neither elected nor retained by the Oregon voters, but rather is appointed for life by the President (George H.W. Bush in this case) and confirmed by the Senate. The only way to remove an Article III judge is by impeachment, which has happened before but takes a fair chunk of Congress' attention. Moreover, it would be utterly irresponsible to suggest impeachment is appropriate just because you disagree with one of his decisions.
              • Damn, I didn't realize he was that high up. But you're right; there's no way Congress would impeach. Still, in general, that's how you remove a judge, though it doesn't happen very often.

                That said, I think it's perfectly legitimate to advocate for the removal of judges who are careless in following the law if they cross a certain threshold. I'm not saying what this guy did rises to that standard (I personally think he just doesn't know the RIAA very well yet, and he may never get the chance), but if ther

      • So YOU are RIVSTP. (Actually I knew that from an earlier post here but this was a convenient place to point it out.)

        Keep up the good work.
      • Yes. Truly amazing. The RIAA lawyer tells the judge that the University will destroy the data if the motion is not granted. Leaving out the fact that the University told him that the data has been preserved. And the Judge "presumes" that that was an "honest mistake"?

        So in a situation where a Judge is so obviously and demonstrably "playing dumb" where can the people turn in order to be assured of the judge's fitness to be a judge? I don't find the Judge's presumptions to be amazing, I find them to a cause
    • Sure it does. See, "Honestly, if RIAA was more corrupt and criminal on operation, it would be legal to shoot them on sight in an honest intent of self defense."

      See, it fits nicely there in the same sentence.

  • Illegal joinder (Score:5, Insightful)

    by l2718 ( 514756 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @06:48PM (#25252325)
    Several years ago a New Mexico Judge (IIRC) instructed the RIAA to bring further suits against individual defendants rather than join several in one action. For example, there is no accusation here that the various students acted in concert to infringe copyrights -- whatever each of them allegedly did, it was done on an individual basis. Did the University raise this issue with the judge? Does the ruling address it?
    • Re:Illegal joinder (Score:5, Informative)

      by NewYorkCountryLawyer ( 912032 ) * <ray@NOsPAm.beckermanlegal.com> on Friday October 03, 2008 @06:51PM (#25252349) Homepage Journal

      Several years ago a New Mexico Judge (IIRC) instructed the RIAA to bring further suits against individual defendants rather than join several in one action. For example, there is no accusation here that the various students acted in concert to infringe copyrights -- whatever each of them allegedly did, it was done on an individual basis. Did the University raise this issue with the judge? Does the ruling address it?

      Well you're certainly on top of the issues. A number of judges, more than a dozen, have held that it is illegal to join the John Does. But the University did not raise it. The tenor of the motion was that they were looking out for the University's interests rather than those of the students.

      • by l2718 ( 514756 )

        The tenor of the motion was that they were looking out for the University's interests rather than those of the students.

        In that case, did any of the students also file independently of the university to get their interests considered?

        • Only if the University happens to have a student named John Doe.

        • did any of the students also file independently of the university to get their interests considered?

          Not to my knowledge, but I would not be surprised to see that happen now when subpoena number 2 gets served.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        The University is moving to quash the subpoena; it is not a party to the action. As such, I don't believe that it has standing to make a motion regarding the substance of the litigation itself. In short, the University is watching out for its own interests, but that's because the rules prevent it from watching out for the interests of others.

      • Re:Illegal joinder (Score:5, Interesting)

        by CodeBuster ( 516420 ) on Saturday October 04, 2008 @01:02AM (#25254261)

        The tenor of the motion was that they were looking out for the University's interests rather than those of the students.

        Unfortunate, but not surprising given the relatively low value that many universities place upon their undergraduates in general these days (and especially individual undergraduates...just another brick in the wall to them when they have 20K+ attending their school). They may care about undergraduates in the aggregate, as in what percentage of the brightest and most promising freshmen they are attracting, but undergraduates don't generally donate large sums of money to the university endowment or help research professors secure grant money or publish lots of peer reviewed academic papers (how can they? they are only undergraduates). Individual undergraduates might get better treatment depending upon how wealthy or famous their family is and whether or not they are members of the corporate elite or the political class, but if you are not the scion of a wealthy or powerful family then forget about the university going out of its way to assist you (particularly in legal matters that might cost the university lots of money). They would rather throw you to the wolves than pony up money and resources to protect you from litigation. At least, this is how it seems these days. Everyone is so afraid of getting sued that if it doesn't protect their own skin they just roll over and do what the opposing attorneys want in exchange for not getting sued...its the lawsuit society and seems like it is only getting worse. I suppose that will end this rant for now, but surely I cannot be alone here and other people have experienced similar things or drawn similar conclusions based upon what we read in the news.

        • Re:Illegal joinder (Score:5, Informative)

          by NewYorkCountryLawyer ( 912032 ) * <ray@NOsPAm.beckermanlegal.com> on Saturday October 04, 2008 @08:24AM (#25255549) Homepage Journal
          Let's not lose sight of the forest for the trees.

          The University of Oregon and the Oregon Attorney General did a great, great thing here.

          1. They were the first institution of higher learning to actually make a motion to quash an RIAA subpoena.
          2. Their motion papers [blogspot.com] and their reply papers [blogspot.com] were both fantastic.
          3. Other colleges and universities emulated their motion papers and made similar motions.
          4. They made the all important point about how the RIAA's "evidence" does not point to a copyright infringer, and the Judge -- despite the irrationality of his order -- recognized that.
          5. They made the all important point about MediaSentry operating without a license, a point which has been taken up by many other people in many other jurisdictions, leading to investigations of possibly criminal conduct in North Carolina, Michigan, Massachusetts, and elsewhere. (And PS-don't be surprised to see such an investigation launched in Oregon, since the Oregon Attorney General has gone on record with this issue.)
          6. The motion overall was extremely beneficial to the students; had the motion been granted, that would have been the end of it -- 17 RIAA victims would have been spared further persecution.
          7. The misjoinder of John Does issue, and the illegality issue, and many other issues, are still preserved for the John Does to raise, so they haven't lost anything.
          8. Other colleges and universities, based upon the Oregon AG's papers, have taken a second look at their policy of RIAA appeasement, and some are showing recalcitrance for the first time in 5 years.

          So in my book, the Oregon AG and the University of Oregon did a great thing. My hat is off to them. And I think history will show that they were right, and that they made an important contribution.
          • the Oregon AG and the University of Oregon did a great thing.

            If only other institutions which now roll over would follow the lead of Oregon institutions instead then perhaps the RIAA would be obliged to quit or at least change tactics and stop pursuing those who aren't really worth going after when the full rules of legal procecure apply. I have been pondering those rules myself in some of my spare moments and I think that these types of lawsuits (the extorted small settlement) will become ever more common, and perhaps not just in the entertainment industry, unless t

  • Easy defense (Score:5, Insightful)

    by clang_jangle ( 975789 ) * on Friday October 03, 2008 @06:49PM (#25252337) Journal

    The Court...allowed the RIAA to subpoena the identities of 'persons associated by dorm room occupancy or username with the 17 IP addresses listed' even though those people may be completely innocent.

    Sounds like the defense will have it easy. IANAL, but I'd expect the moment of being served on this one is probably a good time to file the countersuit.

    • by l2718 ( 514756 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @06:54PM (#25252377)
      Defending a lawsuit is never innocent. Even if you don't owe them anything, you actually have to prove it. The RIAA will trot our "experts" who will testify that their "evidence" shows you are likely to have infringed copyright. To fight this you at the very least need to pay a good lawyer, and will probably need some experts of your own. Even if you have the skills to represent yourself, you can't recover the cost of your own time spent on this [IANAL but I think that the lawyer's guild got a law passed so that people who represent themselves can't collect attorney's fees if they win]. Now add to this the emotional stress of fighting a deep-pocketed corporation and dealing with the judicial system, and you'll see that there's nothing "easy" about being sued.
      • by Walkingshark ( 711886 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @07:55PM (#25252757) Homepage

        Well, you CAN fight them, just not in court. Isn't it funny how we've set it up so that assymetrical power can be exercised from the rich to the poor, but not the other way around? Seems unsustainable over the long term to me.

  • Is it just me.... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by whoever57 ( 658626 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @06:53PM (#25252365) Journal
    or is it hard to believe that this and other judges are highly influenced by their own prejudices, to the point that they issue rulings that are legally unsound?
    • It's just you. (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 03, 2008 @07:32PM (#25252627)

      > or is it hard to believe that this and other judges are highly influenced by their own prejudices, to the point that they issue rulings that are legally unsound?

      It's just you. The other day, there was a Supreme Court decision that said there was 'consensus' in the law that child rape not be punishable by death. Then someone pointed out that there was, in fact such a law. They did not reconsider their decision and the dissenters pointed out that they didn't believe that the decision had been based on any such consensus in the first place, so it was pointless to reconsider.

      A while back, we had the $222k verdict set aside because the judge realized that he had, in fact, ignored important precedents (which the RIAA failed to notify him of).

      In this case, if I had to guess, the judge doesn't understand why the discovery orders are so important to the defense and simply wants to get through this preliminary crap and to the 'real' case. Not knowing the RIAA, he apparently doesn't realize that they plan to drop their case once they have this discovery and send out settlement letters.

      We on Slashdot know the RIAA better than most judges do because we hear about all their cases. Most judges are meeting the RIAA for the first time.

      How many times has SCO been given the benefit of the doubt, after all? While we were reading dozens of ridiculous proclamations from them every day, Judge Kimball was busy with real work and it took him a while to catch on to the fact that they were shysters. And once he caught on, they fled his court to get bankruptcy protection. It's been what? Four years? Five? And SCO's case is STILL going on!

      So no, it's not hard for me to believe that a judge would presume that a party was acting in good faith, contrary to all evidence, until it was personally demonstrated to them what kind of cock-smoking teabaggers the RIAA employs. After all, remember how many times SCO claimed that IBM was acting underhanded early on? I'm glad the judge didn't just take SCO's word for things. The judge waited to figure out for himself that SCO was, in fact, the cock-smoking teabagger so that he could deal with things appropriately.

      The annoying part is that it usually takes the judges a while to realize this, and shysters like SCO & the RIAA make sure they're in a different court by then, whether they have to drop & refile their case or seek bankruptcy protection.

      • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

        by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @08:27PM (#25252985)
        Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Re:It's just you. (Score:4, Informative)

          by TheLink ( 130905 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @10:42PM (#25253639) Journal

          "And while I think child molestors are scum"

          What the Law defines as Child Molester could be very different from what you are thinking of.

          Take the case of Genarlow Wilson who was convicted of aggravated child molestation:

          http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilson_v._State_of_Georgia [wikipedia.org]

          Maybe in the future the USA would be executing 15 year olds for having consensual sex with each other, in order to protect them of course.

          I believe they're already prosecuting them for distributing child porn because they send each other nude pics (kids these days...).

          It'll be wonderful to be living in United Saudi Arabia don't you think?

          I think the children need protection, but they also need protection from the government and the legal system ;).

  • But doesn't the court overstep it's bounds by suggesting, and approving an alternate wording?

  • by bigstrat2003 ( 1058574 ) * on Friday October 03, 2008 @07:01PM (#25252433)
    How much did this judge get paid for his decision? Because there's no way an honest man could've come to such a conclusion.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by konigstein ( 966024 )
      I had exactly the same thought. Either the judge isn't mentally in this century, or he's been paid some amount or favor to come to this conclusion.
    • by Pebby ( 1321397 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @07:32PM (#25252631)
      It wasn't money. The RIAA offered the judge a 3 album contract to help him finally realize his dream of pop stardom. Look for the debut album, "Judge, Jury, and Executioner" from 'MC Gaveltron' this Christmas.
    • The decision was issued by a federal judge, who is appointed for life. That's a pretty sweet gig and I doubt they would be swayed by only money, as the penalty for bribery is very severe.

      The long and the short of it is that the decision addressed the University's motion to quash the subpoena. The Judge granted the motion to quash, and allowed the plaintiff to file a more limited subpoena. There was no harm and no foul (aside from legal fees) from the overly-broad initial subpoena.

      If there was a violation of law regarding private investigators, that's a matter for the state Attorney General to prosecute. A federal judge cannot enforce state law by himself in a lawsuit involving private individuals. Perhaps the state has an interest in not pursuing the claim that would be frustrated if a federal court asserted a state right (the prerogative to enforce its own laws) on the state's behalf.

      You may be surprised to know that illegally-obtained evidence can be used in civil trials. The evidence can be admitted, and it's up to the defendants to file counterclaims for the violation of laws. That's when the state AG will get involved, hopefully, and make the RIAA machine responsible for its illegal investigators.

      The decision was limited to a very narrow issue regarding a subpoena. RIAA made admissions that limited the scope of the subpoena. The judge found the reduced scope acceptable, so he dismissed the initial subpoena and invited RIAA to file a subpoena of proper scope.

      • by billcopc ( 196330 ) <vrillco@yahoo.com> on Friday October 03, 2008 @08:19PM (#25252925) Homepage

        the penalty for bribery is very severe.

        Sure, how many judges do you know that have been tried and found guilty of accepting bribes ? One, two maybe ? Oh, is it zero ? Right, because no judge would dare inconvenience one of their own, especially when the tide of corruption is unstoppable, why bother with such a damaging case ?

        It's the kind of thing that puts your career to sleep, much like that young hotshot cop who thinks he's going to clean up the force. Next thing you know, he's doing traffic in some dead boring district because nobody wants him snooping around.

      • by guruevi ( 827432 )

        There is a saying: every man has his price. Whether it's money, blackmailing or special 'gifts', they can all be bought if you name the right price. It's just very risky if they're wrong.

        Another point: Judges etc. are in a political position by some type of vote at some point in time (whether you call it appointments or whatever) either by a group of laymen or a group of politicians meaning that at one time they were politicians making themselves seem whatever they needed to be to get that position.

        The RIAA

    • by BlueStrat ( 756137 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @07:48PM (#25252715)

      How much did this judge get paid for his decision? Because there's no way an honest man could've come to such a conclusion.

      The judge likely got paid nothing. Bribes are too obvious and easy to trace. Don't forget, the RIAA/Media Sentry do investigations for a living. They also had, what, a year? A lot of dirt can be dug up in a year. It's quite possible that the RIAA/Media Sentry lawyers and/or private investigators pretexted or pressured sources to obtain the judges' internet and phone records, copies of his credit card charges, and even taken a look at his family too.

      Maybe they found one of the judges' children or grandchildren had used P2P to illegally share copyrighted material without permission. Maybe the judge had some charges on his plastic at a strip club. Bribed people will flip on the briber if pressured. Those acting to keep secret their own or loved ones' indiscretions are much more reliable and likely to keep quiet, and that kind of pressure much harder to prove.

      Cheers!

      Strat

      • by Jerry ( 6400 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @08:22PM (#25252957)

        http://tripsforjudges.org/ [tripsforjudges.org] says otherwise. They just hide the income in different ways.

        Corporate special interests are wining and dining judges at fancy resorts under the pretext of "educating" them about complicated legal issues. Nothing for FREE, a July 2000 report by Community Rights Counsel (CRC), showed that these junkets appear to be working as their sponsors intend, encouraging rulings that strike down environmental protections and line the pockets of junket sponsors. CRC's most recent report, Tainted Justice, released in March 2004, expands on Nothing for FREE.

        You see, it works just like the "Fact-finding" junkets that Congress take each summer and around all the major vacation periods.

        • http://tripsforjudges.org/ [tripsforjudges.org] [tripsforjudges.org] says otherwise. They just hide the income in different ways.

          Corporate special interests are wining and dining judges at fancy resorts under the pretext of "educating" them about complicated legal issues. Nothing for FREE, a July 2000 report by Community Rights Counsel (CRC), showed that these junkets appear to be working as their sponsors intend, encouraging rulings that strike down environmental protections and line the pockets of junket sponsors. CRC's most

  • by [cx] ( 181186 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @07:30PM (#25252615)
    They probably told him they know all about his stolen Barry Manilow mp3s he has on his laptop in his chambers, justice was served shortly after.
  • Appeal? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Nom du Keyboard ( 633989 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @07:39PM (#25252663)
    Can this be appealed at all? Obviously innocent people are going to be thrown under the RIAA bus. When so much damage can be done by a subpoena, and many important factors aren't being considered, this can't be left to just the discretion of one clueless judge.
  • by ChienAndalu ( 1293930 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @07:45PM (#25252705)
    Everybody makes mistakes!
    Heck, yesterday a book fell on my keyboard - the next thing I know: every Metallica Album right in my incoming folder!
  • Malfeasance (Score:2, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Anyone in the public can submit a complaint to the State Bar. I would be willing to bet a series of submissions of the typical sophistication, quantity, and velocity of a typical /. response would get their attention. NOW.

    Jerry

  • "Honest Mistake" (Score:4, Insightful)

    by m509272 ( 1286764 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @08:01PM (#25252795)
    These clowns have started how many lawsuits? There's no such thing as an "honest mistake" at this point in the game. Can the judge be honestly this clueless??
  • by Jerry ( 6400 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @08:15PM (#25252903)

    how much did it take to lubricate the Judge?

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by TubeSteak ( 669689 )

      how much did it take to lubricate the Judge?

      Roughly 1/5th of a gallon of Single Malt Whiskey

  • I have no idea what narcotics THAT judge is on-but I WANT SOME! Seriously though, the phrase 'learned jurist' seems to ne an oxymoron these days!
  • so i headbutted him in the throat, picked up a beer bottle, smashed it on the counter, and stuck him in the abdomen with it as he stood up. after he fell to the floor grasping his throat and side, i took the barstool and smashed his head with it a few times

    turns out he was actually addressing the woman sitting next to me

    sorry, honest mistake

  • Can't someone whose judge was so clearly (and probably provably) corrupt use the courts to sue the judge?

  • by SageMusings ( 463344 ) on Friday October 03, 2008 @10:49PM (#25253675) Journal

    The Judge says he really enjoys the way his new Bentley handles and purrs like a kitten on the road.

  • Judge: "You lied to the court in order to harm the innocent defendants. I hereby find you guilty of perjury."
    RIAA lawyer: "It was an honest mistake."
    Everyone in the court room says things like "Well, if it's like that" or "Mistakes happen".
    Judge: "Well, in that case I can't really blame you. The defendants are sentenced to pay the RIAA one billion Dollars or go to jail for ten thousand years."

Technology is dominated by those who manage what they do not understand.

Working...