Originally posted by: dmcowen674
9-16-2003
Some musicians say they are beginning to wonder if the actions being taken in their name are a little extreme
Since the Recording Industry Association of America began its campaign against file-sharing services and unauthorized song swapping online in 1999, it has offered one chief justification for its actions: downloading songs is stealing money from the pockets of musicians.
But the musicians themselves have conflicted responses to file sharing and the tactics of the association, a trade group that represents record labels, not the musicians themselves, who have no organization that wields equal power.
"It would be nice if record companies would include artists on these decisions," said Deborah Harry of Blondie.
A few artists, like Metallica and Loudon Wainwright III, have come out strongly in favor of the record industry's crackdown.
At the same time, other influential musicians and groups ? like Moby, System of a Down, Public Enemy, and the Dead ? contend that the record industry's efforts are misguided and that it must work with the new technology instead of against it.
top-selling artists, even those who have been outspoken about embracing new technology, declined to comment on the lawsuits on the record, for fear of upsetting their labels.
Much of the stated concern over file sharing has centered on the revenue that record companies and musicians are losing, but few musicians ever actually receive royalties from their record sales on major labels, which managers say have accounting practices that are badly in need of review.
"I don't have sympathy for the record companies," said Mickey Melchiondo of the rock duo Ween. "They haven't been paying me royalties anyway."
9-9-2003
Mother of 12 Year Old Girl Settles RIAA Piracy Suit for $2,000 same day
"We understand now that file-sharing the music was illegal," Torres said in a statement distributed by the recording industry. "You can be sure Brianna won't be doing it anymore."
Brianna added: "I am sorry for what I have done. I love music and don't want to hurt the artists I love."
Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., also alluded to Brianna's case.
"Are you headed to junior high schools to round up the usual suspects?" Durbin asked RIAA President Cary Sherman during a Senate Judiciary hearing.
Sherman responded that most people don't shoplift because they fear they'll be arrested.
"We're trying to let people know they may get caught, therefore they should not engage in this behavior," Sherman said. "Yes, there are going to be some kids caught in this, but you'd be surprised at how many adults are engaged in this activity."
9-9-2003
War on P2P: Congress introduces Legilation to Make File-Sharing a Felony
That 12 year old girl and 71 year old Grandfather could spend up to five years in prison, pay a $250,000 fine for trading a *single* copyrighted song if the Author, Consumer and Computer Owner Protection and Security Act (ACCOPS, HR 2752) is passed by Congress. This is a profoundly wrong-headed approach to file-sharing and it's up to you to stop it. Write your Congressperson today and urge them to stop this unbelievable attack on the American public.
9-9-2003
12-Year-Old Sued for Music Downloading
Brianna was among 261 people sued for copying thousands of songs via popular Internet file-sharing software ? and thousands more suits could be on the way.
"Nobody likes playing the heavy and having to resort to litigation," said Cary Sherman, the RIAA's president. "But when your product is being regularly stolen, there comes a time when you have to take appropriate action."
71 Year Old Grandfather sued by RIAA, says he hardly uses the Computer Grandkids use it.
Durwood Pickle, 71, of Richardson, Texas, said his teenage grandchildren downloaded music onto his computer during their visits to his home. He said his grown son had explained the situation in an earlier e-mail to the recording industry association.
9-8-2003 RIAA Declares D-Day
Record Industry Sues Music File Swappers
The recording industry filed hundreds of lawsuits Monday against individual music lovers, accusing them of illegally downloading and sharing songs over the Internet
The industry in recent weeks also has served subpoenas on at least 10 universities in an effort to identify individual file-swappers.
9-6-2003 Members here looking to organize Black Friday RIAA Boycott and Protest - Keep checking here for Updates...
9-5-2003
RIAA Unveils Amnesty Offer
For people who admit they illegally share music files across the Internet, promising not to sue them in exchange for their admission and pledge to delete the songs off their computers.
"It will be an interesting measure of how much fear the recording industry has managed to inject into the American public."
said Fred von Lohmann, a lawyer for the San Francisco-based Electronic Frontier Foundation, who has criticized the RIAA's use of copyright subpoenas. "I'll be curious to see how many opt for this."
9-4-2003 Even bigger news in the maybe they have a clue Dept:
World's largest record Company claims they only make 91 cents on a CD
Universal Music to Cut CD Prices to Under $13
"We expect this will invigorate the music market in North America," said Doug Morris, the label's chief executive. "This will allow retailers (to sell) for $10 or less if they so choose."
"Wholesale prices for CDs would decline to $9.09 from $12.02. For a handful of bigger name artists, wholesale prices would be $10.10 for a short period of time..."
So they still expect the public to believe they will only make 91 cents on a CD?
9-4-2003 Man tests Property rights in the Digital Age, tries to sell .99 cent Apple iTunes song he bought on EBay.
Says he will not keep a copy. Also said he will give the proceeds of the Sale to the EFF.
Bidding now up to $300
Value is at least $150,000 since the RIAA says that is how much each song is worth.
Does the Right of First Sale Still Exist?
Discussion on /.
Testing The Right To Resell Downloaded Music
9-3-2003 Research Group predicts end of CD's and DVD's
Virtual Delivery Seen as Death to Discs
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Hollywood will win the war against illegal downloading but the battlefield will be littered with casualties, including the DVD and CD formats as physical means of distributing video and audio, according to a Forrester Research study released Tuesday.
The study predicts that in five years, CDs and DVDs will start to go the way of the vinyl LP as 33% of music sales and 19% of home video revenue shifts to streaming and downloading....
Ruling may affect RIAA/MPAA pursuits against Internet Users
9-3-2003
Court: ISP subpoenas a 'grave' matter
"The subpoena power is a substantial delegation of authority to private parties, and those who invoke it have a grave responsibility to ensure it is not abused," said Judge Alex Kozinski.
This case is not related to the RIAA Vs Verizon or SBC cases, however legal experts say this ruling may eventually apply to the tactics being used by the RIAA/MPAA.
In the case that led to last week's ruling, an attorney obtained 339 e-mail messages--including personal communications and mail that had no relevance to the lawsuit--from the ISP, NetGate.
The panel ruled that the attorney had violated two federal laws: the Stored Communications Act and the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. The Stored Communications Act "reflects Congress' judgment that users have a legitimate interest in the confidentiality of communications in electronic storage at a communications facility.
"Just as trespass protects those who rent space from a commercial storage facility to hold sensitive documents, the Act protects users whose electronic communications are in electronic storage with an ISP or other electronic communications facility."
9-3-2003
Copy protected CDs illegal in France? Not quite
French Woman wins Lawsuit against Copyprotected CD's that don't work in all Players.
A Nanterre court has ordered the music label to refund a woman who could not play her new Alain Souchon CD on her car CD player. Alternatively, EMI is to provide a full-working copy. The ruling applies to all people who have bought CDs which they cannot play on some CD players, computers and Walkmans.
But EMI was not forbidden by the court to sell copyright protected CDs per se, merely that it must not sell defective CDs. So it appears like it could be back to the drawing board for the anti-piracy measures it uses.
8-28-2003
RIAA files Court case against "Jane Doe" Brooklyn New York Verizon customer
The RIAA in examining her Computer using FBI Forensic programs by remote control claim that the files on her Computer date back to Napster.
"The 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act (news - web sites) permits music companies to force Internet providers to turn over the names of suspected music pirates upon subpoena from any U.S. District Court clerk's office, without a judge's signature required.
The RIAA has said it expects to file at least several hundred lawsuits seeking financial damages as early as next month. U.S. copyright laws allow for damages of $750 to $150,000 for each song offered illegally on a person's computer, but the RIAA has said it would be open to settlement proposals from defendants.
The campaign comes just weeks after U.S. appeals court rulings requiring Internet providers to readily identify subscribers suspected of illegally sharing music and movie files."
8-26-2003
Websites begin ISP Subpoena's to identify people that surf their site
Thanks to the RIAA's and the Legal system's destruction of due process exploitation will now commence to new levels.
8-24-2003
EFF RIAA Subpoena database - Put in your address to see if you & your ISP has been subpoena'd for prosecution
8-22-2003
File swapper fights RIAA subpoena
Good detailed discussion from SlashDot
Anonymous User Challenges RIAA Subpoena
8-11-2003
NetCoalition Sends Letter to RIAA Requesting Answers about Subpoena Initiative
"There are understandable fears among many in the Internet community that the real purpose of this legal campaign is to achieve in court what the association has not yet been able to accomplish in Congress ? to make Internet companies legally responsible for the conduct of individuals who use their systems," the letter proclaims.
8-8-2003
RIAA steps up bid to force BC, MIT to name students
8-8-2003
Judge Rejects Subpoenas in Music-Use Case, Siding With MIT, BC
This is temporary because it simply means that the RIAA will have to spend money and set up shop in each State that just doesn't allow a Bully in Washington DC to do what they please.
7-31-2003
Pac Bell's Internet arm sues music industry over file-sharer IDs
SBC/PacBell is the first ISP to Sue & question RIAA tactics. Was wondering how long before and how many paying customers the ISP's and Telco's in the U.S. could lose before they make a move to stop the RIAA.
7-29-2003
RIAA will take 2191.78 years to sue everyone at 75 per day
The Inquirer assumes that they plan on staying at 75 per day though.
7-22-2003
Boston Colleg & MIT decline to name students in music-use case
The first Universities to not just hand over the information. Fitting that the battle begins in the area of where the U.S.A. was forged.
7-21-2003 Reports say they are up to 75 Subpoenas a day now.
7-20-2003 Now serving 15 Subpoenas a day
RIAA nails 1,000 music-lovers in 'new Prohibition' jihad
7-16-2003
Record Labels Send ISPs Subpoenas in Piracy Battle
7-2-2003 SpeakEasy DSL ISP embraces and endorses Wi-Fi sharing with co-sharing of billing.
SpeakEasy comes up with innovative Wi-Fi Sharing plan
The RIAA could learn from this embracing of technology with innovation and progress instead of digression.
6-30-2003 Busy day today. 7th Court of Appeals rules P2P is illegal and not protected under VCR decision or Photocopiers.
7th Court of Appeals rules P2P is illegal
6-30-2003 Musicians against RIAA tactics
Musicians united against RIAA Tactics
6-30-2003
What is the EFF doing for P2P?
6-29-2003 RIAA now encouraging lower CD prices?
I don't have an article for this, it is a personal observation of seeing Pre-Sales advertisements that the Ashanti new CD release due on Tuesday July 1, 2003 is earmarked for $9.99.
This is the day so many people kept telling me "it won't happen", well what do you guys have to say now???
RIAA makes announcement it is going after individuals 6-25-2003
6-25-2003
Recording Industry to Sue Internet Song Swappers
"On a visceral level it doesn't sound like it's the smartest thing to do, but obviously they've done the cost-benefit analysis and they've decided they have to do it," said Gigi Sohn, president of Public Knowledge, a nonprofit advocacy group.
6-5-2003
Verizon Turns Over Names in Piracy Case
6-4-2003
Verizon to hand names over to RIAA
6-4-2003 Breaking News: Verizon told to reveal P2P Users to RIAA IMMEDIATELY
Here is the latest from the EFF front page
6-4-2003
EFF Statement on Court Order Requiring Verizon to Identify Users Pending Further Rulings
6-4-2003
Court Rejects Request on Alleged Pirates
Verizon given 2 weeks to reveal P2P Users to RIAA
C-Net News.com article on Verizon given 14 days to ID P2P Users to RIAA
The Judge (Bates) says that the RIAA is able to subpoena the subscriber's information under existing copyright law (The DMCA) , even without an open legal case. Verizon contends that the RIAA nee....
Edited for Fair Use excerpt Guidelines
Post Discalimer: All the facts are not here for review and debate as you will have to purchase your own copy (which you are really only renting) from the Copyright Holder in order to fully review and debate the matter at hand.