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Old 10-05-2007, 08:50 AM   #51
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Originally Posted by tony404 View Post
not true you have no rights to share anything because you pay a cable bill.Do a google search with the words hbo and bit torrent. They are going after people for downloading hbo's shows. nothing in it about asking them for their cable bills.
Or look up how the NFL went ballastic on an Indianapolis church who was going to show the 2006 Super Bowl on a big screen TV for their congregation.
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Old 10-05-2007, 08:57 AM   #52
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Thats alot of money
Not to the webmasters of GFY. They wipe with that much daily.

cackle..
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Old 10-05-2007, 09:16 AM   #53
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Alex.. in the case of a song over the radio or a show over the television, there is no fee paid! You don't get distribution rights.. period.. the end. Those are retained by the copyright holder.

You as an individual have a right to copy something for yourself. Plain and simple. The original is supposed to be owned by you, not by someone else. If you make a recording of a song off the radio.. fine.. back it up if you like. don't back it up for someone else or offer it to someone else.. that's a violation. Same goes for a television recording, software, video file, etc etc etc.
I am playing the Gideon gamer now. When you listen to the radio, you pay a fee (by listening to the commercials, you pay with your time). That should be enough to grant fair use rights to Gideon so that he can reuse those songs any way he sees fit, including giving them to 100,000 of his closest friends and neighbors!

Like I said, Gideon makes the mistakes of confusing his restricted rights as a buyer of a CD or movie (or as a viewer on TV) with those rights granted to the original copyright holder or their licensees for distribution.
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Old 10-05-2007, 09:18 AM   #54
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Originally Posted by Kevin-SFBucks View Post
Since we are all spouting off about things we don't know (I am not a lawyer).
I hear what you're saying (and people who take legal council from anyone other than a board-certified lawyer in their own state isn't working in his or her best interests)... but claiming one has to be a lawyer to know the law is as misdirected as saying one has to be a physicist to understand gravity.
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Old 10-05-2007, 09:28 AM   #55
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Again, wrong. You are correct for points 1 and 2. But for points 3 and 4, sorry, but you are wrong. If you missed CSI last night, you don't have the right to go download it this morning. If you didn't happen to see that movie that played on HBO last night, you didn't suddenly get the rights to watch it today. The receiving gear and storage of material received is YOUR problem, not the industry's problem.

When you say "gain access from other liciences" (and I won't comment on the spelling) you miss the main point: everyone else is under the same restricted license with NO RIGHTS FOR REDISTRIBUTION. They have the same restricted rights that you had in watching it.

If you pay for cable TV this month, it doesn't mean that the cable company has to once again provide you access when the shows return as a repeat in the future. It doesn't mean they have to give you copies of the programs you might have missed.

You really don't get it, do you?

again you are missing the point
3. read it completely don't just cherry pick parts to prove your point http://www.eff.org/IP/DMCA/MGM_v_321...0219_Order.pdf

4. if you were correct and that the act of getting a replacement copy for material i had a licience to view from a friend then
BETAMAX case would have upheld the restriction requiring vcrs to have some type of encoding that prevented there viewing on another VCR. THEY DID NOT. I suggest you read the case law again because you haven't.

again i will get back to the entire point i was making at the begining, which you keep ignoring.

Quote:
since the torrent file does not contain any copyright material and doesn't contain any trade secrets should it be protected by the copyright laws as well
I can write books telling people how to do illegal things( like making bombs), i can write software that can potentially be used to do illegal things(like cracking dvd encryption). All of those are protected by both copyright law and first ammendment rights. If your right and your copyright allows control of distribution of your work, doesn't the torrent creator have the same right to protect his copyright.

Wouldn't you be violating his copyright to protect your own WHEN YOU CAN PERFECTLY PROTECT YOUR COPYRIGHT by going after the SEEDERS DIRECTLY.

Your arguement about how strong your copyright protection is flawed because you seem to want to ignore "fair use" the problem is even if i seed the point (which i am only doing to make the point because your assessment about the lack of power of "fair use" is dead wrong) then the .torrent file should be entitled to the same incontrovertible protection as well.


your arguement is flawed because if you are correct about how perfect your protection is targeting the .torrent files is violation of their copyright

And if you are wrong it then "fair use" prevents you from targeting the .torrent file as well.
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Old 10-05-2007, 09:35 AM   #56
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Originally Posted by D View Post
I hear what you're saying (and people who take legal council from anyone other than a board-certified lawyer in their own state isn't working in his or her best interests)... but claiming one has to be a lawyer to know the law is as misdirected as saying one has to be a physicist to understand gravity.
I wasn't claiming that you have to be a lawyer.. but they certainly understand the law 1000 times better than we do.

Point well made though and I do agree with you.

My intent was hoping that people read the court filing (especially Gideon) and recognize that rather than assumption and conjecture, there is legitimacy for what the RIAA is doing and case law to back up their position.
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Old 10-05-2007, 09:38 AM   #57
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everyone else is under the same restricted license with NO RIGHTS FOR REDISTRIBUTION. They have the same restricted rights that you had in watching it.
you assume that they have no right to distribute to people who have purchased a licienced right to view WITHOUT PROOF.

You ignore the fact that BETAMAX case actually recognized this right by not requiring VCRs to have an encoding schema that would have prevented the playing on another device.

You ignore the fact that when i am recovering my data from an online backup i am reaquiring a lost copy of said material.

VCRs without an ecoding schema that would prevent their playing on another VCR would be illegal if you were right.

Online backup would be illegal if you were right.

it is another A-B-A proof again and you know it

I will make it simple for you

Why did the BETAMAX case not result in a ruling that the technology was invalid until they implemented an encoding schema that prevented it from playing it on another device. If you were correct and the ruling DID NOT give me the right to aquire a missed copy from a friend such a ruling would be 100% legitimate.
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Old 10-05-2007, 09:42 AM   #58
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again you are missing the point
3. read it completely don't just cherry pick parts to prove your point http://www.eff.org/IP/DMCA/MGM_v_321...0219_Order.pdf
I may have missed it, but what in this ruling is making your point. I could show you lots and lots of cases and say hey.. read them.... yeah.. whatever....LOL.. Wait.. I did do that didn't.. Well I did read the RIAA v Jammie Thomas and RIAA did win.. which means their arguments against distribution were valid for the time being.. which puts this as the most relevant case until the appeal is held.

Quote:
4. if you were correct and that the act of getting a replacement copy for material i had a licience to view from a friend then
BETAMAX case would have upheld the restriction requiring vcrs to have some type of encoding that prevented there viewing on another VCR. THEY DID NOT. I suggest you read the case law again because you haven't.
I would venture to say that the restriction against encoding had more to do with my right to have my copy work on a subsequent machine that I own and is for my personal purposes than it did to allow you to share your copy with a friend. Me having rights to my copies is in line with fair use.. you distributing copies to friends because of a vis a vis assumption is not fair use. I may be wrong.. gimme the case link.. I want to read the opinion that has a judge saying its ok to share content of any type with your friends.

sometimes a judge is smart enough to protect us from our own stupidity (like restricting our personal right to do something for ourselves)... but their actions get misinterpreted.
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Last edited by Kevin Marx; 10-05-2007 at 09:43 AM.. Reason: forgot something
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Old 10-05-2007, 09:47 AM   #59
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So just to clarify...all those people who are all for the RIAA suing people like this have never downloaded anything of peer to peer networks? Stop being a hypocrite.

I'm not afraid admit that I download songs. But I also go to the record store on a weekly basis. I probably have around 500 albums on either cd or record, I go to shows and I'd probably buy a tshirt too if it wasn't a raping ($40-50 for a tshirt, give me a break they are poor quality and probably only worth $20).

This is a tough issue for me because I love music and I try to support it as much as I can (I think buying 5-10 albums a month is pretty fucking good) but there are still loads of albums that I want from artists that either don't have their product in the record stores here (Toronto), or I just don't have the money to buy it.

Downloading is obviously a problem, but suing your customers is really unnecessary in my opinion. They are victimizing their own customers. Somehow I don't think that these suits are going to stop downloaders or uploaders all that much since the percentage they go after is so so so low when you look at the population in the US. They need to figure out how to survive and be profitable in this new age otherwise they are going to loose their customer base and go out of business anyways.

I would argue (and win) that Clear Channel has hurt the music industry far more than p2p networks ever will.
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Old 10-05-2007, 09:49 AM   #60
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Originally Posted by Kevin-SFBucks View Post
I wasn't claiming that you have to be a lawyer.. but they certainly understand the law 1000 times better than we do.

Point well made though and I do agree with you.

My intent was hoping that people read the court filing (especially Gideon) and recognize that rather than assumption and conjecture, there is legitimacy for what the RIAA is doing and case law to back up their position.
I have never rejected the legitimacy of what they are doing, because that is exactly the act i have been arguing they should be doing-- going after the INFRINGING SEEDER directly.

What i reject is your arguement that this win grants the RIAA and you more rights than explicitly specified in the case.

(see your arguements that KAZZA and by extension Torrents/ torrentspy, isohunt, TPB etc) are liable.

This lady never produced any proof she owned the content in question
and secondly RIAA produced proof of infringement that exceed previously defined speculative claim (Interscope v. Rodriguez)


she is exactly the type of seeder who should be removed from the p2p network so that fair use people like myself can enjoy the technology available.
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Old 10-05-2007, 09:50 AM   #61
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Gideon, nobody is ignoring your point. You are ignoring everyone else's points though.

Quote:
f you were correct and that the act of getting a replacement copy for material i had a licience to view from a friend then
BETAMAX case would have upheld the restriction requiring vcrs to have some type of encoding that prevented there viewing on another VCR. THEY DID NOT. I suggest you read the case law again because you haven't.
Wrong. You cannot take the physical limitations (or lack of) on a VCR and have it just wipe away copyright restrictions. At the time of the Betamax decision, the widest potential distribution for a single copy of a video was "immediate friends" and it wasn't an issue. VCRs are sold ot the public make only degraded copies (technically, they record less than the true image, compressing it and using less scan lines, then artificially puffing it up on playback. When you record that playback signal, the end result is even worse picture quality. But about the 5th copy, it looks like a snowman in a snowstorm at night). The courts didn't touch on or addres the concept of mass reproduction because that wasn't in the scope of the trial. The EXTREMELY LIMITED RIGHTS gained because of the betamax case in no way extend to mass redistribution or reproduction. Until you get this stupidity out of your head, you won't understand any of the other underlying concepts.

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since the torrent file does not contain any copyright material and doesn't contain any trade secrets should it be protected by the copyright laws as well
I can write books telling people how to do illegal things( like making bombs), i can write software that can potentially be used to do illegal things(like cracking dvd encryption). All of those are protected by both copyright law and first ammendment rights. If your right and your copyright allows control of distribution of your work, doesn't the torrent creator have the same right to protect his copyright.

Wouldn't you be violating his copyright to protect your own WHEN YOU CAN PERFECTLY PROTECT YOUR COPYRIGHT by going after the SEEDERS DIRECTLY.
WRONG AGAIN!

Torrent files aren't "innocent pieces of data" anymore than guns are innocent repositories for gunpowder. People who trade torrent files aren't trading them for fun, they are trading them for the information they contain, the keys to castle as it were. Without the torrent files, there would be no P2P file sharing over TPB or any other torrent file site. Eliminating torrent trackers / torrent search engines would more significantly limit P2P file trading than attacking any single seeder. Without those things in place, the seeders would be seeding to NOTHING.

The entire process is what causes the copyrighted material to be shared without permission. Remove the locating services, remove the torrent files themselves, and there would be no method for anyone to find the stuff to start with. It is a "pimp and ho" sort of thing. The pimp profits from the ho. Get rid of the hos, and all you got left is a bunch of uneducated men in funny fur coats.
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Old 10-05-2007, 09:55 AM   #62
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So just to clarify...all those people who are all for the RIAA suing people like this have never downloaded anything of peer to peer networks? Stop being a hypocrite.
I don't download music... so I am not being hypocritical. I don't download anything. If I want it, I buy it. I expect others to do the same.

Quote:
I'm not afraid admit that I download songs. But I also go to the record store on a weekly basis. I probably have around 500 albums on either cd or record, I go to shows and I'd probably buy a tshirt too if it wasn't a raping ($40-50 for a tshirt, give me a break they are poor quality and probably only worth $20).

This is a tough issue for me because I love music and I try to support it as much as I can (I think buying 5-10 albums a month is pretty fucking good) but there are still loads of albums that I want from artists that either don't have their product in the record stores here (Toronto), or I just don't have the money to buy it.
Supporting the industry is great... rationalizing that you buy enough, so at some point you are OK with getting it for free is not. Would you use the same rationale at your local grocery store? Hey.. I buy $800 in groceries from you each month.. it's not that big of a deal that I get some for free every now and then. Theft is theft.. plain and simple.

Quote:
Downloading is obviously a problem, but suing your customers is really unnecessary in my opinion. They are victimizing their own customers. Somehow I don't think that these suits are going to stop downloaders or uploaders all that much since the percentage they go after is so so so low when you look at the population in the US. They need to figure out how to survive and be profitable in this new age otherwise they are going to loose their customer base and go out of business anyways.

I would argue (and win) that Clear Channel has hurt the music industry far more than p2p networks ever will.
People have a right to protect their product. Just because it is mainstream and everyone knows about it (in the case of music) does not mean that RIAA or ClearChannel or others must adapt to the thievery market. They have a right to sell their product to legitimate users and to control the distribution. Why create a product otherwise?

You are wrong in that p2p or torrents don't really hurt the industry. Of course they do. These are all users that are potential purchasers which are now getting the product at no cost. Unless that usage is checked and stopped.. it will continue to increase, thereby decreasing legitimate purchasers. Everyone gets hurt except for the leeching users who say.. what's the big deal???? it's just one song.
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Old 10-05-2007, 09:57 AM   #63
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I have never rejected the legitimacy of what they are doing, because that is exactly the act i have been arguing they should be doing-- going after the INFRINGING SEEDER directly.

What i reject is your arguement that this win grants the RIAA and you more rights than explicitly specified in the case.

(see your arguements that KAZZA and by extension Torrents/ torrentspy, isohunt, TPB etc) are liable.

This lady never produced any proof she owned the content in question
and secondly RIAA produced proof of infringement that exceed previously defined speculative claim (Interscope v. Rodriguez)


she is exactly the type of seeder who should be removed from the p2p network so that fair use people like myself can enjoy the technology available.
Gideon.. keep going.. you didn't get to the part in the filing about distribution rights.... you can't avoid that part... nowhere in the case was fair use addressed that said you can share with others.

Point me to the case law that says you can do that... quote it.. take me to it so I can read it!!!
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Old 10-05-2007, 10:11 AM   #64
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I may have missed it, but what in this ruling is making your point. I could show you lots and lots of cases and say hey.. read them.... yeah.. whatever....LOL.. Wait.. I did do that didn't.. Well I did read the RIAA v Jammie Thomas and RIAA did win.. which means their arguments against distribution were valid for the time being.. which puts this as the most relevant case until the appeal is held.
ok let look at the case in question

1. "The questioning then turned to her CD-ripping habits. In her deposition, Thomas said that she ripped no more than six or seven CDs per day"

assuming only a month (which was the time frame for the case in question) with 10 songs per cd that would be 600-700 per day for a grand total 21,000songs shared, she was only guilty for 24 songs. If "fair use" was as weak as you say it is, if copyright law was as strong as you say it was then she ADMITTED TO 21,000 violations and should have been convicted of a lot more violations, SHE WAS NOT. That the point i am making

AND THAT IS THE POINT YOU ARE IGNORING.

you are trying to expand the case to mean a lot more than it actually does. I have no objection to this ruling because only convicted her of copyright infringement for material she had bought no rights too. I believe that such an act is an infringement, and i WANT YOU TO TAKE THOSE PEOPLE OUT OF THE NETWORK so that i am only sharing with PEOPLE WHO DO HAVE A RIGHT TO THE CONTENT.
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Old 10-05-2007, 10:19 AM   #65
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provide the link to what you are reading.. I am curious to read your info as well.
http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/200...ury-finds.html

According to this article, they brought her to court over 24 songs of the 1700 that were shared. Got hit for $9250 a pop for each song, even though there was no proof that the songs were indeed transferred to anyone.

The part about the judge initially requiring proof of transfer and then rescinding isnt talked about in that article, but I gathered that from several other articles of many that are circulating around about this.
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Old 10-05-2007, 10:25 AM   #66
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My only problem with this whole thing is this - give me an outlet to legally purchase all the media I want to consume and I will pay for it.

I'm a music fan. Sadly, a lot of music is not available for sale in Canada or online. How do I get a copy legally? As a consumer I want to consume! Give me the product.

The grocery store analogy doesn't take the above into account...

Instead of spending so much money on prosecuting these infringers (who are completely in the wrong, I agree) spend the money on creating outlets for people to purchase the product and be good consumers.

Bah...
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Old 10-05-2007, 10:27 AM   #67
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Waaaaaaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit...... what about her FAIR USE rights??? didnt' the judge think about that?

You know... if she had been in Sweden, it would have been OK.
Do you even know what FAIR USE is? If I bought a CD and made 100 copies and just gave them away that is still ILLEGAL.
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Old 10-05-2007, 10:33 AM   #68
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ok let look at the case in question

1. "The questioning then turned to her CD-ripping habits. In her deposition, Thomas said that she ripped no more than six or seven CDs per day"

assuming only a month (which was the time frame for the case in question) with 10 songs per cd that would be 600-700 per day for a grand total 21,000songs shared, she was only guilty for 24 songs. If "fair use" was as weak as you say it is, if copyright law was as strong as you say it was then she ADMITTED TO 21,000 violations and should have been convicted of a lot more violations, SHE WAS NOT. That the point i am making

AND THAT IS THE POINT YOU ARE IGNORING.
You need to read up a little more on the case. The defendants lawyer succeeded in getting the RIAA's proof of ownership for the 1700+ songs i question tossed out, which would have meant a very long trial, as each song or group of songs would have required different expert testimony, and would potentially have lead to discovery motions on all of the contracts that grant the rights to the record companies and the RIAA. As a result, they select 24 songs that were accepted as "owned", and moved forward. Considering the net result of $220,000 dollars, there is no reason to think that any more songs would have been needed to make the point.

Key in this case: Having the files in the Kazaa "shared" folder is enough to prove intent to distribute. Likewise, having files "seeded" on a torrent program would likely be more than enough as well.

Important too: Just because the end user(s) are found guilty doesn't in any way limit Kazaa's liability. There is nothing in the judgement that I can see that would say that.
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Old 10-05-2007, 10:36 AM   #69
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I don't download music... so I am not being hypocritical. I don't download anything. If I want it, I buy it. I expect others to do the same.

Supporting the industry is great... rationalizing that you buy enough, so at some point you are OK with getting it for free is not. Would you use the same rationale at your local grocery store? Hey.. I buy $800 in groceries from you each month.. it's not that big of a deal that I get some for free every now and then. Theft is theft.. plain and simple.

People have a right to protect their product. Just because it is mainstream and everyone knows about it (in the case of music) does not mean that RIAA or ClearChannel or others must adapt to the thievery market. They have a right to sell their product to legitimate users and to control the distribution. Why create a product otherwise?

You are wrong in that p2p or torrents don't really hurt the industry. Of course they do. These are all users that are potential purchasers which are now getting the product at no cost. Unless that usage is checked and stopped.. it will continue to increase, thereby decreasing legitimate purchasers. Everyone gets hurt except for the leeching users who say.. what's the big deal???? it's just one song.
And this is the argument that they will continue to use until they realize that suing their customers is only hurting themselves.

The grocery store example does not translate to the Music industry where the cost of production is relatively low these days if we are talking about production. The act of recording songs would take place if recorded music is sold or otherwise as it is a necessary step in the songwriting process. If I steal food at the grocery store I have physically taken something and not paid for it whereas when you download a song you do not have the physical product (the album with artwork the cd or record) what you have is a relatively poor quality copy of it no different from copying a movie on VHS back a few years ago.

The main problem is that artists no longer really need the industry to support them as they can do everything by themselves over the internet at a very low cost which Radiohead is about to prove (and Pearl Jam already did by selling their live shows for $10 for a digital download). The record companies are just not too happy about this fact and are trying their hardest to stay in business. Their great plan to accomplish this is by suing the people who are supporting their artists.

Bands make their money mostly through touring and merchandise sold at those events. They make very little on the actual album. So downloading songs and telling your friends about a band is actually helping them because it means the difference of doing a small tour at small venues or doing a bigger one at larger venues. And it also gets people like me who like to collect to buy the album. For example, this summer I saw Dispatch. They rose in popularity because of Napster. They never sold that many albums and haven't made a record since 2000. Yet they were able to sell out MSG for three nights in a matter of minutes. So there is just one example of p2p helping out artists.

On to Myspace...why do you think bands are so active on there and put up songs for us to listen to? Because radio is all but dead (because of Clear Channel) and MTV and MuchMusic choose to play reality TV instead of music. So where are bands supposed to promote themselves? Why do you think NIN and Prince are also giving away albums for free? Because they understand that for them getting their material out there is more important than making sales off of it (so they can sell out huge arenas and stadiums).

This is not an argument that is going to be won by either side. But it is a changing of the guard and that much is obvious. It's like any industry that goes through change for any number of reasons...you have to adapt or risk going out of business.
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Old 10-05-2007, 10:36 AM   #70
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ok let look at the case in question

1. "The questioning then turned to her CD-ripping habits. In her deposition, Thomas said that she ripped no more than six or seven CDs per day"

assuming only a month (which was the time frame for the case in question) with 10 songs per cd that would be 600-700 per day for a grand total 21,000songs shared, she was only guilty for 24 songs. If "fair use" was as weak as you say it is, if copyright law was as strong as you say it was then she ADMITTED TO 21,000 violations and should have been convicted of a lot more violations, SHE WAS NOT. That the point i am making

AND THAT IS THE POINT YOU ARE IGNORING.

you are trying to expand the case to mean a lot more than it actually does. I have no objection to this ruling because only convicted her of copyright infringement for material she had bought no rights too. I believe that such an act is an infringement, and i WANT YOU TO TAKE THOSE PEOPLE OUT OF THE NETWORK so that i am only sharing with PEOPLE WHO DO HAVE A RIGHT TO THE CONTENT.
I don't care if she had 5 songs or 1000 songs... each violation counts. Just becuse she only put up 24 songs is only part of the argument. They apparently were shared 1700 times. There's your $130 per violation.

If you read the law, RIAA had the right to request actual damages vs. statutory damages. They went with option 2.


17 USCA 106
17 U.S.C.A. s 106
UNITED STATES CODE ANNOTATED
TITLE 17. COPYRIGHTS
CHAPTER 1--SUBJECT MATTER AND SCOPE OF COPYRIGHT
Current through P.L. 105-153, approved 12-17-97

s 106. Exclusive rights in copyrighted works

Subject to sections 107 through 120, the owner of copyright under this title has the exclusive rights to do and to authorize any of the following:
(1) to reproduce the copyrighted work in copies or phonorecords;
(2) to prepare derivative works based upon the copyrighted work;
(3) to distribute copies or phonorecords of the copyrighted work to the public by sale or other transfer of ownership, or by rental, lease, or lending;

Please go to section 107 (which is where fair use resides) and show me where my right to distribute has been trumped by your right to share with anyone else. (it's not there) Ok now point me to the case law (which you havent') that says you can do so. Don't say that BetaMax does.. show me if you can find something.
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Old 10-05-2007, 10:38 AM   #71
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Do you even know what FAIR USE is? If I bought a CD and made 100 copies and just gave them away that is still ILLEGAL.
I was being a smartass and yes I do know what Fair Use is. It is located in US code 17 subsection 107. I have read it many times.

But you are right.. giving them away is still illegal. Thank you though.
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Old 10-05-2007, 10:42 AM   #72
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My only problem with this whole thing is this - give me an outlet to legally purchase all the media I want to consume and I will pay for it.

I'm a music fan. Sadly, a lot of music is not available for sale in Canada or online. How do I get a copy legally? As a consumer I want to consume! Give me the product.

The grocery store analogy doesn't take the above into account...

Instead of spending so much money on prosecuting these infringers (who are completely in the wrong, I agree) spend the money on creating outlets for people to purchase the product and be good consumers.

Bah...
Lost mind, I would suggest you complain to your favorite artists that you can't buy if that is the case. They are the ones entering into restrictive contracts, rather than allowing the music to "be free".

One of the funny stories right now is the whole Radiohead deal. For those who don't know, this band (who no longer has any recording deal) self produced an album which they will sell on the internet for "whatever people want to pay", minimum being about $1 to pay for processing. They are also selling an upscale box set of the album for about $80.

Many people in the "record companies suck" world are pointing to this as the way of the future, how bands could just set up shop, record their own albums, and sell them by themselves, making the money and no longer feeding the money hungry record companies.

Hahahahahaha. Fuck that makes me laugh.

Question: How does anyone know Radiohead from a hole in the wall? They do only because (a) they had a number of albums released and distributed worldwide by record labels, (b) they received marketing support, advertising, and promotion from the record labels, and (c) they received advances of funds from the record companies in order to be able to record the albums.

What Radiohead is doing today is taking all the market exposure, all the build up, all the promotion, and all the brand awareness built up by the record companies involved and turning it to thier favor. Without the record companies, they wouldn't be here to start with.

Without the capital to record, produce, master, duplicate, and distribute widely a significant number of records in a significant number of markets, most musicians would be eating whatever the local version of Kraft Dinner is for the rest of thier lives, playing gigs for bar tab money.
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Old 10-05-2007, 10:46 AM   #73
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Subject to sections 107 through 120, the owner of copyright under this title has the exclusive rights to do and to authorize any of the following:
(1) to reproduce the copyrighted work in copies or phonorecords;
(2) to prepare derivative works based upon the copyrighted work;
(3) to distribute copies or phonorecords of the copyrighted work to the public by sale or other transfer of ownership, or by rental, lease, or lending;
They way overstep their boundaries by stating that you can't even lend the album to your friend. I say suck a nut. Everyone here has lent their friend an album, DVD, a book. If not, you are either way too uptight, way to straight edge, or more than likely a bad friend. This is exactly why I say screw the RIAA! Your time is over.
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Old 10-05-2007, 10:48 AM   #74
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The grocery store example does not translate to the Music industry where the cost of production is relatively low these days if we are talking about production. The act of recording songs would take place if recorded music is sold or otherwise as it is a necessary step in the songwriting process. If I steal food at the grocery store I have physically taken something and not paid for it whereas when you download a song you do not have the physical product (the album with artwork the cd or record) what you have is a relatively poor quality copy of it no different from copying a movie on VHS back a few years ago.
something you can hold in your hand vs. something that is on your computer/IPod... they are both product. They are both taken without being paid for.

Quote:
The main problem is that artists no longer really need the industry to support them as they can do everything by themselves over the internet at a very low cost which Radiohead is about to prove (and Pearl Jam already did by selling their live shows for $10 for a digital download). The record companies are just not too happy about this fact and are trying their hardest to stay in business. Their great plan to accomplish this is by suing the people who are supporting their artists.
They are proving and disproving at the same time. You cannot say that just because RadioHead and PearlJam were successful that others will be as well. The industry helps to protect all artists.. not just some. They bought into it when they got their start, and now that they are huge.. they wish to get away from it. But they must still respect the system.

Quote:
Bands make their money mostly through touring and merchandise sold at those events. They make very little on the actual album. So downloading songs and telling your friends about a band is actually helping them because it means the difference of doing a small tour at small venues or doing a bigger one at larger venues. And it also gets people like me who like to collect to buy the album. For example, this summer I saw Dispatch. They rose in popularity because of Napster. They never sold that many albums and haven't made a record since 2000. Yet they were able to sell out MSG for three nights in a matter of minutes. So there is just one example of p2p helping out artists.
I do not make my money by seeding the world with my product and then inviting them to exclusive events. My product is sold just as a loaf of bread is sold.. you buy it.. you consume it. Music works the same way.. although they do have the added aspect of live performances. not all products work that way. A book couldn't work that way. Could JK Rowling have made the billions if she gave away all her books and charged for individual readings by her? LMAO.. of course not.

Quote:
On to Myspace...why do you think bands are so active on there and put up songs for us to listen to? Because radio is all but dead (because of Clear Channel) and MTV and MuchMusic choose to play reality TV instead of music. So where are bands supposed to promote themselves? Why do you think NIN and Prince are also giving away albums for free? Because they understand that for them getting their material out there is more important than making sales off of it (so they can sell out huge arenas and stadiums).
myspace, etc etc. are great for bands that aren't known but want to be, or bands that want to get away from the controls within the industry. Once they are big enough, they want the money as well. no one wants to make a product for free. You make the point that NIN and Prince give it away so they can sell out arenas. Sure.. makes sense for their product. Does not make sense for all products, nor does it make sense for all artists.

Quote:
This is not an argument that is going to be won by either side. But it is a changing of the guard and that much is obvious. It's like any industry that goes through change for any number of reasons...you have to adapt or risk going out of business.
Adaptation is understandable.. but not adapting to thievery. If creating product for free ultimately wins out then fine, that's the new business model, but there are a lot of creators on the other side fighting it tooth and nail and will be for a long time. A few success stories such as Pearl Jam does not represent an entire industry or copyright issues on the whole
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Old 10-05-2007, 10:54 AM   #75
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Originally Posted by Adult Lounge - Brad View Post
They way overstep their boundaries by stating that you can't even lend the album to your friend. I say suck a nut. Everyone here has lent their friend an album, DVD, a book. If not, you are either way too uptight, way to straight edge, or more than likely a bad friend. This is exactly why I say screw the RIAA! Your time is over.
They way overstep their bounds??? LMAO.. you think it's unreasonable for Movie Studio XYZ to say that you shouldn't copy something to give to your friend?

Loaning an albumn to a friend.. that you know.. that you physically hand it to them.... yeah.. that's one thing.

Seeding it on a sharing network with people you have never met nor will ever meet without any sort of controls?????? completely different.
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Old 10-05-2007, 10:58 AM   #76
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I don't care if she had 5 songs or 1000 songs... each violation counts. Just becuse she only put up 24 songs is only part of the argument. They apparently were shared 1700 times. There's your $130 per violation.
All the information I have seen, hasn't said anything about 1700 file transfers. She had 1700 songs shared. The RIAA chose to take her to court on 24 of those files, with no record or evidence of those files ever being transfered. Two completely different things.

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something you can hold in your hand vs. something that is on your computer/IPod... they are both product. They are both taken without being paid for.
The difference is, taking food from a grocery store causes a tangible loss to the grocery store. Copying a file from one computer to another does not amount to any appreciable loss for the record companies. Thats why its not theft. Just copyright infringement.
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Old 10-05-2007, 10:59 AM   #77
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sorry... I have misread.. yes... 1700 potential songs.. 24 of which are verifiable. No mention of how many distribution violations.

Again.. actual vs. statutory damages.. they chose #2
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Old 10-05-2007, 10:59 AM   #78
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Lost mind, I would suggest you complain to your favorite artists that you can't buy if that is the case. They are the ones entering into restrictive contracts, rather than allowing the music to "be free".

One of the funny stories right now is the whole Radiohead deal. For those who don't know, this band (who no longer has any recording deal) self produced an album which they will sell on the internet for "whatever people want to pay", minimum being about $1 to pay for processing. They are also selling an upscale box set of the album for about $80.

Many people in the "record companies suck" world are pointing to this as the way of the future, how bands could just set up shop, record their own albums, and sell them by themselves, making the money and no longer feeding the money hungry record companies.

Hahahahahaha. Fuck that makes me laugh.

Question: How does anyone know Radiohead from a hole in the wall? They do only because (a) they had a number of albums released and distributed worldwide by record labels, (b) they received marketing support, advertising, and promotion from the record labels, and (c) they received advances of funds from the record companies in order to be able to record the albums.

What Radiohead is doing today is taking all the market exposure, all the build up, all the promotion, and all the brand awareness built up by the record companies involved and turning it to thier favor. Without the record companies, they wouldn't be here to start with.

Without the capital to record, produce, master, duplicate, and distribute widely a significant number of records in a significant number of markets, most musicians would be eating whatever the local version of Kraft Dinner is for the rest of thier lives, playing gigs for bar tab money.
You are sot of right, but that is only because Radiohead came to the forefront when the record companies were making money and were the only game in town. A time when you pretty much had to go to a recording studio to record your music because the equipment was so expensive. That is not the case today where most albums can be produced with a computer and some software that is accessible to anyone who can save up a little bit of money.

The internet is a far better avenue for promotion than the radio and Music videos are dead...it is far more direct and more cost efficient. So you are wrong that bands can not take the DIY approach. Perhaps it will take them longer to build a fan base, but when you consider a band like No Doubt took about a decade to become popular, I don't think the time line is going to be very different. What we will loose is the cookie cutter groups like Spice Girls or Averil Lavigne because they need a promotions giant to force themselves on the public.

Like I said before, a record for a band is only a tool to get people to their live show which is where they make their money. So in that respect, no physical product is needed, everything can be done by streaming audio or MP3, the latter being a better option because then people can burn it or put it on a portable player and give it to their friends to listen too in the hopes that they can get people to the live show.

Plus there are always going to be music rags like Rolling Stone that will review new music that will give these DIY bands even more exposure. So in short, there is not as much need for the huge record companies as there was even 5 years ago.
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:02 AM   #79
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All the information I have seen, hasn't said anything about 1700 file transfers. She had 1700 songs shared. The RIAA chose to take her to court on 24 of those files, with no record or evidence of those files ever being transfered. Two completely different things.

The difference is, taking food from a grocery store causes a tangible loss to the grocery store. Copying a file from one computer to another does not amount to any appreciable loss for the record companies. Thats why its not theft. Just copyright infringement.
The ole.. it's just a song argument... it's only worth 99cents.

Who cares.... did it belong to you before you got it? Do you have the legal right to either distribute it or receive it? NO on both cases. Broken law.. pay the fines...
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:04 AM   #80
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The internet is a far better avenue for promotion than the radio and Music videos are dead...it is far more direct and more cost efficient. So you are wrong that bands can not take the DIY approach. Perhaps it will take them longer to build a fan base, but when you consider a band like No Doubt took about a decade to become popular, I don't think the time line is going to be very different. What we will loose is the cookie cutter groups like Spice Girls or Averil Lavigne because they need a promotions giant to force themselves on the public.

Like I said before, a record for a band is only a tool to get people to their live show which is where they make their money. So in that respect, no physical product is needed, everything can be done by streaming audio or MP3, the latter being a better option because then people can burn it or put it on a portable player and give it to their friends to listen too in the hopes that they can get people to the live show.

Plus there are always going to be music rags like Rolling Stone that will review new music that will give these DIY bands even more exposure. So in short, there is not as much need for the huge record companies as there was even 5 years ago.
That business model may work for music.. but again, it doesn't work for all musicians so you can't blanket the whole music industry nor can you blanket all copyrighted works.

Books don't work this way.. my internet product does not work this way.
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:06 AM   #81
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That's pretty fucked up... I can see that the RIAA has to take some sort of action but $220,000 is ridiculous.
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:08 AM   #82
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I say, go after those that reproduce/host copyrighted material for profit. There are tons of bootleggers out there trying to make a couple bucks off of other people's hard work. Throw the book at them, take their profits. But don't extort over $200,000 from some ignorant computer user for 24 songs, that's just bullshit. They should have only won about $24, the actual price of the songs. Hell even give them another $24 for 'damages'.
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:11 AM   #83
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Hey RawAlex, I agree with you to a point.

But the thing is, it's the record companies that we should be complaining too, not the artists for signing with them. The artists seem to need the record companies for exposure more then the record companies need the artists - since there is always another artist willing to take the spot of another... anyways, it's the record companies that decide where the album is sold and how it's sold... not the artist in most cases...

I had the same argument with a very good friend just last night on the Radiohead thing... without their money gained by joining the evil greedy corporate record labels they wouldn't have been able to produce this album or sell any copies cuz no one would know who the fuck they are!
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:13 AM   #84
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Something kind of disturbing about this case is that the only link they needed to get the guilty verdict was her IP address. The original hard drive wasn't even presented.
Unprotected wireless routers are a major issue. My connection is too slow to bother following the link, but I would have to say she got screwed.
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:18 AM   #85
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Unprotected wireless routers are a major issue. My connection is too slow to bother following the link, but I would have to say she got screwed.
Yeah, unprotected wireless routers, and a person who was hijacking her wireless also just happened to signup and use her exact same username for kazaa...

YEAH RIGHT.

She didn't do herself any favors by lying about the date her hard drive was changed either (it happens about 1 month AFTER the RIAA contacted her originally).
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:23 AM   #86
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I say, go after those that reproduce/host copyrighted material for profit. There are tons of bootleggers out there trying to make a couple bucks off of other people's hard work. Throw the book at them, take their profits. But don't extort over $200,000 from some ignorant computer user for 24 songs, that's just bullshit. They should have only won about $24, the actual price of the songs. Hell even give them another $24 for 'damages'.
Damages are intended to recover what has been lost and to deter others from doing the same.

Would you stop if it cost you $48 instead of $24??? how about $480?? How about $4000?

Nothing has pointed to how many sharing violations occurred.

I had a picture up on FHM that was posted there without permission. My estimation is that it was viewed roughly 2 million times per day (they had over 20million hits daily while the picture was up) during the 2 month period it was available without my knowledge.

How much should I get paid for that? My usual fee plus some damages? $0.01 per viewing? That seems fair doesn't it? Until you learn that over 2 months that's 120 million viewings and at 1 cent per viewing I would get 1.2 million dollars. Who's to judge what's fair and what's not?

She broke the law. She got caught. I support the punishment.
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:27 AM   #87
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Brad, the reality is that record companies are like network TV. They provide a large audience with material that is generally likes and appreciated by a wide audience. They don't typically run niche stuff, but they certainly do mainstream all well and good.

The cable industry came along, and now there are 400 channels pecking away at network viewership. But you rarely see people talking about the great show they watched on the Sailboat channel, but you can find many chat rooms about Grey's Anatomy or CSI.

However, record company versus artist distribution is only a sideline in the debate. If one person pays $1 for a song and then gives it away for free to everyone else, the band made $0. They will make money if people come to their concerts, but again, if someone stands there and records the concert on video and gives that away free online as well, ticket sales drop and the band makes less money.

At some point, unless the bands or musicians are making money at it, they won't turn out the music at the level they are currently turning it out. They will all be working as baggers at supermarkets or doing McJobs and putting out one song a year that immediately gets put on the torrents and no money is made. You take music from an industry and turn it into a hobby. Everyone from the musicians to the live show venue owners to the record companies to the music stores (online and B&M) all lose. Without income, the level and quality of the product drops until it is no longer a viable business model.

All of these things are nice. Without a viable business model, there is no business.
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:32 AM   #88
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I say, go after those that reproduce/host copyrighted material for profit. There are tons of bootleggers out there trying to make a couple bucks off of other people's hard work. Throw the book at them, take their profits. But don't extort over $200,000 from some ignorant computer user for 24 songs, that's just bullshit. They should have only won about $24, the actual price of the songs. Hell even give them another $24 for 'damages'.
Exactly... most of these copyright laws were meant to prevent exactly that sort of thing. Rogue commercial outfits making a living off of other peoples work. Back in the day, it wasnt possible for a single person to do this on any large scale. It would have taken a large amount of resources to pull off such a thing. Now a single individual can be crushed by the weight of these laws that are meant for organizations much larger than any one person. I respect copyright, it is a very good thing, and allows most of us here to make a living, but the laws have got to change to fit with the times and technology.

Now if you downloaded an mp3 and accidentally leave kazaa open overnight, you can end up owing the RIAA more money than you may ever make in a lifetime? Makes no sense.
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:33 AM   #89
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Damages are intended to recover what has been lost and to deter others from doing the same.

Would you stop if it cost you $48 instead of $24??? how about $480?? How about $4000?

Nothing has pointed to how many sharing violations occurred.

I had a picture up on FHM that was posted there without permission. My estimation is that it was viewed roughly 2 million times per day (they had over 20million hits daily while the picture was up) during the 2 month period it was available without my knowledge.

How much should I get paid for that? My usual fee plus some damages? $0.01 per viewing? That seems fair doesn't it? Until you learn that over 2 months that's 120 million viewings and at 1 cent per viewing I would get 1.2 million dollars. Who's to judge what's fair and what's not?

She broke the law. She got caught. I support the punishment.
Ok, they were using your copyrighted work for profit. She wasn't. That was my point.
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:37 AM   #90
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sucks for her
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:39 AM   #91
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Exactly... most of these copyright laws were meant to prevent exactly that sort of thing. Rogue commercial outfits making a living off of other peoples work. Back in the day, it wasnt possible for a single person to do this on any large scale. It would have taken a large amount of resources to pull off such a thing. Now a single individual can be crushed by the weight of these laws that are meant for organizations much larger than any one person. I respect copyright, it is a very good thing, and allows most of us here to make a living, but the laws have got to change to fit with the times and technology.

Now if you downloaded an mp3 and accidentally leave kazaa open overnight, you can end up owing the RIAA more money than you may ever make in a lifetime? Makes no sense.
In the eyes of the law, one ifringment is equal to 20000 infringments.. the difference is the punishment.. they are both against the law.

Everyone keeps making the arguement that it's small scale.. it doesn't 'matter... she broke the rules.

Also, we aren't talking about a woman that tripped across Kazaa for one day... OOPS... she was a committed user.. knew what she was doing. and blatently was offering copyrighted works. very simple. she doesn't own the copyright, she shouldn't be sharing with others.
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:40 AM   #92
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Ok, they were using your copyrighted work for profit. She wasn't. That was my point.
it doesn't matter (BTW KAZAA is making a profit by their ad sales or memberships, so her being involved in the loop overcomes the fact that she isn't making money).

part of copyright law is that I retain the rights to distribution.. no one else.. just me!

fair use says you can use it for specific purposes. Sharing with 1 million unknown friends is not one of them. especially when I am selling the product and you are undermining my ability to make money with it.
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:42 AM   #93
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Ok, they were using your copyrighted work for profit. She wasn't. That was my point.
Commercial profit isn't the bar of measurement. You have to consider what was lost in the process. If the average file on Kazaa is shared and reshared 10,000 times, then making a file available to this network creates 10,000 times the hurt of giving one copy away. If the record companies get $1 profit from each record sold, then a $1 x 10,000 amount is the actual loss.

Nobody has to profit for someone to lose.
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:46 AM   #94
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Exactly... most of these copyright laws were meant to prevent exactly that sort of thing. Rogue commercial outfits making a living off of other peoples work.
Back in the day, when people were duplicated cassette tapes, they could typically produce a couple of dozen tapes a day, of reduced quality. Most "rogue commercial outfits" could produce maybe 1000 pieces a year of any one product.

Kazaa allows this individual to produce tens of thousands of copies instantly using a distributed network setup and maintain by kazaa. The losses suffered by the record industry (and the artists) as a result of this widescale distribution far exceeds any harm that was done "back in the day". The amount of pirated music (and movies, and porn, and software) flowing around now as a percentage of total sales is many many times higher than it ever was "back in the day".
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:54 AM   #95
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Back in the day, when people were duplicated cassette tapes, they could typically produce a couple of dozen tapes a day, of reduced quality. Most "rogue commercial outfits" could produce maybe 1000 pieces a year of any one product.

Kazaa allows this individual to produce tens of thousands of copies instantly using a distributed network setup and maintain by kazaa. The losses suffered by the record industry (and the artists) as a result of this widescale distribution far exceeds any harm that was done "back in the day". The amount of pirated music (and movies, and porn, and software) flowing around now as a percentage of total sales is many many times higher than it ever was "back in the day".
Don't forget the quality of the copies... they are not reduced quality... they are identical copies... 100% quality.. no degridation from the original.
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Old 10-05-2007, 11:57 AM   #96
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The RIAA needs Sue Kazaa, not users. Sue bootleggers, not listeners.

If they really wanted to put an end to this, they wouldn't be by going after end users. They would go the root of the problem. But they don't, because they just want to extort money out of anyone they can.

They don't want to make a change, they just want to make some change.
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Old 10-05-2007, 12:02 PM   #97
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Brad, the reality is that record companies are like network TV. They provide a large audience with material that is generally likes and appreciated by a wide audience. They don't typically run niche stuff, but they certainly do mainstream all well and good.

The cable industry came along, and now there are 400 channels pecking away at network viewership. But you rarely see people talking about the great show they watched on the Sailboat channel, but you can find many chat rooms about Grey's Anatomy or CSI.

However, record company versus artist distribution is only a sideline in the debate. If one person pays $1 for a song and then gives it away for free to everyone else, the band made $0. They will make money if people come to their concerts, but again, if someone stands there and records the concert on video and gives that away free online as well, ticket sales drop and the band makes less money.

At some point, unless the bands or musicians are making money at it, they won't turn out the music at the level they are currently turning it out. They will all be working as baggers at supermarkets or doing McJobs and putting out one song a year that immediately gets put on the torrents and no money is made. You take music from an industry and turn it into a hobby. Everyone from the musicians to the live show venue owners to the record companies to the music stores (online and B&M) all lose. Without income, the level and quality of the product drops until it is no longer a viable business model.

All of these things are nice. Without a viable business model, there is no business.
Actually, that's not the reality at all. Network TV buys the rights to show shows so that it can get viewers so that they can make money off of their advertising. A very different business model.

Bands don't make much money off the album sales the record companies do. Musicians don't make music so they can become big and famous for the most part...they do it because they love to play and create music.

A viable business model was already presented by me. Give music out for free for the most part, sell to those who want to support the artist through record sales and allow the band more exposure so that they can have bigger and more profitable tours. What you are failing to realize is that under the current business model, bands make the vast majority of their money touring.
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Old 10-05-2007, 12:06 PM   #98
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The RIAA needs Sue Kazaa, not users. Sue bootleggers, not listeners.

If they really wanted to put an end to this, they wouldn't be by going after end users. They would go the root of the problem. But they don't, because they just want to extort money out of anyone they can.

They don't want to make a change, they just want to make some change.
I am only assuming but this is my guess.

You sue enough end users, you then prove that the conduits are being used for nefarious purposes rather than legitimate ones. You then have the power to sue them for contributory infringement, negligence, etc etc.

You then also have the power to require checks and balances to sharing networks and require that all files to be shared pass through human filters that are required to deal with copyright issues.

just a guess.

You can't avoid the fact that the end users are breaking the law willingly. Just becasue they are small time in comparison doesn't change that they are doing it.
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Old 10-05-2007, 12:09 PM   #99
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Bands don't make much money off the album sales the record companies do. Musicians don't make music so they can become big and famous for the most part...they do it because they love to play and create music.
LOL... they don't do it for the money??? Fine.. I want my money back from the concert I went to.. Yeah.. that $250 ticket. Come play at my local park for free. We'll even make dinner for you so you aren't hungry. LOL>. not for the money.

Quote:
A viable business model was already presented by me. Give music out for free for the most part, sell to those who want to support the artist through record sales and allow the band more exposure so that they can have bigger and more profitable tours. What you are failing to realize is that under the current business model, bands make the vast majority of their money touring.
viable for a few but not for all. many artists rely on record sales. many artists don't like doing tours. And it also neglects the talent that is not self propogating.. many artists would die without the big machine behind them.
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Old 10-05-2007, 12:11 PM   #100
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I don't care if she had 5 songs or 1000 songs... each violation counts. Just becuse she only put up 24 songs is only part of the argument. They apparently were shared 1700 times. There's your $130 per violation.

If you read the law, RIAA had the right to request actual damages vs. statutory damages. They went with option 2.


17 USCA 106
17 U.S.C.A. s 106
UNITED STATES CODE ANNOTATED
TITLE 17. COPYRIGHTS
CHAPTER 1--SUBJECT MATTER AND SCOPE OF COPYRIGHT
Current through P.L. 105-153, approved 12-17-97

s 106. Exclusive rights in copyrighted works

Subject to sections 107 through 120, the owner of copyright under this title has the exclusive rights to do and to authorize any of the following:
(1) to reproduce the copyrighted work in copies or phonorecords;
(2) to prepare derivative works based upon the copyrighted work;
(3) to distribute copies or phonorecords of the copyrighted work to the public by sale or other transfer of ownership, or by rental, lease, or lending;

Please go to section 107 (which is where fair use resides) and show me where my right to distribute has been trumped by your right to share with anyone else. (it's not there) Ok now point me to the case law (which you havent') that says you can do so. Don't say that BetaMax does.. show me if you can find something.
again you are trying to ignore the facts to make YOUR substandard point

she ripped her songs to the My music folder
Kazza in the default install (the one she used shares everything in the My music folder)

She admitted to 21,000 "sharings"

She was only convicted of 24 "sharings"

The court case made a distinction between the 24 she got convicted for and the 20,976 she did not.

IF you were right about how strong the copyright act was she would have been convicted of all of the "Sharings"

SHE WAS NOT

That the point

You have to
1. determine what the difference is
2. modify your stance to acknowledge that difference.

there is no point explaining anything to you as long as you keep ignoring all the facts that don't fit your opinion
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