musicNEWS:
RIAA Targets Filesharers For Lawsuits.
06-29-03
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Watch out P2P users, you may get more than
you bargained for. The RIAA said last week that it will sue hundreds of
P2P users who use these services to illegally traffic in copyrighted songs
on the web.
The RIAA will target the heaviest traders
on P2P networks by first tracking them down, and then hitting them with
lawsuits.
"We're going to begin taking names and
preparing lawsuits against peer-to-peer network users who are illegally
making available a substantial number of music files to millions of other
computer users," RIAA President Cary Sherman said.
In the past, the RIAA has pointed its
legal guns primarily at the companies that provide the services used by
individuals to share copyrighted material. However, their battle plan appeared
to change a few months back when they went after filesharers directly.
That case, which involved four college
students, has now been settled with the students agreeing to pay the music
industry trade group between $12,000 and $17,500 each.
A recent court ruling has provided the
RIAA with more amunition in their fight and paved the way for them to trackdown
and go directly after filesharers. In that ruling, a court ordered Earthlink
(an internet service provider) to turn over the identity of one of their
customers who was using their service to trade a large amount of files
through a P2P network.
Who will be the target of these initial
suits? According to Sherman, individuals who offer substantial libraries
of copyrighted mp3 songs to P2P network users. At least during this initial
phase, the RIAA will not go after individuals who simply use the P2P networks
to download songs. They advise users of these networks to change their
settings, disallowing others to download their mp3 collections, or better
yet, uninstall the programs.
Those who are targeted by the RIAA can
count of being sued for $150,000 per count. That was the initial amount
the trade organization sued the four college students for. Sherman said
that he expects hundreds of suits to be filed beginning in August.
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