musicNEWS:
RIAA Settles Lawsuits With Students.
05-5-03
antiGUY
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The RIAA has reached out-of-court settlements
with the four students they had previously filed suit against for operated
peer-to-peer networks at three U.S. colleges that trafficked in illegal
mp3s.
The lawsuits, filed in early April, claimed
that the students had made over 1 million songs available through these
peer-to-peer networks. They had sued the students for $150,000 per song.
Going on that amount, one student in fact was looking at almost $98 billion
dollars in damages if the RIAA won the original lawsuit the terms were
enforced
However, the RIAA has settled the lawsuits
at a much lower amount. The settles rang from between $12,000 and $17,500.
According to a Billboard report, the students will pay in installments
over several years.
Matt Oppenheim, RIAA senior VP of business
and legal affairs, told Billboard, "Given that these were the first lawsuits
of this kind, and that these individuals had limited means, we believe
that the settlement amounts are appropriate. We would anticipate, though,
that any future similar enforcement actions may require stiffer settlement
obligations."
Lawsuits against student file traders is
only one new front the RIAA has taken in their war against online music
piracy. Another new tactic that the RIAA is reportedly using is sending
warnings to users on the KaZaA and Grokster peer-to-peer networks via their
built in messaging services. They reportedly use an automated search program
to local targets files and send the users who are sharing those files the
following message; "It appears that you are offering copyrighted music
to others from your computer. When you break the law, you risk legal penalties."
The RIAA reportedly plans to send out these
messages to approximately 1 million users a week. Such action reportedly
violated the KaZaa user agreement.
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