MESSAGE
DATE | 2005-01-27 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [hangout] I've been Robbed - NOT
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washingtonpost.com Disparate Cast Lobbies Court To Restrict File Sharing
By Jonathan Krim Washington Post Staff Writer Wednesday, January 26, 2005; Page E01
The entertainment industry yesterday unleashed its latest assault on Internet services that let people swap music and videos, enlisting an array of artists, state officials, academics and others to urge the U.S. Supreme Court to crack down on companies that provide file-sharing tools.
Trade associations representing the major movie and recording studios released court papers arguing that popular file-sharing networks Grokster Ltd. and StreamCast Networks Inc. are "breeding grounds" for piracy on an unprecedented scale and should be accountable for the illegal actions of their users. The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear oral arguments March 29 in the case, which could determine the fate of services whose software is used by tens of millions of people every day.
The entertainment industry was joined by filings from a star-studded supporting cast that includes musicians such as crooner Tom Jones and pop singer Avril Lavigne, 39 state attorneys general, the Christian Coalition of America, the Hip-Hop Summit Action Network, professional sports leagues and a roster of university law professors and economists.
"I've been robbed," Rick Carnes, who heads the Songwriters Guild of America, said at a news conference. "My property is being stolen."
Also filing briefs largely in favor of the industry's position were the U.S. solicitor general, who argues on behalf of the federal government, and Sens. Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah) and Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.), senior members of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
At issue for the court will be to what extent the provider or manufacturer of a product or service can be held responsible for the actions of those who use it.
File-sharing services and several digital-rights advocacy groups argue that a key 1984 Supreme Court decision, involving early videocassette recorders made by Sony Corp., established critical protections for innovators against possible bad acts by users. Like copying machines and telephone networks, the "peer-to-peer" file-sharing tool is used for illegal and legal purposes, they say.
Grokster and StreamCast were sued by the entertainment industry in 2001. A federal district court in Los Angeles sided with Grokster, as did the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit in August. The courts, citing the Sony decision, ruled that Grokster had substantial legal uses and could not control the actions of its users without overhauling the product.
Representing the Recording Industry Association of America and the Motion Picture Association of America, attorney Donald B. Verrilli Jr. said that the 9th Circuit misinterpreted the Sony decision.
He said that if a product or service is primarily used for illegal purposes, the provider should be held accountable. Moreover, he said, the courts also should be able to hold providers responsible if they are able to take steps to halt the illegal behavior, which Verrilli said the file-sharing networks could accomplish.
Verrilli said that Grokster and other file-sharing networks are profiting from the illegal acts of their users by selling advertising on their sites.
Beyond their legal arguments, the studios and record labels hope that key supporters might help sway the court. Among those who spoke at yesterday's RIAA/MPAA news conference was former solicitor general Theodore B. Olson, who filed arguments on behalf of a citizen group that defends property rights.
File-sharing networks "have engaged in, for profit, and on a massive and widespread basis, the greatest ongoing theft of intellectual property that the world has ever seen," Olson said.
Also lending their names to the industry's filing were high-profile attorneys Kenneth W. Starr, who was the special prosecutor investigating the activities of President Bill Clinton, and David E. Kendall, who represented Clinton at his impeachment hearings.
The filing also cites Jane C. Ginsburg, a prominent copyright-law scholar who wrote an article that supports the industry's view of the case and who is the daughter of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
Fred von Lohmann, senior counsel for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which has handled much of the legal work for Grokster in the case, said the entertainment industry wants consumers to have to ask permission for how they use music and videos.
He said that if the Supreme Court adopts a standard of whether this kind of product or service is primarily used for illegal purposes, devices such as compact disc burners and the TiVo digital television recorder could be at risk.
Several major technology companies share that concern, and they have urged the court to keep the Sony standard intact but to examine whether Grokster's conduct in promoting its service has encouraged copyright infringement.
Marty Lafferty, head of the Distributed Computing Industry Association, of which Grokster is a member, said that the "peer-to-peer genie is out of the bottle" and would not be stopped by an adverse Supreme Court ruling.
Instead, he said, the entertainment industry needs to stop boycotting file-sharing services and instead work with them on creating a licensing scheme that will make the services a legal and lucrative distribution method for all concerned.
The case is MGM Studios Inc., et al v. Grokster Ltd., et al, No. 04-480.
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