Advice for the Beleaguered File Sharer
Published July 30, 2003
Another roundup of the current legal status of file sharing, the RIAA's Campaign Against Humanity, and advice on how to not get sued: if you have already been subpoenaed, erase copyright infringing files from your computer; if you haven't, stop file sharing.
Hmm, brilliant advice. When I explained the situation to my 3-year-old, she also mentioned disabling the the computer's sharing capability, and she hasn't even started law school yet!
- As the recording industry tries in unprecedented fashion to enforce copyright laws against individual consumers, legal experts say people can take several steps to try to avoid costly litigation.
For starters, legal experts advise file-sharers to stop sharing any unauthorized files. That action could, though not necessarily, eliminate the need for more costly legal steps if a file-sharer learns he or she has been caught in the Recording Industry Association of America's copyright infringement dragnet.
....The RIAA will not say what it considers substantial, but legal experts say the larger the number of files, the more likely the file-sharer will be sued.
...."So the first thing you should do if you want to be off (the RIAA's) radar is to stop uploading," said Fred von Lohmann, senior intellectual property attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
The San Francisco digital-rights advocacy group's Web site, www.eff.org, includes a new page that offers tips on how not to get sued by the RIAA for file sharing. Among those tips are ways to stop sharing potentially infringing files or to disable file sharing.
- But Rothken, the San Rafael attorney, believes having shared files may not automatically be an infringement. "If you are somebody who accidentally shares a subdirectory on a private hard drive and someone wants to call that an offering because it appears on some file-sharing network by accident, the answer would be no," he said.
RIAA spokeswoman Amy Weiss said her group might be "willing to talk settlement" if a file-sharer has erased the evidence, but that would be considered on a case-by-case basis.
- If a person learns the RIAA has subpoenaed the ISP to learn their identity, they should seek legal advice to protect their rights, said Glenn Peterson, a partner in the law firm McDonough Holland & Allen PC of Sacramento.
- Advice for the Beleaguered File Sharer
- Published: July 30, 2003
- Type:
- Section: Sci/Tech
- Filed Under: Sci/Tech: Internet, Music: News
- Writer: Eric Olsen
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Not sure how true this is but this company claims they can block the RIAA
http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=10769