10/8/2007 7:35:21 PM
people aren't getting caught for DOWNLOADING. how many fucking times does this have to be said? it's for UPLOADING. she is getting fined for enabling piracy, just the same as if someone was selling the cds out of the back of their truck
10/8/2007 8:44:38 PM
^ Jury Instruction from the Virgin vs. Thomas case via:http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/files/jury_instructions.pdf
10/9/2007 12:58:03 AM
^ of course it doesn't make you safe...but the RIAA isn't focusing their cases on downloading, it's uploading they're aiming for as that allows them to use the aforementioned pyramid of distribution argument in demanding landmark fines...what jury in their right mind would award a corporation hundreds of thousands of dollars in restitution for downloading a single song? the point of this case (again, as mentioned above) was that her actions enabled others to break the law in a cascade effect...hence the massive fine[Edited on October 9, 2007 at 8:15 AM. Reason : .]
10/9/2007 8:15:16 AM
^
10/9/2007 1:50:35 PM
10/9/2007 4:28:34 PM
http://www.wired.com/culture/lifestyle/commentary/theluddite/2007/10/luddite_1011
10/11/2007 2:20:55 PM
Go Wolfpack!http://recordingindustryvspeople.blogspot.com/2007/10/four-north-carolina-state-students.html
10/11/2007 2:46:33 PM
The Technician is all the RIAA lawsuits today. I even got quoted by the lawyers who are defending some of the students.
10/19/2007 9:03:11 AM
I feel bad for the students being fined but demonizing the RIAA is getting ridiculous. They wouldn't be doing all this if people would just cut back on what they feel is their right to download copyrighted music for free. I don't get why people think this is ok.Really though, they should find ways to go after the websites.
10/19/2007 10:22:09 AM
10/19/2007 10:26:24 AM
It isn't just the downloading. The RIAA said it is STEALING to make a backup copy of the record you legally purchased.So, you buy the rights to the work, and when the physical media that it is on wears out, they expect you to pay for the full rights again.Not to mention they go after completely innocent grandmothers and minors as well.They are utilizing a buckshot approach and hitting everyone in the way. If they limited their cases to egregious abuses and didn't make statements like in my first paragraph, they wouldn't be demonized as much.
10/19/2007 10:28:06 AM
the recording industry is just trying to ensure its retirement, digital media is cheap and easy all you really need is a studio and a pc to make an album and release it to the world and they know that once real artists re-emerge and all this factory made Brittney crap goes away there will be no place for an industry that takes 90% of an artists profit or more for itself.
10/19/2007 10:35:57 AM
10/19/2007 10:37:09 AM
10/19/2007 1:19:20 PM
10/19/2007 1:36:59 PM
bttt for the seach impaired
11/30/2007 12:02:55 AM
I'm tired of people listening to the radio for free, that's gotta be illegal somehow
11/30/2007 9:28:51 AM
^ look at internet radio.... The RIAA is giving it to them hard, deep, and unlubricated
11/30/2007 12:35:58 PM
The consumers in this country are getting a big fuck you thanks to RIAA lobbyisthttp://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20071204-doj-says-222000-damages-in-capitol-v-thomas-trial-not-unconstitutional.htmlI understand the concept of statutory damages, but somewhere along the way, common sense has to happen and someone realize that $220,000 is just a bit excessive, especially when the RIAA has not ONCE shown legitimate numbers in re of the damages they suffer to file sharing.
12/4/2007 9:36:08 PM
my thing is, if I wouldn't buy the music anyway, who is losing anything if i happen to download an mp3?
12/5/2007 8:43:08 AM
^ You, when they sue the crap out of you.I wish that a non-idiot judge could be found that will through out these lawsuits for a complete lack of evidence.
12/5/2007 8:48:20 AM
http://www.engadget.com/2007/12/29/riaa-suing-citizen-for-copying-legally-purchased-cds-to-pc/sued for ripping to his computer(stolen from packpride)
12/30/2007 11:45:13 AM
So therefore anyone that has taken all their CDs and imported them to iTunes is breaking the law?Or am I misunderstanding the point here?
12/30/2007 12:17:00 PM
12/30/2007 12:23:27 PM
Update: We got some more info on the case -- it looks like Jeffrey's actually being sued for illegal downloading, not ripping, but this whole "ripping is illegal" tactic is still pretty distasteful. Check out this post for the full story.
12/30/2007 9:53:02 PM
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080111-under-pressure-from-emi-riaa-could-disappear.htmlsweet!
1/11/2008 1:25:27 PM
nice.
1/11/2008 1:32:42 PM
^^Perfect can't wait to see that happen RIAA
1/13/2008 10:06:47 AM
a couple days old, but riaa's website got hacked >.<http://mashable.com/2008/01/20/riaacom-down-for-the-count/
1/23/2008 12:30:47 PM
A new free and legal site with access to 25 million songs... no mention of any exceptions, so I'm assuming all of the majors are on board with this. The catch is files you download have DRM and can only be played through their proprietary player, which features advertising on the player itself.Article about it:http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/music/article3261591.eceThe site itself:http://www.qtrax.com
1/28/2008 4:28:26 AM
i'm going to link to Oeuvre's thread in chit chat, since there are some valid links/articles in there: message_topic.aspx?topic=512221
1/28/2008 1:59:33 PM
^reposthttp://www.thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=512198BTW, the deals were made with EMI, BMG, other labels, this is not coming from the RIAA[Edited on January 28, 2008 at 2:19 PM. Reason : ,]
1/28/2008 2:15:07 PM
2/7/2008 11:15:00 AM
lol, i had newmark for ec301 back in the day - he was entertaining.he once claimed that economics could prove that time travel was impossible because interest rates would go to 0.
2/7/2008 11:54:08 AM
2/26/2008 8:06:11 AM
The easiest argument and most logical is what others have said. If I couldnt get it for free, I wouldnt buy it or listen to it in most cases. Also, how many bands would I have never heard of, hence never buying their CD if I hadnt found them through free downloading. I'd imagine I have spent more on CDs due to downloading than I otherwise would have. Although I'd imagine a lot of those CD's didnt give any profit to the RIAA so I guess that is why they are crying about it.
2/26/2008 8:35:23 AM
http://recordingindustryvspeople.blogspot.com/2008/02/judge-in-north-carolina-case-laface-v.html
2/28/2008 1:40:01 PM
aha
2/28/2008 2:03:05 PM
2/28/2008 2:23:55 PM
http://recordingindustryvspeople.blogspot.com/2008/03/north-carolina-state-university-john.htmlJohn Doe #2 in one of the NCSU cases doesn't exist. (Reported by our very own Technician)
3/12/2008 7:19:13 PM
^ perfect RIAA gets bent over once again
3/17/2008 12:55:07 PM
Can we say "glass house"? Yes, that's what I thought ...http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080331-sony-bmgs-hypocrisy-company-busted-for-using-warez.html(I know not RIAA, but definitely related.)
3/31/2008 7:32:18 PM
4/26/2008 12:22:40 AM
I'm not sure if I should find it funny or infuriating that the RIAA is even ripping off the artists and the recording industry. It's just built off a model of a self-sustaining lawsuit engine designed to feed and finance the lifestyles of its legion of lawyers. I can't seem to find confirmation of this one way or the other, but I was under the impression that:1.) The lawyer fees from RIAA suits are taken from the judgment amounts and not the actual amounts that are able to be collected. In addition, these fees are payed first before any remaining money is distributed to the labels. Worse still (from the label's perspective), the full judgments are rarely collected as they usually drive those who choose to fight them bankrupt.2.) Though most of the defendants choose to settle (this is required in any successful racketeering enterprise) and this income does survive the lawyers fees and bankruptcy, none of it makes it to artists. 3.) RIAA pays itself and its employees based on lawsuits filed even when the supposed defendant can never be contacted (does not exist.) Though this is small compared to fees from settlements or suits, it represents a massive amount of money eaten by RIAA staff and partners that ensures less actually makes it to the labels. I don't remember where I read this, but if someone could find the articles I'd be grateful. I found the one about them keeping settlement money and am pretty sure it's linked in here anyways. It seems somewhat fitting that the recording labels that formed the RIAA monster seem to have trouble keeping it from eating their dinner.[Edited on April 27, 2008 at 10:21 PM. Reason : ]
4/27/2008 10:21:06 PM
^ The RIAA lawsuits have never been about compensating artists. It's all about punishing potential customers.
4/27/2008 10:55:44 PM
Actually by stealing music, they've made it very clear that they have no intention of ever being a potential customer.
4/27/2008 11:12:49 PM
^does not computei know plenty of folks who will download an album, decide that they like it, and buy it within a span of a day or two.
4/27/2008 11:18:28 PM
It's about protecting the aging business model that centers around distributing albums by way of CD while corralling people into a few select DRM laiden online outlets where you have to buy the rights to use and listen to the music piece-meal. While the money they pulled in for the rights-holders was obviously never the aim of the operation, it was nominally. This is a legal necessity because forming a group whose stated and primary purpose was to intimidate and terrorize thousands of people through lawsuits would be fairly clearly extortion. It's the same reason that telling your neighbor they need to keep quiet at night or else you're going to call the cops about their pot plants would be considered extortion as well. Though the legal complaint would be technically valid, the threat of it is being used to leverage action on part of the neighbor. A more direct analogy would be if a store-owner caught someone shoplifting. Let's even say they had good reason to suspect this person had been stealing from them for weeks. What the RIAA does would be like the store-owner telling the shop-lifter that if they pay 100 times the value of the items they were stealing that the cops will be left out of it. In the case of the RIAA they offer an exhorbitant but often slightly less than ruinous settlement figure and threaten certain bankruptcy and probable criminal charges if the accused refuses. This is what the RIAA is basically doing, they're threatening anyone who downloads illegal music with technically valid lawsuits to coerce them into shopping for music the way they want. They don't really care about the so-called restitution. None of this is making it to the rights holders that the RIAA is acting as a proxy of. The practice can only continue so long as the argument that they are protecting their clients rights in that failing to prosecute offenders would invite even more piracy; hence they fear actions by bands like radiohead where artists give the music away. Freeing the music distribution and changing the source of income to merchandise, donations, and concerts not only cuts out the labels but it severely weakens any legal standing for suit of piracy. That's the biggest reason I hope more bands go this route. It would destroy the RIAA and the large top-heavy labels.[Edited on April 27, 2008 at 11:30 PM. Reason : ]
4/27/2008 11:24:22 PM
4/28/2008 9:40:08 AM