Department of Justice
to Protect Intellectual Property
Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT), joined
by Senator John Cornyn (R-TX) introduced a bill in the Senate called
the Intellectual Property Enforcement Act of 2007. The law would
augment counterfeiting laws already on the books, as well as mandating
and providing resources for better enforcement.
According to The International
Anti-Counterfeiting Coalition, various forms of piracy and copyright
infringement drain billions of dollars from the US economy, costing
hundreds of thousands of jobs.
According to Leahy, this new law would
be only the beginning of a new legislative effort to combat
counterfeiting. The bill would allow the Department of Justice to
pursue civil, as opposed to criminal, remedies against copyright
infringers, and would provide more money for agents to pursue pirates,
as well as protect people from loss of copyright due to "harmless
errors" in filling out copyright forms, such as spelling mistakes.
According to Leahy, "It is impossible
to put a price tag on creativity, but we must do all we can to protect
the fruits of creative labor."
Patrick Leahy, November
7, 2007
http://leahy.senate.gov/press/200711/110707c.html
Lime Lawsuit a Lemon
Online
file-sharing company LimeWire's antitrust suit against a combination of
record companies has been dismissed by U.S. District Judge Gerard E.
Lynch, who ruled that New York-based Lime Group LLC did not demonstrate
that it had been harmed by the record companies, dismissing some of the
claims outright, while dismissing other state claims without prejudice,
meaning the plaintiffs may refile their claims.
LimeWire,
a company that allows peer-to-peer file-sharing, alleged that the music
groups had refused to license works to LimeWire in order to force them
out of business, and were themselves monopolizing sales of online
music.
Judge
Lynch ruled that even if record labels had fixed prices for online
music, LimeWire had not established that it had been harmed by such
practices and that record companies were free "to refrain from doing
business" with the company. Though LimeWire alleged that record
companies had hacked LimeWire's network and subsequently claimed that
LimeWire promoted child pornography, Lynch found these alleged acts
could not be construed as anticompetitive.
According
to the AP, "Lime Group's lawsuit was a counterclaim to a copyright
infringement lawsuit brought last year against by record labels owned
by the four major recording companies: Vivendi's Universal Music Group,
Warner Music Group Corp., Britain's EMI Group PLC, and Sony BMG Music
Entertainment, a joint venture of Sony Corp. and Bertelsmann AG."
The
record companies have maintained that providing a means for
peer-to-peer file sharing encourages internet users to steal movies and
music.
AP December 4, 2007
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,314977,00.html
Lobbyists Advocate
Putting Orphans to Work
Public
Knowledge, a group lobbying on behalf of fair use reform, is advocating
for laws which will would permit indexing to facilitate online
searching, allow the use of "orphan works" after a good faith effort to
find the copyright holder, and provide relief from frivolous requests
to remove legitimate material from websites, which would necessitate
Congress amending the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
According
to Public Knowledge President Gig B. Sohn, unchecked growth of
copyright protections in past decades is at odds with emerging
technologies.
K.C. Jones,
InformationWeek, October 26, 2007 05:39 PM
http://www.informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=202602188
If They Did It: Confessions of the Swedish Pirates
Fred
Goldman, the father of murder victim Ron Goldman, has filed a lawsuit
against The Pirate Bay, a Swedish file-sharing website, for illegally
distributing the O. J. Simpson book, "If I Did It: Confessions of the
Killer."
Fred
Goldman had acquired the rights to the best-seller through legal action
against O. J. Simpson; Simpson had been ordered to pay the family of
Nicole Brown Simpson and the Goldman family 33.5 million dollars.
Though Simpson has not paid a substantial portion of the judgment,
Goldman was awarded 90% of the royalties for Simpson's book.
Goldman
has claimed to have lost at least $150,000 through free downloads at
The Pirate Bay, and wants to recoup the losses through advertising
monies received by the site from Target, Jamster, and Wal-Mart.
The
website's operators have refused demands from Goldman's attorneys to
stop posting the book, indicating that "they are not subject to the
laws of the United States," according to the lawsuit .
According
to David Cook, Goldman's attorney, "It's the wealth through the
advertising that allows the site to remain. Ron Goldman LLC will never
be able to stop these pirates from posting that book online but they
can do that in the poorhouse."
AP, Friday , November
30, 2007
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,314065,00.html
Quick Bits and Bytes
Nag Nag Nag
Microsoft
has announced that that they will no longer end Windows Vista
functionality for users who do not authenticate after a 30 day period.
Instead, Vista users will be subject to what's known in the industry as
"Nagware"—notices will pop up periodically on users’ computer monitors,
reminding them that the product they are using is not genuine.
According to IDC analyst Al Gillen, "This does represent a step
backward for Microsoft. It's always been pretty aggressive about trying
to reduce piracy, so this is a significant move." However, Microsoft
has indicated that piracy rates for Vista are about half those of
Windows XP.
Still,
there are reports from consumers that Vista does not always
authenticate correctly, and that functionality has become degraded for
customers even when registration has been completed.
Windows
Genuine Advantage senior product manager Alex Koch apologized for this
in a post on the WGA blog.
"I
want everyone to know that I am personally very disappointed that this
event occurred. As an organization, we've come a long way since this
program began and it's difficult knowing that this event confused,
inconvenienced, and upset our customers."
There
has been speculation that Microsoft is responding to the loss of
customers to Linux, but analyst Gillen disputes this. "Linux is
just not a huge threat to Microsoft. Yes, in some underdeveloped
geographies, Linux has made a little progress, but in more mature
geographies, it hasn't been much of a factor. I doubt that was part of
Microsoft's reasoning."
Frederick
Lane December 5, 2007
http://www.newsfactor.com/story.xhtml?story_id=57084
Demonic Dispossession
The file-sharing website demonoid
recently put up the following placeholder on its website:
"The CRIA [Canadian Recording Industry
Association] threatened the company renting the servers to us, and
because of this it is not possible to keep the site online. Sorry for
the inconvenience and thanks for your understanding."
http://www.demonoid.com/
http://torrentfreak.com/demonoid-shuts-down-again-071109/5, 2007
MPFee
EMI Group has instigated a second
copyright infringement lawsuit against Michael Robertson and MP3tunes,
the company of which he is CEO. (The first suit occurred in 2000 and
was settled by his former company for 100 million dollars.)
EMI alleges that though sideload.com
and mp3tunes.com, two websites run by MP3tunes, offer downloadable
music online, "MP3tunes… does not own the music it exploits; nor does
MP3tunes have any legal right or authority to use or exploit that
music."
Robertson has called the suit
"retaliatory"–MP3Tunes had slapped EMI with a lawsuit after that
company had given sideload.com a take-down order. Robertson's old
company, MP3.com, had been sued before by some of the current
plaintiffs, one of which, Vivendi's Universal Music Group, ended up
buying MP3.com for $385 million.
Robertson went on to comment "These
guys rush off to court and tell the court that I am terrible and then
they end up buying my company. It is really a shame because instead of
using these technologies to improve their business they make an enemy
of every technology company out there."
Hollywood Reporter
November 13, 2007
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/business/news/e3i26138003c343f1a18c80cc9d1a3d20dd
OiNK Goes BOiNK
Shortly after being forced offline by
the music industry, online piracy site OiNK has announced plans to
relaunch the site as "BOiNk." The new domain will have to rely on
former OiNk users to upload their own files again in order to offer
content competitive with OiNK’s former offerings. The move has caused
concerned in music industry circles, as the destruction of OiNK may end
up spawning a host of new piracy sites.
Ken Fisher November 5,
2007
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20071105-oinks-new-piglets-proof-positive-that-big-contents-efforts-often-backfire.html
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