News and Document archive source
copyrighted material disclaimer at bottom of page

NewsMinecabal-elitecorporatefilesharing-p2p — Viewing Item


Verizon turns over names { June 6 2003 }

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A24485-2003Jun6.html

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A24485-2003Jun6.html

Verizon Turns Over Names in Piracy Case

By BRIAN BERGSTEIN
The Associated Press
Friday, June 6, 2003; 2:44 PM

NEW YORK - Verizon Communications Inc. reluctantly surrendered to the music industry on Thursday the names of four Internet subscribers suspected of illegally offering free song downloads, but vowed to keep fighting the law that forced its hand.

Verizon was compelled to give up the names Wednesday by the U.S. Court of Appeals for Washington, D.C., which rejected the telecom giant's request for a stay while it appeals a lower court decision won by the Recording Industry Association of America.

The RIAA has not decided what action to take against the four Verizon customers, said Matt Oppenheim, the group's senior vice president for business and legal affairs.

Though it released the names, New York-based Verizon, the nation's biggest phone company, plans to continue the appeal.

The provision in the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act that the recording industry invoked in seeking the names is unconstitutional and greatly exceeds traditional copyright and privacy laws, said Sarah Deutsch, Verizon's associate general counsel.

"We are committing to pursuing the case if necessary to the Supreme Court," she said Thursday. "The real harm here is to the consumer."

The recording industry has been unrelenting in fighting people and services who facilitate online song-sharing, calling the practice larceny.

In the Verizon case, the recording association relied on the DMCA law, which permits copyright holders to compel Internet providers to hand over the names of suspected pirates. All they need is a subpoena from a federal court clerk's office. A judge's signature is not even required.

Internet privacy and civil liberties advocates say that system is open to abuse.

"The RIAA's position would make it trivially easy to learn the name, address, and phone number of anyone who sends e-mail or visits a Web site," said Peter Swire, chief privacy counsel in the Clinton White House and now an Ohio State law professor.

Swire, who filed briefs supporting Verizon with the Washington court, believes copyright holders should be forced to rely on "John Doe" lawsuits in which a copyright holder has to persuade a judge that an Internet user's identity ought to be revealed.

The federal district court judge who originally heard the case, John D. Bates, wrote that the Digital Millennium Copyright Act has adequate safeguards that in some ways are more protective of Internet users' rights than "John Doe" cases.

Verizon's Deutsch said the recording industry seems to be using the case "to teach Verizon and all the service providers in the future that we shouldn't dare challenge one of these subpoenas."

As evidence, she pointed to the recording industry's demand for $350,000 in legal fees.

Oppenheim, the music industry representative, called such demands standard.

"Verizon decided to litigate this as though this were a case involving capital punishment going to the U.S. Supreme Court," he said. "They decided to put the full weight of a $40 billion company behind protecting pirates, and somebody has to pay for that."

---

On the Net:

http://www.riaa.org

http://www.verizon.com


© 2003 The Associated Press




12 yr old sued { September 9 2003 }
Artists defend free downloading
Byrds vs metallica [jpg]
Cd sales drop
Chuck d says power to people
College students sued for sharing music { April 4 2003 }
Daughter downloads get mom sued { December 7 2003 }
Defend napster 6 5 03 [jpg]
Destroy computers of downloaders { June 17 2003 }
Downloads scoff at music industry
Dutch court throws out control of kazaa { December 19 2003 }
Falsehoods ian
Fed busts underground file sharing sites { August 25 2004 }
File sharers switch to other services { November 12 2003 }
File sharing ruled legal canada
File sharing sites not liable for infringement { August 20 2004 }
File swap not infringing { April 26 2003 }
File swapper takes on riaa { August 22 2003 }
Firm to forgive repentant song downloaders { September 5 2003 }
Girl 12 settles piracy suit 2k
Grokster to shut down under legal settlement
House panel approves copyright bill increase penalties { March 31 2004 }
How riaa tracks downloaders
Hundreds of music swappers sued
Industry now sites pornography { September 7 2003 }
Judge file swapping legal { April 26 2003 }
Judge rejects riaa subpoenas
Kazaa most downloaded program
Lawsuit kazaar
Lifeline ian { February 2 2003 }
Metallica vs byrds
Methods that would make george orwell blush { August 22 2003 }
Mit fights subpoenas
Music downloads up 27 percent one year { April 27 2004 }
Music industry sues 744 more file sharers
Musicians caught in middle { September 14 2003 }
Napster deal with penn state for students
Napster to reenter net music { October 10 2003 }
P2p war
Radiohead tops charts after shunning music industry { January 10 2008 }
Record company investigators raided australian universities { February 6 2004 }
Record industry may not subpoena providers
Record industry sues 532 more file sharers { March 23 2004 }
Recording industry subpoenas sharers
Riaa lawsuits against file traders { June 25 2003 }
Riaa nails 1000 in jihad
Riaa not targeting small downloaders
RIAA sues 493 more music swappers { May 24 2004 }
Riaa sues 531 suspected music pirates { February 17 2004 }
Scotch tape stymies sony music rip protection
Single mom overwhelmed by recording industry lawsuit { May 26 2004 }
Software thwart sharing { May 4 2003 }
Sony sued for spyware on music cds
Student sued by music industry { April 4 2003 }
Student sued for paper cd copying { October 9 2003 }
Teens feel sharing should be legal { September 8 2003 }
Teens ok filesharing
Tower records bankruptcy blamed on downloads { February 5 2004 }
Tracking music file sharing
University file sharing orientation { August 28 2003 }
US sees growth in its CD sales market { January 6 2005 }
Us sides with record labels against verizon { April 18 2003 }
Verizon turns over names { June 6 2003 }

Files Listed: 63



Correction/submissions

CIA FOIA Archive

National Security
Archives
Support one-state solution for Israel and Palestine Tea Party bumper stickers JFK for Dummies, The Assassination made simple