Welcome | Sign In
ECommerceTimes.com
News

RIAA's Second Wave of Suits Hits File Traders, More To Come

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
RIAA's Second Wave of Suits Hits File Traders, More To Come

Reporting 156 settlements and 1,000 takers of its "Clean Slate" amnesty agreement -- which lifts the threat of an RIAA lawsuit in exchange for cleaning unlicensed music files off computers and promising not to engage in free file trading again -- the RIAA said music fans are responding to its campaign.


Tips to Integrate Social Media into Your Day-to-Day Media Monitoring
Is social media part of your PR and marketing strategy? This white paper is filled with tips on how to listen to conversations about your brand in the media (social media, print, TV and internet) using the latest tools and techniques. Download Now.

Claiming that its "education and enforcement campaign" involving more than 1,500 subpoenas and nearly 350 lawsuits is working, the Recording Industry Association of America has continued suing music file traders accused of copyright violation.

RIAA spokesperson Amanda Collins told TechNewsWorld that, in addition to the 80 new suits filed late last week, the subpoenas and lawsuits will continue, with more online music traders to be targeted, notified and sued.

"We've said all along this is an ongoing, long-term campaign against piracy on the Internet," Collins said. "Part of that is filing subpoenas and lawsuits." Touting that there is an increase in awareness that making music files available to others for free download on the Internet is illegal, the RIAA also pointed to the continued development and acceptance of legitimate music download sites as proof of its success Download Free eBook - The Edge of Success: 9 Building Blocks to Double Your Sales.

However, Yankee Group senior analyst Mike Goodman told TechNewsWorld that the ability to share music freely is one of the main things keeping song swappers loyal to peer-to-peer services such as Kazaa and Grokster.

"They're still missing one component of what music lovers want to do -- and that is a sense of community and the ability to share music," Goodman said of licensed services including iTunes, Napster 2.0, MusicMatch and others. "Until they do, [peer-to-peer networks] will offer what these things don't -- the ability to share."

By the Numbers

The RIAA would not comment on the number of subpoenas it has issued in the campaign that began this summer and resulted in the first wave of 261 lawsuits in September. Legal observers monitoring the situation estimate the recording industry group has issued more than 1,500 subpoenas to ISPs across the country.

For its second wave of litigation that took shape in the form of 80 new lawsuits last week, the RIAA warned file sharers -- accused of distributing an average of 1,000 copyrighted music files on the Internet -- that they were being sued.

The group said that out of 204 notified individuals, 124 sought resolution without a suit -- "a clear indication that the plan to notify illegal file sharers in advance and providing them an opportunity to work out a settlement before legal action is working," said an RIAA statement.

Following Congressional hearings on its legal strategy, which centers on the controversial Digital Millennium Copyright Act, the RIAA said last month it would provide advance notice of the lawsuits "to be reasonable and fair," according to Mitch Bainwol, RIAA chairman and CEO.

Filing Down

While indicating there are more lawsuits to come, the RIAA's Collins told TechNewsWorld that the RIAA lawsuit campaign has centered on the most egregious copyright infringers thus far.

"In the first few rounds in the beginning -- in a general sense -- we are filing lawsuits against the worst offenders," Collins said.

The industry group dropped one of its first erroneous suits against an elderly woman accused of file trading on Kazaa with her Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) computer, which is not compatible with the service. Collins indicated there have been no similar errors to date.

Filing Down

Reporting 156 settlements and 1,000 takers of its "Clean Slate" amnesty agreement -- which lifts the threat of an RIAA lawsuit in exchange for cleaning unlicensed music files off computers and a promise not to engage in free file trading again -- the RIAA said music fans are responding to its campaign.

"Awareness that file sharing is illegal and interest in legitimate online music services are both up, while traffic on the pirate P2P services is down," said RIAA president Cary Sherman in a statement.

However, Yankee's Goodman said a new business model that offered free file trading while still paying retailers would better serve the RIAA. Goodman called such a strategy "easy to do" given the digital rights management technology available today.

"That's when we'll truly see a decline in unlicensed file sharing," he said.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Jay Lyman


More by Jay Lyman

Open Source Developer Dumps Novell Over Microsoft Deal
December 26, 2006
A key open source developer, Jeremy Allison, who cofounded the Samba project, has resigned from Novell in protest over the company's recent agreement to enter a collaborative arrangement with Microsoft. The deal has created an uproar in the open source community because it does not treat all recipients of the GPL equally and thus violates the spirit of the license, critics say.
Financial Firms Tap Microsoft for Linux
December 22, 2006
Three major financial institutions are among the first companies to go to Microsoft for Linux services, provided through an agreement the software giant struck with Novell. Although a recent survey showed customer approval of the collaboration, many members of the open source community view Novell's move as sleeping with the devil.
Mozilla Beefs Up Security in Firefox 2.0
December 21, 2006
Mozilla's latest update to its open source Firefox browser includes security measures targeting phishers. Phishing scams that use social engineering techniques to dupe Web surfers into revealing personal financial information have become an effective way for cybercriminals to conduct their nefarious activities on the Internet.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network