[Infowarrior] - Top Internet Providers Cool to RIAA 3-Strikes Plan
Richard Forno
rforno at infowarrior.org
Mon Jan 5 23:44:01 UTC 2009
Top Internet Providers Cool to RIAA 3-Strikes Plan
By David Kravets EmailJanuary 05, 2009 | 2:43:15 PMCategories: RIAA
Litigation
http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2009/01/draft-verizon-o.html
Two weeks after the Recording Industry Association of America
announced it had struck deals with top internet service providers to
cut off unrepentant music sharers, not a single major ISP will cop to
agreeing to the ambitious scheme, and one top broadband company says
it's not on board.
The RIAA's announcement came as it revealed it was closing down its
massive litigation campaign, which has targeted more than 30,000
individuals for allegedly sharing copyrighted music on the internet.
Instead of federal lawsuits, the RIAA claims it would now rely on a
series of accords it had reached with "leading" internet service
providers, in which the ISPs have agreed to terminate customers the
RIAA catches uploading three times, the association said.
But when contacted by Threat Level, none of the leading ISPs
acknowledged any such deal. "We are not working with them on this,"
Verizon spokeswoman Ellen Yu said in a telephone interview. Verizon,
based in New York, has 8.5 million broadband subscribers, making it
the fourth largest ISP by customer base.
Comcast, the nation's second largest ISP, declined to comment, and
referred inquiries to the National Cable & Telecommunications
Association. The group's vice president, Brian Dietz, said he could
not confirm any deals between the RIAA and his association's members,
but "we look forward to working constructively with the recording
industry and other content providers."
The NCTA represents dozens of cable internet providers. Neither AT&T
nor Verizon are represented by the group.
AT&T, the nation's No. 1 internet service provider with about 14.8
million customers, declined comment through a spokesman. Time Warner
Cable, Cox Communications and Charter Communications did not return
repeated phone calls for comment.
But the RIAA says it really has negotiated an enforcement deal with
large ISPs. It just can't identify members of its coalition of the
willing.
"All I can tell you right now is that we have an agreement on
principle with several leading ISPs but not all, and the agreement on
principle is confidential," RIAA spokeswoman Cara Duckworth said in an
e-mail.
The recording industry began targeting individual file sharers five
years ago, suing about 30,000 alleged copyright scofflaws. Most of the
cases settled out of court for a few thousand dollars.
Only one case went to trial, which was ultimately declared a mistrial
after a federal judge said he erred when he instructed the jury that
"making available" copyrighted music on the internet amounted to
unauthorized distribution — or copyright infringement — regardless of
whether actual downloading by others was shown.
The mistrial decision nullified a $222,000 jury verdict against Jammie
Thomas of Minnesota for sharing 24 songs on the Kazaa file sharing
network.
The RIAA's latest plan of enforcement with the ISPs, if it comes to
fruition, is also under attack as it only targets uploaders (.pdf).
A Thomas retrial is set for March, as the RIAA said it was continuing
with cases that were already in the legal pipeline.
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