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Internet & Computerization
Music industry turns against file sharing customers
By Mike Ingram
10 May 2003
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The recording giants have turned their fire on music consumers
after failing to halt online music swapping, despite shutting
the file-sharing pioneer Napster.
Last month recording labels organised in the Recording Industry
Association of America (RIAA) sued four university students who
allegedly ran file-sharing networks on their schools local
networks.
The students, two from the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
and the others from Princeton University and Michigan Technological
University, were accused of operating local area Napster
networks by the RIAA. The organisation claims the students
operated Napster-like networks designed to enable widespread
music thievery.
Under the terms of the settlement reached this week, Jesse
Jordan and Aaron Sherman, students from the Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute in Troy, New York, agreed to pay $12,000 and $17,000
respectively, according to an RIAA announcement on May 2. Princeton
Universitys Daniel Peng and Michigan Technological Universitys
Joseph Nievelt will pay the RIAA $15,000 each.
Payments will be collected by the RIAA in annual increments
from 2003 to 2006. The students are also expected to disable the
web sites that allowed campus users to download songs and files
from school network computers.
Originally, the RIAA was looking for damages payable up to
$150,000 per song, but the less onerous settlement has successfully
established a principle that damages can be extracted.
In its May 2 statement, the group said it believes the settlement
amounts are appropriate but warned that in future cases it may
not be as lenient and could enforce stiffer settlement obligations
on individuals.
The intimidation appears to have already borne fruit. The RIAA
claims that since filing the initial suit against the four students,
at least 18 similar campus file-sharing services have come down
without the RIAA having to issue further lawsuits.
While identifying campuses as a source of music piracy during
the case against Napster and sending out warnings to campus heads,
the recording giants had until now refrained from action against
individual students in fear of the bad publicity it would generate.
Throughout the case against Napster, the RIAA was careful to
stress that it was not attacking consumers but simply opposing
an illegal business set up by Shaun Fanning. Even in the case
against the four students, the RIAA claimed that they werent
simply swapping music but essentially running a Napster-like network.
The decision to go after the four students came after the RIAA
suffered a serious setback in a case against two of the most popular
file-sharing services, Grokster and StreamCast Networks. Los Angeles
judge Stephen Wilson dismissed a lawsuit against the two companies
on April 25, saying that they could not be held culpable for illegal
file trading carried out over their networks. The ruling represented
an about-turn from previous decisions in favour of the recording
giants. The RIAA said it would appeal the ruling immediately.
Wilson ruled that the peer-to-peer (P-to-P) networks have substantial
non-infringing uses in addition to infringing uses that cannot
be dismissed. It is undisputed that there are substantial
non-infringing uses for defendants software, Wilson
wrote, such as distributing movie trailers, free songs and other
non-copyright works.
Wilson ruled further that the P-to-P network operators do not
have any direct knowledge of when illegal trading is happening
on their systems. Acknowledging, It is undisputed that defendants
are generally aware that many of their users employ defendants
software to infringe copyrighted works, Wilson said that
direct knowledge of users infringement could not be proven.
The judge compared the case to the ruling in the Universal
City Studios lawsuit against Sony, in which the court said
that the sale of video recorders did not subject Sony to contributory
copyright liability.
The RIAA said it was not entirely displeased with the ruling
as the court affirmed that individual users are accountable for
sharing copyright protected material.
Another popular provider of file sharing software, Kazaa, has
argued that it cannot be held to US law given that it is incorporated
in the South Pacific island nation of Vanuatu and has no ties
there.
In a move that opens up an offensive against the general public,
the recording giants have also taken to the tactic of spoofingintroducing
corrupt or bogus files into file-sharing services. For example,
anyone who went to download a song from the new White Stripes
CD, Elephant, in the last few weeks would likely get
a spoofed tune. The first 15 seconds of the song would play, it
would then fade out and begin playing againover and over.
In a more high-profile example of spoofing, Madonna planted a
version of a song from her latest album that included her cursing
at the listener about copyright abuse. Technologically astute
users have reportedly taken her words and worked them into homemade
remixes of other songs.
In addition to the spoofing, the RIAA have posted threats on
the Kazaa and Grokster services. Utilising the instant messaging
feature built into these services, the RIAA sent a notice to those
who had been identified as offering copyrighted materials.
The notice read, in part: It appears that you are offering
copyrighted music to others from your computer. Distributing or
downloading copyrighted music on the Internet without permission
from the copyright owner is ILLEGAL. When you offer music on these
systems, you are not anonymous and you can easily be identified.
A Recording Industry Association of America spokesman told
Reuters News Service that the group has no plans to actually sue
users. But that is the implication of the threat.
Far from a decline in file sharing since the case against Napster,
the opposite has taken place. Services such as Kazaa, Grokster
and Morpheus have far more users than Napster ever had. With the
development of relatively low-cost high-speed permanent Internet
access for home users, moreover, far more files are being swapped.
An abundance of free software is available which makes ripping
a CD to MP3 files no less difficult than playing one. More and
more people are making their entire music collection available
online.
The recording giants are quick to attribute the continue decline
in music sales to online file-sharing, but there are other factors
that cannot be ruled outnot least the extortionate prices
charged for popular CDs. Some studies indicate that those who
download music actually buy more CDs, and that they use file-sharing
to sample new music before paying for it. Whatever the effect
on music sales, file-sharing is here to stay and attempts to criminalise
those who seek to share their music collection will not prevent
it.
While launching a legal onslaught against music fans, the recording
giants have dabbled with their own efforts to make music collections
available online with subscription-based services such as Rhapsody
and pressplay. These have failed to take off not because of pricing,
but because they place too many restrictions on what users can
do with the files they download such as preventing them being
burned to CD or copied.
Apple Computer has introduced its own service, abandoning the
subscription model for its iTunes Store and instead asking users
to pay 99 cents per song, with major-label selections. This has
been hailed as a breakthrough, but like Rhapsody it has serious
restrictions on what users can do with the files. For one thing
it is only available to Macintosh users, which is about 3 percent
of the PC market. Files are offered in Apples proprietary
AAC format, rather than the industry standard MP3 (though they
can be burned to a CD, and then ripped from the disc into MP3s).
And there are limits to the number of CDs you can burn, and how
often songs can be transferred to external players. Furthermore,
only 200,000 songs are offered.
The problems confronting the music industry are similar in
character to those faced by proprietary software developers such
as Microsoft in the face of developments in free Open Source software.
What the recording giants, like their software counterparts, fail
to grasp is that the attraction of online music is not only reduced
cost but increased freedom. For many the main attraction of online
music sites is not the ability to download songs free of charge
but the ability to exchange opinions with fellow fans, to make
their tastes known and encourage others to listen to music they
think highly of. But this socialisation of music immediately comes
into conflict with the interests of the multibillion-dollar corporations.
Because intellectual property rights translates
into big money, the freedom of the consumer is curtailed in the
interests of maintaining corporate profits. While the free exchange
of music, as with other forms of information, grew organically
out of the emergence of the Internet as a mass medium, it comes
into direct conflict with the capitalist profit system and is
subject to repeated attacks.
The arguments in relation to online music have been complicated
by the support given to the RIAA by a number of artists in its
initial campaign against Napster. This allowed the RIAA to pose
as the defender of the interests of the struggling artist and
individual copyright. But this is a red herring. The vast majority
of copyrights are not held by the creator of the work, but by
multinational labels. For many artists the Internet represents
a welcome opportunity for mass distribution, independent of the
recording labels. In attacking those downloading online music
the recording giants are denying all artists the most important
motivator for artistic creation, a wider and more attentive audience
for their work.
See Also:
The Internet
and Computerization
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