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Two universities win battle against RIAA subpoenas

The decision could slow the recording industry's efforts to stop music piracy

August 11, 2003 12:00 PM ET

IDG News Service - The U.S. recording industry received a setback in its nationwide campaign to quash music piracy on the Internet when a federal judge ruled on Friday that two universities do not have to comply with subpoenas requesting that they hand over the identities of students who could be illegally sharing music online.
Both MIT and Boston College won their requests to reject subpoenas issued by the Recording Industry Association of America Inc. (RIAA) over jurisdictional issues, according the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF).
The universities argued that the subpoenas, which were filed in Washington, did not apply to them in Massachusetts.
Massachusetts U.S. District Court Judge Joseph Tauro's ruling in the universities' favor could prove to be an obstacle for the RIAA's piracy offensive, given that the group has reportedly filed some 2,000 subpoenas through the Washington court, according to the EFF.
The ruling could mean that the group will have to file subpoenas in courts across the country where it believes infringement is occurring, a much longer and more complicated process, the EFF said.
EFF staff attorney Wendy Seltzer cheered the decision, saying in a statement that the ruling "confirms that due process applies to Internet user privacy nationwide." The EFF has been battling the RIAA campaign, saying that the group's efforts compromise the privacy of individual users.
The San Francisco-based privacy group isn't alone in its rejection of the RIAA's latest campaign. Pacific Bell Internet Services, a subsidiary of SBC Communications Inc., has filed a suit in California alleging that the RIAA's subpoenas are a threat to subscribers' privacy and a burden on Internet service providers.
What's more, Sen. Norm Coleman (R-Minn.) has also publicly spoken out against the group, calling the subpoenas a "shotgun" approach to piracy.
The RIAA's spraying of administrative subpoenas is just the latest strategy in a battle against Internet piracy that stems from the early days of the Napster online music-swapping service. And while the group's efforts to go after individual users has sparked some controversy and backlash, its campaign against piracy on the legal front has been mostly successful.
The group managed to knock Napster off-line last year and has since won rulings in cases against Madster -- formerly called Aimster -- and other peer-to-peer file-trading networks.
Having had success in cases against peer-to-peer networks, the industry has now focused on going after individual users with the aid of Internet service providers. Although the latest ruling could slow down the subpoena process, that does not mean that ISPs won't eventually be ordered to comply.
Verizon Internet Services Inc., for instance, lost its bid in June to protect the names of customers accused of illegal file-trading.
The recording industry is using as its defense part of the 1998 U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which allows copyright holders to subpoena ISPs for the names of people they believe are using their copyrighted material without permission.
The EFF is campaigning for ISPs to notify users when their information is being sought. The group has also created an online database where users can check to see if their identifies have been subpoenaed by the RIAA. The database is at www.eff.org/IP/P2P/riaasubpoenas/.
The RIAA was not immediately available to comment on the ruling.





Reprinted with permission from

IDG.net
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

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