Music Industry Targets
Net Swappers
by D. Ian
Hopper, AP Technology Writer
Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Music companies tried to
persuade a judge Friday to let them obtain the names of
people suspected of trading music files online without going
to court first, a move that could dictate how copyright
holders deal with Internet piracy in the future.
Internet service provider Verizon is resisting
the music industry's subpoena, saying that it could turn
Internet providers into a turnstile for piracy suits and
put innocent customers at risk.
U.S. District Judge John D. Bates, who
heard the case, lamented ambiguities in the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act, which was enacted to uphold copyright laws
on the Internet while shielding technology companies from
direct liability.
Congress "could have made this statute
clearer," Bates said. "This statute is not organized as
being consistent with the argument for either side."
Bates said he would try to rule quickly,
but lawyers for both sides had no guess of when a decision
might arrive.
The subpoena hearing, which is normally
a tame affair, was contentious because the music industry
sees it as a test case. If it succeeds, it plans to send
reams of cease-and-desist letters to scare file-swappers
into taking their collections offline.
Until now, copyright holders have relied
on requests sent to Internet providers to take action on
their own against suspected pirates. Almost all Internet
providers forbid sharing copyrighted material without permission.
But that can take a lot of time, and makes
copyright holders reliant on Internet providers to enforce
the law. Internet providers do not always respond as well
or as quickly as music and movie publishers would prefer.
They think individual letters from the maker itself might
work better.
"Wouldn't that be a lot easier way to
let people know that they are in fact not anonymous and
there could be consequences?" asked Cary Sherman, RIAA's
general counsel.
Verizon said that since the hundreds of
songs up for trade by the anonymous Verizon customer at
the center of the case sit on the person's computer rather
than Verizon's network, it is not required to automatically
give up the subscriber's name.
"Verizon was a passive conduit at most,"
said Eric Holder, a former Justice Department prosecutor
who represented Verizon. Holder said the music industry's
strategy could create a contentious relationship between
Verizon and its customers and put the Internet provider
in the position of handing over names to the music companies
without a judicial determination of piracy.
"We also don't want to be the policeman
in this process," Holder said.
Lawyers for the recording industry rejected
Verizon's arguments that it had little obligations in the
process. Industry lawyer Donald Verrilli said no type of
service provider is exempt from having to identify a potential
music pirate, no matter where the songs sit.
Verrilli also dismissed Verizon's position
that the Internet provider's customers have a right to privacy.
"You don't have a first amendment right
to steal copyright works," Verrilli said.
The judge disagreed with Verrilli's assumption
that the works were stolen.
"Here, there's only an allegation of infringement,"
Bates said.
Bates gave few hints as to how he might
rule. He asked many, detailed questions of both sides. He
called some Verizon positions vague, but showed little patience
with other arguments advanced by the music industry and
movie studios, which also argued on behalf of music publishers.
Through programs like Kazaa, Morpheus
and Gnutella), a person can find virtually any song or movie
- sometimes even before it's released in stores - and download
it for free. On a typical afternoon, about 3 million people
were connected on the Kazaa network and sharing more than
500 million files.
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