[BC] Court rejects RIAA's 'making available' piracy argument
Ernie Belanger
armtx at mhcable.com
Wed Apr 30 13:01:57 CDT 2008
>From CNET
The recording industry's music piracy fight was dealt a setback Tuesday when
a federal judge rejected the RIAA's "making available" argument in a lawsuit
against a husband and wife accused of copyright infringement.
In Atlantic v. Howell, Judge Neil V. Wake denied the labels' motion for
summary judgment in a 17-page decision (PDF), allowing the suit to proceed
to trial. The argument--that merely the act of making music files available
for download constituted copyright infringement--has been the basis for the
Recording Industry Association of America's legal battle against online
music piracy.
The RIAA sued husband and wife Pamela and Jeffrey Howell for copyright
infringement in 2006, claiming the couple had used Kazaa to make copyrighted
files available for download. In a deposition, Jeffrey Howell admitted
loading the file-sharing software onto his computer and that the songs
listed in the complaint were for personal use but that he had not placed the
files in the program's shared folder. He said that the recordings were
copies made from CDs he owned placed on the computer for personal use and
not copies downloaded from Kazaa.
He also argued that that he was not the one sharing the files, but that it
was the computer that was sharing the files.
While the couple lacks legal representation, the Electronic Frontier
Foundation said it filed an amicus brief on behalf of the couple (PDF). The
EFF argued against the RIAA's "making available" position, saying in a
statement that it "amounts to suing someone for attempted distribution,
something the Copyright Act has never recognized."
Judge Wake apparently agreed with that position.
"The court agrees with the great weight of authority that section 106(3) is
not violated unless the defendant has actually distributed an unauthorized
copy of the work to a member of the public," wrote the judge in his order.
"Merely making an unauthorized copy of a copyrighted work available to the
public does not violate a copyright holder's exclusive right of
distribution."
EFF staff attorney Fred von Lohmann called the order the "most decisive
rejection yet of the recording industry's 'making available' theory of
infringement."
The order is a bit of an oddity in that it's a reversal of an order Wake
issued in August, in which he granted the RIAA's summary judgment and fined
the Howells $40,850 in penalties and court costs. However, the Howells
appealed and the judgment was later vacated
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