Woman Arrested For Filming Snippets Of 'New Moon' May Sue Theater
from the but-probably-won't-win dept
The latest in the saga of the young woman, Samantha Tumpach, who was arrested and jailed for two nights because her attempt to film some of her sister's birthday party at the movies happened to catch a few snippets of the film New Moon, is that Tumpach is now considering suing the theater, even though the charges against her have been dropped. Unfortunately, thanks to the draconian anti-camera laws pushed by the MPAA to punish people for these sorts of things, she might not get very far with such a lawsuit. As Copycense points out, the Illinois law in question basically lets the theater do exactly what it did, even if the circumstances are ridiculous. So, any lawsuit is unlikely to last, though it should lead us to questioning why legislators around the globe have passed similar laws at the behest of the movie industry. There are already perfectly good copyright laws to be used against anyone actually filming a movie for "piracy" purposes. These anti-camcorder laws go above and beyond that, and lead to ridiculous scenarios like this one.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: copyright, felony, movies, new moon, piracy, samantha tumpach
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"she was contemplating legal action against the theater."
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Well
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Re: Well
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Why? Thanks to a lifelong education at the hands of NBC's Law & Order, can't the police hold you for 48 hrs, no questions asked? Was the two nights correlation w/48 hours a coincidence in this case? Or is there some rules differing between "holding" and thrown into gen-pop at county corrections facility?
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I wonder
Could he have his career destroyed?
You see corporations don't need to prove anything anymore they just have to alleged something now.
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Don't forget to rate the theater!
http://maps.google.com/maps/place?cid=16195052917625124963&q=%22Muvico%2BTheate%20r%20%22 %2Brosemont&hl=en&gl=us
The management there need to know there is a consequence for brainlessness.
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"perfectly good copyright laws"
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Re: "she was contemplating legal action against the theater."
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This is the Law: Changing It would be More Effective
Yes, it was ridiculous. No it shouldn't have happened. But it did and it could just as easily have gone the other way. Because the MPAA supported laws do not make distinctions between Commercial Bootlegging and Personal Use Copying, both of which are lumped together under the term "piracy". If you are making a video while you walk down the street and pass a TV store that is running a film and you record one frame of it you will have broken this law.
The laws need to be changed. A.C.T.A. will make things much much worse.
( A.C.T.A. is still BAD )
Speak out!
Tell your elected representatives what you think. Currently they believe everything the MPAA tells them. If enough voters complain they will hear.
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Re: "she was contemplating legal action against the theater."
You try going to jail for two nights for an innocent mistake, and we'll see how you feel?
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I can't take any article using that word seriously :-
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So yes, she should sue the hell out of anyone involved in this case.
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Re: Don't forget to rate the theater!
http://twitter.com/MuvicoTheaters
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How Tony Soprano of you.
"Yo, dis bitch should jus' leave well 'nuff alone, capiche?"
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I would say she is better off at even, zero - there is little up and a whole bunch of down here.
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That would give a Friday night DUI arrest a possible Wednesday morning/afternoon release from jail, and it happens all the time.
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How to evaluate a law
Imagine the law is in effect and your worst enemy with a personal vendetta against you is the government official that can utilize it...
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Re: @Bob V
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If you cannot pay for it, then you need government bail-out.
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wow
The owner or lessee of a facility where a motion picture is being exhibited, the authorized agent or employee of that owner or lessee, or the licensor of the motion picture being exhibited or his or her agent or employee, who alerts law enforcement authorities of an alleged violation of this Section is not liable in any civil action arising out of measures taken by that owner, lessee, licensor, agent, or employee in the course of subsequently detaining a person that the owner, lessee, licensor, agent, or employee, in good faith believed to have violated this Section while awaiting the arrival of law enforcement authorities ...
at what point do we just hand the keys to the jail over to hollywood? I mean really at what point do we start billing David Geffen for the cops' salaries spent on this instead of legitimate crime? Maybe if he took us ALL on a cruise...
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Maybe she can get the same lawyer that did Tenenbaum's stuff. He's really shrewd.
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Criminal??
OK, if the theater wants to ban cameras from its property, fine--let it kick out its customers. I don't really care.
And if the copyright holder wants to bring civil action against someone for infringement,fine. Let them bring their case in front of a judge and jury to assess the situation and render an appropriate judgement.
But to make the act *criminal*? That's just insane, folks. On what grounds are you contending that possessing a recording device on private property is causing enough individual or societal harm that it warrants criminal punishment--even jail time? Even if this woman intended upon using her recording for commercial gain--which it certainly seems like she was not--how can you justify elevating this to the level of criminal behavior?
I'm sorry, I'm just not buying this snake oil. And my legislators know it. How the hell have we managed to let an industry subvert our justice system for their own economic benefit just boggles the mind.
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If she e.g. had to take two days off from work, or missed some exclusive sale or other event, is that just bad luck? Or can she demand (financial) compensation for her missed time? Or should she first demand that a judge declares her innocent before she can demand compensation? (Which would be difficult in this case because it has been dropped.)
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The court of public opinion is more reliable here. People actively avoiding Muvico will be more effective in the long run.
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