Judge: Using The Copyright System To Force People To Pay Up Is Unconstitutional
from the well-that'll-be-effective dept
In yet another case of odd legal choices by copyright troll lawyers, apparently a lawyer named Ira Siegel has been avoiding complying with a court order that he reveal how much money he's been making from demanding settlement fees based on accusations (and the threat of court) of copyright infringement. It's no surprise that he would avoid doing so, but there are two interesting points related to this. First, he filed the response two days after the judge's deadline. That's not a way to win points with a judge. Second, he spent much of the filing complaining about an anonymous blogger who has nothing to do with the case. I'm not quite sure what the strategy is here other than to look foolish and lose the case. Of course, there's been conspiracy theories that perhaps he wants this case dismissed to avoid having to reveal how much money he's raking in.Thankfully, rather than dismiss the entire case, the judge has followed the precedent of many other courts dealing with such copyright trolls, and dismissed all but one defendant, effectively ruining the legal strategy of the trolling operation. The judge goes through in great detail why joining so many different people in one lawsuit makes no sense. And you sense that the judge is annoyed that Siegel wasted his time with such a bad case. The judge clearly saw through the whole scheme, and flat out says that abusing the court system to force people to pay up is unconstitutional. It's too bad this part is hidden in a footnote, but the judge clearly states:
The Court’s concerns are heightened by plaintiff’s refusal to file under seal a copy of its settlement letter and related information about its settlement practices. The film sells for $19.95 on plaintiff’s website. According to public reports, plaintiffs in other BitTorrent cases, rather than prosecuting their lawsuits after learning the identities of Does, are demanding thousands of dollars from each Doe defendant in settlement. If all this is correct, it raises questions of whether this film was produced for commercial purposes or for purposes of generating litigation and settlements. Put another way, Article 1, section 8 of the Constitution authorizes Congress to enact copyright laws ‘to promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts’. If all the concerns about these mass Doe lawsuits are true, it appears that the copyright laws are being used as part of a massive collection scheme and not to promote useful arts.That's quite a statement. It's so rare to see a court look at the actual purpose of copyright law to see if it's being met by a plaintiff...
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Filed Under: constitution, copyright, shakedowns
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Bets starting at 1:1 for Friday
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Wow.
I would say that the judge needs to look at the other side, and see that massive copyright infringement is taking away millions of dollars from the useful arts. Perhaps a little balance might clear up the judge's clearly clouded vision.
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Er, no. He's saying that joining so many defendents in a single case of this nature makes him a moneygrubber. BTW, normally setllements are of a dollar amount less than the value of the work, not more. Are you just willfully misconstruing what was said here?
"I would say that the judge needs to look at the other side, and see that massive copyright infringement is taking away millions of dollars from the useful arts. Perhaps a little balance might clear up the judge's clearly clouded vision."
Uh, why? The judge didn't say mass copyright infringement is okay. He said this method for tackling is wrong and against the US Constitution.
Honestly....have you been sniffing paint again?
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It is my professional opinion that paint alone is not sufficient to cause this level of brain damage. Blunt trauma to the head (with a red stapler?) on the other hand...
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Got citations for that? Anything? Please? I honestly, truly, really would like to see something that supports that idea.
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actually I believe its more the fact that the court should not be a "Collection Agency" for the lawyers and others. ask yourself this, What is the purpose of the court?
Wow.
"I would say that the judge needs to look at the other side, and see that massive copyright infringement is taking away millions of dollars from the useful arts.(citation needed, WHERE is this loss of million of dollars coming from; the public sure would LOVE to know) Perhaps a little balance might clear up the judge's clearly clouded vision."
and by balance what do you mean? the fact that he should proceed to just give the IP address info? or the fact that joining together separate parties and creating a class action lawsuit would be best? the court is in the business of justice and that usually means giving the parties a chance to actually get justice. if the court believes each individual should be tried separately then others that's fine by me since actual justice happens.
peace
Deane
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There is widespread infringement. There is widespread "settlement before court" actions in all sorts of cases note related to copyright. Why ignore both just to crap on the content producers?
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"This Court does not condone copyright infringement and incourages settlement of genuine disputes. However, plaintiff's desire to to enforce its copyright..."
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He skims, and does that poorly.
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What reality? So far, from what we've seen, all these cases amount to is some guy pulling IP addresses out of his ass and suing those IP addresses, in hopes that he can scare some suckers into settling and paying up. If that fails, they drop the ball and run away.
What's funny is why nobody questions the methodology used to acquire these IP addresses. How do we guarantee that they were not pulled out of someone's ass? And if they were, how do you prove that you are innocent?
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In any of these other pre-settled civil cases you are referencing, do any of them join together thousands of people from across the country, identifying them as Doe's because the only evidence available is a number which is not permanently assigned nor necessarily exclusively used by the individual.
I hope the practice is closer to barratry than commonplace.
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Re: Content Producers
Content Producers
This term is key to many of these arguments about Art and Intellectual Property. Through ignorance or mis-information many people confusedly think this means the artists, the creators of the content. It does not, it literally means the producers, as in "Executive Producer" the investor who is trying to monetize the Art or Intellectual Property. My opinion is that these people generally get no sympathy to their dilemma because they have made a risky (vs. intelligent or even thoughtful) investment and lost and many of them are turning to strong arm legal tactics instead of innovation and new and possibly better ideas. And this seems to be where all the discussions break down. One group says 'this is unreasonable', and the other group says 'this is our RIGHT'.
Well, no, its not a right. You may have legal recourse, but that does not make it A right, and that does not make it right.
Why does it seem to be impossible to reach an agreement? Supply and Demand will set the price regardless of what the producers want the price to be. As many here have pointed out lately (paraphrasing); When you choose set unreasonable prices content-piracy and infringement WILL be your competition.
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According to public reports, plaintiffs in other BitTorrent cases, rather than prosecuting their lawsuits after learning the identities of Does, are demanding thousands of dollars from each Doe defendant in settlement.
In other words, using the courts to extort money from people who may not be guilty, but can't afford to defend themselves from such actions. The lawyers absolutely have no interest in bringing these cases to court. And THAT is the issue. Using copyright to extort thousands from people.
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From the studies I have put together, it is competition for entertainment dollars, competition for peoples time, music singles, and digital as the final format causing a loss of resales from format upgrades and designed obsolescence, thats destroying the old content industries. They have lost their monopoly status.
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In short, you sir, are stupid, and should be removed from the gene pool.
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I know I'm late, but...
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Why "thankfully"? Why it it would be bad in your opinion, Mike, to dismiss the entire case outright?
Now a single Doe feels the pressure that was evenly distributed over 5000 before. Given the "quality" of the evidence gathering methods, this Doe could be a bystander (I have an educated guess that likelihood of error is around 15%)... I'm a collaterally damaged myself, and believe me, it is not fun.
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"Now a single Doe feels the pressure that was evenly distributed over 5000 before."
You're assuming that 5000 defendants would feel less pressure than 1 defendant while being sued... while not the crux of your point I don't think that's a true statement.
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Of course my statement about the pressure was only a metaphor and was not meant to be mathematically correct, yet try to to imagine yourself in this guy's place before and after this ruling. No difference at all?
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Had the judge kicked the entire case, Ira would then have used troll 2.0 techniques to send letters saying pay me or I will file a case naming you. The Judge would have no ability to keep an eye on Ira and continue to make demands. With there now being 1 Doe, there is also a chance EFF or Public Citizen will step in and begin the challenges.
The case being alive = good.
The poor Doe who is still stuck = not so good.
But hopefully that Doe will find your blog, or us here and find out not all hope is lost.
I feel sorry for the Doe, but that Doe's discomfort might lead to Ira getting the legal smackdown he so desperately needs. To be all vulcan, sometimes the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the one. I don't like it, but this is the closest we've ever gotten with a Judge doing the right thing.
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my fucking GOD, i have waited my whole life to this date just to hear someone just come out say this... i finally have hope for humanity regarding these stupid laws
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Copyright Enforcement Group
If you have been affected by CEG or Ira Siegal, get your money back. DON'T pay them in the first place. They don't have the resources to do anything to the people they accuse.
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*useful* arts?
After all, to my mind, the definition of art is essentially something that has no practical use and is purely aesthetic in nature.
[And I'm guessing the answer is: lobbyists]
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Re: *useful* arts?
It is easy to confuse the two given how they are typically used in this day and age.
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Have you heard the good news!?
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http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2011/05/biggest-bittorrent-case/
So $3000.00 for a movie.
Now 5011 John Doe Defendants.
Total to the Plaintiffs, $15,033,000.00.
Now say the lawyer has a 40% recovery fee, that's $6,013,200.00 (I bet it's higher)
Not to bad a return on at best $99,969.45 worth of fap magic.
Oh yea, I can see the extortion in the numbers. Good for the Judge for a wise decision.
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Somewhere, I forget where atm, someone contacted one of the porn companies one of these trolls was representing. He was shocked to find out how much they were demanding as he was informed they were only seeking like $50 from each person.
Lying to your clients, lying to the courts, lying to the victims. Seems to be about right for this business model.
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Its the new adaptive model being used by smaller troll firms.
There is a small boutique firm in FL who used a STATE court to force ISP record hand overs for multiple films in 1 filing.
They did an end run around the federal courts saying you can't jam all of your films into 1 mass doe suit.
They got a state judge to consider allowing them discovery in what has to be a federal level case.
They had their German tracking firm setup their data collection in FL to create the illusion that FL was the proper venue.
Oh and there is no US copyright on that porn companies films, which means the damages are capped at actual, because the oldest film they brought the case for was released in 2005.
This did not stop them from calling people and demanding payments of several thousand dollars. And when people told them to go away, they sent letters threatening a lawsuit in the wrong Federal District to cover their targets.
No copyright troll will EVER bring a case on just their own "evidence". They will only bring one if they can catch the Doe in a statement showing guilt. This lets them try to bypass the simple fact that IP address gathering techniques are flawed and can be used to point at innocent parties. That they can not prove what they told the courts in the initial filing is remotely true, even with the civil bar of more likely than not.
If a specific gathering technique is killed in court, the shockwave would severely hurt the copyright trolls. There is one German firm using multiple names who supplies most of the IP "evidence".
Oh and as for the new super secret methods, John Steele who loves to point out his super system that he spent way to much money building could never we wrong, Sued a 70 yr old woman in SF. Because she went to the press about this "extortion" attempt, Steele and Co. looked at the records... and admitted it was an error. He tried to raise the specter that it was an error on the part of the ISP and they now had the right person targeted. But it took media coverage to get Steele to look up from the settlement letters he was sending out to see that he screwed up.
It is better for a guilty man to go free than an innocent man to serve one day... unless we can get paid.
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So, he has probably collected close to $500k
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Wow
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Same everywhere
Isn't that pretty much what studios and labels are doing as well? Trying to make so all use of their content results in some amount fo collection forever, so they don't ahve to make anything new that costs money?
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