RIAA's Response To Infringement Via Its IP Address... Is To Note Someone Else Did It
from the where-have-we-heard-that-before? dept
Oh this one just gets better and better. Remember how the YouHaveDownloaded system was used to pinpoint infringement done via an RIAA IP address (among other interesting places)? Well, now the RIAA is using the "someone else did it" defense. According to CNET:RIAA spokesman Jonathan Lamy had an explanation for that that implies that a third-party vendor was responsible for the downloads. "Those partial IP addresses are similar to block addresses assigned to RIAA. However, those addresses are used by a third party vendor to serve up our public Web site," he said. "As I said earlier, they are not used by RIAA staff to access the Internet."However, as TorrentFreak points out in response, Lamy is lying (shocker). Those addresses are not "similar" to RIAA addresses, they belong to the RIAA.
Now, of course, it's possible some other vendor was using them, but this seems rather ironic, coming from the RIAA, who has insisted for years that IP addresses are sufficient to accurately determine who is responsible for infringement. Apparently it works for everyone... but the RIAA.
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Filed Under: evidence, ip addresses
Companies: riaa
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Re:
MOAR MONEY PLZ...
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Sigh... This type of schlock news is tiresome.
Clearly those in the service of law enforcement are not subject to the law itself.
Would you arrest a drug informant for lighting up a bowl in order to get a gang of marijuana dealers?
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Re: Sigh... This type of schlock news is tiresome.
Let me make it easy for you: RIAA is a trade organization and has no legal ground on which it can infringe the IP rights of other copyright holders.
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Re: Sigh... This type of schlock news is tiresome.
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rofl
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Re: Sigh... This type of schlock news is tiresome.
1) the RIAA is not law enforcement
2) a pirated TV show is not music
So, the RIAA could not have been downloading in order to catch music thieves.
RIAA shill fail.
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Re: Sigh... This type of schlock news is tiresome.
So if you sent your fictitious informant in to bust the evil marijuana dealers, and he did a bunch of cocaine?
Maybe they had to download movies for fear the marks would think they werent real downloaders and blow their cover...
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Re: Sigh... This type of schlock news is tiresome.
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Re: Sigh... This type of schlock news is tiresome.
if you're not trying to be funny. you are a total blithering idiot.
RIAA is *NOT* law enforcement, nor in the service of law enforcement.
and law enforcement can only go so far in breaking the law in the course of their duty to begin with....
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Re: Re: Sigh... This type of schlock news is tiresome.
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Re: rofl
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I know you're desperate for a punchline here, but I just don't see it. The target of an infringement lawsuit and the RIAA can both use the some-other-dude-did-it defense. The IP address points to the subscriber of the address, in this case it's the RIAA. Then that subscriber has to come up with some defense, and in this case it's that some vendor did it. I'm not seeing any irony. Nice try though, I guess. You'll get 'em next time, Mike.
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Re: Sigh... This type of schlock news is tiresome.
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Re: Re: Sigh... This type of schlock news is tiresome.
The 'one-stop-shop' dealers, as well as delivery service versus pickup, are the ones with the competitive advantage. It's better to keep around 'a guy' who can get anything, than someone who only has say weed.
For instance, if you're going to a phish concert this weekend, you might want a little weed in order to make the music palatable, but the following week you might be going to a rave and want ecstasy. It's better to get everything in one trip rather than have to deal with the underworld on multiple occasions. I know that my own guy is often late and when he does finally get her, he is totally sketchy. I keep him around though, because he always has what I need.
However, I would rather the concierge at my building not see this character coming up to visit more than say once or twice a month.
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Pay more attention.
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They're not saying they believe the person associated with the IP address actually did the downloading, they're saying that there's enough evidence, if left unrebutted, to permit the inference that that person did it (or would otherwise be responsible for it). Either way, a defendant or the RIAA (or anyone else) can claim that somebody else is actually to blame. The same exact rules are applying here as would apply to any other IP address subscriber. The fact that the RIAA's IP address was apparently used to infringe doesn't change anything. That makes no sense. If your car drives through one of those photo red lights, they're going to send you the ticket even if it was your friend borrowing the car that day. It's reasonable to assume it was you, and if it wasn't, the burden shifts to you to prove it.
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Eventually the absurdity of the 55 mph speed limit sunk in and in 2006 MassHighway traffic engineers recommended a speed limit increase. State Police vetoed the change, preferring the 99% violation rate that let them write tickets at will. Police have no legal role in setting speed limits. Somebody in the Romney administration weighed the risk of losing ticket revenue against the risk of being blamed for accidents. Police won.
After engineers lost that fight people began to worry about the high accident rate on Route 3. The state hired a consultant to do a Road Safety Audit. The consultant’s report blamed the low speed limit, among other factors, for the high crash rate. The report explicitly recommended raising the speed limit.
Three years later, state officials have not followed the advice of their engineers, their consultant, or 100,000 drivers per day. State police are still out there running speed traps and helping keep the road as dangerous and profitable as they can.
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Re: Re: Re: Sigh... This type of schlock news is tiresome.
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Re: Re: Sigh... This type of schlock news is tiresome.
Right over your head...
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http://g.co/maps/5p7ah
It's not uncommon for say someone from Fox Filmed Entertainment to have lunch at The Ivy
http://losangeles.citysearch.com/profile/81607/los_angeles_ca/the_ivy.html
with someone from Sony Music to discuss ways of stopping the illegal theft of their intellectual property. These distinctions only exist for you middle American common folk.
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The RIAA did not care when they brought suit against someone for infringement, and the accused said "it wasn't me." The RIAA would call BS and keep on with the lawsuit. Now the RIAA has been suspected of infringement and are using the EXACT SAME EXCUSE they would always shoot down in court. While I do not see CBS pursuing them in this matter so we will never get a judges decision on it. Its still a little funny to see the tables turned.
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Re: Re: Sigh... This type of schlock news is tiresome.
Perhaps someone doing the same work at the RIAA comes across something which would interest a personal friend and professional contact over at the MPIA. It's also probably a good excuse to write off a business lunch.
I for one love getting out of the office as much as possible. Here at NBCU we can check out a golf cart and nosh over at Universal Studio Walk next door.
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Pay more attention.
OK, show me where "the RIAA insists that nobody is allowed to use the defense." It doesn't even make sense that they would say that since obviously everyone can use that defense. You guys aren't making much sense.
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And the RIAA couldn't necessarily get out being sued here by saying they didn't do it either. And why should the RIAA have cared if someone said it wasn't them? Could they prove it? Were they lying? I'm thinking of Tenenbaum and Thomas-Rasset. Both lied under oath and said it wasn't them either. And look what that got them.
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Also if I recall correctly some people even came forward in this very forum to say that the responsibility of what happens in ones connection is entirely square on the lap of the account holder of that IP address.
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I never reference those specific cases. It was more of a general statement than anything really. I must say though that they have got you hooked on some serious fucking kool-aid.
As to the Tenenbaum though. Don't you think that the doctor who killed Michael Jackson is going to serve less time than Tenenbaum could is okay? Or the fact that his fines and fees were less than than what Tenenbaum is looking at is somehow wrong? Tenenbaum let some people download some music. Dr Murray fucking killed someone.
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I wonder if they know SOPA will fail, just just want to distract us from 6 strikes happening.
And the irony is the RIAA never accepted the idea of some other guy did it in their lawsuits, where they sued the dead, lied to courts, sued people who didn't own computers, etc.
Pretending a block of assigned IP addresses are somehow dynamic and someone else did it is lying. Allowing them to use a defense they deny is valid in their court cases is just the wrong kind of funny.
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The only one I;ve seen pushing this idea lately is Randazza, who got someone to settle a case and pay off on a claim of your ip your fault, and the others point to that "win" to scare more settlements out of people.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Sigh... This type of schlock news is tiresome.
Well actually I'm Canadian, so I'm fairly certain Hollywood is fictional in its entirety. It doesn't even sound like a real place!
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One possible outcome is a US pirate party with teeth affecting both the tea party and OWS, another is the joining of various organizations into a new party. This, if passed, could be one stone in bridging various groups into a coherent whole. Even if it is not passed it is another example people will remember of the lobbyist influenced government at work.
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Are you kidding? That was my first clue that it was fake! Birch trees never grow like that!
Besides, I've stated in the past that I'm not sure New York City is real either - so you're definitely not going to convince me about Hollywood.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Sigh... This type of schlock news is tiresome.
It's also a fantasy in that it's been a fantasy factory for well nigh on a century now and has been reading far far too much of it's own press releases and has been believing that the fantasy is reality.
To the point the story makes. The very argument the RIAA is making here to "prove" it's innocence is something they won't accept from anyone else. Kinda like they won't accept a defense in a private home of "cousin johnny was here that weekend so he must have done it, not us". In the RIAA's case it proves nothing when they say "a contractor had to have done it" or words to that effect.
So if we are to accept the RIAA's word for it, as it doesn't appear that they're disputing that the block if IP addresses belong to them, then it seems that there's a better than even chance that they've been party to sending out cease and desist messages and taking people to court (and winning sometimes) on extremely flimsy information that their now admitting is next to useless or someone DID in fact "infringe" on MPAA "property" from inside the RIAA.
There's nothing schlocky about it unless Techdirt, CNET and others are all dealing in that according to you.
And no, the RIAA is not an officer of the court in the sense of law enforcement nor was it conducting an investigation or claiming that it was.
I do LOVE your drawing a parallel between Hollywood and drug dealers though. It's amazingly accurate.
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Re: Sigh... This type of schlock news is tiresome.
So there's no immunity of the sort. The people who are granted immunity are spelt out in the law.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Sigh... This type of schlock news is tiresome.
I am sorry to hear you were sued by Hollywood because your lead reindeer has a resemblance to the character Rudolf. To bad they got that restraining order to prevent him from flying this Christmas. My dead grandma was also sued by the content industry for downloading German death metal. Frank Sanatra I would understand but that, not so much.
I know I am going to be on your naughty list next year because I hacked your servers. All I did was look around!! I found that the heads of every record label, TV studio and movie studio is on your "COAL FOREVER" list. Why you did that in 24 pt bold font I don't understand. I think that is very harsh. People should be forgiving this time of year. It is a time of giving, and hope.
I would like no gifts this year. Instead I would like to brighten the day of the studio execs in Hollywood California. They really need it with how mean they are. I recently learned that "the majority of them, are all with a 20 mile radius of Hollywood, CA". Which should make delivery of the gift I would like to give them easy. I would like it delivered to The Ivy in LA. The gift is a Tsar Bomba. You might need a bigger sled though.
Signed your friend
Johnny age 12
P.S. Enclosed is a list of changes to your network to make it more secure.
----------------
Dear Johnny
I apologize for taking a year to get back to you. Between federal custody and the YouTube talk show circuit I have been busy. To bring you up to speed. I have to wear an ankle bracelet for the rest of my immortal life. It seems the whole smile and a wink thing, I do to get up and down chimneys, works to get out of jail cells. Who knew? They decided to save face after my 100th cookie run. So they changed the terms from life imprisonment to life with an ankle bracelet. That and no one in the US justice department had jobs lined up for after the change in administration.
So all is well now. I have placed you on my "NICE" (in 24 pt font) list this year and filled a 1 TB mp3 player with your favorite music.
Your friend
St Nick
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So there is no question that someone at an IP address assigned only to the RIAA downloaded "infringing" material (notably the RIAA isn't denying that) but they're using the "some vendor" excuse instead of the "cousin johnny" defense, the same defense they insist that others can't use because their "investigations" say that the person who is assigned that address at that time is responsible for any and all actions done at that address, similar to your traffic light camera argument. Therefore, the responsibility for the piracy lays WITH the RIAA and not "cousin johnny" by your and, up till now, their logic and equating it with the speed trap camera lights.
THAT, my friend, is the irony, even if every word the RIAA is saying in its defense of itself is true.
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It takes some cheek for them to pull that one out of the hat now and indicates a delicious lack of a sense of irony that one of their songwriters or muscians would have reminded them of after telling them a label still owed them money from the last pair of million selling CDs.
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I'm thinking of Debbie Foster and Tanya Andersen.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capitol_Records_v._Deborah_Foster
"Instead of immediately dropping the case against Deborah Foster and suing those they believed were responsible for the alleged infringement, the plaintiffs amended the complaint to add her daughter Amanda Foster, while keeping Ms. Foster as a co-defendant. The RIAA told her that she was liable for any infringement regardless of whether she had shared or downloaded files herself because she was the registered owner of the account."
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2008/05/andersen-relentless-in-quest-to-nail-th e-riaa.ars
"But the central piece of Andersen's complaint is the RIAA's conduct in Atlantic v. Andersen. She says that the RIAA could have with very little effort discovered the true identity of "gotenkito@KaZaA," the P2P user observed by MediaSentry, but instead chose to pursue its case against her—despite having "actually already identified the real 'gotenkito'" over 10 months before dismissing the case against her."
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The RIAA gets a block of IPs assigned to them, just like, say, your local ISP. They take a part of that block, and assign it internally to the company the runs their websites and such - including all of their staff. Someone in that group may or may not have pirated something or created a torrent or whatever.
The RIAA has no more real control over a single IP address in their block than your ISP does.
The difference? The RIAA is pointing over at a guilty party, not clamming up and and wanting someone to actually sue them and prove the case before they say anything.
In an organization as big as the RIAA, with the number of people working for contractors and such, you don't think that one of them might be, maybe, just sort of, willing to take a risk to put a little shit on the RIAA?
Smells like a setup to me!
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Funny...
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You need a new prescription for your glasses, boy.
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Which like always explains a lot about you. So what?
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People clam up when confronted by the copyright trolls because they trolls LIE to them.
Oh well if you tell me who did it we'll sue them not you.
If you want to say you didn't do it I will just ask all of your neighbors within WiFi distance if they were the ones who downloaded Anal Grannies 4 on your internet connection.
I need a list of everyone who has even looked at your house in the last 6 months so I can ask them if they downloaded it.
As far as proof the website is as accurate as the trolling methods that have been employed to capture IP addresses that are being accepted as factual and accurate in Federal Courts. Even with a copyright troll telling the Judge directly they mislead the court that the IP address would let them catch the infringer when seeking a sweeping order demanding an entire household turn over every device capable of holding a bit of data for them to sift through, a list of IP addresses is taken as being accurate.
The downside with your theory is that these events did not take place on a single day or a single download.
They demand universities block filesharing protocols yet leave the door open on their own network.
This is just them trying to avoid people figuring out they are unwilling to do what they demand of everyone else.
The RIAA should have complete control over their assigned IP block, they expect every other company on the planet to take extreme measures to protect their copyrights so why do they get a pass when they refuse to do what they demand of others?
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Though the RIAA and other industry bodies have said on numerous occasions that that defence does not fly since the account holder (of IP address) is absolutely responsible for whatever happens with their account unless the account holder can prove in court (they shift the burden from plaintiff onto the respondent in this instance) that they had no knowledge nor control over any third party (ie: cracking, phreaking etc) as long as that third party was NOT a familial person nor part of their immediate circle of associates.
Therefore in this instance the RIAA is stating that they should not only be held responsible for their own IP address they own, that they can use this defence even before any court action is initiated. Can you now see the hypocrisy?
What I can see is that this official statement is going to bite them in the arse next time they are at court by any responding attorney.
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I got an email from the PRS
how do you do a search on youhavedownloaded.com for a range of IP addresses, or do you have to do it individually?
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Amiright?
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Real Ignorant Asshats of America
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"These are not the IPs you are looking for"...
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Let's try to hold the RIAA to the same standards everyone else holds the ISPs up to.
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remember the 70 year old granny that was threatened with a huge fine if she didn't pay the extortion demanded in a form letter... the lawyer for the copyright holder stated 'leaving a Wi-Fi router unsecured is akin to leaving a loaded gun in reach of a 3-year-old child'... so I guess the RIAA irresponsibly left a loaded gun for others to commit illegal acts.
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1) Someone at the RIAA would have to download content outside of Big Content control, because the big boys are unlikely to sue each other over this.
2) Unless the downloader was someone of some importance, they would probably love to get sued and lose. They'd happily throw the person responsible under the bus and pay the fines, to have the legal ruling in their favor for future lawsuits.
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And the RIAA just happened to clone one of those alligators and then got caught after lobbying for said cloning to be illegal.
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That pretty much sums it up, doesn't it. The proper response from the RIAA should have been "Yes, we are terribly sorry about this horrible incident and will be providing the rights holders with a x-billion dollar check to cover the fines, penalties, and lost sales. We are further going to model our demands on others by taking full responsibility for the security issue this indicates."
Instead they used the one excuse they had already labeled as being the single weakest. Not that I would expect anything more from such a lame organization, but it would have been kind of nice to be wrong for a change. sigh.
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It is also an ironic situation, but perhaps you are having trouble with the meaning of that word.
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"The RIAA told her that she was liable for any infringement regardless of whether she had shared or downloaded files herself because she was the registered owner of the account."
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