Righthaven Actually Shows Up In Court, Whines About 'Scorched Earth' Attacks Against It
from the can-we-define-irony? dept
Righthaven became famous for being one of the first copyright holders to go after alleged online infringement... by suing first, without ever sending any sort of takedown notice. That, alone, raised some questions about Righthaven's tactics. The company also -- for no clear reason -- demanded not just payment, but also that sites turn over their own domain names. It was this level of intimidation (via the legal system) that caused many sites to simply settle, rather than pay to fight it. If ever there was a company guilty of using overly aggressive litigation techniques, it would be Righthaven. And yet... in a rather ironic move, the company is now complaining about the tactics used against it by lawyer Marc Randazza, who has been relentless in pursuing the attorney's fees that the court has ordered Righthaven to pay.Though, yes, this does mean that Righthaven's lawyer, Shawn Mangano, actually showed up in court this time. Righthaven also complained that Randazza's efforts were just to get press attention (well, if Righthaven isn't going to pay them, they might as well get publicity some way...). Either way, the judge issued a protective order blocking anyone from revealing the financial information uncovered during a debtor's examination of Righthaven CEO Steve Gibson and his wife.
Separately, an appeals court rejected Righthaven's attempt to get an injunction to stop Righthaven assets from being auctioned off... It seems like another bad day for those supporting Righthaven.
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Filed Under: appeal, marc randazza, scorched earth, shawn mangano, steve gibson
Companies: righthaven
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Hmmm
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I agree, too
Randaza is probably enjoying some nice bubbly right now (assuming that's the sort of thing he enjoys).
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A sad tale to be sure
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Re: Hmmm
He is currently engaged in copyright extortion of people identified by IP address alone, and has his own version of what the law says that does not match reality.
While hes been occupied with RightHaven he has had cases open on the docket over 4 months, violating the rules but no one seems to mind.
His demands are about as nutty as RightHaven's, so this is mostly just troll on troll action.
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MPAA attacks Ars for "challenging efforts to curb content theft"
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2012/01/mpaa-attacks-ars-for-challenging-efforts-to -curb-content-theft.ars
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Re: Re: Hmmm
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Re: Re: Re: Hmmm
I guess I unnerve him being able to quote his threat letters, having a good knowledge of the methods being used in the shakedown, and calling him out directly on BS statements.
While he has done some good in free speech cases, his troll tendencies make me unhappy.
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Apparently they thought they were in high court. It must have been quite the shock to find out otherwise.
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Domains
At minimum the receiver who auctioned off the righthaven.com domain should not ignore that RightHaven could have other domain names hiding away.
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Re: Re: Hmmm
"this is mostly just troll on troll action"
My god, just what dark corners of the internet are you visiting?
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That would be a stay, not an injunction.
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Re: Domains
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Righthaven is simply toxic and the RIAA attempts to want to acquire this company may prove to be a very bad move for them.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Hmmm
But I have been wronger before.
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Re: Re: Re: Hmmm
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Re: Re: Hmmm
> so this is mostly just troll on troll action.
Too bad its not a steel cage match.
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Re:
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Re: Re: Re: Hmmm
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Re: Re: Re: Hmmm
'Nuff Said.
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Dear Righthaven
Old age should burn Righthaven at the end of the case
Rage, rage against the dying of your right
Tho wise lawyers at their end know a copyright
Because their case forked no lightning they
Do not go gentle from this good fight
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A new documentary beinjg released exposes Righthaven backers
It's 50 minutes into the documentary and the settlement part is talked about right towards the end of the 2 hour film titled, America: From the Road of Freedom to the Streets of Fascism.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eNY2S0fgrfs
I heard from USWGO that westword will put out a entry soon about this documentary but it's hard to know when exactly they will write an article about this.
Righthaven is now being put in a documentary and pretty soon maybe Marc Randazza will start a short series talking about Righthaven like on the history channel titled 'The History of Righthaven'. Lol!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Hmmm
Indeed, it was not him initially, but Malcom DeVoy, who went after Righthaven. EFF's Subpoena defense page, which lists lawyers defending against all breeds of copyright trolls (including the one Randazza belongs to) modestly adds "(Righthaven cases only)" next to DeVoy's name. It's shame that EFF became too politically correct and does not wipe any mention of Randazza from their resource pages.
Ironically, this lawyer who "has done some good in free speech cases", blocks me from following him on Twitter. Apparently free speech ends where dirty money start speaking.
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Righthaven gets bit back
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Re: Hmmm
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20111103/19074316628/court-says-that-outing-closeted-gays-throu gh-mass-infringement-lawsuits-not-big-deal.shtml
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