Florida Dept. Of Corrections Sued For Screwing Inmates Out Of $11.3 Million In Digital Purchases
from the you-don't-own-what-you-overpaid-for dept
Last fall, the Florida Department of Corrections decided it needed to enrich itself at the literal expense of its inmates. It signed a new contract with new provider of jailhouse entertainment, instantly making $11.3 million in purchased digital goods worthless. You don't own what you paid for, even at inflated prison prices.
The new contract with JPay rendered the purchased content unusable. Even the players purchased by inmates aren't technically theirs and must be returned to the vendor. Not that keeping the players would help much. The licensing agreements covering the content are only valid if the previous contractor is providing the service. Since it's not, the mp3s and ebooks can't be transferred to JPay devices.
Unsurprisingly, inmates are furious. So are their families -- the ones who paid extortionate rates to give their imprisoned family members a little music to enjoy. The DOC recognized this was a problem and created a portal for the filing of complaints related to this disappearance of purchased digital goods. That portal is going to be very useful in the upcoming lawsuit against the Florida DOC for screwing inmates out of their purchases. (h/t Boing Boing)
The Florida Department of Corrections is facing a potential class action over recently forcing inmates to forfeit millions of dollars worth of mp3 and other multimedia files purchased under a since-axed media player contract.
William Demler, a 74-year-old incarcerated man at South Florida Reception Center is the lead plaintiff in the case, which was filed in the northern U.S. District Court on Tuesday with the backing of the nonprofit legal firm, the Florida Justice Institute.
The lawsuit [PDF] says the Florida DOC violated its own contracting guidelines when it decided to prioritize its profits over the inmates' purchases.
As part of this bidding process, both the FDOC’s Invitation to Negotiate Contractual Services, as well as the FDOC’s Request for Proposal for Contractual Services, explicitly stated that compatibility with the FDOC’s prior vendor was a mandatory requirement of the contract, in order to ensure that prisoners would not bear the cost of the transition between vendors:
[T]he proposed system must allow for inmates who currently have a device and/or songs purchased from the current Contractor to transfer and/or obtain updated equipment and/or music compatible with the successful contractor’s Digital Music Player Program. It is the intent of the Department that the implementation of a new Digital Player Program to have little or no financial impact on inmates presently participating in the Department’s current program.
Obviously, that's not what happened. A new contractor was picked based on prison profit margin, disregarding the standards the DOC set for itself. On top of that, the previous contractor offered up its own false assurances about the longevity of purchased digital content.
In addition to touting the qualities of the digital media players themselves, at least one widely-distributed advertisement, which appeared on the digital media player order form itself, also touted various qualities of the Digital Music Player Program, including the following representation:
Browse, search and preselect songs from updated music catalogs holding millions of song titles representing a wide array of music genres. You have the ability to purchase and listen to unlimited music utilizing the re-download feature free of charge. Once music is purchased, you’ll always own it! (emphasis supplied).
The only concession the new vendor has made is one that solves none of the problems created by the new contract. For a fee, inmates can have their mp3s transferred to a new device or CDs, but those copies can only be sent to friends or family members who can hold onto the purchased content until the inmate is released. This means every inmate wishing to access the music and books they thought they owned will have to not only repurchase the content again, but the devices and accessories needed to access them.
The suit is probably a long shot, but it does highlight the bullshit engaged in by companies selling digital media that relies on a thicket of licensing to make its way to the end user. Promising anyone that their digital purchases will be around "forever" is so out of touch with the reality of the situation it should be considered fraudulent on its face. In this case, the planned obsolescence was accelerated by the DOC's desire for a better profit margin. If there's any justice, those profits will go towards replacing the purchased goods it took away from the inmates it houses.
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Filed Under: copyright, department of corrections, digital goods, florida, inmates, mp3s, music, ownership
Companies: jpay
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Perfect
This is a perfect example of how copyright is supposed to work. They purchased a limited use license to use their music on a single device.
Of course they will need to re "purchase" everything.
Just like when you "purchase" a single Microsoft OS. You have to toss it out if you get a new computer - it's right there in the terms of the license. (Seriously, it is.)
This is the end-goal of every copyright maximalist. Limited user, perpetual fees.
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Re: Perfect
Or you reuse the same product key on your new computer and update Microsoft with the details if they require you too(they almost always do). This is both legal and common. If you have been using your windows key only once and getting a new one each time you upgrade, you have lost out on quite a bit of money.
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Re: Re: Perfect
You can't use the same product key on two active computers, but if you have stopped using your old computer, you are perfectly in your rights to transfer it to your new PC.
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Re: Perfect
Never had a problem with Microsoft in that regard. Have ported it from one computer to another many times without incurring any extra fees.
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Re: Re: Perfect
Although it is possible to do this, it is explicitly against the microsoft licensing to transfer it to a different CPU.
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But but but they are "bad people" so they deserve to punished a little bit more if it means we can make a few more bucks.
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...Services neither rendered nor (nonfraudulently) required...
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Rehabilitation
Getting screwed out of their purchases by crazed media companies that have bought themselves into a cozy relationship with the law is just preparing them for the realities of life once they are released. That way they won't be hit cold by the developments of society while they were locked away.
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"As part of this bidding process, both the FDOC’s Invitation to Negotiate Contractual Services, as well as the FDOC’s Request for Proposal for Contractual Services, explicitly stated that compatibility with the FDOC’s prior vendor was a mandatory requirement of the contract, in order to ensure that prisoners would not bear the cost of the transition between vendors:"
Of course, with a proprietary system, mandating backward compatibility means the only companies that can win the contract are a) the original vendor or b) a company that licenses the old tech from the original vendor. Prisoners wouldn't lose their songs, but with vendor lock-in like that, they'd be paying $5 a song rather than $1.80 or whatever it was. This would screw over the short-timers in favor of the lifers and long-timers, where the current situation primarily screws over the lifers.
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And they wonder why people pirate stuff.
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the inmates have been tried and found guilty of crimes, then sentenced to imprisonment. it shouldn't mean that they can be screwed into the ground, just because they are inmates! their money was good enough when they purchased the devices and the media but to now take away what they paid for, just because the companies concerned can do and just because they are inmates is reprehensible! regardless of why these people are in prison, WE are supposed to human beings FFS! we are supposed to be above the rest of the animals on the Planet!
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Re: Perfect
Actually, that depends. If Windows came preinstalled on your computer (or if you bought an OEM license), then that license is only for that single computer; you can transfer the license to somebody else with the computer, but you can't transfer it to another computer. The license for the full retail version, on the other hand, does allow transfer to another computer.
From the license (see Section 4: Transfer):
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Re: Re: Re: Perfect
I don't think you are "within your rights" to do that. I think it's within Microsoft's right to gift that to you and that's a very significant distinction. It'd be interesting to hear what more informed parties have to say on the matter...
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It's not a matter of being "human beings"
Inmates are supposed to reform and to respect the rules and laws of society. Shenanigans like that are setting a lousy example where examples are most needed. You don't get to respect laws and rules when you get to see the worst laws and rules there are.
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Re: It's not a matter of being "human beings"
I'd say there's a pretty significant overlap between "prisoners should be rehabilitated, not just punished" and "prisoners should be treated like human beings."
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Re: Re: It's not a matter of being "human beings"
The focus of one is bettering the people behind bars, and the other is bettering the people before bars. The former is the principal goal of gaol.
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Re:
I, personally, think it would be better served to mandate FORWARDS comparability, forcing them to use open source file types.
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Profit margin
"A new contractor was picked based on prison profit margin"
Are you sure they didn't just bribe whoever chose them?
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Meh, first they came for the idiots who can't tell the difference between OEM and Retail licensing, then they came for the prisoners who were dumb enough to believe the DoC, then they came for the Government Bureaucrat who awarded a contract to a vendor that wasn't capable of complying with the terms of the proposal. (to give him a promotion), Then they came for the vendor that didn't comply with the terms and gave them more money. Finally, they came for me, but I was already broke, from paying AT&T for my internet access.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Perfect
You think Microsoft is going to encourage people to switch to Linux when they could keep a customer instead?
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Re: It's not a matter of being "human beings"
In Florida, that applies only in Juvenile. Adult prison is purely retributative; officially, there is no goal of rehabilitation.
I cannot say that this is a wise public policy decision. It does seem to work out well for legislators ``keeping us safe'' and prison unions and prison contractor/campaign contributors.
This particular problem, switching to J-Pay, was a Governor Scott [now sen. Scott]. In effect, it is stealing. But then, remember, his campaigns have been largely funded by the portions of the Medicare fraqud proceeds which he did not return. I think the deal was that he gave back half the money, and he did not go to prison.
That works out well: he is not at risk of suffering the fate of the other prisioners, having his stuff stolen to benefit the campaign.
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yeah..
Corporate digital theft is pretty much why I stopped buying ebooks from Barnes and Noble. They had a PC book reader that downloaded your book onto your PC. That is disabled now so you buy a book but you can only stream it.. so you're leasing a book you paid for.
Only buy Amazon digital downloads now.
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Re:
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Screwing The Inmates~
About your story screwing the inmates...…How about the parents of the inmates who pay for everything!!!!!!
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