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By Declan McCullagh
Posted on ZDNet News: Jul 27, 2004 11:41:00 PM

A federal judge has handed a preliminary victory to the recording industry by granting its request to unmask anonymous file swappers accused of copyright infringement.

U.S. District Judge Denny Chin ruled Monday that Cablevision, which provides broadband Internet access in Connecticut, New Jersey and New York, can be required to divulge the identities of its subscribers sued over copyright violations.

This ruling is the latest decision to clarify what legal methods copyright holders may use when hunting down people who are trading files on peer-to-peer networks. Courts have spent the last few years grappling with how to reconcile Americans' right to be anonymous with the entertainment industry's own right to sue people who violate copyright law.

Chin, in Manhattan, said that the implicit guarantee of anonymity in the Bill of Rights is an insufficient shield in this case: "Such a person's identity is not protected from disclosure by the First Amendment."

Lawyers following the case said it is significant because Chin's ruling is the most detailed so far in any of the many "John Doe" lawsuits brought by the Recording Industry Association of America. Chin said that while file swapping "qualifies as speech" to some degree, the RIAA's member companies had overcome the hurdle posed by the First Amendment and could compel "disclosure of the Doe defendants' identities."

Paul Levy, an attorney at the nonprofit group Public Citizen, said that "the nice thing about the ruling is that (the judge) recognizes the First Amendment interests at stake here and he applies a balancing test." Levy, who filed a friend-of-the-court brief opposing the RIAA, said that Chin's analysis ensures that companies filing a copyright infringement lawsuit must prove they have a real case and aren't merely on a fishing expedition for someone's name.

Stanley Pierre-Louis, a senior vice president for legal affairs at the RIAA, said in an e-mail statement: "Judge Chin's ruling makes it abundantly clear that those who engage in copyright infringement over the Internet, whether on peer-to-peer networks or otherwise, should not expect to remain anonymous."

Investigators working with the RIAA had traced the Internet addresses of 40 suspected peer-to-peer pirates to Cablevision's network. RIAA lawyers sent a subpoena to Cablevision, which turned over the names of the "John Doe" defendants in February.

Chin said he was willing to consider the First Amendment aspects anyway--even after the names were divulged--because the RIAA could have been "ordered to return the information and prohibited from using it" if the outcome of Monday's ruling had been different.

Aden Fine, an attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union, said: "It's not a victory or a defeat. The important part of the opinion is that it emphasizes that accusations saying an individual is engaged in illegal speech don't mean the First Amendment provides no protections." The ACLU and the Electronic Frontier Foundation had also filed amicus briefs against the RIAA.

The RIAA turned to "John Doe" lawsuits after a federal appeals court ruled late last year that the association could no longer rely on the Digital Millennium Copyright Act's turbocharged subpoenas to unmask suspected pirates.

The DMCA contains provisions for unmasking file swappers without a judge's approval, but a federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., barred those methods from being used. While that decision is not technically binding on other areas of the country, it is influential. RIAA litigators appear to have decided that filing "John Doe" lawsuits with unnamed defendants is a less risky legal strategy.

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  • Most Recent of 46 Talkback(s)
Opinion
Was anyone able to find the actual opinion regarding the case? If so, please post the link. Thanks (Read the rest)
Posted by: calblee133@yahoo.com Posted on: 08/11/04 You are currently: Logged In as: a Guest  | Login | Terms of Use
Can't Unmask ME!  Bill_gates_Is_SATAN | 07/27/04
Such a shame...  Leidenfrost | 07/27/04
well...  ryusen | 07/28/04
Guilty until forced to settle  Anton Philidor | 07/27/04
Want a roomate?  Xunil_Sierutuf | 07/27/04
This should send a clear message to PIRATES  realitycheck101 | 07/27/04
Actually  Linux User 147560 | 07/27/04
Of course  GMTobias | 07/27/04
Stop complaining  rkadowns | 07/27/04
It's worse  TechDiva_z | 07/27/04
actually  buxxmaster | 07/27/04
ever heard of IP SPOOFING  V Sanders | 07/28/04
Jail?  tamuhockey | 07/28/04
well,  ryusen | 07/27/04
*yawn  M_c | 07/27/04
I'm so glad  Chad_z | 07/27/04
I agree  johnnyu | 07/28/04
RIAA is thinks its god  nograin | 07/27/04
Think Of All The Namby Pamby RIAA  ParadigmOdyssey | 07/27/04
Dont put your Fair-use copy Onto The Internet  ParadigmOdyssey | 07/27/04
"Honorable" Denny Chin is an RIAA Puppet  claytonmuhler | 07/27/04
He could have done worse...  Anton Philidor | 07/28/04
Gawd, I can't stand the whining in here.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/27/04
Then, for as long as you can  TechDiva_z | 07/27/04
Then feel free to leave.  John E Wahd | 07/28/04
You whine us pirates growl !!!!  cybershoplifter | 07/28/04
Then leave...  Nullifidian | 07/28/04
then stop whinning about it (nt)  ryusen | 07/28/04
Foolish Pirates think whining will save their Azz...  realitycheck101 | 07/27/04
You, sir  ObiWayneKenobi | 07/27/04
You whine us pirates growl !!!!  cybershoplifter | 07/28/04
I have no problem with *IAA  ctk76 | 07/27/04
Question for consumers  johnek_z | 07/27/04
the mistake being made  V Sanders | 07/28/04
Bigger mistake  TechDiva_z | 07/28/04
it's about the $$  bjornafreeman@... | 07/28/04
next virus will probably automaticaly download  V Sanders | 07/28/04
Anyone affiliated with the RIAA can rot in HELL  Protector | 07/28/04
I checked Canada for country on kazaa, am I safe?  cybershoplifter | 07/28/04
Piracy, in terms even the RIAA should be able to understand  tamuhockey | 07/28/04
Ironically, you have described the strategy of more than music distribution  TechDiva_z | 07/28/04
they understand piracy just fine...  ryusen | 07/28/04
right on the head  tamuhockey | 07/28/04
Still time to sue music industry on MAP pricing scheme  FilledOut | 07/28/04
Privacy gets it's head crapped on once again...  BitTwiddler | 07/28/04
Opinion  calblee133@... | 08/11/04

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