Well, here it is:
Thanks for your note. Yes, the industry found the Howells by searching for computers that were sharing files through Kazaa. But that's not relevant to the column I wrote. The news here is the novel argument that the industry lawyer makes in his brief. In this case, the defendant claimed he had no idea he was sharing files, but that's irrelevant to the argument advanced by the recording companies' lawyer, who makes the case that the act of transferring music from a legally-purchased CD is in and of itself illegal, even if the file is not being shared.
Here's a link to the recording industry's brief in the case:
http://www.ilrweb.com/viewILRPDF.asp?filename=atlantic_howell_071207RIAASupplementalBrief
Thanks for reading the column.
Best,
Marc Fisher
Mr. Fisher has sent me a 21 page legal brief outlining the plaintiff's causes of action (more accurately, their supplemental brief in support of Summary Judgment). I find curious what Mr. Fisher considers relevant, and what is not in this case. He has again misstated the record. He writes above that the plaintiffs argue that the
very act of copying (
not sharing) files, is, in fact, infringement. This is the brunt of his email, and, apparently, the focus of his December 30th report. Well,
he is patently wrong. Directly from the brief:
"
Defendant actually distributed Plaintiffs’ sound recordings and that
Defendant made them available to others on a peer-to-peer file sharing network." Hmmmphhh.
The brief is riddled with references to the Kazaa network, and all those users that had access to the copyrighted files. Furthermore, the initial motion for Summary Judgment that I posted (#2) plainly states that it is the act of
sharing on a network that constitutes the infringement.
It is late, I am tired, and Mr. Fisher was kind enough to promptly reply to my request. For that I am appreciative. I will delve more deeply into the brief tomorrow, and most probably, again email Mr. Fisher with the issue I have outlined above, and any other discrepancies between the brief(s) and his report. I want to doubly ascertain that he misrepresented the facts before I so accuse. At least there is an expressed interest in reporting the truth. I will post if I am able to persuade Mr. Fisher to augment his report.