Wed, 05 Dec 2007 DOJ approves $222,000 RIAA fine
US DOJ approves punitive level of file-sharing fine
The US Department of Justice says a $222,000 damage award in a music copyright infringement case won recently by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) is constitutional.
In a 20-page brief filed today in US District Court in Minnesota, acting assistant attorney General Jeffrey Bucholtz said that the damages assessed by a jury against Jammie Thomas, the defendant in the case, were not excessive.
"Given the findings of copyright infringement in this case, the damages awarded under the Copyright Act's statutory damages provision did not violate the Due Process Clause" of the Constitution, the brief noted. They were not "so severe and oppressive as to be wholly disproportioned to the offence...."
The government brief was filed in response to an earlier motion by Thomas challenging the constitutionality of the $222,000 she was ordered to pay for wilfully infringing copyrights belonging to six different music labels.
The 12-person jury ordered Thomas to pay $9,250 for each of the 24 songs central to the case. In their complaint, the six music companies claimed that Thomas had illegally shared a total of 1,702 songs over the Kazaa file-sharing network, but they chose to focus on a representative list of 24 songs. Statutes allow for damages of between $750 and $30,000 per infringement, with a maximum of $150,000 for a wilful violation.
The case marked the first time that the RIAA had actually won a lawsuit in its fight against music piracy and was greeted with dismay by the thousands of other individuals against whom it has filed similar cases.
Thomas herself appealed the verdict on the grounds that the damages were far in excess of any actual damages that the music labels might have incurred as a result of her actions, and were therefore unconstitutional. In her appeal, Thomas argued that since the music labels made just around 70 cents per song, even the minimum statutory damages of $750 were excessive.
In its response, the DOJ dismissed Thomas' arguments and said the statutory damages provision in the Copyright Act were crafted to ensure both a "compensatory and a deterrent purpose."
The brief noted that both the value of a copyright and the loss caused by an infringement are hard, if not impossible, to determine.
"Although defendant claims that plaintiffs' damages are 70 cents per infringing copy, it is unknown how many other users - potentially millions - committed subsequent acts of infringement with the illegal copies of works that the defendant infringed," Bucholtz said. "It is impossible to calculate the damages caused by a single infringement, particularly for infringement that occurs over the internet."
The DOJ decision - like the entire Thomas case - is likely to come as a disappointment for the more than 26,000 individuals against whom the RIAA has filed similar claims over the past two years. Many were outraged at the size of the damages awarded by the jury and some lawyers had even predicted that it would be struck down as being excessive.
Email A Friend
Email this article to a friend or colleague:
PLEASE NOTE: Your name is used only to let the recipient know who sent the story, and in case of transmission error. Both your name and the recipient's name and address will not be used for any other purpose.
Permalink This Article
This articles permalink is:
http://www.macworld.co.uk/business/news/index.cfm?RSS&NewsID=19851
<<prev article | back to news index | next article>>
Do you share your creations online? % of Macworld readers agree with you What do you create and how do you share it? Follow the conversation at @TabletChat paintings & illustrations, mostly, which i upload to flickr.RT @fragmentedm I draw manga/anime characters. I also do graphic design and photography.RT @spialelo Yes. I usually put them up on my #deviantart account for feedback on how to improve.RT @spialeloQuestion of the day!
Latest News
- Apple intros Aperture 3, adds over 200 new features
- Walt Disney World iPhone update offers 300 pages, 500 photos
- VIP iPhone app drops from millionaire priced £279.99 to under a tenner
- Play.com: Google Nexus One now available for pre-order
- Amazon's Kindle gets ready to battle Apple's iPad
- Apple Store is down, new Macs imminent?
- Canon intros EOS 550D 18-megapixel DSLR camera
- WSJ: Apple could slash iPad prices if sales disappoint
- Apple offers 'find out how' tutorials as podcasts
- Adobe says sorry for 16-month-old Flash bug
- Getty launches subscription stock image service, Thinkstock
- RouteBuddy intros RouteBuddy Atlas 1.3 for iPhone, iPod touch

It's easy and free to get the latest news headlines, reviews and opinions straight to your email inbox. Sign up NOW to make sure you receive the latest Mac news, reviews and tutorials on your favourite topics.






Click here for the latest reader comments