A Massachusetts District Judge Nancy Gertner has provisionally prohibited Boston University from providing details of students’ connections to the RIAA. The judge called for an investigation to look into whether such an act is permissible.
The RIAA, of course, targets students on campus suspected of violating copyright laws by getting illegal music downloads. The judge made the argument that it is unclear whether using filesharing programs like Limewire have violated any copyright laws.
There is some strong debate whether or not this is indicative of a turnaround in this and other court cases against students accused of filesharing. Boston University acts as an ISP for its students and has thus far not given the RIAA details of individual users.
The RIAA finds filesharing violators by employing the company MediaSentry to act as a filesharing user and target certain computers on university campuses around the United States.
Related Articles
Like this? Subscribe to the feed.
Del.Icio.Us! | Digg! | Redditt! | Stumble!If you found this page useful, consider linking to it.
Simply copy and paste the code below into your web site (Ctrl+C to copy)
It will look like this: Judge denies RIAA access to filesharing students’ records
5 Responses for "Judge denies RIAA access to filesharing students’ records"
[...] its battle against filesharing. Three recent court rulings may be seen as complicating the way the RIAA deals with filesharing [...]
[...] heavy-headed approach to suing students accused of filesharing is once again under scrutiny. Three recent court cases have thrown the “making available” argument under the [...]
[...] Sony BMG has been very vocal in the legalities of filesharing, the music giant may have slipped up in another area. PointDev has come out accused Sony of using [...]
[...] Snocap pioneered a system of digital fingerprinting, which provides technology to find unauthorized music that has been uploaded to any website that utilizes the [...]
[...] Danish ISP has announced a new service to offer unlimited free music downloads. The new service will offer tracks with DRM restrictions that will expire 30 days after a user’s [...]
Leave a reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.