Tuesday, February 06, 2007
from the Kennebec Journal
Sport of Kings
Collins: Detecting 'home-grown terrorists' difficult
Recession over? Don't tell the hungry
Downtown remains optimistic
Health-care bill clears key hurdle
A chance to cash in
A tough way to end it
Windham pulls away to win Class A title
All of today's:
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from the Kennebec Journal
from the Morning Sentinel
Old building gets new lease on life
Freedom brings perils along with privileges, Sen. Collins says
At food pantries, recession still very much alive
BILL CLEARS KEY HURDLE IN SENATE
FARMINGTON Volunteers take day to replace roof
OAKLAND Sewer project finishes first phase, ready for next
Black Bears fall to Wildcats in finale
Eagles rally to state title
All of today's:
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from the Morning Sentinel
Scott Hinds, 23, is a defendant in one of a number of lawsuits by Recording Industry of America affiliates seeking to halt illegal sharing of copyrighted songs -- a once-widespread practice some maintain was "fair use," encouraged by certain computer software.
As artists attempt to regain control of their music -- and reap profits from sales -- recording industry spokeswoman Amanda Hunter said 18,000 individuals have been sued in similar lawsuits since September 2003, but Hinds is one of only six defendants in Maine.
Hinds said he is not yet represented by a lawyer.
Monday, he wondered: "Why choose me?"
"Every single person has done this," he said, saying he doesn't listen to music online presently.
The lawsuit, filed last week in U.S. District Court for the District of Maine, alleges Hinds illegally downloaded:
n "Automobile" by NWA, Priority Records, LLC;
n "All Over You" by LIve, UMG Recordings Inc.;
n "Fast Car" by Tracy Chapman, Elektra Entertainment Group;
n "Don't Know Why" by Norah Jones, Capitol Records Inc.; and
n "What Would You Say" by Dave Matthews Band, BMG Music.
The allegation is that Hinds used an "online media distribution system" to download tunes, then distributed the copyrighted material to others.
The lawsuit doesn't identify the download service Hinds allegedly used, nor does it identify individual users who allegedly obtained the copyrighted music from Hinds.
According to the association, "online investigators searched for copyrighted recordings made available by individuals on peer-to-peer networks."
They then filed a lawsuit against Internet service providers prompting them to identify individuals who allegedly shared music files.
Hinds faces a minimum civil penalty of $750 per song. There can be criminal penalties as well.
If guilty, Hinds would hardly be the first person found downloading music on the Internet; the Internet has been chockablock with sites offering free music almost since there have been browsers and bandwidth.
The most well-known site -- Napster, founded in 1999 by 18-year-old college dropout Shawn Fanning -- signed up 25 million users in its first year.
In 2000, the Recording Industry Association of America sued Napster, charging "tributary copyright infringement" -- an allegation that Napster was not violating copyright itself, but was contributing to and facilitating other people's infringement.
Napster later was shut down by court rulings and resurfaced as a pay-per-song service, joining dozens of new players -- such as Apple's popular iTunes service -- that generally have the blessing of the music industry.
The premise of the civil lawsuit against Hinds is a December 2005 decision in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit, and the U.S. Supreme Court's 2004 opinion in MGM Studios, Inc., v. Grokster Ltd.
In the latter case, the court found "that a distributed file-sharing system is engaged in contributory copyright infringement when its principal object is the dissemination of copyrighted material.
"The foundation of this holding is a belief that people who post or download music files are primary infringers."
Saying the Grokster decision "helped hold bad actors accountable and helped establish a foundation for a growing legal digital marketplace," a news release from Hunter said the industry has sharpened its legal strategy to curtail copyright infringement and steer people to a legal digital marketplace.
The association counted "more than 500 million legal downloads in 2005, compared to 200 million the year before."
The lawsuit against Hinds seeks money for copyright infringement and attorneys' fees as well as an injunction banning future infringement and a court order telling him "to destroy all copies of sound recordings made in violation of (the recording companies') exclusive rights."
It has been assigned to U.S. District Court Judge John A. Woodcock in Bangor.
Betty Adams -- 621-5631
badams@centralmaine.com

Reader comments
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Even today, one is unable to go to a website and purchase just one song without having it either limited in its distribution (we all have legitimate multiple playback devices) and/or a monthly subscription is required and/or it is in some incompatible format.
Here is what people want (I believe): They want to, and would be willing to, select and purchase 1 song, keep that song, transfer to their home computer, laptop, PDA, cellphone, MP3 player(s), automobile, iPod, office computer, and so on. This reminds me of the portability of the 45's I played for years!
Yes, there will be people who share songs just as there were people who recorded music off the air (also illegal) and country stores that play a radio in the background without paying ASCAP fees (the only reason arm-twisting Musak ever made a dollar), and other forms of piracy. If the industry wants to minimize this theft, it ought to provide a reasonable means to fulfill consumers' desires, and not sacrifice Scott Hinds on the judicial altar.
report abuse
And this is America...soldiers are dying so that this, among other far more worthwhile freedoms, can continue? Get serious.
What's wrong with just loving music? Nothing at all...unless taken to silly extremes by its creators, middlemen and those music lovers who make them rich paying for their tripe.
And the world is full of selfish, empty-headed goofballs at both ends of the spectrum...with millions to spend, let's waste it on more lawsuits instead of making this world a better place to live.
It's not about getting one's name out there with sense, sanity and reason, it's about money, and more money...
Mr. Hinds shared music? God bless 'im.
Shared?...that's the crime? Downloaded music...
I wish you the absolute best of good fortune in this when it ends, Mr. Hinds. You are being robbed legally, as usual. Money begets this mindset's choice of action...
Never even considering doing what's decent...kind, or caring for their fellowman...no time for that silly stuff.
Just make those bucks! And pick on the little guy, why don'tcha? Now THAT is empty-headed twitness.
It's music. Not life and death.report abuse
"Automobile" is such a great song. NWA was the best. nice choice.report abuse
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