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Hollywood: P2P is Not About Technology

Published by: smith 2008-12-03

The entertainment industry urged the U.S. Supreme Court Monday afternoon not to give the companies developing peer-to-peer (P2P) music file swapping software a "perpetual free pass" to engage in "mind-boggling" infringement.

In a 67-page brief filed in advance of the March 29 Supreme Court oral arguments in MGM vs. Grokster, attorneys for the music and movie studios claim Grokster exploits "this massive infringement for profit, and petitioners are suffering extreme harms as a consequence."

Hollywood wants the high court to reverse a district court ruling and a Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco decision that say file-swapping companies such as Grokster, Morpheus and Kazaa are not liable for the infringement of their users.

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The Supreme Court in December agreed to hear the case that challenges the court's landmark 1984 Sony Betamax decision. In the two lower court decisions, judges exonerated Grokster and its parent company, StreamCast, of secondary liability based on the Betamax decision.

The judges used the Betamax standard established by the Supreme Court, which states that the use of new technology to infringe s did not justify an outright ban on that technology as long as the technology had other, legal uses.

"Although the [P2P] technology can be used for lawful exchanges of digital files, that is not how Grokster and StreamCast use it," the entertainment industry's brief states. "They run businesses that abuse the technology. At least 90 percent of the material on their services is infringing, and that infringement occurs millions of times each day.

"The services are breeding grounds for infringement of unprecedented magnitude -- infringement that would not occur if Grokster and StreamCast did not make it possible," the brief continues.

The U.S. Solicitor General, the Progress and Freedom Foundation (PFF), the Business Software Alliance and the Christian Coalition of America supported the music and movie industries by filing friends of the court briefs. Grokster has until Feb. 28 to file its brief in the case.

At Tuesday's press conference in Washington, Hollywood representatives repeatedly stressed that case does not pit technology against the entertainment industry.

"These people are not engaging in technological innovation," Dan Glickman, president and CEO of the Motion Picture Association of America, stated.

Donald B. Verrilli, the lead attorney for the MPAA, added, "They are abusing the technology. When you set out to run a business built on violations, you're on the hook."

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In its brief to the court, the PFF wrote, "The Ninth Circuit focused totally on the need to avoid any inhibition on technology, and in so doing it lost sight of the equally important consumer interest in promoting content."

James V. DeLong, the PFF counsel of record in the brief, wrote that consumers have two basic interests in the case: avoiding technological inhibitions and providing incentives to the creative community to foster the production of content.

"These are complementary, not conflicting, because each is necessary to the other," DeLong wrote. "Technological devices are useless without content, and content is pointless without means of delivery. But they must be reconciled, because each, taken to the limit of its logic, can do serious harm to the other."

DeLong contends in his brief that the Ninth Circuit was mistaken in application of the Betamax case.

"No one in this case argues that P2P as a technology should be banned. The issue, rather, is the business practices which the file-sharing companies are wrapping around this technology," he wrote. "This can and should be the subject of judicial inquiry, and condemned when they create business models that can fairly be classified as deliberately dependent on infringement."

MGM vs. Grokster began more than two years ago in Los Angeles. U.S. District Court Judge Stephen Wilson ruled in favor of Grokster, saying the file sharing companies cannot control how people use their software if the product has legitimate applications.

"Grokster and StreamCast are not significantly different from companies that sell home video recorders or copy machines, both of which can be and are, used to infringe s," Judge Wilson wrote in his decision.

Wilson also made a distinction between the original Napster and its successors. In Napster's case, an index of material available for file-swapping was maintained on a central server. Grokster does not use central servers. In that situation, the court said, Grokster had no control over the actions of its customers.

Hollywood appealed the decision but got the same results from the Ninth Circuit.

"The technology has numerous other uses, significantly reducing the distribution costs of public domain and permissively shared art and speech, as well as reducing the centralized control of that distribution," Judge Sidney R. Thomas wrote in his opinion.

The three-judge panel acknowledged that violations do occur on the decentralized P2P networks, but the companies owning and distributing the enabling software cannot be held liable for the infringements.




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