[Reader-list] Recording Industry Goes After Students Over Music Sharing

Rana Dasgupta eye at ranadasgupta.com
Fri Apr 25 09:53:37 IST 2003


New York Times
April 23, 2003
Recording Industry Goes After Students Over Music Sharing
By AMY HARMON

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/04/23/national/23STUD.html?th=&pagewanted=print&
position=


COLLEGE PARK, Md. — Jason, a senior at the University of Maryland, ran one
of the most popular Web sites on campus out of his shoebox dorm room here.
The site let his 8,500 fellow dorm residents search for music files, among
other things, stored on one another's computers and copy them in seconds.

Then came the news that the record industry had filed lawsuits against four
students running similar sites at other universities, accusing them of
enabling large-scale copyright infringement and asking for billions of
dollars in damages. Within an hour, Jason, who insisted on anonymity for
fear of being sued himself, had dismantled his site.

"I don't think I was doing anything wrong," said Jason, a computer science
major. "But who wants to face a $98 billion debt for the rest of their
lives? I was scared."

The lawsuits, filed on April 3, are the most aggressive legal action the
record industry has ever directed against college students, who in recent
years have exercised an enduring predisposition to consume large quantities
of music by copying it over the Internet without ever paying for it. College
campuses, the record industry says, have become far and away the prime locus
for online piracy.

Wary of alienating young customers who continue to generate a large chunk of
their revenue, record companies until recently focused on prodding
university administrators to discipline their students. But freshman
orientation sessions on respect for intellectual property have had little
effect. With CD sales in a tailspin that record executives attribute at
least partly to the downloading frenzy in academia's hallowed halls, they
said they needed to try another approach.

Record executives say the lawsuits — singling out four students at three
colleges — mark a turning point in the battle they have been waging since
Napster popularized Internet music trading three years ago. (A federal judge
in 2001 ruled that Napster had abetted copyright infringement, and it has
been off line since.) The unauthorized copying of digital music that has
become as routine a part of college life as cramming and keg parties may
have finally lost some of its charm.

"We have decided to bring to the attention of universities just how much
music piracy is going on on college campuses and universities," said Cary
Sherman, president of the Recording Industry Association of America, which
brought the suits, "and we think that message has been received."

College students are not the only ones copying music off the Internet. But
students, who often justify their behavior by arguing that CD's are too
expensive and that artists do not get the money anyway, may be more hostile
toward the music industry than most. Many say record labels should accept
that the Internet has irrevocably changed their business and instead offer
new services, like chat sessions with artists or early ticket sales for
concerts, which they would be willing to pay for. Others say they buy as
many or more CD's as they ever did because they are able to sample music
free and discover artists they like.

"This is just more crazy litigation that shows everyone over 40 not
understanding the future of music," said Thomas Geoghegan, 21, a history
major at Maryland and a frequent user of Jason's site before it was so
abruptly removed.

College administrators say they are mindful of their responsibility to teach
students that what they are doing is wrong. They are also aware of the
expense they are incurring as the constant flow of large media files strains
campus networks.

At the same time, they want to protect students' privacy and rights to free
speech and stay out of the role of monitoring what is sent over their
networks. As a result, most colleges have simply sent warnings to students
whom industry groups have reported as downloading copyrighted material. Some
have required students to write papers on copyright law or have temporarily
deprived them of Internet access. But such measures have had little impact

"It's been very difficult because students have grown up viewing the
Internet as a place where you go to get lots of free access to things," said
Graham Spanier, president of Pennsylvania State University. "As we have
tried to educate our students, half of them understand it's like going into
a store and putting a CD in your pocket and the other half just can't see it
that way."

The threat of legal retribution may be improving their vision. Since the
record industry filed its lawsuits, officials say they have seen over a
dozen internal campus Web sites devoted to music-sharing go dark.

The complaints charge Daniel Peng, a student at Princeton University; Joseph
Nievelt, a student at Michigan Technological University; and Aaron Sherman
and Jesse Jordan, both students at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, with
directly infringing copyrights by providing dozens of songs from popular
artists to other students to copy.

They also charge the students with contributing to much broader infringement
by running programs that indexed tens of thousands of songs stored on other
computers connected to the campus network by students who chose to make them
available to copy. Accusing the four of having "taken a network created for
higher learning and academic pursuits and converted it into an emporium of
music piracy," the lawsuits ask for $150,000 for each of the recordings
listed on the students' Web sites, but recording industry officials
acknowledge that having made their point, they expect to settle out of
court.

The proliferation of campus file-trading networks appears to have started
two years ago, when many universities capped the amount of bandwidth
allotted to each student.

In response, students began using programs that would let them share files
over the superfast networks that connect computers on campus, without
relying on the Internet.

Because those files may be notes from Psych 101, family pictures or music by
bands that choose to distribute it freely, some academic community members
argue that the students running the programs should not be held accountable
for how others may have used them. By singling out the technology, they say,
the record industry has also raised First Amendment issues in what otherwise
could have been a straightforward copyright infringement case.

"If this becomes more about a challenge to the technology than about
downloading music for recreational purposes, that is a serious concern for
us," said Peter McDonough, general counsel for Princeton. "Because we
emphatically believe the technologies themselves are not illegal."

That is also the conclusion of Brendan Dolan-Gavitt, 19, a freshman at
Wesleyan University who has continued to run his own site, which indexes the
shared files of every computer on the Wesleyan network.

Mr. Dolan-Gavitt took his site down the day after the suits were filed but
put it back up the next day after poring over copyright statutes. He said
that if a copyright holder notified him of an infringing file in his index,
he would remove it, just as the law says. His mother is nervous, but "I just
figured if there was something I was going to take a stand on it might as
well be this," he said.

Even before the lawsuits, university administrators felt the heat of the
music industry's stepped-up anti-piracy campaign. In recent months,
entertainment companies have barraged administrators with complaints
documenting alleged copyright infringement over their networks. Several
colleges, in turn, issued more stringent policies regarding student
behavior.

Harvard University warned undergraduates this month that they would lose
their Internet access for a year if they illegally shared copyrighted
material more than once. The United States Naval Academy punished 85
students who were found to have downloaded copyrighted movies and songs
through the academy's Internet connection. Penn State warned students that
file-sharing could lead to huge fines and jail time, and deprived 220
students of high-speed Internet connections in their dorms after finding
that they were sharing copyrighted material. A committee of university
presidents and entertainment industry executives are in the process of
formulating strategies to address the illegal activity on campus. One idea
under consideration: negotiating campuswide licenses for legal online music
services, which colleges could provide as part of a standard student
activities fee along with recreation facilities and newspaper subscriptions.

Colleges have a financial interest in working with the entertainment
industry to solve the downloading problem: the free bandwidth they provide
to students is getting more and more expensive, and they must constantly
investigate all of the entertainment industry's complaints to avoid being
held liable for the infringement themselves.

The peremptory lawsuits have also angered some college administrators.

"They have apparently changed their minds about wanting to work
cooperatively with universities," said Curtis Tompkins, president of
Michigan Tech, who vented his frustration in an open letter to the recording
industry association. "To pick four individuals out of thousands and line
them up against the wall and say, `Here's the firing squad,' is not the way
you deal in higher education."

Just how successful the industry's tougher tactics will be is unclear. On a
recent afternoon at Maryland, a student who once used Jason's site showed a
reporter how to log on to another local network instead.

"We can't live without it," said Eric Lightman, a junior majoring in
computer science. "If one goes down, another comes up."

On the other hand, an advertisement for a new administrator for Jason's site
willing to "take on whatever legal risks may come about" has so far received
no replies.




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