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By John Borland
Posted on ZDNet News: Aug 19, 2004 8:27:00 PM

A federal appeals court has upheld a controversial court decision that said file-sharing software programs such as Grokster or Morpheus are legal.

Following the lead of a lower-court decision last year, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Los Angeles said on Thursday that peer-to-peer software developers were not liable for any copyright infringement committed by people using their products, as long as they had no direct ability to stop the acts. (Download the decision.)

The ruling means that companies that write and distribute peer-to-peer software can't be shut down because of the actions of their customers. It did not say file-trading itself is legal, and lower courts in the United States have said individual computer users are breaking the law when they trade copyrighted files without permission. But the ruling does lift the cloud of potential liability from defendants Grokster and StreamCast Networks, as well as from many of their rivals.

"The (record labels and movie studios) urge a re-examination of the law in the light of what they believe to be proper public policy," the court wrote. "Doubtless, taking that step would satisfy the copyright owners' immediate economic aims. However, it would also alter general copyright law in profound ways with unknown ultimate consequences outside the present context."

The decision marks a substantial--if not entirely unexpected--setback for the big record labels and movie studios, which have tried hard to win legal rulings that would clamp down on anarchic peer-to-peer networks such as Kazaa or eDonkey.


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Motion Picture Association of America CEO Jack Valenti said his group is reviewing its options and could appeal. He stressed that the court had not made the file trading of copyrighted works itself legal.

"Today's decision should not be viewed as a green light for companies or individuals seeking to build businesses that prey on copyright holders' intellectual property," Valenti said in a statement. "Businesses that ignore their responsibilities as corporate citizens profoundly undermine innovation in both the creative and technological arenas."

A Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) executive echoed Valenti's comments.

"Irrespective of what any court says, a debate has crystallized: it's legitimate versus illegitimate," said RIAA Chief Executive Officer Mitch Bainwol in a statement. "It's whether or not digital music will be enjoyed in a fashion that supports the creative process or one that robs it of its future. That's the online future of music."

Copyright holders have been more successful in the past, forcing companies such as Napster, Audiogalaxy and Scour to shut down their file-trading networks.

But those companies had distributed software using an earlier model of file sharing, in which searches and indexing of available files all took place using a central server operated by the software company. That meant that all the millions of search requests that took place on the original Napster network involved small bits of data flowing through computers operated by the company itself--and that was enough to make the company liable for the copyright infringement, judges said in that case.

By contrast, most modern file-trading networks involve vast, decentralized webs of PCs that talk only to each other--and not to any central computer.

When someone using StreamCast's Morpheus software searches for a file, the search request goes to another personal computer and ripples out through the network, like a rumor being whispered from one person to the next. When the correct file is found, a direct connection is made between the computers at the beginning and end of that chain--but StreamCast itself is never involved.

That decentralized system means that StreamCast has no direct knowledge of individual file transfers and has no direct ability to stop transfers, the court said. As a result, it cannot be held liable for the infringement any more than Xerox can be held responsible for people using a photocopy machine to copy pages of a book.

Like photocopiers, the file-trading networks could be used for many legal, noninfringing activities, the judges noted. They cited rock band Wilco's use of the networks to distribute its work after it had lost a record contract. This fact helped establish the software itself as legal, even if the vast majority of its use turned out to be for illegal activities, the court said.

Attorneys for the copyright holders had argued that the file-trading companies could be ordered to change the way their software worked in order to exert some control over their users' illegal behavior.

The court dismissed this argument, however. Only companies that had already been found liable for infringement could be ordered to block that infringement, it said.

Attorneys for the file-sharing companies welcomed the decision, saying it would apply to other technologies that have been targeted by copyright holders, such as ReplayTV.

"This is a big win for innovators generally--not just peer-to-peer," said Fred von Lohmann, an attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation who represented StreamCast in the appeal. "The court (said) you have no general duty to design only software that entertainment companies approve."

An attorney for Kazaa parent Sharman Networks, which is facing a parallel lawsuit in Los Angeles federal court, said he would immediately ask the record labels and movie studios to dismiss that case, or ask the lower court to rule immediately against the entertainment companies.

Like the lower court, the Ninth Circuit implied that any ability to hold software developers liable for copyright infringement might have to come from Congress rather than from the courts. Indeed, the RIAA is already pursuing that goal, with a bill sponsored by Sen. Orrin Hatch, a Republican from Utah, that would put legal responsibility for copyright infringement back on the peer-to-peer developers.

But the Appeals Court closed its decision with words that some technology lawyers are interpreting as a cautionary note to Congress, as it debates that bill.

"The introduction of new technology is always disruptive to old markets and particularly to those copyright owners whose works are sold through well-established distribution mechanisms," the court wrote. "Yet history has shown that time and market forces often provide equilibrium in balancing interests, whether the new technology be a player piano, a copier, a tape recorder, a video recorder, a personal computer, a karaoke machine or an MP3 player. Thus, it is prudent for courts to exercise caution before restructuring liability theories for the purpose of addressing specific market abuses, despite their apparent present magnitude."

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  • Most Recent of 97 Talkback(s)
Tsk..Tsk..Tsk..
Hmmmmm....I'm sorry little Johnny, you cannot use the Xerox machine to copy a page out of, 'Green Eggs and Ham?' because these machines are illegal. You'll have to find another way to finish your book... (Read the rest)
Posted by: BruceTSpruce Posted on: 12/14/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
My hearing is going bad  Chad_z | 08/19/04
Yeah,  Spoon Jabber | 08/19/04
Yes but...  Fred Fredrickson | 08/19/04
You're right.  Immanuel Tranz-Mischen | 08/19/04
I'm tired of this.  Mack DaNife | 08/20/04
Brave (NT)  rapson | 08/20/04
and Bravo! (oops) (NT)  rapson | 08/20/04
Bravo  TheWerewolf | 08/19/04
I have to disagree with you....  rock06r | 08/19/04
I Disagree With You . . .  brble | 08/19/04
I bet if ...  rock06r | 08/19/04
Maybe Not . . .  brble | 08/19/04
I bet...  Immanuel Tranz-Mischen | 08/19/04
I'll take that bet  JudgeLeo | 08/20/04
try Bittorrent  Iain_Peters | 08/20/04
Besides...  Immanuel Tranz-Mischen | 08/19/04
Huh?  Spoon Jabber | 08/19/04
I am a non-smoker.  rock06r | 08/19/04
They don't want to make it legal  voska | 08/20/04
Simple, look to history  tic swayback | 08/19/04
the subject is broader then swapping music files  NemesisNL | 08/19/04
Maybe the Music Companies Will Just DIE  markdoiron | 08/19/04
ROCK06R.... Gimme a break  shawkins | 08/20/04
WhoOoOoOooo..those scary inanimate objects  Teps71 | 08/20/04
Cry wolf again  Mack DaNife | 08/20/04
File swapping increase CD sales  voska | 08/20/04
Please define  AmusedAtItAll | 08/22/04
not for long...  ryusen | 08/19/04
In the end the courts will decide ...  George Mitchell | 08/19/04
Yessss! The Betamax decision lives on!  tic swayback | 08/19/04
I agree tic.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/19/04
A good decision!  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/19/04
Sensible, though contradictory  Anton Philidor | 08/19/04
Not me, I have always said P2P has a place.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/19/04
Thieves..... Thieves!!!! We're all thieves!!!  Xunil_Sierutuf | 08/19/04
If the shoe fits....  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/19/04
What is illegal about downloading anything?  Hanover Phist | 08/19/04
Me thinks thou dost protest too much.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/19/04
Sorry I dont download  Hanover Phist | 08/19/04
Still protesting?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/19/04
so I am a liar?  Hanover Phist | 08/20/04
I have no idea if yur a liar...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/20/04
What would the appropriate response be?  tic swayback | 08/20/04
The NET Act  StorageGuru | 08/19/04
Incorrect  tic swayback | 08/19/04
But wait, there's more  Fred Fredrickson | 08/19/04
question for lawyers  buxxmaster | 08/20/04
It is a criminal offence - any more questions?  Fred Fredrickson | 08/19/04
ahhh but...  NemesisNL | 08/19/04
Convoluted logic  Fred Fredrickson | 08/19/04
but you have condemed the product/company before...  ryusen | 08/19/04
No, 321 is different.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/19/04
No way?  AbsolutelyNot | 08/19/04
Sorry but your wrong Diva.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/19/04
no need for 321...  ryusen | 08/19/04
"Not when it breaks the DMCA laws..."  Martin Marvinski | 08/19/04
Not about copying but about the DMCA  voska | 08/19/04
re:  ryusen | 08/19/04
I am at a loss as to what you are asking.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/19/04
DMCA it where it's at  seosamh_z | 08/19/04
what i'm asking is this:  ryusen | 08/19/04
ZZ: An answer.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/20/04
Just don't forget you can alway remove your lock  voska | 08/20/04
your right  V Sanders | 08/19/04
Wright your legal representatives and change it.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/19/04
To No_Ax  seosamh_z | 08/19/04
well duhhh  Arrg | 08/19/04
A Bad decision that will create new laws  realitycheck101 | 08/19/04
Perhaps or perhaps not  StorageGuru | 08/19/04
A good decision that may lead to better laws  tic swayback | 08/19/04
Distribution of stolen property is not a crime  voska | 08/19/04
Not to be picky but  seosamh_z | 08/19/04
Sure is  voska | 08/20/04
So  rapson | 08/20/04
Misconceptions  tic swayback | 08/20/04
I wholeheartedly agree with point 2  buxxmaster | 08/20/04
The only reason they go after uploaders is this  voska | 08/20/04
OK  rapson | 08/20/04
how does radio make money?  buxxmaster | 08/20/04
It seems to me...  rapson | 08/20/04
No one has the right  amicus_curious | 08/20/04
I agree to a point  rapson | 08/21/04
re: OK  Mack DaNife | 08/21/04
Future of so-called "Intellectual Property"...  Root User | 08/22/04
The dumbest person in history  Protector | 08/20/04
Man I Could Cry:  ParadigmOdyssey | 08/19/04
Good, maybe ppl can put their 321Studio backups on it  FilledOut | 08/19/04
DEFENDING OUR RIGHTS !!!!!!!  Protector | 08/20/04
The Appeals Court gets it right!  Anton Philidor | 08/20/04
But, a fine hair must be split between the devloper and the user.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/20/04
A fine hair up...  Anton Philidor | 08/20/04
Won't make a difference  tic swayback | 08/20/04
The best one...  StorageGuru | 08/20/04
Yes, both of them.  Anton Philidor | 08/21/04
How are p2p networks making money?  buxxmaster | 08/20/04
You mean a Judge actually stood up for PEOPLE  BitTwiddler | 08/20/04
Tsk..Tsk..Tsk..  BruceTSpruce | 12/14/04

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