
Judge calls it pirate's
paradise
Usenet.com was taken to the cleaners by the Music and Film
industry in a ruling that was not really a surprise.
Punters used to pay
$4.95 to $18.95 a month for the privilege of accessing the newsgroups. The
outfit was refused to use the “safe harbour” defence often quoted by Google
because the Judge felt the outfit's advertising seemed to encourage illegal
use.
One of the problems was that Usenet.com went so far as to insert meta
tags into its website HTML that included terms like "warez" and
"kazaa." Its tutorials included instructions on how to use the service used
infringing music files as examples. Even Usenet.com's own customer
survey which showed that 42 percent of its responding subscribers said
the downloading music was a "primary" reason for signing up.
It didn't
help that after it was sued, Usenet.com did its best to wind up the Judge
with a repeated pattern of evidence spoliation and stonewalling from
Usenet.com. Getting discovery from Usenet.com was as easy as getting a
mortgage from a British Bank. There was a story of wiped hard-drives,
employees disappearing to Europe, in short everything that could indicate to
the Judge that Newsnet.com was not exactly kosher.
Steven Marks, General
Counsel for the RIAA, said in a statement that the decision is another
example of courts recognizing the value of copyrighted music and taking
action against companies and individuals who are engaging in wide scale
infringement.
The ruling is however strangely unsatisfying. Usenet.com did
appear to be a pirate and did appear to do its utmost to avoid capture. It
did not prove anything as far as the greater issue of P2P downloading and
did nothing to prove the validity or otherwise of the rest of the Music
Industry's anti-piracy antics.