Symbol Lookup
Verizon stands up for its users in copyright lawsuit
Published: 05/11/12 04:03 PM EDT
Verizon Communications has had a history of standing up against publishers seeking to subpoena information about its subscribers and their downloading habits, so it's not a big surprise to see Big Red telling John Wiley's lawyers to stuff it.

Verizon Communications has had a long history of standing up against publishers seeking to subpoena information about its subscribers and their downloading habits, so it’s not a big surprise to see Big Red telling John Wiley’s lawyers to stuff it. Wiley is seeking information on the people behind IP addresses that Wiley says have pirated copies of its popular “For Dummies” series.

According to TorrentFreak, Verizon has argued that the request for subscriber information is flawed for several reasons, including that an IP address may lead to a name, but that name may not be the alleged pirate, and that the request seemed like it was designed to harass subscribers rather than achieve any legitimate legal goal. With this argument, Verizon joins others, including judges, that are beginning to view the content industry’s efforts to flush our pirates as a type of extortion designed to get a settlement.

As my colleague Jeff Roberts wrote in November when one of these suits was filed:

The decision to sue “John Does” reflects the fact that John Wiley cannot immediately identify the actual names of the file-sharers. The publisher is therefore using a procedural tactic that permits it to amend the complaint later on in order to add the defendants’ real names which it can obtain from internet service providers.

John Wiley’s goal with the litigation is likely to force the defendants to agree to a settlement rather than go to a full-blown trial. The publisher has considerable leverage because the Copyright Act provides draconian penalties of up to $150,000 per infringement, meaning many defendants could be willing to pay a few thousand dollars to end the matter.

Verizon’s decision to stand up for its users probably has less to do with some chest-thumping love of online freedom, and more to do with its historical reluctance to become an arm of the law when it comes to policing users for illegal downloads. While many of the historical suits of this nature have focused on music and pornography, the publishing industry and others are seeing their chance to take a little back from online pirates.

If they are successful Verizon and other ISPs face a future of flushing out the John Does on their network and handing their names over to the content industry. That costs money and doesn’t exactly make your customers love you. For a sense of Verizon’s dilemma, check out this 2003 article for a reminder of the era when the RIAA was employing similar tactics to drag potential pirates into the bright lights of the courtroom:

[Sarah Deutsch, who was counsel for Verizon] had received dozens of subpoenas from RIAA and other entertainment trade groups, all of them fairly routine requests. But this one was different. Subscriber X wasn’t hosting illegal content on Verizon’s network; he was a Kazaa client that used Verizon for Internet access, and the disputed content was stored on his hard drive. Verizon had no way of verifying RIAA’s allegations. Deutsch refused to give up Subscriber X’s name.

“We’re not going to become the Internet police for RIAA,” Deutsch said. “There’s a delicate balance between copyright holders’ rights and our customers’ rights that needs to be preserved. RIAA crossed over the line.”

Looks like Verizon feels like Wiley is stepping over that line nine years later.

Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.



GigaOM
Today
06:07 PM Say those magic words: Xbox One, Google Glass and the rise of the always-on microphone
04:55 PM Boost Mobile applies a unique spin on the mobile wallet
04:55 PM Top jobs of the week in tech
04:24 PM Integrated Vimeo, Flickr sharing could follow Twitter, Facebook to iOS
02:47 PM Yahoo swears it isn’t going to screw up Tumblr — but how realistic is that promise?
02:45 PM From Cronkite to Couric: Internet Archive gets $1 million to expand TV news collection
02:38 PM Amprius has built a lithium ion battery that can last 25% longer than today’s batteries
02:35 PM Your tax dollars at work: Apple’s Cook navigates the senatorial theater of the absurd
02:31 PM VMware lays out prices for hybrid cloud offering — now customers have the ball
02:03 PM Sprint ups its bid for Clearwire at the eleventh hour
01:32 PM Microsoft announces new Xbox One with live TV guide, media multitasking and Skype group video chats
12:17 PM Leaked benchmarks suggest Intel could power Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 3 10.1
12:00 PM Report: one in four online teens now use Twitter
11:55 AM Considerations for rolling out an NoSQL strategy in the enterprise
11:35 AM Nvidia’s new Tegra superchip boasts 150 Mbps speeds, but it’s not LTE-Advanced
11:19 AM Brrr: The chilly conditions that quantum computers need to run
11:00 AM Brow.si wants to make mobile websites behave like native apps
10:27 AM Powermat marries PowerKiss, vows to use same wireless charging standard
10:15 AM The future of propaganda: A Q&A with Sean Gourley about big data and the “war of ideas”
09:21 AM Six finalists in the book discovery Publishing Hackathon; winner to be announced at BEA
09:00 AM Why one startup thinks laying a few bets could help companies convince employees to slim down
09:00 AM Knewton teams up with Macmillan to bring adaptive learning beyond K-12 and higher ed
08:55 AM Sponsored post: Cloud storage is great — but be careful what you put there
07:45 AM Why racist, nasty comments are better than none at all
07:30 AM Orchestrate.io gets $3M to crunch many kinds of data in the cloud
07:15 AM With $10M, ConsultingMD helps patients get speedy second opinions from top specialists
06:00 AM Exclusive: LogMeIn launches AppGuru to help IT wrangle consumer apps
05:22 AM SAP to bring in autistic workers as software testers and programmers
03:15 AM Orange’s Flexible Computing IaaS platform spreads to North America and Asia
12:01 AM Bored with mere medicine, IBM’s Watson adds customer service to its resume
 

Powered By: FinancialContent Services, Inc.
Nasdaq quotes delayed at least 15 minutes.
All other data is delayed at least 20 minutes.
By accessing this page, you agree to the following terms and conditions.
Daily Market Updates provided by MarketMinute.com
Mortgage Rates, CD Rates & Home Equity Rates provided by Banks.com
Stock Analysis provided by SocialPicks Conference calls info supplied by OpenCompany
Fundamental data supplied by Mergent, Inc.
Stock quote data supplied by Telekurs
Bots go here
close window
E-mail Article to a Friend




CLOSE WINDOW