By Jay Lyman TechNewsWorld Part of the ECT News Network
09/10/04 10:00 AM PT
"For these plaintiffs to complain about infringement of their intellectual property is not merely ironic," according to Cary Sherman, RIAA president. "It is an act of incredible chutzpah. Their claims are dead wrong." Yankee Group analyst Mike Goodman said if the RIAA were to lose its case, it would end up looking "no better than people who [illegally] download files."
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As it has been suing thousands of computer users accused of illegally
trading copyrighted music online with peer-to-peer (P2P) technology, the
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) has also been polluting
P2P networks with bogus and corrupted media files to discourage P2P use.
Now the industry group is the one being sued for alleged patent
infringement in its process of so-called "spoofing" on filesharing
networks. A civil case has been brought against the RIAA by P2P providers Altnet and its parent
Brilliant Digital Entertainment, which own the popular Kazaa P2P
network .
In a suit filed in California this week, Altnet argues the RIAA
breached its 2002 patent on "TrueNames" technology, adding Overpeer,
Loudeye and Media Sentry to the list of alleged infringers.
Interference Infringes
"Altnet alleges this has inhibited the growth of P2P for legitimate file
sharing that benefits copyright holders, which Altnet advocates, and
thereby has injured its business," said a statement from Altnet.
An RIAA spokeperson told TechNewsWorld that the industry group's lawyers are
still looking into the suit initially. The group denied the
infringement claims, which come after failed efforts toward a
compromise, according to Altnet.
Altnet said its suit is focused on a specific, patented algorithm that
permits the unique naming of files across P2P networks.
Measuring Spoofing
Yankee Group senior analyst Mike Goodman told TechNewsWorld there is no
specific metric to measure how much spoofing the RIAA does on P2P
networks, but he added that it occurs quite a bit. Goodman called spoofing
the RIAA's second biggest weapon against P2P, after the RIAA lawsuits
against users, which began last year.
Alnet president Lee Jaffe said Overpeer, which works with the RIAA in
spoofing songs on P2P networks, claims it spoofs as many as 200 million
files per month.
"That adds up to a lot of instances of patent violation," Jaffe said in
a statement. "The defendants have had the opportunity to work closely
with us to innovate and improve the overall content experience for file
sharers, yet they choose to send users damaged files that erode
relationships between artists, bands, and their fans."
Basis For Claim
Goodman said while the courts will have to determine whether or not
patents have been infringed, there is a basis for the complaint from
Altnet, which has tried repeatedly to work with the RIAA and record
labels.
"Anything that makes P2P networks inefficient will hurt Altnet's
business," Goodman said. "Anything that drives users from Kazaa hurts
the Altnet network."
Goodman added that there are legitimate uses of P2P technology, which in
some cases is similar to a simple copy machine at the office . The U.S.
9th Circuit Court of Appeals also ruled recently that there are
legimiate uses of P2P file sharing applications and networks, freeing
P2P operators from liability for copyright infringement.
However, proposed legislation currently in the U.S. Congress would make
it illegal to carry large amounts of copyrighted material over a P2P
network.
Chided For Chutzpah
While the RIAA had yet to legally respond to the Altnet charges, the
organization's president, Cary Sherman, who is named in the civil suit, denied any
patent infringement in a statement.
"For these plaintiffs to complain about infringement of their
intellectual property is not merely ironic," said Sherman. "It is an act of incredible chutzpah. Their claims are dead wrong."
However, Goodman said if the RIAA were to lose its case, it would lose a
big tool in its push against P2P and would end up looking "no better
than people who [illegally] download files."
Irony for Industry
The irony of the infringement suit against the RIAA was also highlighted
by an attorney for a Michigan college student who is among those being
sued by the recording industry.
"It's ironic that the RIAA, in trying to stop copyright violations, has
been using techniques that apparently violate patent rights," said
attorney Tom Lewry of Brooks Kushman. "It is one thing for the RIAA to
stop infringement by enforcing copyrights. But its current tactics,
which include corrupting peer-to-peer networks, should be stopped. Such
tactics disrupt legitimate uses of the networks to share public domain
information.
"Perhaps Altnet's suit will discourage such abuses," Lewry added.