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Why the RIAA may be afraid of targeting Harvard students
TameasDust
Date:
November 27, 2007 @ 3:10 AM
Why the RIAA may be afraid of targeting Harvard
students
By Eric Bangeman | Published: November 26, 2007
- 10:46PM CT
Earlier this month, the RIAA announced that it
had sent off yet another wave of prelitigation
settlement letters to college campuses across the
US. This time, the recording industry targeted 16
schools, including almost the entire membership
of the Ivy League. There was one notable Ivy
school missing from the roster, one that has
failed to appear in any of the RIAA's press
releases: Harvard.
Since beginning its campaign against college
students in February, the RIAA has sent out 4,157
prelitigation settlement letters to 160 different
schools in ten separate waves.
The schools targeted run the gamut. There are
large state schools like Ohio State University,
the University of Texas - Austin, and the
University of Tennessee. There are also a handful
of small liberal arts colleges on the list,
including Swarthmore College, evangelical
Christian school Bethel University in Minnesota,
Gettysburg College, and Carleton College. And the
elite schools in the US are well represented,
too: Stanford, Northwestern, MIT, and the
aforementioned Ivy League schools have all
received missives from the RIAA. But not Harvard.
We're not the only ones to notice that the
nation's oldest university has managed to escape
the RIAA's campus P2P driftnet so far. What gives?
We asked the RIAA about it and a spokesperson
said that, while the group had yet to target
Harvard, we shouldn't read anything into it.
"It's a constantly evolving campaign, and just
because a school has not received letters does
not imply that it will not receive letters in the
future," the spokesperson told us. The group also
intimated that Harvard may have received a DMCA
takedown notice, which the RIAA says it issues to
notify schools of "illegal music file
trafficking" on campus networks.
There may be another factor at work here:
hostility towards the RIAA's campaign on the part
of Harvard Law School professors Charles Nesson
and John Palfrey, who run the law school's
Berkman Center for Internet & Society. Responding
to the RIAA's claim that its litigation strategy
has "invigorated a meaningful conversation on
college campuses about music theft, its
consequences and the numerous ways to enjoy legal
music," the profs called on Harvard to not betray
the "trust and privacy" of its students.
"The university has no legal obligation to
deliver the RIAA's messages. It should do so only
if it believes that's consonant with the
university's mission," wrote Nesson and Palfrey. "[The RIAA seems]
to be engaging in a classic tactic of the bully
facing someone much weaker: threatening such dire
consequences that the students settle without the
issue going to court. The issue is that the
university should not be carrying the industry's
water in bringing lawsuits."
Should the RIAA decide to send prelitigation
settlement letters to Harvard, chances are good
that 1) the letters will not be passed on, and 2)
some of the best and brightest at Harvard Law
School will get involved in a big way. That
doesn't look too appealing, especially when the
campaign isn't going as smoothly as the RIAA
would like.
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20071126-why-
the-riaa-may-be-afraid-of-targeting-harvard-studen
ts.html
zedsalt
Date:
November 27, 2007 @ 11:16 AM
Y'know, I've written two letters to the editor
lately about these extortion letters (one right
after RIAA v. Thomas, another after a set of
these threats were sent to a nearby
university)...disappointed but not surprised to
say that neither has seen the light of day.
The RIAA has gotten in trouble already for
drafting their own subpoenas; maybe the newspaper
received a fake gag order.
zedsalt
Date:
November 27, 2007 @ 11:18 AM
You read that right; they were DRAFTING THEIR OWN
SUBPOENAS! You remember that RIAA character on
South Park with the bad combover who kept
screaming things like, "I AM ABOVE THE LAW!!!"?
Yeah, not much of an exaggeration.
Kalos
Date:
December 15, 2007 @ 7:43 PM
Interesting, but none too surprising.
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