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Media groups appeal P2P ruling

Record labels and movie studios say they have appealed an April federal court ruling that held for the first time that some file-swapping software was legal.

John Borland Staff Writer, CNET News.com
John Borland
covers the intersection of digital entertainment and broadband.
John Borland
3 min read
Record labels and movie studios said Tuesday that they have appealed an April federal court ruling that held for the first time that some file-swapping software was legal.

That ruling, made by a Los Angeles federal court judge, Stephen Wilson, came as a sharp blow to copyright holders' strategy of suing peer-to-peer network operators and software developers in order to curb the explosive growth of file trading. Beginning with a ruling against Napster, all court rulings had been in favor of the record companies and movie studios.

"(Wilson's decision) was wrong," Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) President Cary Sherman said in a statement Tuesday. "These are businesses that were built for the exclusive reason of illegally exchanging copyrighted works, and they make money hand over fist from it. The Court of Appeals should hold them accountable."

The surprise April decision revitalized a peer-to-peer world that had been laboring under the pressure of repeated lawsuits and unfavorable court rulings, resulting in the closure of services such as Napster, Aimster and Scour.

Unlike any other judge before him, Wilson ruled that companies that distributed software were not responsible for the misdeeds of their users, even when it was clear that millions of people were using the software to break copyright laws. He compared the software to the VCR or a Xerox copy machine.

"Grokster and Streamcast are not significantly different from companies that sell home video recorders or copy machines, both of which can be and are used to infringe copyrights," Wilson wrote.

The RIAA subsequently turned to its well-publicized campaign of suing individuals for copyright infringement, a strategy it had largely avoided before Wilson's decision. The group has spent the last month and a half sending subpoenas to Internet service providers, seeking the identities of alleged file swappers, and has said it will file what could be hundreds of lawsuits by the end of this month or early September.

The RIAA, which was joined by the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) and the National Music Publishers Association (NMPA) in its appeal, said that Wilson had failed to follow the example of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal's ruling against Napster. In that case, judges laid down a framework under which Napster would likely have been held liable for the copyright infringement of its users, although the issue never came to a full trial.

"The district court incredibly equated (Streamcast) and Grokster to Xerox, rather than the more analogous comparison to the illegitimate Napster service," wrote attorneys for the NMPA in their brief. "Comparing Xerox to (Streamcast) and Grokster is like comparing a farmer who sells chickens to a promoter and organizer of cockfights."

Grokster attorney Michael Page said the copyright holders' trade associations were misreading the April decision.

"The RIAA would like the world to believe that Wilson was a renegade judge who ignored Napster, but he was anything but that," Page said. "He followed Napster carefully and we won."

The April decision granted summary judgment to Grokster and Streamcast Networks, essentially closing the case against them unless the appeals court rules differently. Wilson has not yet ruled the same way for Sharman Networks, which operates the hugely popular Kazaa file-swapping service and is being sued in the same court.

The copyright holders have long said they would appeal, but procedural issues complicating the case had held up the action until now.