Well, this sucks. It looks like the Obama administration sides with the RIAA's excessive fines for downloading a track, which can range between $750 and $150,000. We know that the RIAA will charge that, too, as evidenced by the flurry of court cases, and people who've lost them (and will now be pretty-much broke for life). I'm unsure how the administration could even remotely side with this policy... the fines are incredibly excessive. I can understand fines... we get fines for parking on the wrong side of the road, but when is the last time you got a $750 fine for that? Much less a $150,000 fine?
No surprise, two top lawyers in the administration are previous RIAA lawyers, including one who was responsible for bringing down Grokster back in the day. The other argued that ISPs should be forced to release customer data without a subpoena. So... it seems like it's no surprise that the administration is leaning heavily in one way.
But still, Obama, what the...? Here we are all whining about the economy, and now $750 fines are being supported for the simple act of downloading a song? Ridiculous.
http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2009/03/obama-sides-wit.html
No surprise, two top lawyers in the administration are previous RIAA lawyers, including one who was responsible for bringing down Grokster back in the day. The other argued that ISPs should be forced to release customer data without a subpoena. So... it seems like it's no surprise that the administration is leaning heavily in one way.
But still, Obama, what the...? Here we are all whining about the economy, and now $750 fines are being supported for the simple act of downloading a song? Ridiculous.
http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2009/03/obama-sides-wit.html