Legal Corner

Read this if you sometimes download porn:....
mrfisher 115 Reviews 2867 reads
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From an email of a lawyer I know:

A Trap for the Unwary

Federal Court dockets are being filled by claims of copyright violation made by the adult entertainment industry alleging the illegal download of adult pornographic movies. The industry filed suits which collectively named over 220,000 unidentified ("John Doe") defendants. In Massachusetts alone, the industry has filed 39 suits against 2,106 John Does.

The pornographers find Internet Protocol (IP) addresses where a specific movie has been downloaded without payment. Through the IP address, they determine which Internet Service Provider ("ISP") assigned that particular address to a subscriber. With only this information, they have filed suits against thousands of John Doe defendants, seeking to obtain the individual identity of the subscribers. The courts, however, have recognized that while someone may be the subscriber to an IP address through his ISP, that person does not have exclusive control over those using that IP address and, therefore, may not be the infringer. Also secured and unsecured wireless networks are susceptible to hacking. Internet pirates, seeking to keep their identities hidden, will often rely on an unsecured wireless network or ones they have hacked illegally to download these movies. In a recent case a defendant presented evidence that over 30% of the designated John Doe defendant subscribers were not, in fact, infringers. Being named in such a law suit may be highly embarrassing and may subject a subscriber to thousands of dollars of litigation costs and potential damages for copyright infringement.

Judge William Young of the U. S. District Court was refreshingly blunt in a recent decision in which he dismissed all cases but "Doe 1." The case initially named 46 defendants. He ruled that each case needed to be treated independently with a separate complaint for each defendant and a separate filing fee to be paid by the plaintiff for each case. He criticized the porn industry's nationwide tactics writing, "The company relies on the combined threat of substantial statutory damages and the embarrassment of being publicly named as illegally downloading a pornographic film (not to mention the pressure applied by the knowledge that co-defendants are settling), to assume that at least some of the defendants will settle for perhaps $2,000.00 or $3,000.00 - which result comes at minimal cost to the company."

If you are contacted by a representative of an adult film company or its attorney demanding settlement and threatening that you will be named as a defendant you should immediately contact an attorney for advice and representation. You should refrain from the quick desire to settle your case to put the matter behind you. Our office has experience fighting these claims and will be happy to answer any questions you have.

There really isn't much money in porn anymore and it's pretty much due to illegal downloads.  The tube sites where many of the downloads come from are acting in the same way that Napster and other audio file sharing sites did a decade or so ago.  They make the content available and no one who is viewing a streaming movie or downloading one really sees it as illegal.  Pron producers rank right up there with strip club owners on the stupid/greed scale so it's not surprising that they finally got lawyers and are trying to hit people where they live.  

I'm encouraged to see that Judge Young handled it the way that he did.

Mr. Fisher's "I can't say I'm a lawyer"  I can't say that is right.  Is right.

Out here in CA there is Prop B which will upset Porn filming and increase cost.   They're advertising for the little guys vote.  If they, then sue the small consumer, there may be leverage little guy can use that the industry believes.

I would think that the porn industry would want to make examples out of the first few non-named defendants by filling for punitive as well as compensatory damages.   If, in fact, they go after them.  

If you get a letter demanding you pay compensation or a collection call regarding this you may PM me. I'm in So. CA,  and I'll find you a lawyer in the field or help you myself. if necessary.

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