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RI judge hears arguments in music downloading case
[January 07, 2009]

RI judge hears arguments in music downloading case


(AP Online Via Acquire Media NewsEdge) PROVIDENCE, R.I._A Rhode Island couple whose son is accused of illegally sharing songs online should not be forced to surrender their home computer for inspection because it would violate their right to privacy, their lawyer argued at a federal court hearing Tuesday.



Joel Tenenbaum, a 25-year-old Boston University graduate student, is accused by the Recording Industry Association of America of downloading at least seven songs and making 816 music files available for distribution on the Kazaa file-sharing network through 2004.

The recording industry's lawsuit against him is part of an aggressive campaign targeting people who share music online. The industry says it has lost more than $3 billion because of peer-to-peer networks that enable Internet users to share large numbers of songs online.


Record company lawyers believe Tenenbaum downloaded the songs on his parents' computer in Providence and urged a federal magistrate on Tuesday for permission to copy the machine's hard drive for proof of copyright infringement.

"The information on the computer is directly relevant and material to the underlying claims in this case," said attorney Daniel Cloherty.

But Charles Nesson, a Harvard Law School professor representing Arthur and Judie Tenenbaum and their son, said the computer contains information protected by attorney-client privilege and holds other sensitive and personal material that has nothing to do with the case.

"You can hardly imagine anything more intrusive than asking anyone to disgorge a computer," said Nesson, who is also challenging in U.S. District Court in Boston the constitutionality of a federal copyright law that the music industry has used to target song-swappers.

Nesson also argued that the computer was not the one on which the alleged downloading took place. Judie Tenenbaum has said in an affidavit that the couple bought the computer after their son had left home, and that he had used it only occasionally to check his e-mail during visits.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Lincoln Almond did not immediately rule on the RIAA's request.

Joel Tenenbaum had offered to settle the case for $500 after the industry confronted him in September 2005 with allegations of illegal file-sharing. But music companies rejected that, ultimately demanding $12,000. They sued in 2007.

Tenenbaum could be forced to pay more than $1 million in damages if it is determined that his alleged actions were willful.

Judie Tenenbaum, who is a lawyer, said outside court Tuesday that the lawsuit has been a "horrible" and time-consuming experience.

Many of the people who have been sued by the RIAA for illegal file-sharing have settled out of court to avoid the costs of going to trial.

RIAA spokeswoman Cara Duckworth said the industry group had wanted to settle the case quickly but blamed Nesson, who brought some of his students to court Tuesday, for dragging it out.

"During the past several years, thousands of regular working class folks in the music community have lost their jobs precisely because of the illegal activity involved in this case," she said in a written statement. "While this might be an interesting academic exercise for the professor and his class, there's been real world consequences for those who create music."

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