Computer & Communication Industry Association
PublishedJune 20, 2008

CCIA Asks Court For New Trial In Copyright Distribution Case

The Computer & Communications Industry Association joined with several organizations today in urging a federal court to grant a new trial to Jammie Thomas, who was fined $222,000 in October 2007 for allegedly violating copyrights.

Thomas was found liable for unlawfully distributing music on a file sharing network, notwithstanding the lack of evidence that she had in fact done so. Her liability was based upon a startling jury instruction that the plaintiff record labels need not have proved that she actually distributed any music on the Internet to hold her liable for distributing music on the Internet.

“If this outcome were allowed to stand, it would set a dangerous precedent for copyright law,” said Ed Black, President & CEO of the Computer & Communications Industry Association. “Before you hold someone responsible for an offense, in this case distributing protected songs, it’s probably a good idea to prove they actually committed the offense.”

CCIA, along with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Public Knowledge, and the U.S. Internet Industry Association, did not take a position on the merits Thomas’s alleged liabilities and defenses. Instead, the brief argues that this jury instruction, which adopted the Plaintiffs’ so-called “making available” theory of infringement, had no basis in the Copyright Act and threatened innovative, legal e-commerce and Internet businesses.

Given the “extraordinary penalties that can follow from a finding of infringement” and the fact that “there is no need to allege or prove actual damage”, the brief argues that the jury instruction incorrectly expanded the scope of the distribution right, in a dangerous manner.

For Brief Click Here

News

CCIA Asks Supreme Court to Hear Apple v. Epic Case

Washington – The Computer & Communications Industry Association has filed an amicus brief in support of Apple Inc., asking the Supreme Court to hear the Apple v. Epic case. The Chamber of Progr...
reading-tablet
  • Press Releases
  • Competition
News

CCIA UK Response to CMA’s New Conduct Requirement

London – The Competition and Markets Authority has announced a new conduct requirement today that will, among other things, require Google to provide publishers with additional controls over the use...
reading-tablet
  • Press Releases
  • Artificial Intelligence
News

Discriminatory EU Cloud and AI Development Act Risks Severe Market Fragmentation

Brussels, BELGIUM – The European Commission’s Cloud and AI Development Act (CADA), presented today as part of a wider tech sovereignty package, introduces discriminatory measures that directly und...
reading-tablet
  • Press Releases
    European Union
News

Rewriting EU AI and Copyright Rules Puts €600 Billion at Risk, New Study Warns

Brussels, BELGIUM – Restricting the EU’s current text-and-data-mining (TDM) framework – the copyright rules that allow AI models to be trained in Europe today – could cost the EU economy up to...
reading-tablet
  • Press Releases
    Copyright