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Saturday, April 26, 2008

The Woman Who’s Beating the RIAA

The RIAA’s indiscriminate legal tactics against downloaders has caused many innocent people to get sued in court. One of them fought back and won. Now she is still fighting to take them down.

After being sued by the music industry for stealing songs and winning the case’s dismissal, Andersen is now taking the record industry to court. Her case is aimed at exposing investigative practices that are controversial and may be illegal, according to the lawsuit. One company hired by the record industry, she claims, snoops through people’s computers, uncovering private files and photos, even though it has no legal right to do so. A different industry-backed company uses tactics similar to those of debt collectors, pressuring people to pay thousands of dollars in settlements even before any wrongdoing is proven. In Andersen’s case, the industry’s Settlement Support Center said that unless she paid $4,000 to $5,000 immediately, it would “ruin her financially,” the suit alleges.

Andersen is going after the recording industry under conspiracy laws. She argues the Recording Industry Association of America, the industry’s trade group, and its affiliates worked together on a broad campaign to intimidate people into making financial payoffs. The defendants “secretly met and conspired” to develop a “litigation enterprise” with the ultimate goal of preserving the major record companies’ control over the music business. Andersen is requesting class action status for her case, seeking at least $5 million in compensation for the class.

It’s bad enough government is destroying our privacy. We can’t let corporations do it too. This is an important case. And an important step towards digital sovereignty.

In other music news, Phil Collins is retiring

Posted by James Hudnall on 04/26 at 07:00 AM
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