Thursday, October 4, 2007 - Page updated at 03:28 PM
Music industry to keep on suing
The Associated Press

Jammie Thomas, accused of illegal sharing
DULUTH, Minn. — Regardless of how the first trial of a person accused of illegally sharing music online turns out, the record industry plans to keep suing listeners.
"We think we're in for a long haul in terms of establishing that music has value, that music is property and that property has to be respected," said Cary Sherman, president of the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), which coordinates the lawsuits.
Some 26,000 lawsuits have been filed since 2003, but the case against Jammie Thomas, a mother of two from Brainerd, Minn., is the first to go to trial.
Many other defendants settled by paying the record companies a few thousand dollars.
Sherman said Wednesday night he's surprised it took this long for one to go to trial.
After four years, he said, "it's become business as usual, nobody really thinks about it. This case has put it back in the news. Win or lose, people will understand that we are out there trying to protect our rights."
The case against Thomas was expected to go to jurors today.
Six major record companies accuse Thomas, 30, of sharing 1,702 songs online in violation of their copyrights. The companies claim they found the songs on a Kazaa file-sharing account they later linked to her.
After two days of testimony from 11 witnesses, the defense rested without calling anyone to the stand. Closing arguments in the civil trial were to start this morning.
U.S. District Judge Michael Davis said he would decide then whether the companies would have to prove the songs were actually transferred to any other users for jurors to find Thomas liable.
Thomas testified Wednesday that she didn't do it, though she acknowledged giving conflicting dates for the replacement of her computer's hard drive. Industry attorney Richard Gabriel has suggested she replaced the hard drive to cover her tracks.
Under questioning from Gabriel, Thomas said that while pursuing a college degree in marketing, she did a case study on the original Napster file-sharing program and concluded it was not illegal. A judge ruled in 2001 that it was.
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She acknowledged she listened to, or owned CDs released by, more than 60 of the artists whose music was in the Kazaa file-sharing folder. Thomas denied the folder was hers.
"Did you ever have Kazaa on your computer?" Thomas' attorney, Brian Toder, asked her.
"No," she said.
Toder has tried to raise doubts that the companies can prove it was Thomas who downloaded and shared the music.
Earlier in the day, Thomas set up her computer to show the jury how quickly CDs could be copied onto it.
The demonstration was aimed at countering testimony by an expert who testified the songs on one of Thomas' computer drives were created just 15 seconds apart, suggesting piracy.
But each song Thomas copied in court over Gabriel's objection took less than 10 seconds to land on the computer.
Jacobson said the comparison might not be valid because the version of Windows Media Player that Thomas used to copy the CDs in court was different from what was available in February 2005, when the files in contention landed on her hard drive.
The companies involved in the lawsuit are Sony BMG, Arista Records, Interscope Records, UMG Recordings, Capitol Records and Warner Bros. Records.
RIAA spokeswoman Cara Duckworth said they would ask for damages on the 24 songs the trial is focused on, not the 1,702 described in the lawsuit.
Copyright law allows damages of $750 to $30,000 per infringement, or up to $150,000 if the violation was "willful." That means Thomas could face a judgment of $18,000 to $3.6 million for the 24 songs.
Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company

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