Legal Question in Technology Law in California

File Sharing

My question is about the criminal part of file sharing. From my reading of Title 17 of the United States Code

� 506 Criminal offenses and of

unofficial opinions all over the internet the sharing part is what is a misdemeanor if I were to upload or share at least $1000 worth of

movies, songs or computer programs in any 6 month period.

The opinions are that the parts

such as this :(B) by the reproduction or distribution, including by electronic means and this:

(A) for purposes of commercial advantage or private financial gain;

mean reproducing by sharing

with others and that the private

financial gain is that if I share my

copyrighted files illegally then so

will other peer to peer group

members.

So is it true that the

misdemeanor can never apply to anyone

who only downloads or just

receives files such as computer

programs? I tended

to believe this as most

every software maker

states in their license agreement

that if you provide someone else

a copy of your software that you

have transferred all rights in it to

that person. So given what the

license agreements state how

could only downloading ever be

a misdemeanor on that basis alone?


Asked on 8/20/08, 4:06 pm

2 Answers from Attorneys

Michael Stone Law Offices of Michael B. Stone Toll Free 1-855-USE-MIKE

Re: File Sharing

AFAIK the FBI is not interested in prosecuting garden variety file sharers. The RIAA/MPAA -will- sue your pants off in civil court for copyright infringement, in part because most file sharing programs automatically make your downloaded files available to others for uploading and RIAA/MPAA contends this is the same as distribution for profit.

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Answered on 8/20/08, 4:24 pm
Bryan Whipple Bryan R. R. Whipple, Attorney at Law

Re: File Sharing

The loss of all license rights is only one consequence of the downloading. The license agreements don't say forfeiture of your license rights is the licensor/copyright owner's exclusive remedy against you. It still has the right to sue you.

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Answered on 8/20/08, 6:27 pm


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