Senator to hold hearings on recording industry’s piracy crackdown
By Frederic Frommer for the Associated Press.
A Senate panel will hold hearings on the recording industry’s crackdown against online music swappers, the chairman said Thursday.
Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn., made the announcement in a letter to the Recording Industry Association of America. He had received information he had requested from the group about the campaign, which Coleman has called excessive…
The association announced plans in June to file several hundred lawsuits against people suspected of illegally sharing songs on the Internet. Copyright laws allow for damages of $750 to $150,000 for each song…
Coleman said he is concerned the campaign could ensnare innocent people, such as parents and grandparents whose computers are being used to download music by their children and grandchildren. He also said that some downloaders themselves might not know they are breaking the law.
Coleman has admitted that he used to download music from Napster, the file-sharing service that a federal judge shut down for violating music copyrights.
He wrote that as subcommittee chairman, he intends “to assist in the development of remedies that will be reasonable and narrowly tailored to fit the extent of infringement.”
…Last month, Coleman asked the industry association to furnish him with a list of its subpoenas; its safeguards against invading privacy and making erroneous subpoenas; its standards for issuing subpoenas; and a description of how it collects evidence of illegal file sharing.
Here is the full text of the article in case the link goes bad:
http://www.salon.com/tech/wire/2003/08/15/hearings/
Senator to hold hearings on recording industry’s piracy crackdown
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Frederic Frommer
Aug. 15, 2003 |
WASHINGTON (AP) — A Senate panel will hold hearings on the recording industry’s crackdown against online music swappers, the chairman said Thursday.
Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn., made the announcement in a letter to the Recording Industry Association of America. He had received information he had requested from the group about the campaign, which Coleman has called excessive.
The Senate Governmental Affairs’ Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations is reviewing the group’s responses and declined to make them available Thursday, as did the industry group.
The association announced plans in June to file several hundred lawsuits against people suspected of illegally sharing songs on the Internet. Copyright laws allow for damages of $750 to $150,000 for each song.
In his letter, Coleman said he would look at not just the scope of that campaign but also the dangers that downloaders face by making their personal information available to others. Coleman said he would review legislation that would expand criminal penalties for downloading music.
The association said in a statement that “hearings are part of any oversight process and we always look forward to having the opportunity to present our position.”
Coleman said he is concerned the campaign could ensnare innocent people, such as parents and grandparents whose computers are being used to download music by their children and grandchildren. He also said that some downloaders themselves might not know they are breaking the law.
Coleman has admitted that he used to download music from Napster, the file-sharing service that a federal judge shut down for violating music copyrights.
He wrote that as subcommittee chairman, he intends “to assist in the development of remedies that will be reasonable and narrowly tailored to fit the extent of infringement.”
Coleman was on vacation Thursday and unavailable for comment.
Last month, Coleman asked the industry association to furnish him with a list of its subpoenas; its safeguards against invading privacy and making erroneous subpoenas; its standards for issuing subpoenas; and a description of how it collects evidence of illegal file sharing.
Just remember that he is a freshman republican senator.