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There are currently over 240 million
users downloading and trading files legally on file-sharing networks.
You can, for example, legally download music from over 850 bands,
over 20,000 live concerts as well as have access to multiple software
titles and games. File sharing is not illegal so long as you abide
by all relevant copyright laws. Sharing copyrighted material without
the permission to do so is illegal.
MP3 Rocket Inc
does not condone piracy or breaking copyright laws. The MP3 sharing
tools available on through our members area are powerful search
tools & we recommend that you use your discretion when downloading
music and movie files.
See News.com Article:
Federal Judge Rules: File-swapping tools are legal
Original works of authorship, including
literary, dramatic, musical, artistic, and certain intellectual
compositions are protected by copyright law. If a person publicly
performs, reproduces, distributes copies, or displays works without
consent of the copyright owner could be in violation of the law.
Go to
http://www.loc.gov/copyright/ and learn more about U.S. copyright
law. Purchasing a membership in MP3
Rocket Inc does
not give you license to download or upload copyright material. MP3
Rocket Inc implores
you to respect copyright laws and share responsibly.
Click
here for important information from the US Federal Trade Commission
(FTC) about the risk and use of P2P software.
Stay legal
and avoid breaking the law. Quick steps to stay legal:
- Make sure
there are no potentially infringing files in your shared folders
- meaning only files that are in the public domain, for which
you have permission to share or are available under pro-sharing
licenses.
- Remove potentially
misleading files names that might be confused with the name of
an RIAA artist or song (e.g. "Usher" or "Madonna")
from your shared folder.
- Disable the
"sharing" or "uploading" features on your
search program to prevent other users on the network from getting
copies of files on your computer. Music companies are focused
on finding people who share thousands of files on their computers
with the rest of the community. If you don't share - you reduce
the risk.
File sharing has been
a hot topic in several countries around the world. Below are samples
of court decisions from the United States of America, Canada, and
the Netherlands.
USA Court Decision
Decentralized File-sharing Tools
Ruled Legal
Streamcast and Grokster have won a major court decision in Los Angeles,
shifting the tides of the on-line P2P legal war. Federal court Judge
Stephen Wilson has dismissed much of the studios' claims in their
lawsuits against them, stating that Morpheus and Grokster were not
liable for copyright infringements that took place using their software.
See News.com Article:
Federal Judge Rules: File-swapping tools are legal
The ruling stated loud and clear that innovating decentralized peer-to-peer
Gnutella-like software is perfectly legal, and shouldn't be deemed
illegal in the courts. The courts compared the technology with the
innovation of the original Sony videocasette recorder (VCR).
Fred von Lohmann
of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) stated the case is far
from over, but that the case sends a "strong message to the
technology community that the court understands the risk to innovation"
the case could represent
The Recording Industry
Association of America (RIAA) and Motion Picture Association of
America (MPAA) offered no comment, but are of course issuing an
appeal to the ruling already. Published By Mike Darrah - April
25, 2003
Canada's Federal
Court has ruled against a motion which would have allowed the music
industry to begin suing individuals who make music available on-line.
He said that downloading a song or making files available in shared
directories does not constitute copyright infringement under the
current Canadian law.
"Justice Konrad von Finckenstein ruled Wednesday that
the Canadian Recording Industry Association did not prove there
was copyright infringement by 29 so-called music uploaders. Without
the names, CRIA can't begin filing lawsuits against the alleged
high-volume music traders, identified only as John and Jane Does.
It also reaffirms what the Copyright Board of Canada has already
ruled -- downloading music in this country is not illegal. Von Finckenstein
said that downloading a song or making files available in shared
directories, like those on Kazaa, does not constitute copyright
infringement under the current Canadian law. "No evidence was
presented that the alleged infringers either distributed or authorized
the reproduction of sound recordings," he wrote in his 28-page
ruling. "They merely placed personal copies into their shared
directories which were accessible by other computer users via a
P2P service."
With all of the usual cavets about appeals, this decision makes
it practically impossible to prosecute file sharers in Canada. von
Finkenstein has gone well beyond the idea that downloading is legal
in Canada. By expressly mentioning "merely placing personal
copies into their shared directories" does not constitute distribution
he has blown a huge hole in the arguments which swirled around the
whole question of the legality of uploading in Canada.
(Published April 1, 2004
http://grep.law.harvard.edu/article.pl?sid=04/04/01/0411227&mode=thread)
The Supreme Court
of the Netherlands has thrown out an appeal by music industry lobbyists
who wanted the popular Kazaa file-sharing software to be ruled illegal.
The victory for Kazaa, which follows similar US rulings in favour
of peer-to-peer (P2P) software firms Grokster and Morpheus, is a
huge blow to the music industry. It has fought a long battle to
close down file-sharing networks and criminalise the software that
makes file swapping illegal.
The Dutch decision
means that the developers of the software cannot be held responsible
for how individuals use it.
(Dinah Greek, vnunet.com
19 Dec 2003,
http://www.pcw.co.uk/news/1151673)
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