In short, Australian movie studios can't compel the ISPs to do dick, and if they want any kind of legal actions they should go through the police. The fallout from this should be interesting.In a definitive defeat for film studios—and in a first case of its kind worldwide—Australia's Federal Court has ruled that ISPs have no obligation to act on copyright infringement notices or to disconnect subscribers after receiving multiple letters. If copyright holders want justice for illegal file-sharing, they need to start by targeting the right people: those who committed the infringement.
The ruling handed down today by Judge J. Cowdroy aims to be nothing less than magisterial: in 200 pages, it examines the issue from every possible angle because of the "obvious importance of these proceedings to the law of copyright both in this country and possibly overseas."
It concerns iiNet, the third largest ISP in Australia, which was sued in 2008 by a group of movie studios—many of them American—for not doing enough to stop copyright infringement. Letters sent to iiNet were treated as allegations rather than facts and were therefore not acted upon; iiNet instead sent the letters on to the police, saying that it would not act unless a court first ruled that actual infringement had occurred.
This infuriated the movie studios, who demanded that iiNet cut off subscribers alleged to be repeat infringers. The question before the court was whether iiNet "authorized" copyright infringement on behalf of its users, and media interest in the case was intense.
In his ruling, the judge noted that the case "attracted widespread interest both here in Australia and abroad, and both within the legal community and the general public. So much so that I understand this is the first Australian trial to be twittered or tweeted. I granted approval for this to occur in view of the public interest in the proceeding, and it seems rather fitting for a copyright trial involving the internet."
The judge's ruling amounted to a strong defense of the "mere conduit" safe harbor that many nations grant ISPs, so long as they don't encourage infringement or have actual awareness that it is occurring. Two hundred pages on the topic might sound soporific, but take heart before we dive into the legal logic; this is a judge not afraid to try his hand at "being interesting." Here, for instance, is his description of BitTorrent:
To use the rather colourful imagery that internet piracy conjures up in a highly imperfect analogy, the file being shared in the swarm is the treasure, the BitTorrent client is the ship, the .torrent file is the treasure map, The Pirate Bay provides treasure maps free of charge and the tracker is the wise old man that needs to be consulted to understand the treasure map.
So buckle up; it's going to be an interesting ride.
The investigation
The Australian Federation Against Copyright Theft (AFACT) spearheaded the case, hiring investigators to troll BitTorrent for movies belonging to a coalition of studios. One simple way of doing this was simply to search MiniNova (based in the Netherlands) for movies, but modify the uTorrent client software to filter IP addresses so that it would only connect to those belonging to iiNet.
Investigators collected the IP addresses of those sharing the movies and began forwarding them to iiNet. The studios wanted the ISP to forward the letters to subscribers. When a subscriber received two or three such letters, iiNet should suspend service. If more letters arrived after the suspension was revoked, the subscribers should be booted from the 'Net. And, in addition, the studios "suggested that iiNet should block certain websites."
This is hardly the sort of thing an ISP is going to do to its customers voluntarily. But did iiNet have a legal duty here? Australian copyright law, like the DMCA in the US, requires ISPs to have some policy in place for terminating the access of repeat copyright infringers.
Who is Jo Blow?
iiNet CEO Michael Malone was questioned about this at the trial over "three days of gruelling and unnecessarily hostile cross-examination" by studio lawyers. (This must have really been something to watch, because the judge goes out of his way to mention later that the questioning was "intemperate.")
Malone said that iiNet had a policy to terminate subscribers, but that it applied only to "infringement," not to "alleged infringement." As the judge summarized the testimony, "If a Court ordered a subscriber account be terminated or if a Court found that a subscriber of the respondent infringed copyright or a subscriber admitted infringement, the respondent would terminate that subscriber's account."
This fits with what Malone said back in 2008, when he told ComputerWorld Australia, "We have been passing on all those complaints directly on to the state police—who are in our building. They send us a list of IP addresses and say 'this IP address was involved in a breach on this date.' We look at that say, 'Well, what do you want us to do with this? We can't release the person’s details to you on the basis of an allegation and we can't go and kick the customer off on the basis of an allegation from someone else.' So we say, 'You are alleging the person has broken the law; we're passing it to the police. Let them deal with it.'"
Had anyone been terminated under the policy? No, said Malone, they had not, because "no one had been found to infringe copyright" by this standard. The studios' lawyer then asked Malone if this was some kind of "joke" response. As the judge notes, "The respondent’s policy was not a joke, and its conduct was entirely consistent with the policy as outlined even though it may not have been the kind of policy that the applicants anticipated."
Malone really irritated the studios with a further comment that iiNet was simply not prepared to act on infringement notices received from just any "Jo Blow." The studios' response is priceless: "The applicants submit that they, being the major film studios, could not possibly be considered ‘Jo Blow’ when copyright infringement of their films is under consideration."
As Malone indicated in a December 13, 2008 forum post, the issue should be handled by the relevant authorities; he had no wish to start acting like a private copyright cop. "With the evidence that AFACT has, I’m betting that a magistrate will happily issue an order for us to disclose the account holder’s identity for under $50. AFACT can then directly contact the customer, warn them, raid them, or sue them. Whatever the action, it will then be overseen by the independent legal system."
The judge agreed, saying that the law "recognises no positive obligation on any person to protect the copyright of another. The law only recognises a prohibition on the doing of copyright acts without the licence of the copyright owner or exclusive licensee, or the authorisation of those acts."
Australian court: Movie studios can't play internet police.
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Australian court: Movie studios can't play internet police.
Now to see if we can avoid the usual whining in threads like these.
"It's you Americans. There's something about nipples you hate. If this were Germany, we'd be romping around naked on the stage here."
Re: Australian court: Movie studios can't play internet police.
Man, Australia is weird, first they try to ban internet anonymity, then they do this.
So basically, if I am reading this correctly, it means that ISP providers aren't held responsible for what their customers do? I mean duh. You don't go after the Ma Bell for people running scams over the phone. You call the cops.
So basically, if I am reading this correctly, it means that ISP providers aren't held responsible for what their customers do? I mean duh. You don't go after the Ma Bell for people running scams over the phone. You call the cops.
It's 106 miles to Chicago, we got a full tank of gas, half a pack of cigarettes, it's dark... and we're wearing sunglasses.
Hit it.
Blank Yellow (NSFW)
Hit it.
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"Mostly Harmless Nutcase"
Re: Australian court: Movie studios can't play internet police.
It's simple-minded to think 'AU did x'. The censorship and Internet shit stems from maybe three guys. Stuff like this is industry-wide.
Re: Australian court: Movie studios can't play internet police.
Good thing I was just taking a quick jab then.Stark wrote:It's simple-minded to think 'AU did x'. The censorship and Internet shit stems from maybe three guys. Stuff like this is industry-wide.
It's 106 miles to Chicago, we got a full tank of gas, half a pack of cigarettes, it's dark... and we're wearing sunglasses.
Hit it.
Blank Yellow (NSFW)
Hit it.
Blank Yellow (NSFW)
"Mostly Harmless Nutcase"
Re: Australian court: Movie studios can't play internet police.
HuhWHig? I'm just saying that industry might be less corrupt but people are just as stupid.
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Re: Australian court: Movie studios can't play internet police.
Our courts seem to be pretty good with this sort of thing. I remember the ruling where Sony was told that if they're going to enforce region coding, then it's cool for people to mod their consoles to play other regions. That said I like Cowdroy's description of BitTorrent.
What is Project Zohar?
Here's to a certain mostly harmless nutcase.
Here's to a certain mostly harmless nutcase.
Re: Australian court: Movie studios can't play internet police.
This is a little off topic, but I've always found it weird that iiNet employees refer to their CEO by his nickname (MM).
>>Your head hurts.
>>Quaff painkillers
>>Your head no longer hurts.
>>Quaff painkillers
>>Your head no longer hurts.
Re: Australian court: Movie studios can't play internet police.
iiNet have a really interesting corporate culture. It's not your average faceless ISP, and they're openly critical of all the government's stupid fucking ideas.
Re: Australian court: Movie studios can't play internet police.
I'm having a little trouble navigating your legal system, guys. Where can I find the judge's complete decision?
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Re: Australian court: Movie studios can't play internet police.
This is full text of Justice Cowdroy's decision - not posting the full text due to its length
http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/FCA/2010/24.html
http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/FCA/2010/24.html
A mad person thinks there's a gateway to hell in his basement. A mad genius builds one and turns it on. - CaptainChewbacca
Re: Australian court: Movie studios can't play internet police.
One of the news headlines for this story was "Copyright owners lose battle against pirates" or something to that effect, but I can't for the life of my remember where.
A scientist once gave a public lecture on astronomy. He described how the Earth orbits around the sun and how the sun, in turn, orbits around the centre of a vast collection of stars called our galaxy.
At the end of the lecture, a little old lady at the back of the room got up and said: 'What you have told us is rubbish. The world is really a flat plate supported on the back of a giant tortoise.
The scientist gave a superior smile before replying, 'What is the tortoise standing on?'
'You're very clever, young man, very clever,' said the old lady. 'But it's turtles all the way down.'
At the end of the lecture, a little old lady at the back of the room got up and said: 'What you have told us is rubbish. The world is really a flat plate supported on the back of a giant tortoise.
The scientist gave a superior smile before replying, 'What is the tortoise standing on?'
'You're very clever, young man, very clever,' said the old lady. 'But it's turtles all the way down.'
Re: Australian court: Movie studios can't play internet police.
Thanks! Looks like a similar site to CanLII, should have thought of that first.fnord wrote:This is full text of Justice Cowdroy's decision - not posting the full text due to its length
http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/FCA/2010/24.html
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Re: Australian court: Movie studios can't play internet police.
Effectively the ruling was that iiNet is a service provider and is not responsible for what people do with it's service (just like how you can't sue Telstra for people arranging drug deals over the phone, or Australia Post for people sending a pirated DVD in the mail).
Additionally, it also ruled that the privacy provisions of the contract between provider and customer meant that third parties (like AFACT) can't use the provider to get to the customer - in this case, it was iiNet refusing to pass details of customers suspected of piracy to AFACT and also refusing to pass on notices from AFACT to it's customers as both would have breached the customer privacy provisions.
I think both parts of that ruling are important for many reasons outside of just "internet piracy".
But now AFACT is just going to do an end run around the courts and buy legislation - no doubt through Mr Conroy et al.
Additionally, it also ruled that the privacy provisions of the contract between provider and customer meant that third parties (like AFACT) can't use the provider to get to the customer - in this case, it was iiNet refusing to pass details of customers suspected of piracy to AFACT and also refusing to pass on notices from AFACT to it's customers as both would have breached the customer privacy provisions.
I think both parts of that ruling are important for many reasons outside of just "internet piracy".
But now AFACT is just going to do an end run around the courts and buy legislation - no doubt through Mr Conroy et al.