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Downloading could lead to fines

ELIZABETH YOUNG

Issue date: 8/26/03 Section: News
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A recent study has found college students are much more likely to download music files illegally than to buy CDs.

The study conducted by Pew Internet & American Life revealed 67 percent of file-sharers were not concerned that they were downloading copyrighted material.

As many as four out of five students in the survey said they were not worried about copyright laws at all.

"I like using music files to see what a band is like before I buy the CD and to download live songs that I can't get anywhere else," said Brittany Reed, a junior from Marietta.

But downloading files that are the property of artists infringes on copyrights and is illegal, according to the study.

"The amazing thing is that college students don't see anything wrong with downloading music and not paying for it. You wouldn't walk out of Best Buy with a CD in your pocket or purse, and that's the same thing," said William Lee, a professor in the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication.

A recent case involving four college students and the Recording Industry Associa-tion of America resulted in the students paying fines ranging from $12,000 to $17,500 each, according to the Association's Web site (www.riaa.com).

Representatives of the Association accused the students of encouraging large-scale music piracy by running file-sharing networks on campus, according to the site.

The fines paid by the students may seem heavy, but are far lighter than the $98 billion the recording industry reportedly planned to seek if the case went to court.

This settlement marks the first time the record industry recovered money from individuals in the United States accused of copyright infringement via file-sharing networks.

Downloading copyrighted materials using campus computers also violates the University's computer-use policies and is a violation of state law.

In Sept. 2002, Ben Albert, a sophomore from Roswell, downloaded the movie Austin Powers 3: Goldmember from Kazaa. The University then was notified by Warner Bros. Studios, which produced the film.

Albert violated Regulation X, a computer use policy in the University's code of conduct. His sanction from the student judiciary was to research copyright issues related to entertainment media and produce a fact sheet of useful hints for computer users.

"I think it's ridiculous to be fining college students who are strapped for cash. They should be going after the kingpins who actually encode and distribute the songs instead of just the regular guys," Albert said.

Despite the controversy over copyright infringement, University computer policies have not changed.

"Technically, it's possible (to track students), but it's not University policy to do so," said Eddie Hunter, an administrative specialist for Enterprise Information Technology Services (EITS).

-- Contributing: The Chronicle of Higher Education and News Hour


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Viewing Comments 1 - 10 of 15

anonymous871

anonymous871

posted 8/26/03 @ 12:33 PM EST

As Mr. Lee pointed out.. "You wouldn't walk out of Best Buy with a CD in your pocket or purse, and that's the same thing"....... Well that's not really the same thing. (Continued…)

dining room furniture

posted 10/24/07 @ 4:24 PM EST

I download some music and if i like it i buy the cd. If i dont, it normally gets deleted withing 3 days.

Tree Bench

posted 10/24/07 @ 4:28 PM EST

Same here. Its the only way apart from travelling to a music store and asking to listen to the album.

RP

posted 10/26/07 @ 12:08 PM EST

1) New CDs aren't always in the standard format nowadays. You could buy the CD only to discover that your old CD player can't play it. You can't return it after it's been opened so why buy CDs in the first place?

2) If everyone is walking around with iPods or other MP3 players aren't they probably buying their music online anyway?

3) Why doesn't anyone do a survey of how many people buy the stuff they download?

4) Why doesn't anyone do a survey of how many people download the stuff they bought because it didn't work (usually due to DRM)?

5) If online movie services can come up with a way to let you rent a downloaded movie that expires in a week then why can't they do that with music? Let people download a trial of an album the same way you can download a trial of a software program. (Continued…)

Pay attention.

posted 10/26/07 @ 3:08 PM EST

Issue date: 8/26/03

arun

posted 1/18/08 @ 9:59 AM EST

Seriously, who makes enough money to buy all the cd's they want. I think the music industry should focus more on making money via shows; like on tv, radio, stage, advertising (of products that cannot be pirated, like soap!), album tours, etc. (Continued…)

TJ

posted 1/18/08 @ 11:55 AM EST

I used to walk out of Best Buy with CD's. Now I don't have to.

Kuraiai

posted 3/05/08 @ 11:46 AM EST

I like music online, I don't have to waste batteries to my CD Player you know. There's nothing wrong after downloading it for a few days and delete it later. (Continued…)

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posted 11/09/08 @ 9:30 AM EST

Cool! Great blog.

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