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15 Comments to "A 45-Year-Old Single Mother is Going After the RIAA"
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bean
April 26th, 2008 at
12:15 pm
Man, I hope she wins. I’m all for intellectual property rights, but the RIAA has taken this beyond its logical bounds.
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Skipweasel
April 26th, 2008 at
1:25 pm
“[piracy] costs the U.S. record industry at least $3.7 billion annually in sales. “The magnitude of this [theft] is incalculable,” says Richard L. Gabriel, lead national counsel for the RIAA”
So - if he can’t calculate it, did he just pluck the $3.7 billion out of thin air?
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Micah
April 26th, 2008 at
4:10 pm
The RIAA has always seemed very sketchy to me. I’m very much against pirating, but it’s so flipping easy to do it now, it’s everywhere.
I don’t think suing people will stop piracy, whether they’re doing it to put fear in the hearts of music-lovers or just to make up ‘lost’ money (and what of that money from lawsuits goes to artists?).
So I say, good for this lady, and power to her.
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Ashley
April 26th, 2008 at
9:32 pm
Class action–what does that mean about where the $5 mil ends up? RIAA deserves to lose $5 mil, but that woman certainly does not deserve to gain it.
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Alannah
April 26th, 2008 at
10:09 pm
-Ashley-
Class action means she won’t be gaining much at all. The lawyer for the case would be the only one to come out rich, as he’d take anywhere from 20-50% right off the top of the settlement. The rest would be distributed to each and every member of the suit, which could be in hundreds or thousands. We were in a class action suit against Blockbuster with several thousand other people. We ended up getting 26.50. It really is a great way to teach big business to behave morally, and lawyers love them because their payday is HUGE.
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Justin
April 27th, 2008 at
12:23 am
GO TANYA!
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Justin
April 27th, 2008 at
12:40 am
After reading that article I have nothing but contempt for the music industry. They are using the threat of legal action as means of coercion to get people to pay. I wonder how many more people like Tanya have been falsely accused…
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ben clucky
April 27th, 2008 at
2:38 am
maybe if most americans would actually do something rather than posting on a blog, their antics wouldn’t continue, and we wouldn’t have to rely on a 45 year old single mother to “fight back”
you are asleep…
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alexander
April 27th, 2008 at
8:12 am
if they’re so darned concerned about piracy, why not go after the chinese, who manufacture fake cd’s, dvd’s, luxury goods, etc by the factory load.
Why, because they’d be told to shove it up their sunshine tubes!
The music industry (and movie industry) has had it’s way with the american public for years, making money hand over fist. Now that the “technological tables” have turned and we possess the power to make copies ad infinitum, they cry poor mouth and invoke nazi tactics.
Zero sympathy. And if a couple of Beverly Hills fat cats miss a few house payments and the only music I could listen to came from U-Tube, so be it. -
caitlin13
April 27th, 2008 at
4:04 pm
I hope it does become a class action suit, but unlike Ashley above I do think this woman deserves a large chunk on that money. So many people just do as they’re told so I think its really nifty of this woman to speak out against it all.
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su.wei
April 28th, 2008 at
1:33 am
you go girl!
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Parker
April 28th, 2008 at
2:49 am
I’m pretty sure hiring lawyers and giving up her time and energy to fight the original lawsuit cost her a pretty penny.
And posting on a blog about the RIAA isn’t being asleep..how many of us have been sued or even contacted by the RIAA? Is spreading news and talking about it being asleep? We could take it on as a personal goal to kill the RIAA but I’m sure most of us would rather fight global hunger.
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Man or Monster
April 28th, 2008 at
10:58 am
Five million is not nearly enough to teach the RIAA a lesson.
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tinfoil
April 28th, 2008 at
2:00 pm
I have spoken with both her and her lawyer on a number of occasions. They are both fantastic people and I wish them the best. Actions such as theirs are slowly bringing the recording industry around. EMI has slashed contributions to the RIAA for one and the mass exodus towards selling music free of DRM is another.
Sure, they may not like having terms dictated to them by the likes of Apple, but it goes a long way in showing that if the recording industry would have started adjusting their business model in days of Napster. Had they done that, they would be more than the archaic oligopoly they are now, intent on suing their customers into bankruptcy.
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aj
April 28th, 2008 at
8:24 pm
@Man or Monster
5 million might only be a drop in the bucket for the RIAA but the result of the trial will be hugely beneficial to anyone else the RIAA tries to sue. A sufficient judgment could well put an end to the litigation as it would become unprofitable.
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