A Thursday court ruling requires a Minnesota woman to pay $220,000 to the Recording Industry Association of America. The defendant calls the fine ridiculous, but President George Bush's intellectual property coordinator says it demonstrates that U.S. copyright law is working.
Jammie Thomas, who was ordered to pay the recording industry for copyright violations related to sharing songs, now says she will appeal.
October 8, 2007
the iconoclast President's copyright czar says the record labels' win shows we have "an effective legal system" that adequately protects intellectual property.
October 5, 2007
Will Congress lessen penalties for copyright infringement after Thursday's whopping verdict? We ask Rep. Rick Boucher, a Democrat and ardent foe on copyright legislation.
October 5, 2007
coop's corner The recording industry may have won a controversial copyright conviction, but CNET News.com's Charles Cooper says this is only a brief chapter in an endless saga.
October 5, 2007
the iconoclast Record labels should have won case against Minnesota woman. The problem is the penalty.
October 5, 2007
the iconoclast The recording industry just won a huge legal victory against illicit file-sharing. How? Two key decisions the judge made helped a lot.
October 5, 2007
Jammie Thomas, the woman ordered to pay unprecedented damages to record industry for file sharing, said it was nearly impossible to prove her innocence given her finances.
October 5, 2007
Federal jury orders woman to pay $9,250 for each song she shared online. EFF says copyright attorneys already lining up to help if there's an appeal.
October 4, 2007