RIAA sued by Victim

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Interesting article about the illegal stuff the RIAA are alledged to have done to get file sharers details...

Source: http://www.theinquirer.net/default.aspx?article=26641

RIAA sued by victim
Hackers and racketeers
By Nick Farrell: Monday 03 October 2005, 06:21


A WOMAN who was sued by the Recording Industry of America for file-sharing has countersued the outfit for hacking.

Tanya Andersen, a 41-year old disabled single mother living in Oregon, has countersued the RIAA for Oregon RICO violations, fraud, invasion of privacy, abuse of process, electronic trespass, violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, negligent misrepresentation. She is claiming hurt feelings and "outrage", and deceptive business practices.

According to court documents here, Anderson said the record industry has been abusing the law courts and waged a public relations and public threat campaign targeting file sharing.

She claims that the RIAA hired an outfit called MediaSentry to invade private home computers and collect personal information. Based on private information allegedly extracted from these personal home computers, the record companies have reportedly filed lawsuits against more than 13,500 anonymous "John Does".

She claims the record companies provide the personal information to Settlement Support Center, which engages in outlawed and deceptive debt collection and other illegal conduct to extract money from the people allegedly identified from the secret lawsuits.

She said that she has never downloaded or shared music online. She has not infringed on any of plaintiffs’ alleged copyrighted interest. However, she has been a victim of the record companies’ public threat campaign.

The RIAA falsely claimed that Andersen had been an "unnamed" defendant who was being sued in federal court in the District of Columbia. She was never named in that lawsuit and never received service of a summons and complaint, she said.

When Andersen contacted Settlement Support Center, she was advised that her personal home computer had been secretly entered by the record companies’ agents, MediaSentry.

Apparently she had been up at 4:24am downloading "gangster rap" music under the login name “[email protected].” Andersen does not like "gangster rap", does not recognise the name "gotenkito", is not awake at 4:24 a.m. and has never downloaded music.

The Settlement Support Center threatened that if Andersen did not immediately pay them, the record companies would bring an expensive and disruptive federal lawsuit using her name and they would get a judgment for hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Looks like this one will run for a while. µ
 
I don't understand how you can sue someone who's name you don't know. Surely, by extension, you don't know who exactly you're suing? So i could take, for example, Gilly to court, even if I don't know his name, where he lives or anything?
 
Reezer said:
She claims that the RIAA hired an outfit called MediaSentry to invade private home computers and collect personal information.

Apparently she had been up at 4:24am downloading "gangster rap"

So this is the 50 times a night your pc is attacked, its been on bbc news all day :D
 
Here are 11 ways to stop getting sued by the RIAA


11. Track down and hire the A-Team.
10. Fake your own death or move to Sweden or Both.
9. Piece together whole songs from free ringtones.
8. Make the guy selling you the CDs sign a waiver saying that these "are for sure not pirated."
7. Donate £1 million to the political party in power.
6. Distract them by jingling your bright and shiny car keys.
5. Use the Jedi Mind Trick, "These are not the pirates you're looking for."
4. Play the erase card.
3. Only download from work and use a co-worker's PC.
2. Get the musicians to perform the music for you in person.
1. Only download songs that you yourself have written.
 
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