Appeals court holds Grokster not liable
A U.S. federal appeals court ruled in favor of peer-to-peer (P-to-P) software makers Thursday, stating that the companies behind the Grokster and Morpheus services are not liable for copyright infringement due to the actions of their users.
A three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously backed a lower court ruling that Grokster Ltd., Streamcast Networks Inc., which makes the Morpheus service, and Musiccity.Com Inc. are not responsible for users who illegally copy or share content such as music and movies over their services.
"The peer-to-peer file-sharing technology at issue is not simply a tool engineered to get around" previous rulings against the Napster file-sharing service, wrote Judge Sidney R. Thomas in a ruling for the panel. "The technology has numerous other uses, significantly reducing the distribution costs of public domain and permissively shared art and speech, as well as reducing the centralized control of that distribution."
The ruling is a further setback for the plaintiffs, including the Motion Picture Association of America Inc. (MPAA), the National Music Publisher's Association of America and the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), which were appealing an April 2003 ruling by U.S. District Court Judge Stephen Wilson.
The MPAA and RIAA both said in separate statements that they are reviewing the next legal steps to take, and are widely expected to appeal the ruling to either the full 9th Circuit Court or the U.S. Supreme Court.
Groups supporting the P-to-P networks, such as Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and Public Knowledge hailed the decision.
"This is a victory for innovators of all stripes," said EFF Senior Intellectual Property Attorney Fred von Lohmann in a statement from the group, which had argued on behalf of Streamcast. "The court's ruling makes it clear that innovators need not beg permission from record labels and Hollywood before they deploy exciting new technologies."
Though the ruling was not a surprising one, it will carry a lot of weight and make it difficult for representatives of the entertainment industry to successfully sue companies running decentralized P-to-P networks, said Evan Cox, an intellectual property attorney at the San Francisco office of Covington & Burling, who followed the case closely.
In its first incarnation, Napster allowed data to flow through servers that it operated, and in 2001 courts ruled that practice did directly infringe on the rights of copyright holders. However, the technology has since evolved, and companies such as Grokster and Streamcast use networks that Thomas's ruling recognized as "truly decentralized." As a result, P-to-P companies would have no direct knowledge of individual file transfers, making them unable to directly stop the transfer of content, legal or otherwise, the court said.
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