RIAA to halt lawsuits, cozy up to ISPs instead

Fri Dec 19, 2008 10:18AM EST

See Comments (213)

At last, the music industry admits what we've known for years: That filing music-swapping lawsuits against teenagers, little old ladies, and corpses is a fool's errand (not to mention an expensive headache for the defendants). But don't worry—the RIAA has something new up its sleeves.

The new strategy (as reported by the Wall Street Journal): If the music industry finds out that you're swapping music files online, it'll send an e-mail to your ISP (agreements have already hashed out agreements with "some" unnamed service providers, apparently), which will in turn forward the message to you—probably with a little "P.S." asking you to stop. [Update: CNET has a copy of the RIAA's form letter to ISPs.]

If you don't stop, well ... your service provider probably won't sue you, but it might slow down your broadband connection, or cut off your service altogether.

So, why has the RIAA changed the play? Well, maybe it's been looking at reports like this one from the NPD Group, which shows that U.S. CD sales continue to slide, while the number of tunes shared via P2P sites continues to increase, despite all the litigation.

And then there's the disastrous headlines, as the RIAA relentlessly tracked down and sued tens of thousands of alleged music pirates. Among them: Kids, octogenarians, and a few dead people.

Reaction to the news? Mixed. Engadget's headline reads (in part): "RIAA finds its soul," with the story noting that while the RIAA reserves the right to go after "heavy uploaders or repeat offenders ... it appears that single mothers are in the clear."

All Things Digital has a darker outlook, speculating that ISPs—which "care about the cost of moving lots of data around … [and] want to make money by selling, renting, or just offering up Hollywood's movies and TV shows to subscribers"—might be more than content to "cut off file-sharers … [or] simply [charge] heavy file-sharers a lot of money."

And here's another possibility, courtesy of yours truly: Say your ISP catches you sharing tunes via P2P. No problem—download away! But when you get your next cable bill, you'll find the itemized songs added to your monthly charge, kind of like an iTunes bill.

Call it the "if you can't beat 'em, join 'em" strategy.

P.S. Make no mistake—just because the RIAA has stopped filing new music-swapping lawsuits doesn't mean that it's dropped the existing ones, according to the Journal. Quite the contrary.

Related:
Music Industry to Abandon Mass Suits [Wall Street Journal]

Comments on RIAA to halt lawsuits, cozy up to ISPs instead

Post a Comment

Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.

  • 6 Posted by increasinginterest on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:23PM EDT Report Abuse

    So say I go to Starbucks (or any one of the other countless FREE wireless internet providers around any city) and download/share music. Who would they go after? Sounds like an impossible thing to police to me. Music is now FREE and multi million dollar rock artists/ music companies will be a thing of the past. True artists will continue to make good music.

  • 7 Posted by movietext on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:27PM EDT Report Abuse

    "True artists will continue to make good music?" And do what for food and shelter?

  • 8 Posted by potzynj on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:17PM EDT Report Abuse

    I suppose everybody besides me knows what RIAA is? Might be good in an article which is all about the RIAA to tell what those letters stand for in the first paragraph?

  • 9 Posted by lucky_lefty03 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 6:59PM EDT Report Abuse

    The people who believe that your internet provider will cut your internet because you d/l music are stupid. Do not fall for the stupid scare tactic. The internet service providers are not going to cut off internet just to loose money. That is what this whole thing is about. MONEY!!!!

  • 10 Posted by deathspawn10 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:39PM EDT Report Abuse

    I find this funny when are they gona start caring about people videotaping movies and putting them on the web. people will find a way around this they always do.

  • 11 Posted by rb_tech on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:31PM EDT Report Abuse

    They still don't get it. All legal music downloads are LESS than CD quality but charged the same or even more. If you sell a CD for $10 with 10 songs on it then each song should be a $1 for CD quality. Right now you get a compressed song that is lucky to be a third of CD quality. Oh they will tell you it is engineered to trick your ears into hearing CD quality but it is a lie. Most people know it and that is why online music is treated like cassette swapping.

  • 12 Posted by increasinginterest on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:23PM EDT Report Abuse

    "True artists will continue to make good music?" And do what for food and shelter? The same thing that true underground artists have always been doing all along, getting a day job. People will always have a natural desire to have a creative outlet and will continue to make art of all sorts regardless of financial incentive.

  • 13 Posted by hernndz@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:18PM EDT Report Abuse

    i find this very dumb, first because you might cutt everybodys internet obviously everybodie downloads bootleg music second technology is toooo advance now in days, and thye would find many other ways to download free music and good quality, just like the movies, ........ im innocent. haha.=D

  • 14 Posted by alan_r_cam on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:49PM EDT Report Abuse

    As already noted, you can buy CDs and share them with your friends. Or borrow them from a library. As for itemised bills based on P2P, look for (or create) zip files with innocuous names. Does your ISP really want to open every torrent called "excel_macros_01.zip" to see if it really holds a dozen Barry Manilow tunes?

  • 15 Posted by jseyfield on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:43PM EDT Report Abuse

    You know, if you're going to share/steal music fine, but could ya show some humility? Some of you act like it's your god given right. @pjuice2000: By that same logic everyone should feel free shoplift, because the police can't lock up the entire population right?

  • 16 Posted by kodak19002000 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:52PM EDT Report Abuse

    Listen up RIAA, you finally get it fool. Instead of paying all those legal fees your stupid ass could have given it to research to develop a new media to put your music on to make it impossible to download.

  • 17 Posted by oobersli on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:45PM EDT Report Abuse

    I don't see how its going to stop torrents. Its just a simple matter of putting a collection of songs in a single file and maybe hiding other files with them. An ISP wll have a hard time determining these from legit downloads. This idea is a bunch of fail from an industry that is still behind the times in technology and don't think their wallets are padded enough.

  • 18 Posted by thermatoga on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:05PM EDT Report Abuse

    Ok here's a novel idea. Stop breaking the law! I didn't agree with the music industry suing everyone like a giant over-mind controlling all musical ideas but I certainly don't agree with spreading the love without paying the artists for it. You like the music, show some respect and pay the artist for it. Yes, the corporation takes its cut but it is a business that is what they do. Sad that I'm in the minority on this post. Don't complain about society if you are part of the problem...

  • 19 Posted by spire8901 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:36PM EDT Report Abuse

    The internet is an almost limitless natural resource. ISP... just a gateway, there are ways around them. RIAA needs to face facts, technology killed them, happened before, and it will happen again. Now is the time of the "radio boy's" (keeline.com/Chapman/) and pirates to live again (look it up). The commercialization will eventually win out, but its going to take time and probably a technology that hasnt been created yet to do so. The internet is the wildwest, and RIAA is an indian.

  • 20 Posted by montenico24@ameritech.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:25PM EDT Report Abuse

    I swear a story like this comes out every year around Christmas about if you download something very bad is going to happen. When people were getting sued people did'nt stop downloading, you think, if actually possible, people will stop because you threaten to cancel thier Internet. LMAO. Good Luck with that.

  • 21 Posted by fosluvr on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:01PM EDT Report Abuse

    If a Phd scientist invents a life-saving cancer drug,they get to profit from it for ten years,then a generic version can be made and the scientist gets nothing after that....a ten year run.By contrast,a pop-culture peon should be good for about ten seconds....I live in canada and will ALWAYS download files (music,movies and anything else of insignificance)as much as i feel like,free of charge,

  • 22 Posted by spire8901 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:36PM EDT Report Abuse

    additionally, how are the artist going to make there money? Well, touring for starters, commercial routes such as movie's, commercials, sponserships, there are tons of ways for artist to make money from there musics. Put on a good show and the money comes, worked for the church, still works today.

  • 23 Posted by ghettogal12k on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:08PM EDT Report Abuse

    THEY NEED TO GET A LIFE TIMESS ARE HARD AND THEY NEED TO UNDERSTAND THAT JOBS ARE BEING LOST IN THER MILLION DOLLAR HOMES AND KISS MY HAPPY AZZ!!!.....GUESS WHAT IF U SLOW MY ----- DOWN THERES A MCDONALDS WITH FREE FAST AS heck WIFI THATS OPEN 24-7 3MIN AWAY FROM MY HOUSE AND I WILL BE MORE THAN HAPPY TO GO THERE!!!!!I DOWNLOAD ALL THE TIME!!!..... HOW ABOUT YOU GO CHOCK YA COCK IN YA BIG HOUSE AND GIVES US A BREAK CUZ I WILL NOT READ MY lips never again buy a cd,dvd,or music for my ipod or a cd I WILL DOWNLAD IT SO STICK THAT IN YA PIPE AND SMOKE ON IT!!!!OR ROOL IT UP HOWEVER U WANNA DO IT!!!!!!

  • 24 Posted by ghettogal12k on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:08PM EDT Report Abuse

    THEY NEED TO GET A LIFE TIMESS ARE HARD AND THEY NEED TO UNDERSTAND THAT JOBS ARE BEING LOST IN THER MILLION DOLLAR HOMES AND KISS MY HAPPY AZZ!!!.....GUESS WHAT IF U SLOW MY ----- DOWN THERES A MCDONALDS WITH FREE FAST AS heck WIFI THATS OPEN 24-7 3MIN AWAY FROM MY HOUSE AND I WILL BE MORE THAN HAPPY TO GO THERE!!!!!I DOWNLOAD ALL THE TIME!!!..... HOW ABOUT YOU GO CHOCK YA COCK IN YA BIG HOUSE AND GIVES US A BREAK CUZ I WILL NOT READ MY lips never again buy a cd,dvd,or music for my ipod or a cd I WILL DOWNLAD IT SO STICK THAT IN YA PIPE AND SMOKE ON IT!!!!OR ROOL IT UP HOWEVER U WANNA DO IT!!!!!!

  • 25 Posted by ghettogal12k on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:08PM EDT Report Abuse

    THEY NEED TO GET A LIFE TIMESS ARE HARD AND THEY NEED TO UNDERSTAND THAT JOBS ARE BEING LOST IN THER MILLION DOLLAR HOMES AND KISS MY HAPPY AZZ!!!.....GUESS WHAT IF U SLOW MY ----- DOWN THERES A MCDONALDS WITH FREE FAST AS heck WIFI THATS OPEN 24-7 3MIN AWAY FROM MY HOUSE AND I WILL BE MORE THAN HAPPY TO GO THERE!!!!!I DOWNLOAD ALL THE TIME!!!..... HOW ABOUT YOU GO CHOCK YA COCK IN YA BIG HOUSE AND GIVES US A BREAK CUZ I WILL NOT READ MY lips never again buy a cd,dvd,or music for my ipod or a cd I WILL DOWNLAD IT SO STICK THAT IN YA PIPE AND SMOKE ON IT!!!!OR ROOL IT UP HOWEVER U WANNA DO IT!!!!!!

Post a Comment


My Tech

Please enable your browser's cookies to activate the My Tech column.

Also on Yahoo! Tech

Computers Home Office Wi-Fi & Networking Phones & PDAs Cameras & Camcorders TV & Home Theater Portable Audio
 

Question and Answer content at Yahoo! Tech is written by Yahoo! users at Yahoo! Answers. Yahoo! does not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any Yahoo! Answers content. For more information, read the Full Disclaimer.

Opinions expressed by the Advisors are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of Yahoo! Inc. Yahoo! receives no compensation from any manufacturer or distributor nor does it compensate any Advisor for the coverage of any product or service in any Advisor's content.