The
Attorney
General of Oregon State has blocked attempts by the
Recording
Industry Association of America (RIAA) to spy on university students.
The RIAA had issued subpoenas against 17 students at the University of
Oregon, claiming that they had downloaded music from the internet and violated
copyright.
Documents filed in the US District Court in Eugene by the Attorney General
described the subpoenas as "overbroad and burdensome".
"We do not think the university can be compelled to produce investigative
work for the recording industry," Deputy State Attorney General Pete Shepherd
told
Associated
Press.
Court documents issued by the Attorney General's office said: "The
university's efforts thus far have been met by accusations that it is
obstructing the process and even conspiring with law breakers. Those accusations
are not warranted.
"The record in this case suggests that the larger issue may not be whether
students are sharing copyrighted music, but whether investigative and litigation
strategies are appropriate."
The RIAA has implemented a strategy of tracking illegal downloads to
university campus networks and asking for offenders to be identified.
The tenth wave of this initiative was started on 15 November when the RIAA
sent 417 pre-litigation settlement letters to 16 universities, including
Columbia, Princeton and Yale.
The RIAA encourages offenders to resolve the copyright infringement claims on
its dedicated
P2P
Lawsuits website "at a discounted rate before a formal lawsuit is filed".
Oregon's move is a blow for the RIAA, which has also been hit by rumours this
week that EMI
wants to scale back its contribution to the organisation.
An unnamed source at EMI told
Reuters
that the music label is looking "substantially" to reduce its funding of trade
groups, including the RIAA.
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