Cases related to File Sharing
Capitol v. Thomas
Last October, Jammie Thomas was found liable for copyright infringement for file sharing, and hit with a $222,000 judgment. Thomas' case was the first file sharing lawsuit to reach a jury verdict.
On May 15, 2008, Judge Michael Davis requested briefing on whether Thomas should receive a new trial. The court said it was concerned that it might have made a mistake by instructing the jury that Thomas could be found liable if she simply made copyrighted songs available in a shared folder. There's good reason for this concern — as EFF noted at the time, and several courts have since affirmed, "making available" is not a cause of action under copyright law. EFF applauds the court's willingness to revisit this crucial question and weighed in as amicus in June of 2008.
Atlantic v. Howell
EFF filed an amicus brief in Atlantic v. Howell, an Arizona lawsuit brought as part of the RIAA's national campaign against individuals for file-sharing. Although the case also received attention over the issue of whether CD ripping is legal, the main event in the case was about something different: can the RIAA sue people for attempted copyright infringement?
EFF's brief says no, as have several courts. The district court agreed on April 29, 2008, in an order denying the recording industry's motion for summary judgment on the "making available" distribution issue.
In August 2008, the record industry plaintiffs prevailed against Mr. Howell based on their allegations that Mr. Howell destroyed necessary evidence before trial.
Lava v. Amurao
EFF defended a target of a recording industry lawsuit, filing a brief in a New York district court urging the judge to allow the man to fight back with counterclaims of his own.
The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) has already moved to dismiss copyright infringement claims against Rolando Amurao. But Amurao alleges that the RIAA intended to harass him, and that their case is meritless. He has countersued for a declaration of non-infringement and a finding of RIAA copyright misuse. In its amicus brief, EFF argues that giving Amurao his day in court increases RIAA accountability in the industry's broad lawsuit campaign against file-sharing.
The RIAA has sued thousands of individuals for allegedly sharing music over the Internet since its campaign began in 2003. But sloppy investigative methods have left innocent people entangled in expensive and draining legal proceedings. When the RIAA threatens someone with a lawsuit, it offers to settle the case for a carefully chosen sum that is smaller than the legal fees required to fight the accusations. Faced with this choice, some innocent people settle simply because it's the most affordable option. However, a few individuals like Amurao have decided to battle the RIAA in court. In one Oklahoma case, EFF provided amicus support to an innocent target of a file-sharing lawsuit who is fighting to have the RIAA reimburse her attorneys' fees.
- Press Release: Recording Industry Target Deserves Day in Court April 10, 2007
Interscope v. Leadbetter
The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) should pay for a single mom's two-year legal ordeal fighting a baseless file-sharing lawsuit, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) told Washington state court in an amicus brief filed July 5, 2007.
- Press Release: RIAA Should Pay for Single Mom's Two-Year Ordeal July 6, 2007
- EFF Amicus Brief in Support of Defendant Leadbetter's Motion for Attorneys Fees July 5, 2007
BUMA_v_Kazaa
Directory of information on Netherlands entertainment industry organizations' suit against Kazaa (a P2P software company) for the Dutch equivalent of contributory copyright infringement.
RIAA v. The People
On September 8, 2003, the recording industry sued 261 American music fans for sharing songs on peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing networks, kicking off an unprecedented legal campaign against its own customers. The recording industry has now filed, settled, or threatened, legal actions against well over 20,000 individuals, and there is no end in sight. While the strategy of forcing ordinary music fans to pay thousands of dollars that they do not have to settle RIAA-member lawsuits is itself troubling, many innocent individuals are also being caught in the crossfire.
Along with defending P2P software developers and their right to innovate, EFF has been fighting for a better way forward that gets artists paid without fans getting sued, which you can find more about on our Let the Music Play campaign page. Below, we've provided a collection of resources that may be useful to music fans caught up in the RIAA lawsuit campaign and the lawyers who defend them. You can also learn more about how EFF has helped music fans stand up to the RIAA's overreaching claims in court. If you have been sued or need actual legal advice, consider contacting EFF or www.subpoenadefense.org -- we may be able to refer you to a lawyer or provide other assistance.
- RIAA v. the People: Four Years Later report August, 2007
- EFF editorial about the file sharing crackdown on college campuses June 6, 2007
General Resources and Memos Related to P2P User Lawsuits
- How to Not Get Sued for File Sharing
- RIAA v. the Students: An FAQ for "Pre-Lawsuit" Letters Sent to College Students (March 2007)
- How the RIAA Litigation Process Works [off-site]
- Directory of Lawyers Defending RIAA Lawsuits [off-site]
- Parental Liability for Copyright Infringement by Minor Children (November 1, 2005)
- Typical Claims and Counterclaims in Peer to Peer Litigation
- Memo Re Discharge of Copyright Judgments in Bankruptcy
Sample RIAA Documents
- Form of Doe Settlement Agreement - The document that Does targeted by the RIAA are being asked to sign.
- Sample Recording Industry Letter Threatening to file a lawsuit
- Sample Recording Industry Complaint Against an Individual
Prominent EFF Work
EFF Helps Innocent Defendants Fight Back
Debbie Foster, a single mom who was improperly sued by the RIAA back in 2004 for file sharing, not only got the lawsuit dismissed but also won back her attorneys' fees. The court's decision is one of the first in the country to award fees to a defendant in an RIAA case over music sharing on the Internet. EFF and several other groups filed an amicus brief supporting Ms Foster's motion.
Learn more: Capitol v. Foster
Related cases:
EFF Fights to Dismiss Distribution Claim
The RIAA has been making the erroneous argument that P2P users violate copyright holders' distribution right. While P2P users might violate other rights, this claim would twist the Copyright Act if accepted by courts and create dangerous consequences far beyond file sharing. EFF has filed amicus briefs in several cases on this point.
Learn more: "Transmission + Reproduction != Distribution" February 27, 2006
Related cases:
- Capitol v. Thomas
- Atlantic v. Howell
- Elektra v. Dennis
- Fonovisa v. Alvarez
- Elektra v. Barker
- London-Sire v. Doe 1 (aka Arista v. Does 1-21)
EFF Fights to Protect Anonymity
The RIAA has been cutting constitutional corners in order to get subpoenas to force universities and ISPs to identify suspected file sharers. Not only is this unfair to the defendants, but it also threatens to create a dangerous precedent that copyright claims are somehow exempt from the First Amendment protections that apply to anonymous speech online. EFF has been filing briefs on this issue since the beginning the RIAA legal campaign.
Related Cases:
» Archive of cases directly against music fans
Napster Cases Archive
Directory of info on the legal disputes surrounding the Napster peer-to-peer (P2P) file-sharing service (principally used for trading MP3 music files).
MGM v. Grokster
EFF defended StreamCast Networks, the company behind the Morpheus peer-to-peer (P2P) file-sharing software, in an important case decided by the Supreme Court of the United States on June 23, 2005. Though the Court set aside the Ninth Circuit's ruling in favor of Streamcast, it also declined giving Hollywood what it truly wanted—a veto over technological innovation.
Elektra v. Dennis
This is one of the thousands of cases filed by RIAA member companies against individuals for P2P file sharing. EFF filed an amicus brief on behalf of the defendant asking the court to reject the recording industry's claims that file sharing infringes the distribution right. (According to the recording industry, simply "making available" a file on a P2P network infringes the distribution right.)
EFF's brief in this case argues that a copyright owner's distribution right only reaches material objects -- in other words, mere transmissions never infringe the distribution right.
Before the court was able to rule, the recording industry voluntarily dismissed the case, explaining that they had mistakenly sued Mr. Dennis for activities by his daughter.

