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Category > Management Posted 30 Jan 2018 My Price 8.00

Recording Industry Association of America

RIAA Fights Music Piracy

The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) is the trade group that represents the U.S. recording industry. Its members create, manufacture, and distribute 85 percent of the legitimate sound recordings produced and sold in the United States.2 Since 2003, the RIAA has taken legal action against more than 40,000 people, mostly for copyright infringement for illegally sharing or downloading music via the Internet.3 Some of the lawsuits threatened fines of tens of thousands of dollars. Alleged violators who challenged the RIAA in court risked being assessed crippling fines; thus, most settled out of court. The RIAA justifies its strong antipiracy efforts as a means of both protecting the ability of the recording industry to invest in new artists and new music, and giving legitimate online music sharing services a chance to be successful.4 In addition, it claims that each year the recording industry loses about $5 billion and retailers lose about $1 billion worldwide from music piracy.5 (Other sources cite different amounts, but still in the range of billions of dollars per year). According to the RIAA: “Just as we must hold accountable the businesses that encourage theft, [the] individuals who engage in illegal downloading must also know that there are consequences to their actions. If you violate the law and steal from record companies, musicians, songwriters, and everyone else involved in making music, you can be held accountable.”6 In December 2008, the RIAA announced it was dropping its aggressive and highly controversial strategy of sending out pre-litigation letters asking alleged music pirates to stop their copyright infringement and pay a certain dollar amount or go to court. The RIAA is switching to a graduated response program:

• The RIAA will alert participating Internet service providers to what it believes to be illegal downloading activities by ISP customers.

• The ISP will either forward RIAA copyright infringement notices to its subscribers or notify its customers about the notices and ask them to cease and desist.

• The ISP can take a series of escalating sanctions against repeat offenders, ranging from slowing down the subscriber’s network speed to terminating service.

• The RIAA reserves the right to sue flagrant copyright offenders.7

Questions to Consider

1. Is the RIAA’s strong stand on copyright infringement helping or hurting the music recording industry?

2. Could an ISP’s implementation and enforcement of the RIAA’s multitier strategy have a negative impact on the ISP?

 

 

Answers

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Status NEW Posted 30 Jan 2018 10:01 PM My Price 8.00

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