CARVIEW |
File Sharing
Tired of the entertainment industry treating you like a criminal for wanting to share music and movies online? We are too -- EFF is fighting for a constructive solution that gets artists paid while making file sharing legal.
The RIAA's and MPAA's irrational war on P2P is not generating a single penny for artists. In fact, despite lawsuits against many P2P providers and over 20,000 music and movie fans, file sharing is more popular than ever.
Yet the lawsuits have forced ordinary Americans to pay thousands of dollars to music and movie industry lawyers, while many innocent individuals have been caught in the crossfire. What's more, the entertainment industry has threatened innovation in P2P systems and many other tools that help you get more from your media.
These lawsuits have no end in sight, and it could get even worse -- the industry has pushed Congress to ratchet up civil and criminal sanctions for file sharing and to restrict innovation.
You can help put a stop to this misguided campaign. Already, many artists are turning against the lawsuits, and over 60 million people in the United States have used file sharing -- more than the number of people who voted for our current President. Together, we can forge a better way forward.
Sign our petition opposing the lawsuits, and donate to support our efforts.
Learn more about how EFF has fought to end the war on P2P
- EFF has proposed ways for artists to get paid without fans getting sued.
- EFF helped establish legal protections for privacy online, including the privacy of P2P users.
- EFF has assisted Internet users mistakenly caught in the industry's dragnet.
- EFF has helped P2P users sued by the RIAA and MPAA find legal counsel.
- EFF took MGM v. Grokster to the Supreme Court and defended the right of innovators to build new technologies without begging Hollywood's permission first.
- EFF helped beat back the INDUCE Act, which threatened innovation and P2P systems.
- EFF debunked Audible Magic's P2P filtering solution.
- EFF pushed for sensible solutions for college campuses concerned with file sharing.
- EFF started a petition to Congress opposing the RIAA lawsuits.
- EFF and its members helped defeat the Berman "P2P Vigilantism" Bill in 2002.
File Sharing Cases
- Interscope v. Leadbetter
- BUMA_v_Kazaa
- Lava v. Amurao
- Atlantic v. Howell
- Capitol v. ThomasLast 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.
- RIAA v. The People
- Napster Cases Archive
- Fonovisa v. Alvarez
In The News
- HOUSTON CHRONICLE | May 09, 2008 Studios Sue Ohio Residents Over Movie Distribution
- MEDIAPOST | May 12, 2008 Anti-Piracy Plans Land With Thud
- FMQB | April 30, 2008 Court Rejects RIAA Claim In Lawsuit
- BUSINESS WEEK | April 24, 2008 Does She Look Like a Music Pirate?
- WIRED NEWS | April 11, 2008 Music Label's Copyright Argument is Rubbish
- BOSTON GLOBE | April 04, 2008 Music Downloaders Win Round in Court
Other Resources
- A Better Way Forward: Voluntary Collective Licensing of Music File Sharing
- Making P2P Legal
- Making P2P Pay Artists
- The Berman P2P Bill: Vigilantism Unbound
- How To Not Get Sued for File Sharing
- Author, Consumer, and Computer Owner Protection and Security (ACCOPS) Act of 2003
- User Privacy for ISPs and Accidental ISPs
- IAAL: What Peer-to-Peer Developers Need to Know about Copyright Law
- "RIAA v. The People: Two Years Later" (November 3, 2005)
- Overview of EFF's Efforts to Protect P2P
- Poster for "Let the Music Play" campaign
- Musician Disputes Industry's Stance on Music Sharing
- Misguided "Anti-Piracy" Bill Introduced in Congress
- File-sharing: It's music to our ears
- Janis Ian: "The Internet Debacle - An Alternative View"[janisian.com]
- Subpoena Database Query Tool (disabled)
Whitepapers
- 2006 How To Not Get Sued for File Sharing
- 2006 IAAL*: What Peer-to-Peer Developers Need to Know about Copyright Law
- 2005 When Push Comes to Shove: A Hype-Free Guide to Evaluating Technical Solutions to Copyright Infringement on Campus Networks
- 2003 Unsafe Harbors: Abusive DMCA Subpoenas and Takedown Demands
Deeplinks Posts
- May 16, 2008 Score Two for Defendants in the P2P Wars
- April 29, 2008 Big Victory in Atlantic v. Howell: Court Rejects RIAA "Making Available" Theory
- April 02, 2008 Making Available is Not Distribution, Says Court in London-Sire v. Doe
- April 01, 2008 Offering to Distribute = Distribution, says Court in Elektra v. Barker
- March 27, 2008 Comcast Reduces Discrimination, Plans To End It Altogether
- March 20, 2008 Monetizing File-Sharing: Collective Licensing Good, ISP Tax Bad
- February 29, 2008 EFF to FCC: "Reasonable Network Management" Requires Transparency
- February 25, 2008 RIAA File-Sharing Complaint Fails to Support Default Judgment
Press Releases
- June 27, 2005 Supreme Court Ruling Will Chill Technology Innovation
- June 27, 2005 MGM v. Grokster Decision Press Conference Today
- June 20, 2005 MGM v. Grokster Press Conference Following Supreme Court Decision
- June 09, 2005 Fighting Infringement on Campus Peer-to-Peer Networks
- March 30, 2005 Supreme Court Justices Grill Both Sides at Copyright Hearing
- March 17, 2005 Counting Down to Grokster with EFF
- February 25, 2005 March 1 Press Conference on Supreme Court File-Sharing Case
- January 20, 2005 Supreme Court Date Set for Grokster
Documents and Files
- Universities Should Resist Network Monitoring Demands[PDF, 101.75 KB]