XM+MP3 Going to Trial 206
fistfullast33l writes "A federal judge has ruled that Music Companies can take XM Radio to trial over the XM+MP3 device that allows users to record songs off the Satellite Radio Company's network for playback later. The lawsuit, which was filed last year, asserts that XM is violating the Music publishers' sole distribution rights. From the article: 'XM has argued it is protected from infringement lawsuits by the Audio Home Recording Act of 1992, which permits individuals to record music off the radio for private use. The judge said she did not believe the company was protected in this instance by the act.'"
This is a case... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:This is a case... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:This is a case... (Score:5, Insightful)
The reason they are going after XM is because under the updated Home Audio Recording Act [wikipedia.org] they cannot go after an individual-
"No action may be brought under this title alleging infringement of copyright based on the manufacture, importation, or distribution of a digital audio recording device, a digital audio recording medium, an analog recording device, or an analog recording medium, or based on the noncommercial use by a consumer of such a device or medium for making digital musical recordings or analog musical recordings."
This, IMHO circumvents the "spirit" of the Home Audio Recording Act.
Re:This is a case... (Score:5, Informative)
It's like "it's legal for minors to possess, but not purchase, cigarettes."
If I have a right to record music, denying me any device that allows me to exercise that right denies me that right - and so having an act that protects that right is useless to begin with.
Re:This is a case... (Score:4, Interesting)
The reason the Judge said this case is different is because XM not only acts as a braodcaster of music, but also as a distributor. TiVo is different because a TiVo just records content, it does not determine what is broadcasted.
Will this make a difference in court? I don't know, I hope the case is thrown out though.
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Re:This is a case... (Score:4, Interesting)
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It might affect the ability of Cable/Satellite TV providers to provide DVR equipment and service as part of their subscription packages.
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This is what we've got here. The law supposedly protecting the copyright holders "distribution rights" is unenforceable (if one person posts it to the internet, everyone in the world can get it instantly), AND ethically dubious (I don't have the right to personal property anymore with regard to music?).
If we think these statements are
Protection (Score:5, Insightful)
If they're not protected, who is?
It isn't as if XM was stretching the rules to fit their case, this situation is exactly what the law is about: individuals recording music off of the radio.
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Neither are good examples. (Score:5, Interesting)
I think the assumption was that cassette recorders were inherently such a lossy, low-quality recording, that their "copy protection" was in the generation loss that would naturally occur if a person made a copy of a recorded tape. Within a few generations, it would become unlistenable, or at least severely degraded.
Now, that's not exactly a "second generation" block, but it seemed to suit the courts and the music industry fine.
As far as video, there they were more stringent. Depending on how old that VCR is, it probably has Macrovision, which is essentially a mandatory "analog DRM" (ARM?) system that causes the recorder's tracking to go haywire if it detects a copyrighted signal. It's admittedly not present on early VCRs, but most of them don't produce a particularly good recording (don't have HiFi sound, etc.) unless they're professional models, so it's not a big risk.
Not sure either of those cases are really good ones to be bringing up.
Re:Neither are good examples. (Score:4, Insightful)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrovision [wikipedia.org]
A quick Macrovision primer (Score:3, Informative)
Not true. Macrovision works (as I understand it) by making the auto-brightness-adjust of the VCR go nuts.
Pretty close. It's actually the record level, which affects all aspects of the video signal stored on the tape.
Magnetic tape recording devices need to set their record levels so that the tape comes as close as possible to being saturated. Too low, bad signal to noise ratio. Too high, distortion - clipping in audio, and "white clip" (a lack of contrast on bright objects) in video.
VHS uses the vertic
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Re:Protection (Score:4, Informative)
"Where do you get that from? The cassette recorder on my home stereo has no such feature neither does the VCR in the attic."
He's referring to the AHRA. He referenced it in his note; it's also in the writeup. Specifically he's referring to the AHRA's requirement that digital audio recording devices have serial copy management systems in place. He was pretty terse; he made the (obviously incorrect) assumption that readers are familiar with the AHRA.
At any rate, the devices you mention aren't likely defined as digital audio recording devices by the AHRA. While you're 100% correct that they don't have SCMS, it's not germane to the discussion.
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You can retrieve music from an iPod. Copy everything under iPod_Control/Music to an empty directory (make sure hidden/system files are visible). The files will have odd names, but if you change settings in iTunes so that (1) it'll manage the directory structure of your music and (2) you point it at an empty directory, you can then drag-and-drop the stuff copied from your iPod into iTunes and let it rename/sort the files based on t
Re:Protection (Score:5, Insightful)
In fact, XM's device is considerably more limited than recording with a tape recorder, as you can only retain the recording for a limited number of days, and you can't listen to recordings if your subscription lapses, as far as I'm aware. XM really bent over backwards to implement a device that would protect the recording industry's interests.
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Re:Protection (Score:5, Insightful)
you seem to be stuck on the fact that you can't record individual tracks and create your own playlists. you might also think that it matters the songs cannot be copied from or otherwise accessed by any means other than the playback unit. it all seems very logical but i think that you are missing some key music industry logic.
the device records MP3's from music broadcast on satellite radio. according to the music industry, all MP3's are stolen, including those that that are created for fair use and stored on a device that it is physically impossible to copy them from. er go, the machine encourages the theft of music and threatens the very fabric of civilization.
your argument breaks down because tape recorders record to tapes rather than destroying america with mp3's.
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I think this is a slightly different scenario.
In the case of radio broadcasting, the radio station did not give you the technology to make the recording. They just made the broadcast.
In this case, XM gave the consumer a device which could have the technology to grab any broadcast music directly from the receiver and stor
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Re:Protection (Score:4, Informative)
Well, from that very article, we find this paragraph
Which, if I read it correctly, a "device marketed primarily for making copies of music" (ie, a sattelite receiver with a record feature) might, in fact, be an infringing device because that is it's primary function. It also isn't a device whose primary function is recording of non-music.
As I read this, XM may be in deep doo doo here. The protection you reference isn't a blanket permission, but it has restrictions on it. XM may be running afoul of those restrictions.
Cheers
Re:Protection (Score:4, Interesting)
And wouldn't that apply to tivos, since most people get tivos from their cable company?
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Cable companies rent out cable boxes with DVR functionality, but I've not heard of one that rents out DVRs built around TiVo's software. Calling a cable-company DVR a TiVo is like calling a Ford Pinto a Porsche 911.
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You mean the way most walkman style devices, home stereos and portable "ghetto blaster" style radios have allowed you to record a radio station to tape for the last 30 years or so? Yeah it's not MP3. So what. It's trivial to make an MP3 from a tape. Hell if you have a line out on the
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The important distinction relevant to why this case was sent to trial rather than being barred by the AHRA from square one is not that the tape recorder is not MP3. The important distinction is that the tape recorder is not provided to you by the subscription-only radio station whose songs you are reco
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How about GE [wikipedia.org]? They own NBC and make VCRs [amazon.com].
Same thing, right?
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Yes, but here NBC is the distributor. XM is not a distributor, it's a radio broadcaster. Your analogy would be as if Sony made a CD Burner to record BMG CD's, which they do and people don't argue with. In this case, XM has no ownership over the music it's broadcasting.
I'm not saying that this is a legitimate argument, I'm just pointing out the differences.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomson_SA [wikipedia.org]
Judge is obligated to explain... (Score:3, Insightful)
The case might be made that by providing the means of making the copy, XM played a more active role in the process -- they were both distrbuting, and aiding the copying by the user. That might be why the judge indicated that ruling may not be applicable here.
That case CANNOT be made. Big conglomerates like Sony and GE both distribut
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No, because that's not the distinction on which this case was allowed to proceed to trial; its quite clear, in the AHRA, that digital and analog recording are protected identically.
The allegation that the judge found made it a triable question of fact whether the AHRA applied was the RIAA's allegation that
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That case CANNOT be made. Big conglomerates like Sony and GE both distribute media content (they own publishing, broadcasting, etc. businesses) and manufacture/sell recording devices that aid in the copying of content that is owned both by themselves and their competitors.
Sure it can. Just because they are prosecuting XM and not Sony, does not mean that Sony is legally in the clear. It could be that Sony has given enough money to politicians to avoid prosecution. Or that they may be next on the hit list.
Never underestimate the potential of selective enforcement and abuse of laws.
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The home user is. XM can't sell the ability to recieve(broadcast) + record signals. They can sell the ability to recieve, but not to record them at the same time. Only individuals are allowed to record, and apparantly only by using third party hardware.
In the world of licensing, they've paid for the rights to broadcast that music, the same as FM/AM stations. However, they're also selling the ability to record that same music, which isn't something they have license to
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People who would be sued for infringement either for recording off the air or for simply manufacturing or distributing a recording device.
XM here isn't in the same position as an independent equipment manufacturer, nor of a usual broadcaster.
I don't think its at all clear that they fall within protected categories in the AHRA, at 17 USC 1008:
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I know my question isn't about radio, but I think it's related ... I am a Comcast cable TV subscriber, and I have the DVR that came with the service. The function of the DVR is to record shows off the cable ser
Re:Protection (Score:5, Informative)
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I was interested in the service when it first came out, but the restricted items in the contract let me know I didn't want to pay that much for that little.
I think it's funny that they have so many restrictions, but as a non-subscriber, I can find things like the Howard Stern show on Bit Torrent. I grabbed one show just to see what the fuss was about. I didn't care for the language. Call me a pirate. There is no way
OOPS! (Score:2)
I meant to paste:
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Trying again to paste...
Having one of the devices in question, I can say that it definitively does have copy protection.
Hopefully this time it did paste..
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Link? The Christmas tree thing sounds more interesting than this discussion.
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Scope of Civil Court questions (Score:2)
-Rick
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Amendment VII
In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise reexamined in any court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.
Mod Parent Up (Score:2)
-Rick
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-uso.
War of attrition (Score:2, Interesting)
Sad really.
This will affect everything (Score:2, Insightful)
I sincerely hope this makes it's way to the supreme court and then they get smacked down and told to STFU.
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Possibly. XM isn't situated exactly like a cable company; its something of a combination of a set of TV stations and a cable company. Whether any precendent this case sets would be applicable against a cable company is less than clear in advance. But it could be, at least.
Probably not. Tivo and MythTV are both distributed independently of cabl
Tape recorders?? (Score:3, Insightful)
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Every time a new recording format comes out, the movie and music industries try to stop fair use from applying to it using various idiotic arguments. This case is no different.
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Sony IS the RIAA. They would be suing themselves in effect.
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frequencies. XM is different in two ways: first, it is a paid service and a distributor. TiVo is a paid service, but just a recorder, DVR is the same. XM also does not opera
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They won't, because those don't get Songs exclusively from the Sony subscription radio network.
That's the key difference from the normal case protected by the AHRA that the RIAA alleged and that the judge here found justified sending the case to trial.
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Shoot this foot (Score:3, Interesting)
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Even if timeshifting is the "killer app" that makes the difference between survival and death for satellite radio, an unfavorable decision for XM here won't kill satellite radio. It may force it, however, to find a way to be more "open" so that either account ID information or perhaps a receiver module that can plug into third party hardware that provides various functionality (i
The MP3 acronym terrifies Luddites (Score:2)
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This is just a negotiating tactic (Score:5, Informative)
They're reasoning is that music is the biggest draw for XM listeners. So if XM can afford to pay Jimmie Johnson a million a year for one radio show, then the music cartel deserves at least 60 times that much (for sixty channels of music). But currently, the muisc mafia is locked into a ten year contract for a total of 60 million dollars.
This was all explained in a letter to XM subscribers a couple of months ago.
Do you mean to tell me... (Score:3, Funny)
Someone actually screwed the RIAA for once?
Wow. I thought the RIAA would be able to recognize such an inequitable and one-sided deal...
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According to Wikipedia... (Score:5, Informative)
From The U.S. Copyright Office [copyright.gov]:
It looks like this is saying that you can't sue the makers of any recording device based no the noncommercial use of an infringing consumer. (Not it doesn't stop them from suing the consumer).
I may be missing something... any ideas?
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1008. Prohibition on certain infringement actions alleging infringement of copyright , or or based on the noncommercial use by a consumer of such a device.
IOW: RIAA is screwed or the judge is bought (just like politicians and laws...)
IANAL but I play one here
Re:According to Wikipedia... (Score:4, Informative)
First, it does stop you from suing the consumer, which was rather the point of the media tax and the AHRA in the first place.
Second, the RIAA's claim is that XM isn't being sued for manufacturing the equipment, they are being sued for illegal "distribution" of copyrighted content because the combination of equipment and service they provide makes them a distributor, not merely a broadcaster, and they've only paid for a license to broadcast.
If it succeeds, the RIAA probably won't have struck a lasting blow against recording satellite-broadcast music, but may strike an unintentional blow against integration of content delivery services with recording services and hardware, which might indirectly promote interoperability and open standards.
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Normal broadcasting circumstances.
No, broadcasting is ephemeral, distribution is fixed.
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Broadcasting to a TIVO is broadcasting, not distribution. Broadcasting to a TV antenna plugged into a VCR recording it is broadcasting, not distribution. Both are fixed, not ephemeral.
We should look back to the Copyright Act of 1976 (Score:3, Informative)
Basically, the amendment says that digital recording devices must abide by a Serial Copy management System Basically an SCMS will allow you to make as many first generation copies of the original source but this copy will not allow copies to be made from it. (No second generation.)
Maybe the judge sees that this XM+MP3 does not have this copy-bit protection and will allow the lawsuit to continue. I didn't see anymore information in the TFA to tell why she ruled. But if XM+MP3 can show that it only allows for first generation copying only, then there should be no case.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serial_Copy_Managemen t_System [wikipedia.org].
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1. Is the device primarily marketed as a means to record digital audio? Sounds like it.
2. Are they paying the royalty fees associated with such devices? Essentially a tax. Not sure.
3. Does the device implement the SCMS (serial copyright management system to prevent copying beyond the first duplication? Probably not if
But does it matter if in MP3 (w/ reguards to SCMS) (Score:3, Informative)
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For what its worth, the XM recorder I have makes this requirement moot. You can not copy the content off the device. They have a segemented memory partition that keeps the recordings away from your PC. Its certainly possible that someone could debug the hardware and find a way to the content, but out of the box there is no way to cop
Re:We should look back to the Copyright Act of 197 (Score:2)
I guess it doesn't matter that MP3 does not provide a perfect digital copy of the master recording and/or the commercially available CDs/DVDA/SACD? In fact, the MP3s obtained from satellite radio are generally inferior to anything circulating over the internet via bittorrent/kazaa/what-have-you.
I would submit that while technicalities over being copyright infringement or not can be debated, it should not cause nearly the stir that DAT did, as it results in a much inferior product that does not stand up in
One question for the recording industry: (Score:3, Interesting)
Wrong Arguement - Prior art exists. (Score:2)
They took the wrong arguement. The device in question has full DRM protection. It is not a way to record and keep XM songs.
They need to look at the Rio music player for an example that already has been in the court and prevailed. The XM device is
Re:I am not a lawyer, but.. (Score:5, Informative)
The statement was given in a hearing about whether or not this case will go to trial. Both sides gave an argument, and the judge decided that the RIAA's argument was compelling enough to move to a full trial. This type of opinion is normal in a ruling, be it a hearing or trial.
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Well it looks as the RIAA got one of the best judges that money can buy.
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The case "began" as soon as it was filed, this ruling is not before the case began. Judges often are called upon to make legal rulings before a case proceeds to trial, as here, which would include determining whether or not, on the facts alleged, the entire cause of action is prohibited by a statute and therefore the case must be thrown out.
Now, admittedly, the summary would have been more accurate if it said "The judge held that, assu
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That would be nice. My favorite music station is Radio Paradise, [radioparadise.com] a listener-supported station out of Paradise California. It is my great pleasure to support them for all the enjoyment I get from listening to commercial-free music at work and at home. They are also responsible for the majority of my music purchases (hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars per year), which makes things like the PERRORM Act [slashdot.org] particularly offensive.
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From the XM music station's studio to the place where the recorded music is stored in fixed form on the XM provided recorder.
Now, its important to remember here that the judge's ruling does not mean that, in consideration of all the facts, the AHRA does not apply. It means that viewing all the contested facts in the light most favorable to the RIAA, there is a claim stated which could, if proven, entitle the RIAA to recover.
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Digitial isn't the issue; the AHRA expressly protects digital technology the same as analog. What the judge held made the case triable (which does not mean the AHRA doesn't apply, it only means the facts which would determine that are legally contested and must be determined through trial) is the RIAA's claimes relative to XM's position as service provider, not just an equip
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Probably not.
Maybe so, but its still not as locked as XM is, since if you go somewhere else, the same frequency will give you some other station (if any). The XM device and service are rather tightly integrated, which seems to be the key to the RIAA's chance of success here.
If the RIAA wins, satellite st
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