Comment on FBI nabs worker at DVD company for ripping prerelease blockbusters
finitebanjo@lemmy.world 5 weeks agoHe didn’t get arrested for theft. He got arrested for being part of a distribution network that empowered Russian hackers.
Comment on FBI nabs worker at DVD company for ripping prerelease blockbusters
finitebanjo@lemmy.world 5 weeks agoHe didn’t get arrested for theft. He got arrested for being part of a distribution network that empowered Russian hackers.
sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works 5 weeks ago
Downloading is absolutely illegal, it’s just not really enforced because you need to prove criminal intent. You’re still accessing copyrighted material without a license, which is a copyright violation.
Distribution has much higher penalties and is more likely to push people to buying (harder to find copies = potentially more legal sales), so that’s where enforcement is focused.
finitebanjo@lemmy.world 5 weeks ago
If you can present the law that makes it illegal to download, please do so.
The laws of the USA make it illegal to distribute, but license violations are beef between you and a company subject to civil dispute at most (which is entirely uneconomic to pursue) AND technically you haven’t violated the license, the distributor has.
sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works 5 weeks ago
Here’s the interpretation by the US copyright office in their FAQ:
The enumerated rights of copyright owners are detailed in Title 17, section 106, with exceptions (e.g. fair use) described through section 122. The relevant portion is:
My understanding is that the copyright office is using 1&3 in their interpretation. So my understanding is that Meta is violating copyright by downloading copies of copyrighted work if their use doesn’t fall under the fair use claims.
finitebanjo@lemmy.world 5 weeks ago
Right, so the owners have their rights enshrined in laws to make copies, sales, and derivatives, but that doesn’t mean people other than owners are breaking a law by downloading a copy that a third party made and distributed. In fact, that text alone doesn’t make it illegal to make copies, derivatives, or distributions, that would instead be outlined in U.S Code Title 17 Chapter 5 Section 506 which says:
As with your quote from the FAQ, the entire section says:
Statutory Damages are civil. Risk of liability for downloads means it isn’t certain. There are no criminal proceedings for downloading copyrighted media, it isn’t illegal.
In fact, it’s actually even more lenient than I had expected, you STILL don’t qualify for criminal charges even if you cost the real copyright owner $999.99.