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October
2007
What a Strategic Blunder!
You know, I have never agreed with folks at the Electronic Freedom
Foundation, or other groups who seem dedicated to changing the long
standing laws of copyright protection in this country. But I have
noted one thing.
Their allies seem to include some of the brightest young minds in
this country. From the law professors and students at Stanford,
Berkeley, Harvard, Duke, and others ... to the lawyers at some of
the most prestigious IP firms in the land ... to the engineers and
scientists at some of our leading technology companies in this country
... the intellectual brainpower in this self-described "new
wave" group has been impressive.
How this group could allow a strategic blunder like what we've just
seen come out of Duluth is beyond me. Why these organizations didn't
get involved, study the case thoroughly, and encourage Ms. Thomas,
and her obviously inexperienced attorney, to surrender is phenomenal.
This is not the individual, the attorney, the forum, or the time
I would want a precedent such as this established. What a strategic
blunder!
Maybe these people are not nearly as smart as I gave them credit
for. Apparently, they all sat back and naively thought (make that
"wished") that Ms. Thomas would somehow end the RIAA onslaught
forever.
Don't get me wrong. I applaud the decisions made by both the judge
and jury in this precedent setting case. The anti-copyright crowd
will suffer the consequences of this loss big time. Our economy
will be strengthened. And these decisions will do more to help curtail
widespread Internet Piracy than all the politicians, copyright industry
executives, and lobbyists in this entire country put together.
I thought good lawyers advised their clients of the downside of
their attempts to "change the law of the land" and could
be sanctioned if they chose to pursue only "the big payday"
or their personal "15 minutes of fame" instead. Read the
copyright laws. Displaying and downloading copyright-protected works
owned by others without their permission is illegal. It has both
civil and criminal consequences. And, as in the case of Ms.Thomas
in Duluth, they can be severe. She will have to pay back nearly
$500,000 by having her pay check garnished for the rest of her life.
But she doesn't get any sympathy from me. If she had taken this
many copyrighted songs out of Best Buy or Wal-Mart, she'd be in
jail right now. And owe back a like amount of money. None of us
- right or left - want to live in a lawless society. It's interesting
to debate legal principles and consequences, but fearing to go outside
for a cup of coffee or a loaf of bread is not something we have
had any experience with in this country. Thank goodness!
And if you don't think organized white collar crime families are
behind much of this Internet piracy epidemic, you'd better think
again.
COUNTERPOINT:
Here is the one issue I have discussed with my 20-year -old son
and I do have "conflicts" with. Google infringes more
legitimate copyrights every single day than Ms.Thomas could do in
a lifetime. Do we now have a country that has completely different
standards for the billionaires than we do for the normal working
folks? If so, I sure hope this is short-lived as well. I think I'd
rather give up the coffee and the bread than have to worry about
Google stealing from me every single day.
What's your opinion?
George P. Riddick, III
Chairman/CEO
Imageline, Inc.
griddick@imageline2.com
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