Thus far, the vast majority of copyright infringement demands made by those in the content business have a very weak legal basis.
It's abundantly clear that most of the money that copyright trolling captures comes from those who simply pay out of fear.
Creating "fear" in order to make people scared enough pay is a messy business.
So, I understand that those involved in the copyright trolling business wish to "sanitize" the entire issue.
Both for the business aspect, and so as not to cast one's own professional reputation in a negative light.
While copyright trolling types may not like the term "extortion letter" and might prefer "demand letter", "extortion" and "demand" are in fact synonyms:
http://thesaurus.com/browse/extortionhttp://img23.imageshack.us/img23/468/extortionsynonym.jpgIt’s important to realize that the trolls want ALL criticism to go away.
Today, it’s the word “extortion”. Next week, it’s going to be “troll”. The week after that, maybe we can’t mention any names?
Indeed, Canadian lawyer Julie Stewart wants no mention of her name on the site. But, this is the business that she’s in.
A more productive response to the evidence, opinions and expert commentary presented on ELI would be for lawyers such as Ms Stewart to blog their point of view.
But, she couldn’t “blog” what’s in the extortion letters without damaging her reputation. That also explains why you don’t see lawyers for the trolls posting here.
You can’t openly post what’s claimed in the letters without looking like a scammer.
So, the only option left is to suppress what they’ve written and signed their name to.
The only exception appears to be lawyer Carolyn Wright, whom I believe has some articles of value.
Righthaven has illustrated how bad it can get.
Also, I don’t believe for a moment that Tylor (affiliated with Hawaiian Art Network) doesn’t know that his photos are offered for free all over the web.
Riddick’s claims were garbage from day one, and I feel sorry for anyone who gave in and paid him.
I believe that anyone who demands monetary damages relating to property that they do not legally own is pulling a scam.
I don’t think “scam” is too harsh a word. In such cases, the money simply isn’t owed.
I don’t speak for ELI, but it’s my opinion that those who expect it to be ELI’s job to market the actions of copy trolls in the best light possible are out of touch with reality.
If most people received a gas bill of ten-thousand dollars, they’d ask to see the meter reading. If the gas company said, “we don’t reveal meter readings unless we go to court”, they be screwed in short order.
The same is true for the copyright trolls; what is the actual evidence of the claim?
I hope that the approach on this forum doesn’t go too “soft”. Listen to Rammstein or Metallica while you post if you have to.
S.G.