Hi Helpi,
Thanks for the update on Maverick.
More of my uneducated laymen's thoughts:
Of course, the dates of Oscar's posts you're refering to are very old and, I believe, posted before the decisions you cite. However, regarding Maverick, there is still good news, I think in spite of the appeal. The statutory damages were held at the absolute minimum (considering the innocent infringer defence was disallowed for a technicality) of $750 per infringement. This combined with the fact that infringment of multiple items in an image compilation are currently held, I believe, as a single infringement shows a very favorable position (compared to the grim picture painted by some, I think) for many letter recipients, I think. And remember that the images must have been registered before infringent before statutory damages can be awarded at all.
Personally, I think these companies want us to obsess and worry over the fine points of the law to the point of painting a grim picture in our own minds till we give in and just pay whatever they ask. I, for one, won't do that. For sure, I think that we all need to have a look at the specifics of our own cases and get good qualified legal advice specific to our own cases from a lawyer.
Helpi Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Seasons Greetings.
>
> Is the person in charge of updating this thread OK
> ?
>
> Maverick v. Harper was overturned by the appellate
> court ten months ago. And the Supreme Court
> subsequently declined to hear the case.
>
> ABA case summary
> (
http://new.abanet.org/SCFJI/Lists/New%20Case%20Su> mmaries/DispForm.aspx?ID=108):
>
> "In an opinion by Judge Clement, the U.S. Court of
> Appeals for the Fifth Circuit found in favor of
> the record companies, both by affirming Harper’s
> guilt and by adjusting her penalty from $200 to
> $750 for each of the 37 audio files in question.
> Harper’s liability to the companies therefore
> totaled $27,750. The Fifth Circuit explained that
> it did not matter whether Harper knew her conduct
> was illegal. As long as the record companies
> provided notice that unauthorized reproduction was
> a copyright infringement, the subjective state of
> mind of the defendant does not matter. The Fifth
> Circuit found that warning labels on the compact
> discs from which Harper’s files were originally
> downloaded satisfied this notice requirement.
> Whether Harper ever saw these compact discs was
> irrelevant."
>
> Alito dissent (he wanted to hear the case):
>
http://tinyurl.com/34hxvvp>
> Record companies (who won) and the infringer (who
> lost) arguments to the Surpreme Court to not hear
> and to hear the case, respectively (sorry, you may
> have to google if these URLs don't post
> properly.).
>
>
http://www.scribd.com/doc/32060955/Harper-Petition> -for-certiorari
>
>
http://www.scribd.com/doc/39440193/Plaintiffs-Oppo> sition-to-petition-for-certiorari-in-Maverick-Reco
> rdings-v-Whitney-Harper
>
> Oscar, not only is Maverick not helpful any longer
> it suggests the following question:
>
> Whether 401(d) precludes the innocent infringer
> defense when a stock image company places
> copyright notices on the copies it publishes at
> its freely accessible web site even if the copies
> infringed by the defendant had no copyright notice
> on them.