|  | Posted by Don Del Grande on 11/03/06 03:08 
Just a Friend wrote:
 > Citizen Bob wrote:
 
 >| Copyright ©2006 CNET Networks, Inc.
 >|
 >| http://news.com.com/2100-1027_3-998363.html
 >|
 >| Judge: File-swapping tools are legal
 >| By John Borland
 >| Staff Writer, CNET News.com
 >| Published: April 25, 2003, 12:46 PM PDT
 
 >This judgment has been overruled by so many other court cases, the list is
 >way too long...
 
 The only one I can think of is the Supreme Court decision against
 Grokster (MGM v. Grokster), but the court opinion made it clear that
 the main reason the decision went against Grokster was because the
 company actively promoted the product as for use in illegal downloads.
 From the majority opionion (written by Souter): "Grokster and
 StreamCast are not, however, merely passive recipients of information
 about infringing use. The record is replete with evidence that from
 the moment Grokster and StreamCast began to distribute their free
 software, each one clearly voiced the objective that recipients use it
 to download copyrighted works, and each took active steps to encourage
 infringement."
 
 On the other hand, Attorney General Reno v. ACLU, which overturned the
 Communications Decency Act, said that there is such a thing as going
 too far in controlling the Internet: "In [an earlier case], we
 remarked that the speech restriction at issue there amounted to
 'burn[ing] the house to roast the pig.' The CDA, casting a far darker
 shadow over free speech, threatens to torch a large segment of the
 Internet community."  (And, of course, the grandaddy of "the right of
 non-infringing uses", Sony v. Universal Studios et al., which made
 VCRs legal despite the fact that they could be used to make copies of
 TV shows.)
 
 -- Don
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