Sharman Networks touts music ruling as win

Sharman Networks' chief executive officer, Nikki Hemming, claims yesterday's Federal Court decision has justified the company's claims that the surprise civil search raids of Sharman premises were "heavy handed" tactics.

Justice Murray Wilcox ruled that Sharman, owner and distributor of the file sharing application Kazaa, along with five other raided parties including the US companies Brilliant Digital Entertainment (BDE) Inc, BDE Pty Ltd, Altnet, BDE chief executive Kevin Bermeister and BDE employee Anthony Rose, may review the seized materials.

The order directs that the evidence be held from court until May, giving the defendants an opportunity to identify any privileged or irrelevant documents unauthorised for confiscation, with an independent solicitor and a forensics expert overseeing that process

The raids were conducted in February of this year on the authority of an "Anton Piller" or civil search warrant order. The move initiated by Music Industry Piracy Investigations on suspicion of music copyright infringement, which was allegedly enabled by the Kazaa software.

Hemming says the order was unnecessary, adding the raids were "indicative of the recording industry's increasing desperation to crush peer-to-peer technology"

"We have complied fully in US proceedings [of a similar nature] and will continue to do so this case under appropriate legal procedures," said Hemming.

Lawyers for Sharman stated they are "pleased with the outcome of [the] decision" and "are continuing to prepare our applications for leave to appeal".

Justice Wilcox said the plaintiffs, Universal Music and its associated music industry parties, were "flogging a dead horse" in their attempts at getting immediate access to the evidence. He stated that the seized materials need to be "sorted out" before the case can continue.

"Once we have access to more detailed (information) we may talk about a plan (for accessing the documents)," said Justice Wilcox.

The matter is scheduled to be back in court on 14 May. Until this time the seized material will remain in the hands of an independent law firm.

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Talkback 6 comments

    what does Kazaa have to hide? ...Anonymous -- 25/03/04

    what does Kazaa have to hide?
    if they're so confident their network is fully decentralised and they have no control over the actions of its users - then let the record companies have a look at the evidence.

    it goes to show that Kazaa are 10 times the crooks the record companies are. They have built their business on ripping off the property of others, whilst nikki hemming drives around in her porsche boxster to her house on the leafy north shore.

    The source code. It is pretty ...Anonymous -- 25/03/04

    The source code. It is pretty clear that ARIA wants access to the source code, so that suddenly mysteriously some time in the near future, worms and viruses will infect the peer to peer network via holes in the software rendering it un-usable. As far as ARIA and their co-conspiritors the RIA everyone that uses peer to peer software is a criminal and should be imprisoned and fined (including grandmothers and little girls), so they should consider themselves fortunate if all that happens is their computer hard drive is wiped out.

    Kazaa is already full of worms ...Anonymous -- 26/03/04

    Kazaa is already full of worms, viruses and spyware. The source code is in escrow anyway.

    ARIA and RIAA must have captured proof that Kazaa can filter and/or control the actions of their users, and that they aren't truly decentralised; and Kazaa doesn't want that information to get out.

    It is perfectly clear that they are/have building their business on providing efficient, free and illegal access to the intellectual property of others - every programming and code writing effort has been put into making this process as simple as possible. They don't care that they are ripping of millions of software producers, composers, producers, actors, record co's, movie companies, both small and large - just as long as Nikki Hemming can buy more Porsche Boxsters and buy more houses in the wealthy suburbs of Sydney.

    Hey Specky, not signing your n ...Anonymous -- 02/04/04

    Hey Specky, not signing your name any more or is Anonymous your new handle?

    This case is crap. Kazaa has n ...Anonymous -- 18/06/04

    This case is crap.
    Kazaa has never put pirated files on the network.
    And this sad tale like the record industry is going broke as also crap.
    This is a fact that pirating has helped increase sales in heaps of industries.
    Rember the playstation, do you think that they would of sold so many systems if people could not pirate games?
    In fact if the bloody record industry was not so greedy with prices people would not bother to get dodgy pirate file they’d buy the music I know I would, they have brought this on themselves.

    In my experience, the files I ...Anonymous -- 02/12/04

    In my experience, the files I have downloaded off kazaa have mostly been documentaries, blog-style opnion documents, humorous,uncopyrighted video clips (usually short, cos I'm on dial-up), and television material that I might have been able to videotape off
    the tube if i'd had a videotape handy at the time.
    A lot of it would have been impossible to get without
    kazaa, and I hope that it will continue to operate.

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