Aust unis in court over file-swapping

Major record companies have instigated a legal battle with Australian universities over students' alleged use of university networks to engage in illegal file swapping.

The hearing is taking place in the Federal Court in Sydney between the Sony, EMI and Universal music companies and the Universities of Sydney, Melbourne and Tasmania.

The record companies are asking the Federal Court for permission to gather evidence of illegal file swapping from the university networks, claiming the practice costs them many millions of dollars every year.

The companies have asked the court to allow their computer experts to scan the computers at Melbourne University for sound files and e-mail accounts so they can gather evidence of alleged widespread copyright violations. The University of Sydney and the University of Tasmania have agreed to preserve the files as evidence, but have refused to hand over the information to the record companies.

The University of Melbourne told the Federal Court the present proceedings were punitive and it opposed the action. The hearing has been adjourned until Friday, and the judge refused to impose an interim order for the university to preserve the files until the case was heard again.

The record companies have told the court one student had 500 MP3 files, and another had a list of his 15 favourite songs with links to MP3 files of the music.

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Talkback 4 comments

    Hmmmm being a uni student, I d ...Anonymous -- 19/02/03

    Hmmmm being a uni student, I dont have a personal stereo nor the room to have one, so I rip all my cd's to MP3's. CD's that I have bought and paid for myself.

    40 + CD's with say 15 songs each on average, 600+ MP3's. Does that make me a criminal because I have that many mp3's on my pc?

    I dont share my files to anyone but this article makes out that any one caught with MP3's or similar is a crook.

    What's going on here eh! I jus ...Anonymous -- 19/02/03

    What's going on here eh!

    I just cannot see how the record labels can say that one student with 500 mp3's cost them millions of dollars?

    Remember this is "alleged" too! So if I allege that Sony had a copy of my songs in mp3 form, does that mean I can take them to court to allow me to open up their computers and scan hard drives etc?

    Ohhh wait, yeah I don't have a lot of money that I can profiteer from the burning of CD's - unlike Sony et al!

    How to win friends and influen ...Anonymous -- 24/02/03

    How to win friends and influence people and create a legion of retaliatory piraters.

    I am concerned that snooping o ...Anonymous -- 18/01/05

    I am concerned that snooping on students' email will encourage them to use strong crypto. If there is a movement to switch over to strong crypto this will be bad because it will be harder to catch terrorists. Summary: only spy on email for the most serious of reasons.

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