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Ernest Miller Ernest Miller pursues research and writing on cyberlaw, intellectual property, and First Amendment issues. Mr. Miller attended the U.S. Naval Academy before attending Yale Law School, where he was president and co-founder of the Law and Technology Society, and founded the technology law and policy news site LawMeme. He is a fellow of the Information Society Project at Yale Law School. Ernest Miller's blog postings can also be found @
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« BitTorrent and Grokster: How Much Intent Does it Take? | Main | If Violent Videogames Cause Violence, Where's the Crime Wave? »

June 28, 2005

Grokster and darknet companies

Posted by JD Lasica

In the Grokster open thread below, Kevin writes in part:

>darknets and bittorrent, by their nature, would not be found guily of inducing infringement.

I'm fascinated by your conclusion here. Do others agree with this?

Much of my reading the past two days has centered not on the fine points of law but on how the Grokster decision will affect *me* as a technology entrepreneur.

I just came from a lunch where a very successful businessman and I spent 90 minutes hashing out the ideas that might be involved in forming a darknet grassroots media company - an encrypted social space where individuals could create, collaborate, communicate and share their own works of personal media, either publicly or privately. (I don't think he'll mind if I mention it here; let me know if you might be interested in taking part.)

The subject of infringement never came up, though we'll eventually have to address this central question:

Are providers of such a service *required* to put business rules into place that specifically prevents users from sharing copyrighted works? (It's a very difficult thing to accomplish in an age when hundreds of photographs, videos and mp3 files on your computer may have been created by you -- or by someone else. And, after all, you can always trade photos and mp3s and other files today by email, IM or a dozen other ways.)

Some of the darknet companies out there address this in different ways. Grouper, for example, will let you invite only a maximum of 30 people into any single social space, and it will let you exchange jpegs and video files, but not mp3s (you can, however, stream music to your peers).

What's your sense of what the rules are for technology vendors who want to provide these privacy tools and social spaces to individuals in the post-Grokster world? (And, if you offer an opinion, I won't hold you to it.)

Comments (2) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Copyright


COMMENTS

1. brian on June 28, 2005 11:09 PM writes...

The odd effect of the Grokster ruling is that I do not think the first Xerox could pass the test handed down. The Xerox copier did not have filters that would refuse to make copies of copyrighted books and magazines. Xerox never got licenses from publishers that made it permissible for end users to make copies. And Xerox did promote its machine as capable of copying infringing and non-infringing works.

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2. Randy Picker on June 29, 2005 08:14 AM writes...

If you are interested, we have a couple of new posts on the business models point. See http://picker.typepad.com/picker_mobblog/2005/06/picker_itunes_a.html and http://picker.typepad.com/picker_mobblog/2005/06/groksters_futur.html

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