23,238 Alleged ‘Expendables’ Downloaders Walk Free
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  • 1 Post By eternallight

Thread: 23,238 Alleged ‘Expendables’ Downloaders Walk Free

  1. #1

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    Default 23,238 Alleged ‘Expendables’ Downloaders Walk Free

    http://torrentfreak.com/23238-allege...k-free-110802/

    What was once touted as the biggest file-sharing lawsuit in history has now
    been decimated following a decision from the U.S. District Court of Columbia.
    Judge Robert Wilkins ruled that well over 99 percent of the original 23,322
    alleged infringers can not be chased down by the makers of The Expendables
    because they fall outside of the court’s jurisdiction.

    For a short while the
    makers of The Expendables had the questionable honor of having embarked upon the
    biggest
    file-sharing lawsuit
    the world has ever witnessed.

    A massive list of 23,322 U.S. Internet users were targeted by the film studio
    NU Image, all of which were suspected of downloading and sharing the Hollywood
    blockbuster using BitTorrent. The movie studio later
    lost this record
    to The Hurt Locker makers, but their case was still very
    significant.

    Until now.

    In a recent order District Court Judge Robert Wilkins ruled that NU Image can
    only go after those individuals who are reasonably likely to be living in the
    District of Columbia. This means that the movie studio can’t send any subpoenas
    to ISPs when the IP-addresses are located in other districts.

    “Plaintiff has only shown good cause for, and will only be entitled to
    discovery related to, those John Does for whom there is a good faith basis to
    believe may reside in the District of Columbia,” Wilkins writes.

    As a result, well over 99 percent of the defendants are off the hook.

    The main reasoning behind the decision is that the alleged infringement has
    to take place in the district people are sued in, which is only the case for a
    small percentage of the defendants. Where and to whom the files are uploaded
    after that is irrelevant, the Judge argues.

    The Judge advises NU Image to use one of the many IP-location databases to
    find out who they can go after in his court.

    “Plaintiff can establish such a good faith basis for residence or personal
    jurisdiction by utilizing geolocation services that are generally available to
    the public to derive the approximate location of the IP addresses identified for
    each punitive defendant,” he writes.

    Previously Nu Image had claimed that these IP-lookup services are far from
    accurate, but Judge Wilkins contests this. He states that the movie studio
    selectively quoted an online resource to make it look like the data is useless,
    which it is not.

    By doing so they left out the paragraph below:



    Even when not accurate, though, geolocation can place users in a
    bordering city, which may be good enough for the entity seeking the information.
    This happens because a common method for geolocating a device is referencing its
    IP address against similar IP addresses with already known locations.


    “It therefore appears that while these geolocation services are not 100%
    accurate, these services can place a user no farther away than a city that
    borders the user’s actual location,” the Judge wrote replying to NU Image’s
    attempt to mislead the court.

    TorrentFreak took up the Judge’s suggestion and ran the 23,322 IP-addresses
    through a IP-location database to find out how many defendants would remain. We
    found that of all IP-addresses listed as defendants only 84 are likely to belong
    to persons in the District of Columbia.

    This means that the remaining 23,238 individuals are no longer at risk in
    this particular lawsuit.

    If other judges side with Wilkins, these pay-up-or-else schemes may become
    increasingly more expensive. Suing defendants in multiple districts is not how
    the copyright lawyers and their clients would like to work, so they will have to
    get more
    creative
    to get the information they need.

    Until then, this ruling can be counted as a win for the alleged BitTorrent
    users.
    silentninja likes this.


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    Default Re: 23,238 Alleged ‘Expendables’ Downloaders Walk Free

    If I was part of the 1% I would be soooo pissed.

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