Originally posted by s_stabeler
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For comparison, let's take the two most famous lawsuits: Jammie Thomas-Rasset and Joel Tenenbaum.
Tenenbaum was charged on 31 counts (dropped to 30 at trial). If we assume that each of the 31 is a full, separate album, and Tenenbaum was charged on each separately in criminal court, he'd be liable for a maximum of $3100 for shoplifting, and would probably be reduced below that. If it was one trial, provided that the total value of the items stolen was less than $1000, he would be fined a maximum of $1000. In Tenenbaum's case, he offered to settle for $5250 (more than 5 times what a shoplifting charge would have hit him for), and that offer was rejected, with Sony BMG demanding "double."
Once it went to trial, he figures ballooned hugely. Sony BMG was pushing for the maximum penalty of $4.5 million, but the jury didn't agree. Tenenbaum's final amount was set at $675k, or 22.5k per song, and reduced by the judge to $67.5k, or 2.25k per song. The judge's reduction was ultimately thrown out by a superior court judge, and Tenenbaum was found liable for the $675k verdict - several hundreds of times what he would have gotten if he had simply shoplifted the discs instead of downloading them.
As for Jammie Thomas-Rasset, her trial was even more of a circus (thanks to both sides). Capitol alleged more than 1700 infringements, but only sought damages on a mere 24 (likely because the damages on 1700 counts would have been considered outrageous by even copyright advocates). The original verdict was set at $222k ($9250 per song). Appeals on both sides made the damages range up and down, from a "mere" $54k ($2250 per song), up to as high as $1,920,000 ($22k per song), before being reset to the original $222k figure - again, several hundreds of times what she would have gotten if she had simply shoplifted the discs.
And the worst part of this is that if they had shoplifted, there would be a clear and obvious loss - the retail value of the discs that were lifted. There would be an obvious victim, the store that they shoplifted from. But because it's infringement, and not theft, none of that is clear and obvious unless you unequivocally equate infringement with theft, which is clearly is not.
If you genuinely believe that it's akin to shoplifting - a position I don't quite agree with, but I understand - you should be in favor of separating casual/petty infringement from bootlegging and piracy.
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