Logo
Fuel
ISSUE #32.30 • NEWS • NEWS STORY

Inside The Den Of A "Pirate"


An Oregonian takes a novel approach in his fight against a music file-sharing suit.

Social bookmarking | Permalink
Email | Print | Rate It! | 2 comments
Recently in "News"

August 27th, 2008
Letters to the Editor • Inbox1 comment

August 27th, 2008
The Score • Taking Your Share and Then Some0 comments

August 27th, 2008
The Party Is in the Lobby | Oregon Democrats descend on Denver looking for change they can believe in—with help from corporate friends.5 comments

August 27th, 2008
Bar Fight | The restaurant lobby butts heads with Portland neighborhoods.0 comments

August 27th, 2008
Skipper’s Castaways | New county sheriff keeps the crew from Giusto’s three-hour tour.0 comments

August 27th, 2008
Murmurs • Hope. Change. Capitalism. Barbed Wire.0 comments

August 27th, 2008
Rogue of the Week • Sue Castner | Serious Party Foul.18 comments

August 27th, 2008
Life and Death in Washington | Call it “death with dignity” or “assisted suicide,” Washington preps for Initiative 1000 — with Oregon’s help. 3 comments

August 27th, 2008
Incorrect Change | A new coin buys anger instead of bus fare.5 comments

August 27th, 2008
Cover Story • Sometimes a Great Lawsuit | Ken Kesey’s last prank pits his widow in a court battle with his best friend and a Playboy model.2 comments



IMAGE: BROOKE THOMPSON
BY CHRISTIAN GASTON | 503 243-2122

[May 31st, 2006] Dave Perez isn't much of a music guy.

The 56-year-old Eugene father of three says the only CD he owns is the soundtrack to the 1969 cowboy musical Paint Your Wagon, starring Clint Eastwood and Lee Marvin. Perez's family bought the CD for him as a Christmas gift because they didn't want him singing cowboy songs during family rides in his 2003 Toyota Camry.

"They'd rather listen to the CD than listen to me," Perez says.

All in all, Perez doesn't exactly fit the bill of a music "pirate." Yet last year, the Recording Industry Association of America targeted him and more than a dozen other Oregonians in its national Internet dragnet of MP3 traders. The trade association told Perez to pay more than $4,700 or expect a lawsuit.

The June 2005 lawsuit against Perez in federal court in Eugene does not yet have a trial date. But it contends that Perez downloaded or uploaded 699 files in the winter of 2003.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation, a San Francisco-based nonprofit dedicated to defending digital rights, says fears of legal bills have driven most of the people snared nationwide by the RIAA to settle the suits or ignore them. Ignoring the suits results in default judgments that in Oregon have averaged about $9,000, according to court records.

Perez, who makes about $70,000 a year as executive director of the Eugene YMCA and as a part-time umpire, joined about 20 other defendants in cases around the country who are fighting back by asking the most basic of questions: How can the RIAA prove they were the ones downloading the music?

Perez denies downloading the music, saying, "I'd be the first one to step up to the plate if I did something, but it's hard to do that if you didn't have anything to do with it."

The RIAA finds pirates by tracking individual computer addresses on the Internet. Internet service providers like Comcast assign a unique Internet protocol (IP) number to each computer using its network.

The RIAA then subpoenas service providers to tell them which subscriber was assigned a particular IP number when its investigators witnessed an otherwise anonymous user uploading or downloading music, then adds that subscriber's name to a lawsuit.














icon Story continues below

advertisement

advertisement

"They get the guy who pays the Comcast cable bill, and you know who that is for nearly every household in this state? It's Dad," says Perez's attorney, Stephen Hutchinson. "And Dad is technologically incompetent. He couldn't download this stuff if he wanted to."

None of Perez's children, who were between the ages of 17 and 22 in 2003, has acknowledged downloading that much music. Beyond that, Perez and his wife, Claire, also say they have an open-door policy with their kids' friends, which Hutchinson says raises the number of people who could have downloaded the music to the Perez computer to upwards of 50 people.

"The RIAA and the record companies have tried to stretch the legal paradigm of peripheral liability to include parental culpability," says Charles Mudd, a Chicago trial lawyer who specializes in file-sharing cases. Translation: Mom and Dad are on the hook for Junior's Kazaa habit.

The RIAA declined comment for this article but has told other publications that parents are responsible for their children's actions, and that the association thinks it can prove with testimony and computer logs that the adults knew what their kids were doing.

Perez isn't the only Oregon parent fighting with the RIAA. Tanya Andersen, a disabled single mother from Tualatin, has been engaged in a legal tug-of-war with the association for more than a year on the question of whether songs were actually downloaded to her computer.

But company is cold comfort for Perez, who has racked up $20,000 in legal fees and now says RIAA lawyers are talking about filing lawsuits against his wife and two of his children.

"This is the same kind of thing as when you have a gun and somebody steals your gun,'' Hutchinson says. "They can do the ballistics, and they can track the registration, but if you're not the one who pulled the trigger, are you guilty?"

Rate This Story
Be the first to rate this story.

 
read all 2 comments | add your comment
 

RECENT COMMENTS ON “Inside The Den Of A "Pirate"”

1

Inside The Den Of A WHEN i READ THESE COMMENTS, IT MAKES ME ANGRY.LISTEN TO ME RICAA...I WILL RIP OFF EVERY GOD DAM PIECE OF MUSIC THAT I WANT, AND YOU WILL NOT STOP ME...WHEN I READ ABOUT THES...

Story Forum Archive, Jun 1st, 2006 12:00am
2

Inside The Den Of A Dark hours for the greedy music industry, the tens of millions of dollars vhat they have won in awards has gone where? Have any artist gotten their fair share? and can the...

Story Forum Archive, Jun 1st, 2006 12:00am
 
 
 





Recently in Willamette Week
August 28th 2008Sometimes a Great Lawsuit | Ken Kesey’s last prank pits his widow in a court battle with his best friend and a Playboy model.
August 28th 2008Sliced Bread, Beware | A better fire hose, a poker aid & a foldable clipboard—meet six Portland inventors whose big ideas are the best thing since, well, you know.
August 28th 2008How to Live Cheap in Portland | Throwing too much money away on food and shelter? here’s WW’s Recession Survival Guide.
August 28th 2008The Queer and the Qur’an | Ali is gay. And Muslim. Can he be both?
August 28th 2008Good Cop, Mad Cop | Many of Navin Sharma’s colleagues in the Vancouver Police Department can’t believe he got fired. After reading this, neither will you.
August 28th 2008Lean, Mean Meat-Free Machine | Portlander Robert Cheeke is the face of vegan bodybuilding.
August 28th 2008The Sopranokovs | The Russian mob comes to town with a new scam—medical identity theft.
August 28th 2008Manhunter | Almost every state lets bounty hunters chase down its most wanted. Why doesn’t Oregon?
August 28th 2008Get Wet: WW’s Summer Guide 2008 | The rain is finally over. Now let’s get wet!