The
Recording
Industry Association of America (RIAA) is being sued for extortion by an
individual accused of file sharing.
Suzy Del Cid alleges that the RIAA is using private investigators who are
unlicensed in her state to collect information.
She also claims that the organisation is using the court system to extort
money, and filing 'John Doe' lawsuits to extract personal information on users.
"For a number of years, a group of large, multinational, multi-billion dollar
record companies, including these Plaintiffs, have been abusing the Federal
court judicial system for the purpose of waging a public relations and public
threat campaign targeting digital file sharing activities,"
the
filing reads.
"As part of this campaign, these record companies hired unlicensed private
investigators - in violation of various state laws - who receive a bounty to
invade private computers and private computer networks to obtain information -
in the form of IP addresses - allowing them to identify the computers and
computer networks that they invaded."
Del Cid's filing claims that the RIAA sent out subpoenas without knowing the
identity of the file sharer, and then sent in its Settlement Support Center
which informs them of the case against them and attempts to reach a financial
settlement.
She accuses the RIAA of deliberately targeting the "elderly, disabled,
technologically clueless and other vulnerable victims" in order to attract media
attention. Del Cid is also claiming damages for the organisation's intrusion
into her computer.
This is not the first time that the RIAA has been sued for its policy over
file sharing. Yesterday the organisation dropped its case against Tanya
Andersen, a disabled single mother in Oregon, whom it had accused of sharing
gangster rap songs.
The woman is still pursuing her case against the RIAA.
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