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posted by martyb on Tuesday February 04 2020, @06:33AM   Printer-friendly
from the Have-you-ever-read-a-book,-magazine,-or-newspaper?-Which-ones? dept.

Ars Technica:

Music-industry lawyers plan to ask potential jurors in a piracy case whether they read Ars Technica.

"Have you ever read or visited Ars Technica or TorrentFreak?" is one of 40 voir dire questions that plaintiffs propose to ask prospective jurors in their case against Grande Communications, an Internet service provider accused of aiding its customers' piracy, according to a court filing on Friday.

[...] Record-label attorneys also want to ask potential jurors if they "know what a peer-to-peer network is," have "ever downloaded content from any BitTorrent website" such as The Pirate Bay and KickassTorrents, obtained music or video from "any stream-ripping service," been "accused of infringing a copyright," or "ever been a member, contributor or supporter of the Electronic Frontier Foundation."

The full list of questions by each party were made available by TorrentFreak as pdfs:

Have you now, or ever been, a member of the Pirate Party?


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 2) by deimtee on Wednesday February 05 2020, @11:24AM

    by deimtee (3272) on Wednesday February 05 2020, @11:24AM (#954186) Journal

    A has a pirate copy of a movie. B does not.
    Grande Communications possibly facilitates something.
    A and B now both have a copy of the movie.

    There is no question that a copyright infringement occurred. The questions are did GC facilitate it and is that illegal? (or civilly liable - they are being sued not charged)

    The question they are avoiding is did A or B commit the infringement?
    I think they think the answer is A, but as long as that is never declared in court they can keep claiming that downloading is illegal.

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