Judge reduces Jammie Thomas penalty to $54,000

http://old.news.yahoo.com/s/digitaltrends/20110722/tc_digitaltrends/judgereducesjammiethomaspenaltyto54000

A federal court has reduced the damages award against the Jammie Thomas-Rasset 
from $62,500 for each song she’s accused of sharing over peer-to-peer networks 
to $2,250 per song, bringing the total penalties against Thomas Rasset from 
$1.5 million to $54,000. Judge Michael Davis—who has presided over many 
incarnations of the case, wrote in his decision: “The Court concludes that an 
award of $1.5 million for stealing and distributing 24 songs for personal use 
is appalling. Such an award is so severe and oppressive as to be wholly 
disproportioned to the offense and obviously unreasonable. ”

The decision was noted by lawyer Benn Sheffner, who posted a copy of the order 
to Scribd.

Thomas-Rasset’s case got started in 2006 when the Recording Industry 
Association of America (RIAA) began suing individuals it believes were sharing 
music files over peer-to-peer file sharing networks like Limewire and 
Gnutella—in Thomas-Rassett’s case, it was the P2P service Kazaa. Thomas-Rasset 
refused to settle with the RIAA; ultimately, she was found guilty of copyright 
infringement and a jury awarded $1.5 million in damages.

Judge Davis’s order is the second time he has lowered damage awards in the 
case: Davis similarly reduced a $2 million judgement to $54,000 back in 2010. 
He arrived at that figure by taking the minimum $750 penalty for infringement 
and tripling it, due to juries finding Thomas-Rasset’s infringement “willful.”

Over the years, the RIAA filed more than 30,000 lawsuits against alleged 
file-sharers in an effort to combat music piracy. The majority of people 
accused of file-sharing reached a settlement with the RIAA, with an average 
payment of about $3,500.
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