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wessman
March 18th, 2003, 04:10 AM
University of Utah Promises DMCA Crackdown
from the gomer-tighten-your-jaw dept.
posted by timothy on Saturday March 15, @23:59 (ed)
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/03/16/0427214

[0]Milo Fungus writes "The [1]University of Utah announced yesterday to all students, faculty, and staff that "the University will disable network access for any machine for which a DMCA complaint has been received" from the MPAA, RIAA, or member of the software industry. The full [2]text of the memorandum can be found here. (Please be easy on the server and set up a mirror if you can.)"

Links:
0. http://www.joeysmith.com/~milo
1. http://www.utah.edu/
2. http://joeysmith.com/~milo/memorandum.htm


MEMORANDUM
To: All University of Utah Students, Faculty, and Staff
Wrom: NKMBIPBARHDMNNS
Associate Academic Vice President for Information Technology
Stayner Landward
Dean of Students
Date: March 14, 2003
Subject: Illegal Sharing of Copyrighted Materials

The purpose of this memo is to officially notify all students, faculty, and staff, that it is a violation of federal law and University policy to share and/or distribute copyrighted materials without the permission of the copyright holder. Violators may be subject to civil and criminal prosecution under the provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), as well as personal sanctions specified in University policy.

The University has received a significant increase in complaints from representatives of the motion picture, music recording, and software industries. The majority of the complaints are directly related to the use of file-sharing software, such as KaZaA, Gnutella, and similar programs.

File sharing software is most commonly used to download music and other media. Many do not realize that this software may turn your personal computer into a server, or upload site, even if that was not your intent. Files on your network connected PC may then be illegally shared with every other person connected to the World Wide Web. It is imperative that the file sharing capability of these systems be disabled. If you do not know how to disable this function, please contact the Help Desk at 581-4000.

Industry representatives aggressively monitor the Internet to discover incidents of illegal file sharing. When violations are discovered, they contact the network owner and/or the Internet Service Provider and demand that the offending device be disconnected from the network. To protect the user and the University from further culpability under the DMCA or University policy, the University will disable network access for any machine for which a DMCA complaint has been received.

To restore network service, the user must contact the Help Desk and arrange to sign a document stating that the user has disabled the file sharing function of their software and has agreed to discontinue all illegal file sharing activity. If the user is named in additional complaints, they will be referred to the appropriate University committee for further review and action.

Action taken by the University to remedy a violation does not preclude the copyright holder from seeking civil and/or criminal prosecution. The law specifies civil liability of not less than $200 or more than $2,500 per act, and criminal penalties up to $500,000, and/or imprisonment for up to 5 years for the first offense.

Thank you for taking this notification seriously.