The Associated Press, the New York Times Co, NPR, NBC Universal, the Washington Post, and 11 others argue that allowing the RIAA's case against accused file-sharer Joel Tenenbaum to be broadcast on the Internet is in the public interest.


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It's painfully obvious to all that the RIAA is afraid that the case will finally shed light on its inconsistent argument and extortion demands for compensation for perceived rather than actual losses.

http://www.zeropaid.com/news/9987/Ne...-Sharing+Trial