There have been a growing number of stories recently about people finally fighting back against the various RIAA lawsuits, that are usually filed on the basis of a single IP address, without any effort being made to find out who might be responsible for any of the unauthorized sharing.
This was a question that some had been asking since the RIAA first started filing lawsuits, but many people felt it was safer to just settle and pay the fine than to risk going to court and losing. However, since that one story of a woman fighting back, others have stepped up as well, and they may reach a new level, as one woman has now countersued the RIAA under racketeering charges and a slew of other charges: "fraud, invasion of privacy, abuse of process, electronic trespass, violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, negligent misrepresentation, the tort of "outrage", and deceptive business practices."
Some of those seem like pretty big stretches and won’t get very far, but it should be quite an interesting case (if it actually gets to court). The charges of the RIAA hacking into her computer and spying on her are unlikely to get very far at all — especially if the data was left open to be viewed by file sharing programs.
The extortion charge is the really interesting one, as that’s the biggest point that many critics have brought up in the past. The RIAA basically says they’ll make these cases go away for a few thousand, and often make it clear that people should just pay up rather than fight it — which certainly sounds a lot like extortion to most people.
Related Posts
- RIAA To Be Sued for Racketeering
- RIAA Suggests MIT Student Drop Out Of School To Pay Fine
- RIAA Sued Under Gangster Laws
- RIAA – Being Sued for Racketeering is a Scandal
- Judge Tells RIAA They Don’t Get To Randomly Hunt Through Everyone’s Computers

