Magic City Morning Star

Forum | Wiki | Advertising | RSS Feed | About Us 

Last Updated: Aug 19, 2008 - 11:10:44 AM 

Millinocket, East Millinocket, Medway, and all of Maine!
Staff Login
Donate towards our web hosting bill!

Front Page 
  News
  -- Local
  -- State
  -- National
  Community
  -- MCAC Notes
  -- Maine Elks
  -- Maine Grange
  Business
  -- IRS News
  -- Win at Work
  -- NFIB
  -- USBIC
  Education
  -- History
  Health
  -- Psychology Now
  Tech Notes
  Entertainment
  -- Comics
  -- L. E. Hughes
  International
  -- R.P. BenDedek
  -- Kenneth Tellis
  Sports
  Outdoors
  Features
  -- D. R. Crews
  -- J. G. Fabiano
  -- James Feudo
  -- M Stevens-David
  -- Down the Road
  -- Laura on Life
  Christianity
  -- Ken Christian
  -- Mark Oaks
  Obituaries
  Today in History
  Maine Politics
  -- Tom Allen
  -- Susan Collins
  -- Michael Michaud
  -- Olympia Snowe
  Opinion
  -- Editor's Desk
  -- Guest Column
  -- It Occurs to Me
  -- Scheme of Things
  -- Sally Bouchard
  -- Thomas Brewton
  -- Bernard Chapin
  -- Stephen Crockett
  -- Greg Davis
  -- Michael Devolin
  -- Tom DeWeese
  -- Ed Feulner
  -- Kathy Gagnon
  -- Diane M. Grassi
  -- Jan Herron
  -- William Jud
  -- Jim Kouri
  -- Henry Lamb
  -- Alyce Maragus
  -- Joseph J. Nugent
  -- Michael Roache
  -- Julie Smithson
  -- Nicholas Stix
  -- Paul Streitz
  -- J. Grant Swank
  -- Doug Wrenn
  -- Tony Zizza
  Letters
  Agenda 21
  Book Reviews
  -- Old Embers
  Notices
  Archive
  Discontinued


As Maine Goes
www.rockymountaintrail.com
1-800-PetMeds
HearthSong
I am responsible for my child's education.

Tech Notes

Innocent Customers Potentially Dragged Into Legal Battle Over Satellite TV
By Electronic Frontier Foundation
Aug 19, 2008 - 11:08:48 AM

Email this article
 Printer friendly page

EFF Urges Court to Protect Customers' Privacy

SAN FRANCISCO, CA -- The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) asked a federal court Friday to reject efforts by Echostar to get the names and addresses of every customer that purchased a free-to-air satellite receiver. Echostar claims that the receiver can be modified to pirate DISH satellite TV programming. EFF argues that Echostar's demand, which seeks all purchasers regardless of whether they actually pirated DISH TV, would violate user privacy and leave innocent purchasers vulnerable to bogus legal threats.

The demand for customer records came up in a lawsuit between Echostar, the company behind the DISH satellite TV service, and Freetech, Inc., the manufacturer of Coolsat free-to-air satellite receivers. As part of the suit, Echostar subpoenaed 17 distributors of Coolsat receivers, demanding the names, addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, and other information of every person who purchased a Coolsat receiver over the last five years.

"Innocent customers should not be dragged into federal litigation just because they bought a product that other, less scrupulous purchasers may be hacking for unlawful purposes," said EFF Senior Intellectual Property Attorney Fred von Lohmann. "The court should recognize the privacy interests of these customers, especially since Echostar does not need these customer lists in order to have its day in court against Freetech."

In recent years, satellite TV companies, record labels, and movie studios have all engaged in dragnet litigation tactics that threaten individuals with costly lawsuits unless they pay significant financial sums to "settle" the dispute. These mass litigation campaigns leave innocent consumers trapped between paying a "settlement" for something they did not do or facing even higher legal costs to prove their innocence. Satellite TV provider DirecTV pioneered this approach in 2001, threatening more than 120,000 individuals with legal action and commencing more than 24,000 federal lawsuits, often with no evidence other than the fact that the individual purchased multi-purpose devices that could be used for piracy.

"Once the names of Freetech customers are disclosed to Echostar, there may be little that any court can do to protect these people from harassment, settlement demands, and legal expenses," said EFF Senior Staff Attorney Matt Zimmerman. "This may be the last chance the court has to protect the privacy of these individuals."

For the full amicus brief: www.eff.org/files/filenode/echostar_v_freet/EFFamicusEchostarvFreetech.pdf

For more on Echostar v. Freetech: www.eff.org/cases/echostar-v-freetech

For this release: www.eff.org/press/archives/2008/08/18

About EFF

The Electronic Frontier Foundation is the leading civil liberties organization working to protect rights in the digital world. Founded in 1990, EFF actively encourages and challenges industry and government to support free expression and privacy online. EFF is a member-supported organization and maintains one of the most linked-to websites in the world at www.eff.org/


© Copyright 2002-2008 by Magic City Morning Star

Top of Page

Tech Notes
Latest Headlines
Bogus IP Claims Quash Debate Over Future of NYC Landmark
Innocent Customers Potentially Dragged Into Legal Battle Over Satellite TV
FBI Withdraws Unconstitutional National Security Letter After Challenge
EFF and Sheppard Mullin Defend Wikipedia in Defamation Case
Best of the Web Welcomes new Editor Additions From DMOZ: Introducing "The Nerd Herd"

Animal Den - Gift Shop for Animal Lovers!
A Dinosaur of Education - a blog by James Fabiano.
Buy Alvina's book now with PayPal
Buy The Call of Katahdin from Amazon.com
Buy Weapon in Heaven from Amazon.com
Get Published with iUniverse!
Different products for unique babies!
Save on Backpacks at Altrec Outdoors
Soda Club USA

Google
 
Web magic-city-news.com