Evidence of piracy allegedly destroyed

NEWS
The music industry is urgently seeking a court hearing after being advised by lawyers for Australian universities involved in legal action over alleged online music piracy that evidence subject to a court order has been destroyed, a piracy investigator said. The managing director of Music Industry Piracy Investigations (MIPI), Michael Speck, told ZDNet Australia the industry was seeking an urgent Federal Court hearing in order to cover issues such as precisely what evidence was destroyed and under what circumstances. "We are preparing to commence proceedings to ascertain in fact what evidence has been destroyed," he said. The hearing is likely to be held on Monday. Speck said the universities had indicated they would provide an explanation for the deletion. Speck said the issue confirmed the industry's concerns over what would happen to evidence if it did not commence proceedings to secure its retrieval from the universities involved. The music industry is trying to access copies of universities' computer records to ascertain whether staff or students have been involved in online copyright breaches. Sony, EMI, and Universal began the action against the University of Melbourne, Sydney University and the University of Tasmania to obtain information believed to provide evidence of copyright infringement. The universities had initially refused to hand over the information, claiming it included private files that were not related to the case. MIPI is employed by the music industry to investigate music piracy, which it claims is a significant drain on its revenues.
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Talkback

It's about time the public stood up and made themselves heard. I know that the protest have been done and I'm not a fan of protests cos I thin it's just a lot of tree huggin hippy cr*p that people jump on cos they think it's cool.
What we need to do is make as many people aware as possible over something like a 1 month advertising blitz (flyers etc.) any way you can. And then on the end of this, there should be a boycott of all music purchases. We need to do this and keep to it for longer than just a day. It is this and only this that will get control back to the people. Musicians don't even get a say in this, they have the technology to produce and publish their own material now, so lets give them initial control back too.
If you want something to happen, you have to commit yourself to doing it and stop winging. We don't like something they force on us, so don't use it and watch them go out of business. By then they will be crying out for the file swappers.

via Facebook 29 October, 2003 19:10
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