File-Sharing Policy
Music and Video File Sharing
Policy on Millikin University’s Network
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act and Millikin
University’s Responsibility
Since the fall of Napster, the peer-to-peer
(P2P) file sharing service so heavily targeted
by and eventually dissolved by the Recording
Industry Association of America (RIAA) for
harboring copyright infringement, numerous
similar technologies have risen to take its
place. Most of the Napster “clones,”
such as KaZaA, Morpheus, Gnutella, and iMesh,
have a familiar architecture that is highly
decentralized and thus becomes nearly impossible
to regulate. Even more difficult are the RIAA’s
efforts to prevent the illegal distribution
of copyrighted materials. Now, home-grown,
student-run file sharing networks have begun
to crop up on college campuses around the
world that are even more difficult to control
because they often reside behind the protection
of a campus firewall. The RIAA has therefore
begun to target students for copyright infringement
violations at several universities and have
successfully exposed student-run file sharing
networks. It is imperative that Millikin University
examine its own stance on copyright infringement
policies.
The RIAA’s concerns are valid and their
efforts to maintain control of their intellectual
property are reasonable within the confines
of the law. Under the Digital Millennium Copyright
Act (DMCA) of 1998 (Summary available at:
http://www.loc.gov/copyright/legislation/dmca.pdf),
Millikin University is obligated to assist
the RIAA in these efforts.
Title II of the Digital Millennium Copyright
Act discusses the limitation of liability
of online service providers should one of
their end users violate a portion of the Copyright
Act. These liability limitations remove the
burden of guilt from the service provider,
Millikin University, and place it on the offenders.
Millikin falls under the DMCA’s strict
definition of “service provider”
by providing a means of digital online communication
to users and is eligible for liability limitations
after meeting two conditions:
- Adopting and reasonably implementing a policy
of terminating in appropriate circumstances,
the accounts of subscribers who are repeat
infringers.
- Accommodating and not interfering with
“standard technical measures,”
which are defined as measures that copyright
owners use to identify or protect copyrighted
works that are developed with the broad
consensus of copyright owners and do not
impose substantial burdens on service providers.
In simpler terms, Millikin, upon notification
by the RIAA and/or its constituents, is obligated
to terminate network access for anyone on
the campus network that is found to repeatedly
infringe on national copyright laws, or be
held liable for damages.
This serves as an announcement of Millikin’s
commitment to cooperate with the RIAA and/or
its constituents and abide by the conditions
set forth by the Digital Millennium Copyright
Act to ensure its liability limitation. If
Millikin University network administration
is notified by RIAA and/or its constituents
that a user of Millikin’s network is
found to repeatedly infringe upon copyright
laws or provides a means of transmitting copyrighted
works among a wide user base; Millikin
University has the obligation to terminate
that user’s network access until the
administration is assured the infringements
have ceased.
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