Game sharers face legal crackdown

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  • Ham
    Top Poster
    • Mar 2008
    • 119

    #1

    Game sharers face legal crackdown

    Game sharers face legal crackdown

    A British woman who put a game on a file-sharing network has been ordered to pay damages to the game's creator.

    Topware Interactive has won more than ?16,000 following legal action against Isabella Barwinska of London, who shared a copy of Dream Pinball 3D.

    Three other suspected sharers of the game are awaiting damages hearings.

    The test case could open the floodgates for litigation against thousands of other Britons suspected of sharing the game.

    'A lot more'

    In the case heard at London's Patents County Court the game maker won damages of ?6,086.56 plus costs of ?10,000.

    "The damages and costs ordered by the Court are significant and should act as a deterrent," said David Gore, a partner at Davenport Lyons who acted for Topware.

    He added: "This shows that taking direct steps against infringers is an important and effective weapon in the battle against online piracy."

    "This is the first of many," said Mr Gore. "It was always intended that there would be a lot more."

    Mr Gore said details of "thousands" of suspected file-sharers of the game who might now face legal action were known.

    On file-sharing or peer-to-peer (P2P) networks the files being shared are held on members' computers and those who want a particular game, music track or video get bits of it from everyone else who has it.

    Topware Interactive started its campaign against pirates of Dream Pinball 3D in early 2007 after legal action forced 18 British net firms to pass on details of suspected pirates that it had identified.

    Following this it sent out about 500 letters to Britons it had identified as making the game available via file-sharing networks such as eMule, eDonkey, Gnutella and many others.

    In the letters the company asked for a payment of about ?300 as a "settlement" figure that would head off further legal action.

    Some of those accused of sharing the game chose to fight the legal action and it was in one of these contested cases that Topware Interactive won its claim for damages.

    "This is a proper Intellectual Property (IP) court that has made this judgement," said independent IP barrister David Harris. "The previous ones were default judgements where defendants never turned up."

    The hearing in the IP court meant the case had been rigorously analysed and the law properly understood, said Mr Harris.

    "It's a much more interesting case in that respect," he said.

    But, he said, he was not sure if this case meant game makers were getting more aggressive about chasing and prosecuting pirates.

    "I do not get any sense that there's been any fundamental shift in the desire to litigate," he said.

    Becky Hogge, director of the Open Rights Group that campaigns on cyber liberties issues, said: "An open court process with a full report is certainly preferable to justice of the type being mooted by the government on P2P, where activity takes place behind closed doors through industry action."

    She added that awards for damages had to be realistic and not made to act as a "deterrent".

    "In relation to the orders for release of personal data, it is important that court processes do not become rubberstamps for industry action but retain judicial safeguards and independence," said Ms Hogge.




    Story from BBC NEWS:
    Published: 2008/08/19 02:05:19 GMT
    ? BBC MMVIII
    To be nobody but yourself in a world which is doing its best day and night to make you like everybody else means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can fight and never stop fighting.

    e e cummings
  • Ham
    Top Poster
    • Mar 2008
    • 119

    #2
    Computer games: Industry acts on illegal downloads


    The computer games industry is launching a crackdown on people who illegally download games from the internet by writing to 25,000 people in Britain suspected of illegally sharing files and asking them to pay ?300 immediately to avoid any further legal action.

    Five of the world's top game developers will initially target 500 people who refuse to pay up, according to the Times.

    The move follows a judge's ruling this week to force an unemployed mother-of-two living in Britain to pay ?16,000 to manufacturer Topware.

    Isabela Barwinska became the first person in Britian to be ordered to pay damages after downloading Dream Pinball for free through a file-sharing site. The game costs ?26.

    Four people were recently found by the Central London County Court to have infringed copyright by sharing games illegally.

    The aggressive action marks a dramatic change in the approach to copyright on the internet.

    It is estimated that as many as six million people in Britain share games illegally.

    But five companies - Atari, Topware Interactive, Reality Pump, Techland and Codemasters - have appointed law firm Davenport Lyons to tackle the problem.

    The companies make some of the world's most popular games, including The Lord of the Rings.

    Sales of computer games are predicted to reach ?2bn in Britain this year.




    Gwyneth Rees
    The Guardian, Wednesday August 20 2008
    ? Guardian News and Media Limited 2008
    To be nobody but yourself in a world which is doing its best day and night to make you like everybody else means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can fight and never stop fighting.

    e e cummings

    Comment

    • berley
      V.I.P. Member
      • Mar 2008
      • 567

      #3
      it would be interesting to see how many of the 500 people actually pay up

      it would be even more interesting to find out who the 500 peoples isp is as these games companies must be getting the info from them

      just as well i dont download games

      Comment

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