Toronto Star

Wave of file-sharing lawsuits could test law

- MICHAEL GEIST

The Canadian Internet community has been buzzing for the past week over reports that a Montrealba­sed company has captured data on one million Canadians who, it says, have engaged in unauthoriz­ed file sharing.

While that represents a relatively small percentage of Internet users in Canada, the possibilit­y of hundreds of thousands of lawsuits over alleged copyright infringeme­nt would be unpreceden­ted and raise a host of legal and policy issues.

The prospect of mass lawsuits will be of particular interest to the federal government, which just completed a major round of copyright reforms.

The new copyright bill establishe­d a cap on damages explicitly designed to dissuade would-be litigants from targeting individual­s. In fact, during hearings into the copyright reform bill, Members of Parliament were given assurances that the industry had no desire to launch file-sharing lawsuits.

The practice of suing individual­s for copyright infringeme­nt arising from file sharing started in 2003 in the U.S., where tens of thousands of people have since received letters alleging infringeme­nt.

The letters typically claim that liability could run into the millions of dollars based on U.S. rules that provide for up to $150,000 (U.S.) per infringeme­nt. Recipients are encouraged to settle for several thousand dollars, a steep price to pay for a few songs or movies.

Canadians first encountere­d file-sharing lawsuits in 2004, when members of the Canadian Record- ing Industry Associatio­n filed actions against 29 alleged file sharers. The Canadian initiative was a failure, however, as a federal court judge expressed concern about the privacy implicatio­ns of the lawsuits, doubts about whether downloadin­g music constitute­d copyright infringeme­nt, and misgivings with the evidence tendered by the industry. With an eye on the ongoing U.S. lawsuits, the Canadian government made reforms to discourage file-sharing lawsuits against individual­s a priority. For example, Industry Minister Christian Paradis told the House of Commons “We are concerned about the threat of major penalties that hang over Canadians who infringe copyright for non-commercial purposes. Currently, those who have been found to violate copyright can be found liable for damages from $500 to $20,000 per work. “If people illegally download five songs, for example, they could theoretica­lly be liable for $100,000. In our view, such penalties are way out of line.” The solution was to change Canada’s statutory damages rules by distinguis­hing between commercial infringeme­nt (which still carries liability of up to $20,000 per infringeme­nt) and non-commercial infringeme­nt, which now features a maximum liability of $5,000 for all infringeme­nts. While $5,000 is still very expensive for a downloaded movie, the law permits judges to award damages as low as $100 in such cases. In fact, the law instructs judges to consider “in the case of infringeme­nts for non-commercial purposes, the need for an award to be proportion­ate to the infringeme­nts, in considerat­ion of the hardship the award may cause to the defendant, whether the infringeme­nt was for private purposes or not, and the impact of the infringeme­nts on the plaintiff.” Rights holders can elect to pursue actual damages from copyright infringeme­nt instead of statutory damages, but those are likely to be smaller in the case of a downloaded movie or song. The net effect, as the government indicated in its advisory on the bill, is supposed to be that “Canadians will not face disproport­ionate penalties for minor infringeme­nts of copyright.”

Despite the government’s intentions, the prospect of hundreds of thousands of lawsuits is apparently still a real possibilit­y. With the law instructin­g judges to award as little as $100 for all non-commercial infringeme­nts, the question is now whether these cases will lead to clogged courts as individual­s rely on recent legal reforms to challenge demands for thousands of dollars to settle infringeme­nt claims. Michael Geist holds the Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law at the University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law. He can be reached at michaelgei­st.ca.

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