However, you’d have to imagine that there’s going to be one hell of a lawsuit either way. Most of those lawsuits ended in settlements, so I don’t think there’s as strong a precedent that says that turning digital streams is infringement. Of course, RIAA supporters and the like will quickly counter by pointing to the various lawsuits over whether or not XM’s recording device was legal. The company seems to be relying on the Supreme Court’s Betamax ruling, by claiming that since all it’s really doing is “time shifting” the ability to listen to music streamed via YouTube, it’s no different than the ruling that said it was okay to record television shows via video cassettes. We may get a test of whether or not that applies to the online world, with the news that former Gnutella P2P client MP3Rocket has changed strategies and ditched its P2P offering to switch to an app that simply records YouTube videos and turns them into MP3s. Technically it’s no different than “recording” something you hear off the radio, which is generally considered legal under the Audio Home Recording Act (which had plenty of bad things in it, but also included protections for people recording at home for personal use). There are a variety of different tools out there that let you “record” a YouTube video and turn it into an MP3, just as there are a variety of tools out there for converting Pandora streams to MP3s or converting internet radio to MP3s.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |