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May 31, 2005

Supreme Court Likely to Side with 'Grokster' in Internet File-Sharing Case

In MGM Studios v. Grokster, a case that could affect millions of consumers who use file-sharing software to copy music and video content, the Supreme Court likely will uphold a 1984 ruling stating that companies that offer copying technologies can not be held liable for copyright infringements of users, according to University at Buffalo Law Professor Shubha Ghosh, an expert on intellectual property and cyberspace law.

The decision will have implications not only for file-sharing, but for any company that creates technologies that can be used to copy copyrighted materials, including companies that make TiVo players, next-generation scanners and digital cameras," says Ghosh, who helped draft an amicus brief filed by Intellectual Property and Technology Law Professors in support of Grokster.

Read the entire statement.

Thanks to Jim Milles's ublaw phoenix blog for the tip

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Professor Ghosh is editor of AntitrustProf Blog, a member of the Law Professor Blogs Network

May 31, 2005 in Scholarship | Permalink

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