Last June I blogged about the Minnesota woman who was found guilty of illegally downloading 24 songs from Kaaza.   Today, a judge reduced the "monstrous" $2 Million dollar fine to an amount he called significant and harsh...



WASHINGTON (AFP) – Condemning a two-million-dollar fine meted out to a Minnesota woman for illegally downloading music over the Internet as "monstrous and shocking," a judge has slashed the penalty to 54,000 dollars.





US District Court Michael Davis said the fine imposed by a jury on Jammie Thomas-Rasset, a single mother of four from the town of Brainerd, veered into the "realm of gross injustice."



In a high-profile music piracy case, Thomas-Rasset was found liable in June of violating music copyrights for using the Kazaa peer-to-peer file-sharing network to download 24 songs.




A jury ordered her to pay 1.92 million dollars -- or 80,000 dollars per song -- to six record companies: Capitol Records, Sony BMG Music, Arista Records, Interscope Records, Warner Bros. Records and UMG Recordings.




Davis slashed the fine to 54,000 dollars, or 2,250 dollars per recording, and complained in his ruling on Friday, a copy of which was obtained by AFP on Monday, that he was constrained from reducing it even further.





"This reduced award is significant and harsh," Davis said, but it is "no longer monstrous and shocking."



Posted by John B. Frank Monday, January 25, 2010

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