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ACS Law Drops Piracy Cases


Thursday Next
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-12253746

 

A lot of people have accused ACS Law of basically trying to bully pirates for cash without any intention of going through court proceedings.

 

The ACS gambit is to send you a letter, tell you that they're going to sue you on behalf of the copyright holders agents, and try to sting you for ~£500.

 

Well, 26 people have gone to to court with them and now they are dropping all the cases. Or at least attempting to.

 

The Judge in one of those brilliant moments of making a lawyer squirm because he can is making it very difficult for ACS / Mediacat (the Copyright holders agent in these cases) to back out of what they presumably believe to be a losing battle.

 

Judge Birss: "I want to tell you that I am not happy. I am getting the impression with every twist and turn since I started looking at these cases that there is a desire to avoid any judicial scrutiny,"

 

I don't really agree with the lawyer acting for ACS getting death threats and such, that's going OTT, but the database leak could cost the firm a LOT of money, which would be delicious justice.

Edited by Thursday Next
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Here's the part that lets you know why this is really happening: "The court heard that copyright owners receive a 30% share of any recouped revenue while ACS: Law takes a 65% share." Lawyers are great at making money for themselves. Nobody really cares about actually stopping pirates.

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Well they might decide it's not worth it and drop suits over here too, or it could reveal evidence/documentation that would be useful in suits over here, but you're right that it's unlikely that any specific ruling in the UK would have a direct effect on suits here.

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It's probably an out of court settlement, so the people who paid don't have any recourse. It's common in lawsuits to send what's called a "demand letter", which is basically "this is what I want, if you don't do this then I'm suing you." The article isn't horribly specific, but it sounds like that's what these letters were. So paying it isn't an admission of guilt necessarily, but it's still a binding agreement.

 

Unless the law firm's conduct was so egregious as to invalidate the agreement (fraud, duress, etc), in which case the people who paid might have some recourse, but I don't have enough information to say if that's the case or not.

 

*Edit* - That's also all assuming that settlements work the same way in the UK as they do here. I really have no idea if that's the case or not.

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It's probably an out of court settlement, so the people who paid don't have any recourse. It's common in lawsuits to send what's called a "demand letter", which is basically "this is what I want, if you don't do this then I'm suing you." The article isn't horribly specific, but it sounds like that's what these letters were. So paying it isn't an admission of guilt necessarily, but it's still a binding agreement.

 

Unless the law firm's conduct was so egregious as to invalidate the agreement (fraud, duress, etc), in which case the people who paid might have some recourse, but I don't have enough information to say if that's the case or not.

 

*Edit* - That's also all assuming that settlements work the same way in the UK as they do here. I really have no idea if that's the case or not.

 

 

I demand you pay me $150 in damages because your post made me flashback to 1L and it was terrible. Payment will discharge all debts owed by you to me.

 

IIRC, UK law allows for more judicial review of these sorts of claims than U.S. law does; US law favors settlements more than most other countries' laws.

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