ISP Releases Name in File Sharing Case

By TOBY STERLING, Associated Press Writer

The entertainment industry achieved a key victory Thursday after a Dutch Internet service provider surrendered the name and address of one of its customers suspected of illegal file-sharing.

Ronald van der Aart of UPC, the Netherlands' second-largest broadband ISP with 500,000 subscribers, said the company decided not to appeal a summary judgment by Amsterdam's District Court in a suit brought by the Brain Institute, an organization founded to fight digital copyright infringement.

Brain spokesman Okke Delfos-Visser said the agency would now contact the UPC customer and would likely sue if a settlement isn't reached first. Similar cases in the United States are usually settled for several thousand dollars.

Brain is funded by the U.S.-based Motion Picture Association and Recording Industry Association of America, along with their international and Dutch counterparts.

Previous attempts by Brain to force Dutch Internet providers to give up names of clients suspected of illegal file-sharing had foundered on technicalities. Brain and the organizations it represents say have often been powerless to sue for copyright infringement because they only have numeric Internet Protocol addresses assigned by companies like UPC, not the actual identities.

UPC argued it cannot be certain which of its clients used a given IP address at any given moment.

But in the current case, Brain had gotten a court order to seize the servers of a now-defunct file-sharing network called "Dikke Donder," which used BitTorrent file-sharing software.

Stored on the Dikke Donder servers were records of the IP and e-mail addresses that network members had used to sign up for the group. Several addresses were issued by UPC, including one to a user called "muzan."

The Amsterdam District Court ruled that, taken together, the e-mail and IP addresses must have been enough for UPC to know the identity of the Dikke Donder user. Any objections, it said, were "so theoretical that there can't be any discussion of a 'reasonable doubt.'"

E-mail attempts to reach the client, using an address identified in court documents, bounced. UPC did not disclose the person's identity to The Associated Press.

UPC is a subsidiary of Colorado-based Liberty Media Corp.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

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