Download lawsuits hit colleges
WASHINGTON — The super-fast “Internet2” network that connects universities researching the next-generation Internet is also apparently popular among college students who download pirated music and movies.
Entertainment groups said Tuesday they intend to sue hundreds of students accused of illegally distributing copyrighted songs and films across college campuses using the private research network, which boasts speeds hundreds of times faster than the Internet.
How much faster? Internet2 researchers once demonstrated they can download a DVD-quality copy of the popular movie “The Matrix” in 30 seconds over their network, a feat they said would take roughly 25 hours over the Internet.
The Recording Industry Association of America, the trade group for the largest labels, said it will file federal lawsuits Wednesday against 405 students at 18 colleges with access to the Internet2 network. The Motion Picture Association of America said it will file an unspecified number of lawsuits against Internet2 users.
The recording industry said it found evidence of more illegal activity at 140 more schools in 41 states and sent warning letters to university presidents.
Internet2 is used by several million university students, researchers and professionals around the world but is generally inaccessible to the public.
“We don’t condone or support illegal file-sharing,” said Internet2’s chief executive, Doug Van Houweling. “We’ve always understood that just like there is a lot of file-sharing going on on the public Internet, there’s also some file-sharing going on on Internet2.”
The recording industry said some students were illegally sharing across Internet2 as many as 13,600 music files — far more than most Internet users — and that the average number of songs offered illegally by the students was 2,300 each.
“We cannot let this high-speed network become a zone of lawlessness where the normal rules don’t apply,” said Cary Sherman, president of the recording association.
Van Houweling cautioned universities against filtering data to block illegal activity in ways that would slow the network’s performance.
He said Internet2 does not attempt to screen illegal files from the vast amounts of data flowing over the network because of technical limitations and privacy concerns. He said Internet2 also enjoys liability protection in the courts as long as the organization can’t be shown to be responsible for material flowing over the network.
“It’s possible to attack this problem in ways that do compromise the performance,” Van Houweling said.