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Newzbin was temporarily shut down but came back as Newzbin 2. In
June 2011, the Motion Picture Association applied for an injunction to force BT
to cut off customers' access to Newzbin 2, which was granted by the High Court
on 28 July 2011.
In September 2011, Newzbin 2 released software which aimed to
circumvent the BT blocking, causing the High Court to order BT to block its customers'
access to the Newzbin 2 within fourteen days. This was a first in terms of UK
copyright law.
Both decisions are summarised in more detail by the IPKat here.
The latest in the saga is a decision from
the High Court regarding whether a copyright owner has a proprietary claim to
money derived from infringement of the copyright. Six film studios, all members
of the Motion Picture Association, claimed to be the owners or exclusive
licensees of the copyright in numerous films and television programmes, and
argued that where copyright is infringed, the copyright owner has a proprietary
claim to the whole proceeds of the infringement.
Mr Justice Newey held that the remedies for infringement of
copyright are dealt with in chapter VI of part I of the CDPA. Section 96(2)
states that, in an action for infringement of copyright, "all such relief
by way of damages, injunctions, accounts or otherwise is available to the
plaintiff as is available in respect of the infringement of any other property
right".
He concluded that:
"Despite Mr Spearman's persuasive advocacy, it seems to me
clear that a copyright owner does not have a proprietary claim to the fruits of
an infringement of copyright. I shall not, therefore, grant proprietary
injunctions."
So Hollywood won't get the profits of Newzbin's piracy.
An interesting side note: ZDNet
reported that the barrister acting
for Newzbin in its 2010 trial has been indefinitely struck off in January 2012
because he owned the file-sharing site. The Bar Standards Board disbarred
Brighton-based David Harris for breaches of paragraphs 301(a)(iii), 302,
603(d) and 901.7 of the Code of Conduct of the Bar of England and Wales.
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