Priority Records v. Brittany Chan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Priority Records v. Brittany Chan was a Michigan case by the RIAA against 14-year old child who allegedly infringed plaintiffs' copyrights when she was 13 years old, through peer to peer file sharing.[1]
The case was dismissed due to the RIAA's failure to submit to the judge a workable plan for, (a) appointment of a guardian ad litem to protect the interests of the child, and (b) the RIAA's payment of the fees of the guardian ad litem.
[edit] References
This Case Law article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |