On his blog, Recording Industry vs. The People, he points out that lawyers for Universal Music Group (UMG) specifically claimed on three separate occasions that MediaSentry was not being relied on for any technical expertise, but were in fact only being utilized as investigators. An excerpt from a November, 2006 filing UMG lawyers wrote the following.
Specifically, MediaSentry has not been designated as an expert witness in this case and is not offering any expert opinions. Rather, the MediaSentry investigator who detected the infringement at issue, Tom Mizzone, is a fact witness, having downloaded information from defendant's Kazaa share folder that any other Kazaa user could have downloaded.
They same filing also describes MediaSentry's role in the suit as "conducting on-line investigations into the illegal infringement of plaintiff's copyrighted works."
It's worth noting that the case which these documents were drawn from is just now drawing to a close, with UMG having long since cleared Ms. Lindor and finally admitting they have no evidence of whose computer was actually used to download the files in question. So much for MediaSentry's experts.
And let's also not forget that earlier this year MediaSentry changed their website, which used to identify them as investigators. The following was removed from the site of their parent company Safenet shortly after they were accused of conducting investigations illegally in the state of New York.
The bottom line is this. Either MediaSentry is an investigation firm that must be licensed, and therefore subject to government regulation, or they're expert witnesses whose methods are subject to scrutiny by defendants. It's time to pick one and deal with the consequences.
Written by: Rich Fiscus @ 9 Jul 2008 18:08