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RIAA lists top 25 universities handing out piracy notices

I don’t know who thought it would be a good idea to do so, but the RIAA has released a list of universities, ranked in order of the number of piracy notices they have handed out to students. So when it’s that time of the year again, and you’re looking at universities to apply to, here’s the list to avoid:

Copyright infringement notices handed out during 2006 – 2007 academic year:

  1. Ohio University – 1,287
  2. Purdue University – 1,068
  3. University of Nebraska at Lincoln – 1,002
  4. University of Tennessee at Knoxville – 959
  5. University of South Carolina – 914
  6. University of Massachusetts at Amherst – 897
  7. Michigan State University – 753
  8. Howard University – 572
  9. North Carolina State University – 550
  10. University of Wisconsin at Madison – 513
  11. University of South Florida – 490
  12. Syracuse University – 488
  13. Northern Illinois University – 487
  14. University of Wisconsin at Eau Claire – 473
  15. Boston University – 470
  16. Northern Michigan University – 457
  17. Kent State University – 424
  18. University of Michigan at Ann Arbor – 400
  19. University of Texas at Austin – 371
  20. North Dakota State University – 360
  21. Indiana University – 353
  22. Western Kentucky University – 353
  23. Seton Hall University – 338
  24. Arizona State University – 336
  25. Marshall University – 331

The great folks at Ars have more.

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  4. Online video a handy teaching tool for top universities

One lonesome reply...

  1. I think it is wrong for RIAA to sue students and let a person in law enforcemnt slide.

    A family member has a recording of a high ranking police officer describing a noted website telling her this is thing to do, everybody is doing it. He said he bet his daughters had downloaded 1000 songs on his computer. He laughed and said he hoped the federal government did not come in and investigate him.
    The person called the FBI asking if this was OK to do. The FBI agent was quick to tell the person not to do it, it was a crime and she would get caught. The agent was just as quick to ignore when the person told who had said this.

    Months later after reading where students and others were being sued she sent a copy of the recording to the RIAA in Washington, DC. In so many articles it seems young people are getting put down for doing this and many times saying they should know better. The person told the RIAA how unfair she thought it was for doing this and a person in law enforcement should know better. She also noted the fact he was encouraging someone to break the law. I have seen no sign of this officer having to pay. If the law says it’s a crime then it should be a crime for everyone.

    Send some thoughts on this, I would like to hear.

    By Renee on October 15, 2007 2:15 pm

What do you think?