12-year-old file swapper bailed out by P2P group

$2,000 fine paid on her behalf... would have taken many years' worth of pocket money otherwise...

NEWS A peer-to-peer group says it will cover costs for a 12-year-old New York girl who agreed to pay record labels $2,000 to settle a file-swapping lawsuit. P2P United, a peer-to-peer industry trade group that includes Grokster, StreamCast Networks, Limewire and other file-trading software companies, said Wednesday it had offered to reimburse Brianna Lahara and her mother's payment to the Recording Industry Association of America. Lahara's mother agreed on Tuesday to settle copyright infringement charges on behalf of her daughter. Adam Eisgrau, the executive director of P2P United, said: "We do not condone copyright infringement, but someone has to draw the line to call attention to a system that permits multinational corporations with phenomenal financial and political resources to strong-arm 12-year-olds and their families in public housing the way this sorry episode dramatises." Eisgrau said he had not yet been in direct contact with Lahara or her mother. In the few days since Lahara's unexpected rise into the public eye, the schoolgirl's case has become a cause celebre for RIAA critics, who say the recording industry's wave of lawsuits against file-traders is misguided. According to a New York Post profile, Lahara is a 12-year-old honours student who lives in public housing. Her name turned up in one of the 261 lawsuits filed by the record industry group on Monday. Previous targets of RIAA lawsuits have sometimes found financial help from the file-swapping community. Daniel Peng, a Princeton University junior who agreed to settle file-trading charges with the RIAA for $15,000 earlier this year, has raised nearly $10,000 toward covering his costs from public donations made through PayPal and other online payment services, according to his Web site. John Borland writes for News.com

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