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Australian Screen Association

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromAFACT)
Copyrights Body

Australian Screen Association
Formation2004
TypeNGO
PurposeCopyright protection lobbying
Region served
Australia
AffiliationsFederation Against Copyright Theft
Websitewww.screenassociation.com.au

TheAustralian Screen Association (ASA) (formerly known asAustralian Federation Against Copyright Theft) is ananti-piracy lobby group that was established in 2004. Its aim is to protect the film and television industry and retailers from what it claims are adverse impacts ofcopyright infringement in Australia. The Australian Screen Association is affiliated with the United Kingdom organisation,Federation Against Copyright Theft and the United States organisationMPAA.

ASA actively works to reducecamcorder recording of films screened in cinemas. It is also dedicated to educating people about its own view of copyright infringement.

In mid-2011, thePirate Party Australia accused AFACT of intimidating ISPs after they threatened unspecified actions if they didn't engage with the organisation in talks onfile-sharing.[1]

Aleaked diplomatic cable revealed that AFACT was acting as theMPAA's Australian subcontractor and that the MPAA wanted to avoid the view that the court case was about Hollywood trying to bully an Australian ISP.[2]

Members

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The organisation comprisesWalt Disney Studios Home Entertainment,20th Century Fox,Paramount Pictures,Roadshow Entertainment,Sony Pictures,Universal Pictures,Warner Brothers and theMPAA.[3]

Court case

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Main article:Roadshow Films v iiNet

The organisation broughta lawsuit to theFederal Court of Australia against Australian internet service provider,iiNet, on 20 November 2008, alleging that iiNet had authorised copyright infringement on its network. AFACT had used Dtecnet, a company that tracks online copyright infringement to discover users sharing copyrighted content throughBitTorrent.[4]

The Federal Court decision cleared iiNet on 4 February 2010. Justice Cowdroy found that "mere provision of access to internet is not the means to infringement".

AFACT lostits appeal to the Federal Court on 24 February 2011.[5] It was ordered to pay iiNet's legal bills.

AFACT lost a further appeal to theHigh Court of Australia on 20 April 2012.[6]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Renai LeMay (13 July 2011)."AFACT strong-arming ISPs: Pirate Party".ZDNet Australia. CBS Interactive. Archived fromthe original on 17 July 2011. Retrieved14 January 2012.
  2. ^Richard Chirgwin (31 August 2011)."Wikileaked cable: AFACT was MPAA's cat's-paw".The Register. Retrieved14 January 2012.
  3. ^"About Us". AFACT. Archived fromthe original on 4 January 2012. Retrieved14 January 2012.
  4. ^Josh Taylor (30 November 2011)."iiNet vs. AFACT: the road to High Court".ZDNet. CBS Interactive. Retrieved14 January 2012.
  5. ^Chris Jager (24 February 2011)."iiNet vs AFACT: Australian Federation Against Copyright Theft loses appeal".PC & Tech Authority. Haymarket Media. Retrieved14 January 2012.
  6. ^"High Court Judgment Summary: Roadshow Films Pty Ltd & Ors v iiNet Ltd"(PDF). 20 April 2012.

External links

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Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Australian_Screen_Association&oldid=1270657050"
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