RIAA Objects To Webcast In Downloading Case
The RIAA really doesn’t like a Massachusetts federal judge’s ruling allowing webcasting of a legal hearing in its filesharing case against Joel Tenenbaum. After U.S. District Court Nancy Gertner approved a motion by counsel Charles Nesson, to narrowcast legal arguments to a Harvard website, from which it would be broadcast “gavel to gavel,” the RIAA appealed the decision to the First District U.S. Court of Appeals. The RIAA really doesn’t like a Massachusetts federal judge’s ruling allowing webcasting of a legal hearing in its filesharing case against Joel Tenenbaum. After U.S. District Court Nancy Gertner approved a motion by counsel Charles Nesson, to narrowcast legal arguments to a Harvard website, from which it would be broadcast “gavel to gavel,” the RIAA appealed the decision to the First District U.S. Court of Appeals. The RIAA really doesn’t like a Massachusetts federal judge’s ruling allowing webcasting of a legal hearing in its filesharing case against Joel Tenenbaum. After U.S. District Court Nancy Gertner approved a motion by counsel Charles Nesson, to narrowcast legal arguments to a Harvard website, from which it would be broadcast “gavel to gavel,” the RIAA appealed the decision to the First District U.S. Court of Appeals. The RIAA really doesn’t like a Massachusetts federal judge’s ruling allowing webcasting of a legal hearing in its filesharing case against Joel Tenenbaum. After U.S. District Court Nancy Gertner approved a motion by counsel Charles Nesson, to narrowcast legal arguments to a Harvard website, from which it would be broadcast “gavel to gavel,” the RIAA appealed the decision to the First District U.S. Court of Appeals. The RIAA really doesn’t like a Massachusetts federal judge’s ruling allowing webcasting of a legal hearing in its filesharing case against Joel Tenenbaum. After U.S. District Court Nancy Gertner approved a motion by counsel Charles Nesson, to narrowcast legal arguments to a Harvard website, from which it would be broadcast “gavel to gavel,” the RIAA appealed the decision to the First District U.S. Court of Appeals.