Efforts against file sharing The RIAA opposes unauthorized sharing of its members' music. Studies conducted since the association began its campaign against peer-to-peer file-sharing have concluded that losses incurred per download range from negligible to moderate. The association has commenced high-profile lawsuits against file-sharing service providers. Likewise, it has sued individuals suspected of file sharing, notably college students, parents of file-sharing children and at least one dead person. It is accused of employing techniques such as peer-to-peer "decoying" and "
spoofing" to combat file sharing. In late 2008, they announced they would stop their lawsuits, and instead attempt to work with ISPs to persuade them to use a three-strike system for file sharing involving issuing two warnings and then cutting off Internet service after the third strike.
Selection of defendants The RIAA names defendants based on ISP identification of the subscriber associated with an
IP address, and as such do not know any additional information about a person before they sue. After an Internet subscriber's identity is discovered, but before an individual lawsuit is filed, the subscriber is typically offered an opportunity to settle. The standard settlement is a payment to the RIAA and an agreement not to engage in file sharing of music. Such suits are also usually on par with statutory damages of $750 per work, with the RIAA choosing the number of works it deems "reasonable". For cases that do not settle at this amount, the RIAA has gone to trial, seeking statutory damages from the jury, written into The
Digital Theft Deterrence and Copyright Damages Improvement Act of 1999 as between $750 and $30,000 per work or $750 and $150,000 per work if "willful". The
Electronic Frontier Foundation and
Public Citizen oppose the ability of the RIAA and other companies to "strip Internet users of anonymity without allowing them to challenge the order in court". In the past, U.S. courts have declared that an IP address is not a person nor personal identifier. This weakened the RIAA's ability to sue individuals. The RIAA's methods of identifying individual users had, in some rare cases, led to the issuing of
subpoenas to persons dead or otherwise incapable of file-sharing. Two such examples include: a then-recently deceased 83-year-old woman an elderly computer novice, and a family reportedly without any computer at all.
Settlement programs In February 2007, the RIAA began sending letters accusing Internet users of sharing files and directing them to web site P2PLAWSUITS.COM, where they can make "discount" settlements payable by credit card. The letters go on to say that anyone not settling will have lawsuits brought against them. Typical settlements are between $3,000 and $12,000. This new strategy was formed because the RIAA's legal fees were cutting into the income from settlements. In 2008, the RIAA sued 19-year-old Ciara Sauro for allegedly sharing 10 songs online. The RIAA also launched an "early
settlement program" directed to ISPs and to colleges and universities, urging them to pass along letters to subscribers and students offering early settlements, prior to the disclosure of their identities. The settlement letters urged ISPs to preserve evidence for the benefit of the RIAA and invited the students and subscribers to visit an RIAA website for the purpose of entering into a "discount settlement" payable by credit card. By March 2007, the focus had shifted from ISPs to colleges and universities. In October 1998, the RIAA filed a lawsuit in the Ninth U.S. Court of Appeals in
San Francisco claiming the
Diamond Multimedia Rio PMP300 player violated the 1992
Audio Home Recording Act. The Rio PMP300 was significant because it was the second portable consumer MP3 digital audio player released on the market. The three-judge panel ruled in favor of Diamond, paving the way for the development of the portable digital player market. In 2003, the RIAA sued college student developers of LAN search engines
Phynd and Flatlan, describing them as "a sophisticated network designed to enable widespread music thievery". In September 2003, the RIAA filed suit in civil court against several private individuals who had shared large numbers of files with
Kazaa. Most of these suits were settled with monetary payments averaging $3,000. Kazaa publisher Sharman Networks responded with a lawsuit against the RIAA, alleging that the terms of use of the network were violated and that unauthorized client software was used in the investigation to track down the individual file sharers (such as Kazaa Lite). An effort to throw out this suit was denied in January 2004, but that suit was settled in 2006. Sharman Networks agreed to a global settlement of litigation brought against it by the Motion Picture Association of America, the
International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, and by the RIAA. The creators of the popular Kazaa file-sharing network would pay $115 million to the RIAA, plus unspecified future amounts to MPAA and the software industry; and, they would install filters on its networks to prevent users from sharing copyrighted works on its network. The RIAA also filed suit in 2006 to enjoin digital
XM Satellite Radio from enabling its subscribers from playing songs they had recorded from its satellite broadcasts. It is also suing several Internet radio stations. Later, XM was forced to impose an industry fee upon subscribers. The fee still exists and has always been paid, in-full, directly to the RIAA. On October 12, 2007, the RIAA sued Usenet.com seeking a permanent injunction to prevent the company from "aiding, encouraging, enabling, inducing, causing, materially contributing to, or otherwise facilitating"
copyright infringement. This suit, the first that the RIAA has filed against a Usenet provider, has added another branch to the RIAA's rapidly expanding fight to curb the
unauthorized distribution of copyrighted materials. Unlike many of the RIAA's previous lawsuits, this suit was filed against the provider of a service. Providers have no direct means of removing infringing content. The RIAA's argument relies heavily on the fact the Usenet.com, the only defendant that had been named, promoted their service with slogans and phrases that strongly suggested that the service could be used to obtain free music. On April 28, 2008, RIAA member labels sued Project Playlist, a web music search site, claiming that most of the sound recordings in the site's index of links are infringing. Project Playlist's website denies that any of the music is hosted on Project Playlist's own servers. On June 30, 2009, the RIAA prevailed in its fight against Usenet.com, in a decision, that the U.S. District Judge Harold Baer of the Southern District of New York ruled in favor of the music industry on all its main arguments: that Usenet.com was guilty of direct, contributory, and vicarious infringement. In addition, and perhaps most importantly for future cases, Baer said that Usenet.com cannot claim protection under the Sony Betamax decision. That ruling states that companies cannot be held liable for contributory infringement if the device they create is "capable of significant noninfringing uses". Furthermore, the parties had appealed to a federal court for damage assessments and awards, which could amount to several millions of dollars for the music industry. On October 26, 2010, RIAA members won a case against LimeWire, a P2P file-sharing network, for illegal distribution of copyrighted works. On October 29, in retaliation, riaa.org was taken offline via
denial-of-service attacks executed by members of
Operation Payback and
Anonymous.
Advocacy The RIAA filed briefs in
Allen v. Cooper, which was decided in 2020. The
Supreme Court of the United States abrogated the
Copyright Remedy Clarification Act as unconstitutional, while the RIAA had argued the opposite view. In 2025, the RIAA ramped up its lobbying efforts to counter the impact of artificial intelligence on creative work and ensure copyright protection across digital platforms. The organization spent more than $2.5 million in the first quarter of 2025.
The "work made for hire" controversy In 1999, Mitch Glazier, a Congressional staff attorney, inserted, without public notice or comment, substantive language into the final markup of a "technical corrections" section of copyright legislation, classifying many music recordings as "
works made for hire", thereby stripping artists of their copyright interests and transferring those interests to their record labels. Shortly afterwards, Glazier was hired as Senior Vice President of Government Relations and Legislative Counsel for the RIAA, which vigorously defended the change when it came to light. The battle over the disputed provision led to the formation of the
Recording Artists' Coalition, which successfully lobbied for repeal of the change.
GitHub and youtube-dl takedown request On October 23, 2020, the
code repository hosting service
GitHub (owned by
Microsoft) released a
DMCA request from the RIAA. This request listed the
open-source software project
youtube-dl (and
forks of the project) as
copyright violations. The request cited the United States law
Title 17 U.S.C. §1201. Critics of this action say that the
software library can be used by archivists to download videos of social injustice. According to Parker Higgins, former Director of Copyright Activism at the
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), this takedown request was a "throwback threat" analogous to the
DeCSS controversy.
NFT takedown requests On February 4, 2022, Mitch Glazier swiftly took action against
NFT scam site
HitPiece. The site had allegedly stole music to mint as NFTs, and host them on their site. Since then, HitPiece has only responded with "We Started The Conversation And We're Listening." However, their site has not been updated since. == Criticism ==