By now, we all know how the Recording Industry Association of America nabs alleged file sharers, more than 20,000 lawsuits and counting: Hired snoops from MediaSentry -- aka SafeNet -- log onto Kazaa, Limewire or other file sharing programs, peer into open share folders, take screen shots, download a few files and obtain the offending IP addresses.
But in a few states – Michigan, Texas, Florida, New York, Massachusetts, Oregon and Arizona -- the RIAA's investigators have come under attack by state governments or RIAA defendants. Reason: they are not licensed private investigators in their respective states. Michigan recently told (.pdf) MediaSentry it needed a license to continue practicing.
But demanding a private investigator's license doesn't make such sense for computer forensic work, according to the American Bar Association. In a recent report, the country's largest legal lobbying group urges the states to jettison the idea of, or licensing requirement for computer forensic specialists, especially since most state licensing boards don't demand education in such work
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