Question: Please use the IRAC format with separate sections for Issue, Rule, Application, and Conclusion. I need your help as soon as possible. 6-2. Copyrights in
Please use the IRAC format with separate sections for Issue, Rule, Application, and Conclusion. I need your help as soon as possible.

6-2. Copyrights in Digital Information. When she was in college, Jammie Thomas-Rasset wrote a case study on Napster, an online peer-to-peer (P2P) file-sharing network, and knew that it had been shut down because it was illegal. Later, Capitol Records, Inc., which owns the copyrights to a large number of music recordings, discovered that "tereastarr"-a user name associated with Thomas-Rasset's Internet protocol address-had made twenty-four songs available for distribution on KaZaA, another P2P network. Capitol notified Thomas-Rasset that she had been identified as engaging in the unauthorized trading of music. She replaced the hard drive on her computer with a new drive that did not contain the songs in dispute. Is Thomas-Rasset liable for copyright infringement? Explain. [Capitol Records, Inc. v. Thomas-Rasset, 692 F.3d 899 (8th Cir. 2012)] (See Copyrights in Digital Information.)