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« [Connectivity] Extremely Slow Upload Speed in Ft.Lauderdale Area  
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TOPDAWG
Premium
join:2005-04-27
Midland, ON
reply to eric87m
Re: Notice of Claim of Copyright Infrigement letter

OK get a program called PeerGuardian 2 and use a private torrent site. Also don't call anyone or write them back.

You'll be fine nobody is going to sue you right now.


roztaylor

join:2000-10-21
Madison, AL
·AT&T Yahoo

reply to Morty
said by Morty See Profile :

Under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, ISPs must notify their customers if a copyright owner has claimed a customer with that ISPs IP address has downloaded portions of a copyright owned material, or they can be held legally liable. All ISPs will comply with this, because they do not want to get into lawsuits, and it is know that for the most part the RIAA etc, will not individually press most cases.
Related question: My AT&T (SBC Yahoo) DSL account is setup as DHCP (i.e. I don't own/have a fixed IP address). When I do an IPCONFIG, it shows 10 minutes as the lifetime of the IP address. I typically reboot my PC a couple times per week. Each time I reboot, I receive a new IP address.

So, does my ISP maintain a log that shows which customer has which IP address at which time & date? Does this mean that I probably won't ever get this kind of letter, if I were to do that kind of activity--or am I going to get someone else's letter because I have the IP address that they used to have when they did the downloading. (Similar to the telephone calls we receive, asking for the people who had our telephone number before we did.)
--
Choose to make it a good day... don't wait for something good to happen!

Apollo729

join:2006-08-28
Avis, PA

They should have a log for 14 days I think, maybe longer, there is always logs on a server for troubleshooting issues, so far they aren't required by law to keep anything, but there is a push to store 2 years of logs, but, that won't happen.
--
Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.
Benjamin Franklin, Historical Review of Pennsylvania, 1759


Nightfall
My Goal Is To Deny Yours
Premium,MVM
join:2001-08-03
Grand Rapids, MI
·Site5.com
·AT&T Midwest
·Comcast


1 edit
reply to roztaylor
said by roztaylor See Profile :

said by Morty See Profile :

Under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, ISPs must notify their customers if a copyright owner has claimed a customer with that ISPs IP address has downloaded portions of a copyright owned material, or they can be held legally liable. All ISPs will comply with this, because they do not want to get into lawsuits, and it is know that for the most part the RIAA etc, will not individually press most cases.
Related question: My AT&T (SBC Yahoo) DSL account is setup as DHCP (i.e. I don't own/have a fixed IP address). When I do an IPCONFIG, it shows 10 minutes as the lifetime of the IP address. I typically reboot my PC a couple times per week. Each time I reboot, I receive a new IP address.

So, does my ISP maintain a log that shows which customer has which IP address at which time & date? Does this mean that I probably won't ever get this kind of letter, if I were to do that kind of activity--or am I going to get someone else's letter because I have the IP address that they used to have when they did the downloading. (Similar to the telephone calls we receive, asking for the people who had our telephone number before we did.)
I used to do contract work for an ISP and I can tell you they keep years of data on who gets what IP address. They aren't required by law to do so, but almost all major ISPs do it. In short, this won't work.
--
My Domain
Nightfall's Hockey and Life Journal


Doctor Four
My other vehicle is a TARDIS
Premium
join:2000-09-05
Dallas, TX
·AT&T U-Verse

reply to 81399672
said by 81399672 See Profile :

said by juris doctor :

But it cost those the beat them big bucks in legal fees.
once you win, you ask court to force the other side to pay your legal bill
In case after case, the RIAA has done everything they can
to weasel out of paying the defendant's court and other
costs when they lose one.

You'll find numerous examples of this and other scummy
behavior on the part of the RIAA's lawyers detailed at Ray
Beckermann's blog, »recordingindustryvspeople.blogspot.com/
--
"The trouble with computers, of course, is that they are very sophisticated idiots." - Doctor Who (from Robot)
We are the Hacker Collective: Resistance Is Futile - All Your AACS Keys Will Be Assimilated.

Apollo729

join:2006-08-28
Avis, PA

 reply to Nightfall
said by Nightfall See Profile :

I used to do contract work for an ISP and I can tell you they keep years of data on who gets what IP address. They aren't required by law to do so, but almost all major ISPs do it. In short, this won't work.
Ditto, but, I've seen the flip side too, more then a few times I've found no logs at all because they used too much disk space or some other misguided reason.

Not just on servers mind you, on desktops as well, hundreds of computers, newer models with large hard drives, nothing installed but XP and Office; one or two hundred GB free and they turn off windows built in logs to save space.

There's always two sides to a coin, no one can say for sure that any given ISP or even part of an ISP goes by the book, either the law or their own rules, so his ISP may keep logs or they may not; at the end of the day these networks are run by people and people don't always do things the right way, or even the logical way.
--
Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.
Benjamin Franklin, Historical Review of Pennsylvania, 1759


Nightfall
My Goal Is To Deny Yours
Premium,MVM
join:2001-08-03
Grand Rapids, MI
·Site5.com
·AT&T Midwest
·Comcast

said by Apollo729 See Profile :

said by Nightfall See Profile :

I used to do contract work for an ISP and I can tell you they keep years of data on who gets what IP address. They aren't required by law to do so, but almost all major ISPs do it. In short, this won't work.
Ditto, but, I've seen the flip side too, more then a few times I've found no logs at all because they used too much disk space or some other misguided reason.

Not just on servers mind you, on desktops as well, hundreds of computers, newer models with large hard drives, nothing installed but XP and Office; one or two hundred GB free and they turn off windows built in logs to save space.

There's always two sides to a coin, no one can say for sure that any given ISP or even part of an ISP goes by the book, either the law or their own rules, so his ISP may keep logs or they may not; at the end of the day these networks are run by people and people don't always do things the right way, or even the logical way.
Very true as well. I guess the question is, do you feel lucky? I know, if I was downloading illegal files, I wouldn't want to bank on the fact that my ISP wasn't keeping records like that. Its a gamble that, knowing your luck, wouldn't pay off. Its best to assume that they do things the right way to cover their asses.
--
My Domain
Nightfall's Hockey and Life Journal


jbob
Reach Out and Touch Someone
Premium
join:2004-04-26
Little Rock, AR
·Comcast
·AT&T Southwest

reply to Apollo729
said by Apollo729 See Profile :

said by Nightfall See Profile :

I used to do contract work for an ISP and I can tell you they keep years of data on who gets what IP address. They aren't required by law to do so, but almost all major ISPs do it. In short, this won't work.
Ditto, but, I've seen the flip side too, more then a few times I've found no logs at all because they used too much disk space or some other misguided reason.

Not just on servers mind you, on desktops as well, hundreds of computers, newer models with large hard drives, nothing installed but XP and Office; one or two hundred GB free and they turn off windows built in logs to save space.

There's always two sides to a coin, no one can say for sure that any given ISP or even part of an ISP goes by the book, either the law or their own rules, so his ISP may keep logs or they may not; at the end of the day these networks are run by people and people don't always do things the right way, or even the logical way.
I think yours is more correct. Wasn't one of the "Privacy" concerns is that the government was trying make the ISPs maintain logs for over 30 days? The ISPs were complaining as to cost of maintaining unlimited logs where the public was crying "privacy" issues. I believe, at least until recently, most ISPs only maintained 30 day logs. Not sure which is correct though.

NormanS
Premium,MVM
join:2001-02-14
San Jose, CA
·Pacific Bell - SBC

reply to roztaylor
said by roztaylor See Profile :

Related question: My AT&T (SBC Yahoo) DSL account is setup as DHCP (i.e. I don't own/have a fixed IP address). When I do an IPCONFIG, it shows 10 minutes as the lifetime of the IP address. I typically reboot my PC a couple times per week. Each time I reboot, I receive a new IP address.

So, does my ISP maintain a log that shows which customer has which IP address at which time & date?
Yes. They need such a log for troubleshooting; and to handle abuse notifies. I have certainly sent my share of abuse notifies to sbcglobal abuse; mostly for spam received from zombified customers of "art&t Yahoo! HSI" (formerly called, "SBC Yahoo! DSL Service").
--
Norman
~Oh Lord, why have you come
~To Konnyu, with the Lion and the Drum

NormanS
Premium,MVM
join:2001-02-14
San Jose, CA
·Pacific Bell - SBC

reply to jbob
said by jbob See Profile :

I think yours is more correct. Wasn't one of the "Privacy" concerns is that the government was trying make the ISPs maintain logs for over 30 days? The ISPs were complaining as to cost of maintaining unlimited logs where the public was crying "privacy" issues. I believe, at least until recently, most ISPs only maintained 30 day logs. Not sure which is correct though.
Realistically, I would guess they would keep logs for at least seven days, and, possibly, up to thirty days.

I worked for a company which rotated seven VHS tapes for the security cameras. If you needed to see what happened in the parking lots, you'd best ask within seven days of the event. The tapes were coded by day of the week, and re-used.
--
Norman
~Oh Lord, why have you come
~To Konnyu, with the Lion and the Drum


Maarvin
Premium
join:2005-04-11
Denver, CO
·Comcast

reply to eric87m
Forget it and be thankful that all you got was a letter from Comcast. This is the risk that all P2P users take when they download movies, music, etc.

It is legal to download. It is not legal to upload; this is distributing copyrighted material. Try to find a site that won't shut you down if you don't keep your ratio to ~1:1 and shut off your upload.


FiL
Premium
join:2005-08-16
Silver Spring, MD

reply to K Patterson
"The evidence they likely have is a copy of the infringer's shared directory, and copies of files they downloaded from it containing material for which they or their clients own the license"

You mean the copyright holder hacked his way onto this persons computer, looked through the files in said directory JUST to find his one or two copyrighted works? I think THAT is a more offensive act to perform then downloading copyrighted material. lol. crazy.

NormanS
Premium,MVM
join:2001-02-14
San Jose, CA
·Pacific Bell - SBC

Click for full size
Peers showing...sort of.
said by FiL See Profile :

"The evidence they likely have is a copy of the infringer's shared directory, and copies of files they downloaded from it containing material for which they or their clients own the license"

You mean the copyright holder hacked his way onto this persons computer, looked through the files in said directory JUST to find his one or two copyrighted works? I think THAT is a more offensive act to perform then downloading copyrighted material. lol. crazy.
said by FiL See Profile :

You mean the copyright holder hacked his way onto this persons computer, looked through the files in said directory JUST to find his one or two copyrighted works? I think THAT is a more offensive act to perform then downloading copyrighted material. lol. crazy.
Not at all. P2P means "Peer to peer"; you make files available for upload in exchange for the download. That it the underlying basis of P2P "file sharing". If you set up LimeWire at the default setting; if you join a torrent with Azureus, you are explicitly inviting others to check out what files you are working with. "Hacking" isn't necessary at all!

The copyright owners are doing exactly the same thing the file sharers are doing; looking for public shares of files.

I masked the IP addresses in this peer list; but each one of the peers can see my IP address, as well as the file being down/uploaded. This is the risk you take when you run P2P. If you don't want others to see your IP address, you shouldn't run P2P applications.

Significantly, with traditional P2P in the classic Napster model, you have files in a shared directory which is publicly announced to the Internet.
--
Norman
~Oh Lord, why have you come
~To Konnyu, with the Lion and the Drum


axelrose
Ban Tornadoes

join:2005-05-25
Chattanooga, TN
·Comcast

reply to K Patterson
said by K Patterson See Profile :

What you do NOT want to do is reformat your hard drive. There's a good reason why damning documents and emails show up in law suits - because the evidence against the defendants is less damning than the act of destroying it. It converts a civil wrong into a serious felony.
Not trying to pick a fight BUT what if the person simply replaced the hard drive with a new one and put the old one in a nice acid bath or simply went to the local landfill?

The RIAA went so long knowing no one could afford a record duplicator and suddenly someone went and made evil magnetic tape recorders. They were caught off guard, then went to sleep for 20 years and complained no one woke them up in time.

I got 2 of those letters. Chewbacca defense.
--
"If you wait by the river long enough, the bodies of your enemies will float by." - Sun Tsu (544 – 496 BC)


axelrose
Ban Tornadoes

join:2005-05-25
Chattanooga, TN
·Comcast

reply to eric87m
I need to pass something on about this issue, see if you remember it.

About 5 years ago a major network did a story about the MPAA and RIAA's efforts to stop piracy. One admitted they had a STAFF of people who would make exact sized kb/mb/GB copies of their own copyrighted material, then upload a junk file or one that would simply display or inform the downloader that piracy is Wrong.

Their goal was to make your chances of getting the actual pirated software/cd/movie a lot lower. One example was a popular Movie at the time. They had uploaded nearly 50% of available copies, each one was a junk file.

I wonder what a jury or judge would think of that practice?

Remember, the REAL 50% of the copies could disappear for several hours since it depends on Peers. This could make 100% of the available copies to be junk files, basically the MPAA or RIAA would be feeding people fake files for hours.

How is that different from cigarette companies dumping FAKE packs of cigarettes inside schools?
Their claim would be ?

Hey , just curious and wondering about this.
--
"If you wait by the river long enough, the bodies of your enemies will float by." - Sun Tsu (544 – 496 BC)

K Patterson
Premium,MVM
join:2006-03-12
Columbus, OH
·RoadRunner Cable

reply to axelrose
said by axelrose See Profile :

said by K Patterson See Profile :

What you do NOT want to do is reformat your hard drive. There's a good reason why damning documents and emails show up in law suits - because the evidence against the defendants is less damning than the act of destroying it. It converts a civil wrong into a serious felony.
Not trying to pick a fight BUT what if the person simply replaced the hard drive with a new one and put the old one in a nice acid bath or simply went to the local landfill?

The RIAA went so long knowing no one could afford a record duplicator and suddenly someone went and made evil magnetic tape recorders. They were caught off guard, then went to sleep for 20 years and complained no one woke them up in time.

I got 2 of those letters. Chewbacca defense.
After you have been served it is a crime. Before you have been served it is simply stupid. Judges are not dumb. Ever heard of Arthur Anderson? That is exactly what they did, only with paper files. Bye bye company, leaders go to jail.

It is certainly reasonable to delete files that you shouldn't have downloaded, but do you really think that anyone can get away with denying that they did it? The ultimate sanction, by the way, is to be told that you may not offer a defense against the action. There is one defendant at present who did just what you suggested. Big mistake. The judge has already said in effect that she is a liar.

K Patterson
Premium,MVM
join:2006-03-12
Columbus, OH
·RoadRunner Cable

reply to Maarvin
said by Maarvin See Profile :

It is legal to download.
And where does this appear in the law?

It is just as illegal as sharing. Just a lot harder to catch you at it.


axelrose
Ban Tornadoes

join:2005-05-25
Chattanooga, TN
·Comcast

reply to K Patterson
said by K Patterson See Profile :

said by axelrose See Profile :

said by K Patterson See Profile :

What you do NOT want to do is reformat your hard drive. There's a good reason why damning documents and emails show up in law suits - because the evidence against the defendants is less damning than the act of destroying it. It converts a civil wrong into a serious felony.
Not trying to pick a fight BUT what if the person simply replaced the hard drive with a new one and put the old one in a nice acid bath or simply went to the local landfill?

The RIAA went so long knowing no one could afford a record duplicator and suddenly someone went and made evil magnetic tape recorders. They were caught off guard, then went to sleep for 20 years and complained no one woke them up in time.

I got 2 of those letters. Chewbacca defense.
After you have been served it is a crime. Before you have been served it is simply stupid. Judges are not dumb. Ever heard of Arthur Anderson? That is exactly what they did, only with paper files. Bye bye company, leaders go to jail.

It is certainly reasonable to delete files that you shouldn't have downloaded, but do you really think that anyone can get away with denying that they did it? The ultimate sanction, by the way, is to be told that you may not offer a defense against the action. There is one defendant at present who did just what you suggested. Big mistake. The judge has already said in effect that she is a liar.
A case exists where the defendant Replaced the Hard Drive?
Cane you cite please?
--
"If you wait by the river long enough, the bodies of your enemies will float by." - Sun Tsu (544 – 496 BC)

K Patterson
Premium,MVM
join:2006-03-12
Columbus, OH
·RoadRunner Cable

Motown vs. DiPietro

»www.ilrweb.com/viewILRPDF.asp?fi···sSumJudg

She threw the computer away - apparently. As you read through the ruling, you'll see that she kind of goes with the wind.

The concept is called Spoliation of Evidence. Wikipedia has a short article on it.


axelrose
Ban Tornadoes

join:2005-05-25
Chattanooga, TN
·Comcast

said by K Patterson See Profile :

Motown vs. DiPietro

»www.ilrweb.com/viewILRPDF.asp?fi···sSumJudg

She threw the computer away - apparently. As you read through the ruling, you'll see that she kind of goes with the wind.

The concept is called Spoliation of Evidence. Wikipedia has a short article on it.
It seems they were arguing if she LIED about throwing the computer out to the trash.
Then they wanted to see if she acted in good faith when she threw the computer away. Was she doing it to get rid of evidence or just throwing it away because it's her computer and she can do what she wants.

This all seems very convenient for the plaintiff's since the Lady is alone and has to jump through two hurdles just based on the 'custody of evidence'

I don't think average people should be required to understand the law-firm written laws regarding copyright laws, do you?

Most of these more recent laws took into consideration custody of evidence. What about encryption? I could see someone given a letter, responding saying they make it a regular habit to encrypt all data to protect themselves from government eyes.

They could prove, with dates, that they didn't 'just start' encrypting data but that it was a regular practice long before being given notice of copyright infringement.

I also don't like the Cigarette company like tactics of the Plaintiffs’ parties being allowed to bait servers with faked copies of music and movies.

They need to rewrite the entire case law on copyright infringement, and include a broad definition regarding internet and media piracy.

I don't think we should coddle people who break the law no more than we should encourage people to write laws too complicated for a person to avoid retaining a lawyer who's fees would be no less than $5K-$10K for a very simple and short matter as copyright infringement.

how bout you?
--
"If you wait by the river long enough, the bodies of your enemies will float by." - Sun Tsu (544 – 496 BC)
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