republican-creole
Search:  

 
theme to white backgroundlet page decide theme
 
   All ForumsHot TopicsGallery






how-to block ads


 
Forums » RIAA Pursues State-Level Anti-Piracy Bills » Odds are this will pass in most states
Search Topic:
Share Topic:
RSS topic:
toggle:
flat / full
normal / watch
Post a:
Post a:
« Turnabout Is Fair Play  
AuthorAll Replies

jc100

join:2002-04-10

reply to KrK
Re: Odds are this will pass in most states

Well in some ways I was IF and ONLY if it was pure negligence on the employees's part. If he saw the mess, walked by it, and did nothing and some idiot got hurt. It would be both the idiot and employees fault. However, the idiot won't sue the employee, he or she will sue the store with deep pockets. That is an isolated example. Most times, it goes back to the idiot not watching where he or she was going, and looking for a windfall. Then, ambulance chaser lawyer hits the store with a big lawsuit and the rest is history.


KrK
Heavy Artillery For The Little Guy
Premium
join:2000-01-17
Tulsa, OK
reply to jc100
Ok, I understand what you're saying. It seemed you were advocating the employees should be sued, not the store.

Not a chance. The person who was the most at fault was the individual themselves.

jc100

join:2002-04-10


1 edit
reply to KrK
Krk,

I agree fully, however, the law is stupid. In terms of the law, you have to sue the store. The store hired the employee responsible for said section. The plantiff's lawyers in court will without a doubt argue he or she should have noticed and cleaned it up in a reasonable time frame. Obviously, there is a lot grey area here. Personally, I AGREE. Slip are falls are the CLASSIC B.S type lawsuits. People NEED TO AND SHOULD watch where they are going. Don't for one second believe i was defending this type of litigious crap. It's frivolous to the MAX. I was merely giving you an EXAMPLE of how the law seems to work. Obviously, this law sucks as will the law when it comes to suing over torrents. Instead of holding those responsible at fault, the law / entity always hits the one with the deep pockets. THAT, was my point. Sorry if it wasn't clear.


Noah Vail
Premium
join:2004-12-10
Lorton, VA
·RoadRunner Cable

reply to jc100
said by jc100 See Profile :

Which is absolutely wrong. Individuals should be held accountable instead of the whole. In this society, we always blame the entity versus the person doing the actions.
Which is exactly why the Executives of the RIAssA partner companies should be in prison, and not protected by the incorporate shield laws.

Why does the press, the government, the world in general
fixate on individual end users
who may be stealing hundreds of dollars
and COMPLETELY ignore the RIAssA executive individuals
who have garnered BILLIONS of dollars
that they were never entitled to;
via collusion, price fixing, payola/pay-for-play and other illegal and monopolistic practices?

This is like watching an arsonist torch the entire village;
while we harass the kid frying ants with a magnifying glass.

NV
--
Abortion: A Republican Plot to Thin the Liberal Herd.


KrK
Heavy Artillery For The Little Guy
Premium
join:2000-01-17
Tulsa, OK
·AT&T Yahoo
·AT&T DSL Service
·Cox HSI

reply to jc100
said by jc100 See Profile :

Which is absolutely wrong. Individuals should be held accountable instead of the whole.
Sounds good far...

If you get hurt in a store because an employee failed to mop up a broken container, you sue the store. You don;t sue the employee? Why?
... and here's where you go right off the deep end. With most jobs, the employees have a lot to do. They aren't standing around in the aisles waiting for someone to break something and then swoop in to clean it up. They have to be told about it, and then they get over there and clean it up as soon as possible.

My question to you: If there's a broken container on the floor, how come you didn't see it? Don't you watch where you are going? Don't you look where you put your feet? Where's the responsibility for your own actions? Why is it's the employee's fault that you can't pay attention to what you're doing? And.... then there is who broke the container.... Another customer.... so why not sue them? They knocked it down and broke it, it's more their fault then the store or the employee.... So the guilty parties are in descending order: 1) The person who walked into an obvious hazard; 2) The other person who created the hazard, and then a distant third MIGHT be the employees, and only if they were notified or aware of the hazard but failed to do anything about it and made no effort to begin to correct the hazard.

Slip and falls are such BS. Yes, it's raining. Yes the concrete is wet. Yes you are wearing flip-flops which are flat and slide on the wet concrete. Who's at fault? YOU, you're the one responsible.... Not the owner of the parking lot.... sheesh. Sue the employees. Are you an employee somewhere by chance?

The RIAA is trying to claim these students are an agent of the school. It's the schools job to monitor them. I think that is complete B.S. here. Unlike a company paying an employee, the STUDENTS pay the school. It should fall on EACH STUDENT to face the music if he or she is caught, not the whole.
Now with this I'd have to agree... and notice that how your blaming the store employee for the individual's actions is exactly backwards to this.
--
"Regulatory capitalism is when companies invest in lawyers, lobbyists, and politicians, instead of plant, people, and customer service." - former FCC Chairman William Kennard (A real FCC Chairman, unlike the current Corporate Spokesperson in the job!)

jc100

join:2002-04-10

reply to hairspring
Which is absolutely wrong. Individuals should be held accountable instead of the whole. In this society, we always blame the entity versus the person doing the actions. If you get hurt in a store because an employee failed to mop up a broken container, you sue the store. You don;t sue the employee? Why? Well you say the employee was an agent of the store and we all know that store has deep pockets. The same crap here but in a much lesser degree. The RIAA is trying to claim these students are an agent of the school. It's the schools job to monitor them. I think that is complete B.S. here. Unlike a company paying an employee, the STUDENTS pay the school. It should fall on EACH STUDENT to face the music if he or she is caught, not the whole. O well, this is make believe land, and above we see reality. Reality is obviously bought, as our politicians are morons.
Forums » RIAA Pursues State-Level Anti-Piracy Bills« Turnabout Is Fair Play  


Saturday, 05-Dec 20:16:00 Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Hosting by www.nac.net - DSL,Hosting & Co-lo | feedback | contact
over 10 years online! © 1999-2009 dslreports.com.
page compression OFF
Most commented news this week
· [163] Comcast Releasing Promised Usage Meter
· [147] Avast Antivirus Has Gone Mad
· [128] Comcast Makes NBC Universal Acquisition Official
· [110] The Bandwidth Hog Does Not Exist
· [105] Graduate Student Unveils Sprint's GPS Sharing With Feds
· [101] Google Invades ISP, OpenDNS Turf With Google Public DNS
· [85] FCC Ponders Moving From PSTN To IP Voice
· [81] Latest Consumer Reports Survey Not Kind To AT&T
· [80] New Bill Aims To Limit ETFs
· [74] Sprint Defuses GPS Privacy Media Bomb
Most people now reading
· False positive in Avast! or is it real? [Security]
· UPS - What do you people think happened? [General Questions]
· First commercial tool to crack BitLocker arrives (Updated) [Security]
· Windows 7 boot manager editing questions [Microsoft Help]
· 3.x Feral Druid - Bear Tanking Guide [World of Warcraft]
· delete [Security]
· Wife might have to work in.... Iowa for a few months!!! [General Questions]
· Can I put insulation behind wires from panel? [Home Repair & Improvement]
· DNS options, what are YOU using? [TekSavvy]
· RG Firmware update to VDSL2 this morning [AT&T U-verse]