 | reply to Cheese
Re: Hmmm Nope.. not at all. So in order to get around such shaky ground, the RIAA sends someone to download the file and log such activity. There by, they claim the person broke the law and that they now had net losses. Easy fix. |
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 | If the RIAA did that on Bittorrent, they would be breaking the law by making the infringing file available for others to download also... |
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 | They own title to said file, so it's not illegal to share. The FBI has done that to catch pirates, so I'm sure the RIAA can. |
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 KrKHeavy Artillery For The Little GuyPremium join:2000-01-17 Tulsa, OK Reviews:
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| reply to jc100 said by jc100:Nope.. not at all. So in order to get around such shaky ground, the RIAA sends someone to download the file and log such activity. There by, they claim the person broke the law and that they now had net losses. Easy fix. That would require breaking the law. -- "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!) |
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 | Nice try, but if the company they hire to download the files were given authorization to do such (which they would be as that is what they were hired for), then that company is not breaking any law. |
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 MaggsPremium join:2002-11-29 Woodside, NY | reply to KrK Wouldn't that be entrapment |
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 | said by Maggs:Wouldn't that be entrapment That would most definitely be entrapment. |
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 | reply to Maggs No. Entrapment is a very tough defense that RARELY if ever works. I mean the police these days pretend to be kids and snare people. The person on the other line is an adult, yet they get them for attempted solicitation of a minor. That is entrapment but they still get those people. That's just one example. The only time I CAN EVER remember the entrapment defense working in a major case would be with Delorean. Delorean was approached by the FBI to sell drugs after his was going bankrupt. T hey then got him on drug charges and he won on the defense they approached him and not vice versa. However, 99.99 percent of the time, you're shit out of luck with that defense. |
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 | reply to jc100 If RIAA shares the file on BitTorrent, then RIAA is in effect granting the downloaders to share the file with others because downloading requires sharing in standard BitTorrent. |
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 root9 join:2005-04-08 Kitchener, ON | reply to jc100 said by jc100:They own title to said file, so it's not illegal to share. The FBI has done that to catch pirates, so I'm sure the RIAA can. Technically RIAA doesn't own the title to anything. People who they represent do. Therefore RIAA is liable just as anyone else if they download said illegal content. -- Please engage eyeballs and retain functional brain before operating fingers. |
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