In certain european countries (like France I believe), if you sue someone and you lose, you have to pay for all of thier legal fees and costs. It kind of makes people think twice before suing someone and ensures that the case is a slam dunk. We need this kind of a system in America
Yes!! That\'s exactly it! There needs to be some form of retribution for falsely accusing. That would also make the RIAA, and others, think twice before \"blanket bombing\" the nation with lawsuits.
Hehe I can see it now...
Bubba: \"I\'m in for rape and carrying 100 lbs of smack accross the border. I got 8 years. Hey...what you in for?\"
You: \"I\'m in for 10 years. I downloaded Snow White through Kaazaa.\"
he he he... I\'m only laughing because I don\'t want to cry. Why is it that some people can\'t see this? If they think it\'s wrong, fine... but does the punishment fit the crime?
Up here (Canada), We don\'t have to worry about US legal code, the DMCA or the RIAA. Yes, we can LEGALLY share music. But thats a different argument.
Hm... maybe I\'m in the wrong country. My father is canadian... maybe I need to think about revisiting my roots! Then I would haul whopass on the KaZaA network by sharing anything and everything! Cheap harddrives are now at around 250 GB!... Let me see, that would be every movie Disney ever made. Oh... and all of Britney Spears stuff (not because I like her music, but jsut to really tick off the RIAA).
...but seriously... are Canadians completely free from this? Can they still get sued? Are Canadians 100% safe here? Completely?
Yes...legal in Canada...but you are not exempt from the DMCA or other title 17 violations. God forbid an American downloads your music (such as an undercover FBI or SS agent)...then you are in deep doo-doo. You won\'t be traveling to the USA anymore unless you are looking to get locked up. The long arm of Ashcroft\'s arm appears to extend accross our borders.
See here: http://www.cybercrime.gov/griffithsIndict.htm
So, as long as you don\'t enter the US they can\'t touch you? Can the RIAA still sue you?
Are there any KaZaA \"farms\" in Canada?
The Department of Justice also announced that it intends to seek his extradition in the coming weeks.
So... the US can simply reach out to any country and pull out anyone they want... for copyright infringement? Is there any protection from the US strongarm?
Interesting idea, do you have any ideas as to how one can be classified as an \"educational institute\"? Maybe make the decryption/re-engineering a school project (for those of us in high school/university). Anyone have any other ideas?
Don\'t I, as a father, count as an educational institution?
TonyOlsen wrote:
ut in truth \"I\" NEVER decrypt the data... it is ALWAYS the software. DecSS (spelling?) is the same thing... If I run it I don\'t decrypt it anymore than the player decrypts it. I don\'t understand how that distinction can be upheld.
I don\'t think it\'s as simple as just an \"I-didn\'t-do-it,-DeCSS-did\". I think it\'s more of a problem of you controlling it. You TOLD it to decrypt that DVD, the same way you TOLD your DVD player to decrypt it. The problem is, the DVD player is legal, and cost you (indirectly) for a license to decrypt those DVDs. Unfortunatly, DeCSS cost you nothing and is not legal.
The statement I was responding to was that the claim is that when a DVD Player decrypts the file, \"You\" aren\'t. And I was pointing out why should the DVD Player get to claim that the user isn\'t telling it to do stuff, and yet the DVD Decryptor is? Either the user is responsible or not... it shouldn\'t matter whether the software is a DVD Player or decryptor... or whether it is licensed or not. I hate the industry talking out of both sides of their mouths... either something is one way or it isn\'t, but they can\'t claim immunity from their own laws (or their own \"medicine\"). If they cna\'t live by their own laws then they should see the idiocy of having those laws to begin with.
So... everyone who ever plays a DVD using a DVD Player is \"decrypting\" the DVD... they jsut aren\'t saving the resulting file (knowingly... since Decrypted DVD Files get saved by DVD Players... just not longterm). Decrypting can\'t be illegal without making DVD Players illegal. *Gag* The whole RIAA argument is flawed from so many angles... it sickens me!
Any why does the industry get to fork in \"licensing fees\", and why should I have to conform to whether the player I\'m using paid their licenses or not? Why should millions of americans be held guilty because \"DVD Decryption\" isn\'t licensed? I don\'t understand why the users have to care whether the company that made their software was licensed or not... I think the notion is ridiculous.
so as long as you don\'t advertise the fact you do this sort of thing (i.e. re-encoding movies over the internet for Z users), you shouldn\'t land in trouble.
Then how do legal video streaming companies do it? They decrypt the DVDs using this \"illegal software\"? I though tI had to right to decrypt my own DVDs for my own use... so I have the right to decrypt my own DVDs... I just cna\'t use any of the Decryption software to do it? It sounds like using the \"banned\" Decyption software isn\'t illegal, since copying your own DVDs to your computer IS legal.