RIAA busting MP3 traders--are you worried?
Moderator: TheMachine
RIAA busting MP3 traders--are you worried?
This was probably just talked about on another topic, but I think it's worth mentioning again.
I heard a story on "All Things Considered" on NPR (I love NPR) tonight about the Recording Industry Association of America being rather successful lately in busting peer-to-peer MP3 file sharers. The synopsis on the story is on their website, with audio, at http://discover.npr.org/rundowns/rundow ... te=current. The synopsis reads:
"The Recording Industry Association of America announces it will launch a campaign Thursday that targets individuals who trade a "substantial" amount of copyright music online through peer-to-peer networks. The RIAA says it expects to file hundreds of lawsuits in the next few months."
They go into detail on the story about the way the RIAA is able to do this, and it sounds very legit to me. Apparently this tactic is so effective that they believe it will put a major dent in MP3 trading, if not seriously slowing it down permanently. At least in the way we're used to now.
So is this something to be concerned about, if you're a user sharing thousands of MP3's? I'm not sure.
I heard a story on "All Things Considered" on NPR (I love NPR) tonight about the Recording Industry Association of America being rather successful lately in busting peer-to-peer MP3 file sharers. The synopsis on the story is on their website, with audio, at http://discover.npr.org/rundowns/rundow ... te=current. The synopsis reads:
"The Recording Industry Association of America announces it will launch a campaign Thursday that targets individuals who trade a "substantial" amount of copyright music online through peer-to-peer networks. The RIAA says it expects to file hundreds of lawsuits in the next few months."
They go into detail on the story about the way the RIAA is able to do this, and it sounds very legit to me. Apparently this tactic is so effective that they believe it will put a major dent in MP3 trading, if not seriously slowing it down permanently. At least in the way we're used to now.
So is this something to be concerned about, if you're a user sharing thousands of MP3's? I'm not sure.
- Asheran Mojomaster
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- Drolgin Steingrinder
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Amen!Asheran Mojomaster wrote:I love it, they will never take it away from me!!! Of course I use it more for porn and movies than I do for music.
They failed to shut down Kazaa and others, now they wanna go after the fiends that share. Good fucking luck! They really think we care about people (look up Tommy Mottola) and companies losing millions?
I would take a dump in front of AOL Time Warner if they lose...
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/agreeAslanna wrote:I don't use peer-to-peer trading things like napster or whatever. So not worried in the least.
However, if they start going after Usenet posters/groups.. That would start to suck.
Usenet is the best source of movies, software, pr0n, cracks, or any other binary except maybe MP3s in which kazaa and WinMX are a bit speedier in getting what you want.
I'm amazed that usenet can get away with this. It will be a sad day if usenet is ever censored.
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Aranuil wrote:I think he was talking about his right to privacy. Like typically law enforcement requires a warrant to search your home/auto/computer/etc.kyoukan wrote:your right to steal intellectual property is constitutionally protected?
I remember this coming up back when people outside the "underground" began trading them. It goes along with how any ISP that your EMail travels through (server-wise) could read your email. Now the chances of this happening were virtually nil, but one small ISP I worked for in the past used to open random emails with attachments of a certain size or higher whether they were sent to our users or not. Why? Because any information that his server is made to process/transfer is basically "his" for a short time.
Now, I am not saying I AGREE with this, but that is one way that fighting the ISP's will help RIAA rather than going after the users themselves.





