Originally posted by: Night201
Article Do the 4 people that they are turning over even know that they are the ones? Do you think Verizon was able to contact them as a warning? That would suck if one day they got a phone call or had the authorities bust down their doors.
Originally posted by: SyahM
Originally posted by: Night201
<a class=ftalternatingbarlinklarge href="http://news.com.com/2100-1025_3-1013154.html?tag=fd_top" target=blank>Article</A> Do the 4 people that they are turning over even know that they are the ones? Do you think Verizon was able to contact them as a warning? That would suck if one day they got a phone call or had the authorities bust down their doors.
you're afraid it you, arent you?
bye bye then.
Originally posted by: Murphyrulez
I never really understood why people would want to risk going to jail or paying big fines, just to listen to music. Why would you serve up a huge amount of illegal files? I mean, it's just music. Turn on the radio.
I have Kazaa on one of my computers, I might download 1 song a month if I like it enough.
Just seems stupid to me.
Originally posted by: Night201
Do the 4 people that they are turning over even know that they are the ones? Do you think Verizon was able to contact them as a warning? That would suck if one day they got a phone call or had the authorities bust down their doors.
Originally posted by: notfred
Since when do we turn over the names of suspected criminals to private organizations to do what they want with them? If anything shouldn't these namesbe given to a court or law enforcement agency?
Actually this might be a good test case. The RIAA is trampling on the rights of everyone here. This could quite easily end up in the Supreme Court and if it does the RIAA will more than likely lose it's arse.Originally posted by: no0b
Originally posted by: notfred
Since when do we turn over the names of suspected criminals to private organizations to do what they want with them? If anything shouldn't these namesbe given to a court or law enforcement agency?
welcome to the corporation called America.
Originally posted by: no0b
And people wonder why RIAA gets hax0red every tuesday
Originally posted by: notfred
Since when do we turn over the names of suspected criminals to private organizations to do what they want with them? If anything shouldn't these namesbe given to a court or law enforcement agency?
Since now, unless this gets appealed and reversed.Originally posted by: notfred
Since when do we turn over the names of suspected criminals to private organizations to do what they want with them?
Exactly. The RIAA just wants to get around due process and be able to prosecute anyone and everyone they want to, without any hard evidence.If anything shouldn't these namesbe given to a court or law enforcement agency?
