Sweden's File Sharing Debate Becomes Mass Brawl 406
praps writes "When Sweden's Data board gave the film and games industry organisation Antipiratbyrån an exemption from data protection laws last week it seemed that file sharers were on the ropes. Then the music industry joined in with some punches of its own, saying it too will hunt those who share songs online. Suddenly, file sharers have the support of their ISPs, who are refusing to cooperate with the big industries - and it's game on." From the article: "Only the file sharer's ISP can link the IP address to the person. If the ISP receives a request for such information from the police, they cannot refuse it, but a few calls from TT revealed that requests from APB would be ignored." We've previously reported on Swedish anti-downloading laws before.
Makes me laugh. (Score:5, Interesting)
Every lawsuit against people not judged to be criminals by their friends and family is just another mark against the recording and film industries. You know what they say about business: anger one customer and they tell 10 friends.
These lawsuits go beyond anger, they financially hurt customers. For every $10,000 they receive in settlements, they could be losing multiples of in lost future business.
My luddite parents discovered P2P because of some news article about these suits in the U.S. They were blind to Napster since its inception.
I wasn't surprised to see Limewire on my dad's PC a few months ago. This is a guy who never touched a mouse until 2003.
You can stop a river with a boulder when it is still a 6" trickle. Yet the boulder does not one bit when the river is a torrent.
In the long run, ISPs who share privilege information will go out of business. I hereby amend my previous position: "Information that hurts no innocents wants to be freely accessible."
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:3, Insightful)
Not trying to pick on you, but I find that statement little odd. May be I am not understanding RIAA business, but are they selling anything directly to the consumer? RIAA is an association - a front for Recording industry. If people collectively decide that RIAA is evil, which they wouldn't be wrong by the way, how hard is to abolish that start a new front with a new name and do the same shoddy things a
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:2)
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3)
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:3)
scumbag, swine, pig, bastard [metallica.com]
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:5, Insightful)
That's why the RIAA exists, to protect the interests of the studios while minimizing negative PR for individual companies in the recording industry. If one individual company, say Sony, started throwing around lawsuits it would be easy for consumers to stop buying their products. With the RIAA it's difficult to know where individual studios, publishers, distributors or artists stand on the issue. Most people don't want to boycott music altogether, so the RIAA can act without hurting it's market much.
But in reality, I am seeing a lot of artists supporting RIAA and co. To name a few - Metallica, Eminem etc.
A lot of artists? You named two, and neither are what I would call typical artists. Metallica has sold out and is over the hill. Most old school Metallica fans I know either have grown up or think all of their new stuff sucks. Their career has peaked and they have much more to gain by supporting the RIAA than by pissing off their fans. Eminem is similar. He's at the point where he can put out any crap and people will buy it, kinda like U2, plus there's rumours he's going to retire. Again, he has nothing to lose from denouncing file sharing and everything to gain.
It's interesting to me that there are only a few artists that have actively come out in support of the RIAA's position out of thousands of musicians. I don't think the quiet ones are guilty, I think they are just smart enough to not get involved. They don't want to alienate their fans, but they want to keep a good relationship with their studios. It's actually somewhat unfortunate. It would be interesting to know what most artists honestly think about file trading, but as long as the RIAA and the studios are involved I don't think we will get an honest answer from anyone.
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course, established 'artists' with strong contracts written to fit the current system will support them. Garth Brooks at the peak of his industry power even called for levies on the resale of used CDs reasoning that, after all, consumers are paying to hear his music, not buying a CD. For every one of them there are thousands for whom the RIAA do nothing o
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:2)
What about the innocent artists, most of who are just trying to make enough money to live on by selling their music?
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:2)
Sure an artist might get a coupl of million for a million albums sold. Of course their sponsers just got 3-4 times that.
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:2)
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:2)
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:2)
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:3, Insightful)
I hereby amend my previous position: "Information that hurts no innocents wants to be freely accessible."
No, all information wants to be free, just like chlorine gas wants to expand to fill whatever volume it occupies.
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:4, Informative)
The jury has the ultimate power to decide whether a person is guilty of a crime. As the "conscience of the community," jurors can free a defendant even if they think the defendant actually committed the crime charged. The name for this power is "jury nullification." It has always been a part of our judicial system.
When jurors nullify a law by acquitting a defendant who has obviously broken that law, judges and prosecutors can do nothing about it. A jury's not guilty verdict is final. Jury nullification rarely occurs, but when it does, it most often involves cases that have a political component (such as the refusal to convict draft dodgers during the Vietnam War) or that have harsh punishments the jury does not want to impose on that particular defendant.
Re:Makes me laugh. (Score:3, Informative)
A judge can set aside a guilty verdict, if he believes the jury has not made their determination based on the facts; however, he cannot set aside a not-guilty verdict.
Ok, maybe he could, but it would be appealled so quickly his head would spin, and he'd probably lose his position on the bench.
The Shell Game Continues (Score:5, Insightful)
You can say the same thing about prohibition. Once you create a black market for a product through legislation or exorbitant pricing, it is impossible to put smuggling down permanently.
Re:The Shell Game Continues (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, they have not succeeded in anything except that they are now allowed to store and process personal information about file sharers. Recently the data board classified IP-adresses as personal information, which meant they needed permission to store and process it without the users consent. They now have this permission. However, since it is now clear that they are subject to this law (called PUL, which means something like Law of Personal Information), they are also required to tell the registered person about the registration. In order to do this they need to know who has a particular IP, and only the ISP can help with this, but they refuse to cooperate. It is all very confusing and amusing to follow.
Seems about right (Score:5, Insightful)
What's more, it's not immediately clear to me why it would even be legal for an ISP to give out data about customers to a private company that asks for it, without (I presume) the customer's knowledge or consent. Not that I know a thing about Swedish law, of course, but that sounds like exactly the kind of thing that could result in class action lawsuits and the like, so if I was an ISP, I'd definitely err on the safe side here and only hand over customer data to the police, not private companies, and only when ordered to do so by a court of law.
Re:Seems about right (Score:2)
Re:Seems about right (Score:2)
Fine, file a lawsuit, have the court issue a subpoena. Even civil law has processes to follow. Just because it's Big Business going around rounding up people doesn't make them any less of a vigilantee than the "good ol' boys" going out with their whiskey and guns to "get that feller".
Re:Seems about right (Score:2)
You cant file a suit against a "jon doe" in many cases. You need at least a name. Often you need to serve the person with papers so you need to know who and where they are.
I agree that there is a legal process to follow. Bu
Re:Seems about right (Score:2)
What makes you think so? John Doe suits are fairly common. There is such a thing as pre-service discovery so as to facilitate serving process on the right person when you don't know their identity at the commencement of the suit.
Honestly, it makes sense. If you can discover who injured you, why should we have an artificial barrier that impairs your ability to seek redress for your injury just because the culprit hid himself a b
Re:Seems about right (Score:2)
Re:Seems about right (Score:3, Informative)
It's probably good to have laws limiting how fully, if at all, the ISP can answer. But if you don't have those laws, then it's at the ISP's discretion; might work out well, might not.
Re:Seems about right (Score:5, Insightful)
No. You should have the ability to get a court order to shut them down based on facts.
No private citizen, company, or trade-association deserves police powers, or the power to subpoena at will, or the power of injunction. Ever.
Re:Seems about right (Score:2)
What makes you think you have the right to run around with a camera on my farm?
--
Waging war against fundamentalism is as likely to make the fundamentalists give up as 9/11 was likely to make the United States give up.
Re:Seems about right (Score:5, Insightful)
Instead, if it's entirely a civil matter, then businesses will have to decide for themselves whether they want to enforce their rights, and will have to bear their own costs when doing so. My taxes won't subsidize them then. This also frees up law enforcement resources for serious matters.
Perhaps it's time for a compromise. (Score:5, Interesting)
We want to ensure its's possible to make a profit from creative works.
People will copy data.
Sharing between friends is not going to bring down the music/movie/software industry.
Online file sharing should probably be discouraged, or at least not strongly encouraged.
Awarding disproportionately huge damages against file sharers is not a just solution.
A distinction should be made between small scale copying for free, and large scale copying for financial gain.
When we have the government siding strongly with the media cartels, and disproportionate penalties for file sharers, as well as the invasion of privacy by a private organisation means that people loserespect for the law. This is generally speaking a bad thing. m'kay.
Most people agree that copyright is largely a good thing. Most people also have no qualms about using pirated software. I'm sure we can find a compromise.
Re:Perhaps it's time for a compromise. (Score:5, Insightful)
That was how the original "fair use" precedent was set, and described in the AHRA. Small scale copying between friends was covered under fair use, large scale copying for selling unlicensed copies was illegal. The problem is that the Internet introduces a third type- large scale copying not for profit. Both sides of the debate are now trying to treat this new category in terms of the existing two- sharers by arguing that it's not fundamentally different from making a copy for a single friend, and publishers by arguing that its effect is not fundamentally different from selling bootleg movies on a streetcorner. But both of these positions are wrong. It's something entirely new.
Re:Perhaps it's time for a compromise. (Score:2)
Then it's the ISPs the should be paying, shouldn't it?
How much money have they from people that bought an Internet connection so they could get free music?
ISPs have made plenty of money from other people's music and haven't paid them a cent.
Re:Perhaps it's time for a compromise. (Score:4, Insightful)
We want to ensure its's possible to make a profit from creative works.
Online file sharing should probably be discouraged, or at least not strongly encouraged.
I could care less about profits from creative works. Copyright law doesn't exist to make people money. It is to increase the amount of information available to the citizenry. The idea is that if you give someone a monopoly on disseminating their works, they will be more likely to disseminate said works. What needs to occur is to find out what length of copyright will allow for the dessemination of the most works into the public domain, wether that be 10 days or 10 years.
Online file sharing should be strongly encouraged. If P2P file-sharing falls out of favor, we'll go back to the days when only someone who can afford to buy web space in order to disseminate their program. File sharing takes the power of information out of the hands of large conglomerates and gives it back to the people, where it rightly belongs.
Compromise (Score:2, Interesting)
Slightly OT: pirating in general (Score:5, Informative)
For example, when the above happens, we usually do a one-time refund of the bandwidth charge, which is often considerable, and I'm sure we're not the exception. That means we eat the bandwidth bill for that person. Now, consider that all webhosts are likely to do the same and I wonder what the economic impact is across the board?
Interesting how there are facets you don't even realize exist.
Re:Slightly OT: pirating in general (Score:2, Interesting)
I'd have to point out the similarities to prohibition. Yes, selling alchohol was illegal. However, stealing and killing over it was wrong.
Alchohol (or filesharing) isn't the problem... it's prohibition that convinces people to do things they wouldn't usually do.
Re:Slightly OT: pirating in general (Score:2, Interesting)
Certainly there is a cost to be absorbed in doing business safely and securely over the internet. Seems like your company is taking it in the wrong end.
Re:Slightly OT: pirating in general (Score:3, Funny)
I need to get out more.
Re:Slightly OT: pirating in general (Score:5, Insightful)
Let me get this straight:
If your customers are being routinely hacked
You know why this happens
The link to piracy here is circumstancial. Your bandwidth could be misused in some other way just as easily... a Paris Hilton video, a very popular Linux ISO, or "anything" really.
Of course the customer is always 'right' and you let them use '1234' as a password, and the cycle repeats.
Banks do NOT let their customers use '1234' or '9999' as a PIN!
The person holding you to this policy IS THE PROBLEM. They do not care about the loss of revenue or the distress to the customer, so long as their job is made easier.
There are little rules you can enforce on passwords: 8 characters at least, include at least 1 number, etc. Make it easy to resend the password automatically if they forget it, so you're not getting support calls on that either.
You do NOT need to make them use difficult random passwords to eliminate most of the problem.
'cat'.. LOL...
I can tell you who will win this brawl... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I can tell you who will win this brawl... (Score:2)
This, I can guarantee. If the Internet is changed such that it is no longer possible to be anonymous, people will either make an anonymous, separate internet, or an anonymous peer to peer service that goes through several anonymous peers before reaching its location, a la Freenet.
PB (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:PB (Score:2)
It's understandable that the industry doesn't like this, but it's also understandable that this isn't (yet?) illegal under Swedish law. Copyright infringement is not a criminal offense, so aiding and abetting (which is all they're doing) is
IP Laws Are Obsolete and Unfair (Score:2)
It's time that the powers that be recognized that the current IP laws are not only stupid but have become obsolete in the internet age. Certainly, artists and inventors must be compensated for their work and creativity but the IP laws are not the way to do it. The IP laws are being unfairly used by a few to oppress the many, all in the name of greed. The nations of the world should form a fac
ISP's financial interests (Score:2, Insightful)
In the US, many ISPs are a division of a larger media corporation. Therefore, their finances come from hawking such media (See AOL etc.). The obvious connection to this is that the ISP will not stop their parents from impeding their customers. In Sweeden, however, this appears to not be the case. The ISPs make m
Give us legal TV show downloads (Score:3, Insightful)
The only solution is legal download services. TV shows, which make up a large part of the traffic, are distributed in an antiquated fashion, and the technology is here to change that.
Imagine if music was distributed the same way that TV shows are. The new song of your favourite artist would only play on radio stations in the US, where it's interrupted by commercials halfway through. After a couple of months it'd start to play on radio stations in the rest of the world. Only after a year would you be able to buy the CD in a store, but it would be protected by DRM so you couldn't pick it up a few months early on your visit abroad. Bizarre, isn't it?
Let's hope iTunes TV download service turns out well, so we can finally get fast, legal downloads at a decent price.
Irish ISP's Suck at this.. (Score:2, Informative)
All in all a crap situation compared to Sweden
Re:Irish ISP's Suck at this.. (Score:2)
Montreal, Canada, had a similar situation which was featured in newspapers. The CRIA (Canadian RIAA) petitioned the city's ISPs to translate IP addresses to subscriber names in order to prosecute individuals. All ISPs but one refus
Not such a big deal (Score:4, Interesting)
It's not quite a big deal, since the anti-pirate folks already can do that legally in a number of countries (such as the US) which don't have strict data-protection laws.
And the ISPs are not only doing the right thing but probably the only legal thing, since it'd quite likely violate the very same data-protection laws if they gave information about their customers to a private third party without permission from either the government or their customers.
The "Anti-Pirate Bureau" isn't a government agency after all. And while the USA seems to have happily handed over law-enforcement to the copyright holders, Europe has not. So far.
Pirates are supported by ordinary citizens (Score:3, Interesting)
> 85% answered yes.
The pirates and antipirates has debated in newspaper, television and the "piratbyrån" (pro piracy organization) has even published a book which has recieved good critics. The sum of all this is that the pirates is seen as normal humans that download stuff on internet and the antipirates are greedy corporate a**es. Its not hard do figure out which side will win the hearts of the population.
This has even gone so far as the minister of justice has stated in media that "with the new anti-piracy laws the police should not go hunt for teenagers downloading music, but for big scale for-profit copying"
Since we have a democracy the only outcome I can see in the long run is that not-for-profit private piracy will become legal, even two parties in our parliament has expressed support for piracy.
Also, the results of a lawsuit will be released next week which will determine wether it will even be possible for police to request information on IPs from ISPs when they suspect piracy. One pirate has ben sued because he shared a movie on the internet, if he gets anything below prison swedish privacy laws will make it impossible for the police to request identy of IPs in the future. (which says that for the identity to be reviled for the police it is required that the crime commited has prison as one possible punishment).
(* with piracy I mean copying of music/movies over the internet without any money going to the owner of the work).
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
ISPs also doing it for the money. (Score:5, Informative)
Fact is, many people that pay for an Internet connection do so in part so they can swap music. Getting free
music is part of the value of that connection for them.
Now put yourself in the place of the ISP. You have customers paying you so they can have access to this free music.
Why would you want to stop this? You don't have to pay for the music yourself, but you get a financial benefit from it.
So I don't see anything heroic about these ISPs. Helping to make sure their customers can get free music helps
their bottom line.
thepiratebay.org (Score:2)
is this the same... (Score:2)
yeah, i trust them.
indeed i do.
why plant evidence when there's millions upon millions of people commiting "piracy"?
sort of like why forge evidence of iraq importing yellowcake from niger if they had WMDs.
they have delegitimized themselves. their word means nothing.
hope sweden's population kicks their lying asses and gets those thieving copyright cartels off their backs.
Swedish music? (Score:3, Funny)
Besides this hurdle... (Score:4, Insightful)
So... The APB then have problems with following this practice since the ISP's won't give them personal data (necessary to contact the user they log) without a police order, and it all turns into a kind of circular legal problem that benefits the file sharer, and makes the APB databases illegal if they'd keep registering IP's and bypassing the police. (in Sweden, an IP address is definitely considered private information you can't just register however you like; much like a social security number)
Personally, I believe this is more proof that our privacy safety nets are working as intended than that they're broken. If the APB find an IP address and want to register this one, they should really need to contact the police, and if they decide it's worth tracking up, let them proceed, and if not, force them to delete the IP address from their databases. That way, it's in the end the police that enforce our laws and not a private organization.
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:5, Insightful)
Music, information, entertainment should be free!
Musicians don't make music to just give it away (some do) but they also need to eat. I have no problems handing over some cash for a CD I like.
What I don't like doing is handing over 25.99 for a cd, and having 23.99 go to a label,
That's what I don't like.
But running around saying it all should be free is ridiculous. Remember, making that cd you listen to, or that mp3 you just downloaded, took time, took money and is someones lively hood.
It's like stating all car repairs should be free!
Price Point (Score:2)
What I don't like doing is handing over 25.99 for a cd, and having 23.99 go to a label,
Exactly! The music industry has obviously skipped the class on economics about pricing.
People are fed up of paying that kind of money for the product they receive. This is evident with the iTunes revolution. Had they just p
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:2, Insightful)
If some laws say otherwise, the laws are stupid to. Whats stupid or not is not determined by law but is a subjective view. You think it is natural that people own patterns, but many dont think so.
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:3, Insightful)
You know, if you dont want your PIN spread around you should probably keep it to yourself.
"if a person works long and hard hours to produce something useful or that people enjoy, then it is ok for people to take what that person has done and not give him any sort of compensation for it"
Of course not. That person should be able to charge however much they wish. However, that does not mean they should be allowed to the
Who are the owners, or is only on loan? (Score:3, Interesting)
We, the public, are the owners. It is just on loan to the so called creators for a limited period of time, the period being copyright length.
I think it's time to severely reduce that copyright length. It may have made sense before but not when when costs, and thus the risks, of publishing is reduced due to online avenues for distribution.
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:2, Interesting)
Car repair shouldn't be free, but the MECHANIC should get be the one getting paid. That's why I take my car to a locally owned shop (Frank's Auto Repair) where Frank gets my money instead of "Giant Corporate Auto Repair Inc." where they pay a mechanics $15/hour yet charge the customer $90/hour for labor o
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:3, Insightful)
bad anology. Its like telling someone how to swap out an alternator (on a radio show), and then not letting them describe to others in as much detail, how to do it. A song isnt a commodity any more than a haynes manual is. My stereo is producing the sound.
A better anology would be that going to see a band at a club is the same as taking your car to the shop. The parts (song, alternator) are availiable to both parties, what counts is that the people actually
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:3, Insightful)
"It's like stating all car repairs should be free!"
No, actually it's like stating anyone should be allowed to fix a car.
You're confusing the right to charge for your work with monopoly rights allowing a certain party to control what other people do with their property.
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:3, Insightful)
So, what do you propose? Have the people fund i
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:2, Informative)
Tax refunds are not taking away money from corporations, not giving them money. Most of our tax revenue comes from those corporations anyway, you know. And the rich. More to the point, those "huuuuuuge" companies provid
Economics and rationality (Score:2)
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:3, Informative)
Thanks for your input.
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:2)
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:2)
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:2)
If someone can't make a living off of something, then that means they will have to devote a large portion of their time towards something that they can make a living off of. One could argue that this decreases the quality of art and entertainment, and the amount produced.
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:2)
You may not be, but the original poster who said, "entertainment should be free" is saying that, and that is where this all comes from.
As far as productive goes, you can look the definition up for yourself.
I did. [reference.com] By that, I would say anyone in the entertainment business is productive.
But what I'm refering to as being unproductive is its value in the economy. To put it in very simple terms for you, it doesn't m
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:2)
40$ != 20$
not for the non ad hominem part:
The RIAA has an expensive business model. Most people involved do not make mch money, just a few at the top , artists and managers alike(like pretty much anywhere). People get into because they want to take the risk. The artists choose to go with the RIAA because they want the big $$$$. There are examples of artists who do well otherwise (Fugazi springs to mind), so instead of blaming the RIAA blame the greedy artists who want to make it big.
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:2)
All I'm hearing is that you don't want to pay for stuff, and decided to come up with a flimsy argument to justify it.
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:2)
Those what? I've spent some time looking at it and I'm stumped. Based on the surrounding grammar, it should be plural, so I've got su**s. Sucks? Sunks?
Re:Go sweden go! (Score:3, Interesting)
Come on man, think! Use that brain you were born with.
Re:Bleeding heart (Score:2, Insightful)
The metaconflict is arguably about the power of pure wealth versus the power of the democratic government.
Re:Bleeding heart (Score:2)
Granted, I agree that it seems a bit frivilous.
Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Bleeding heart (Score:2)
File Sharer's manifesto (Score:4, Insightful)
First: I'd gladly buy a CD if it's cheap enough and it's worth it. I don't want to spend my money in a giant marketing apparatus promoting tours. People who go to the tours ARE ALREADY paying. If I'm not going, why should my money go to them? I don't want to spend twice on a product. On the other hand, if a musician puts up his website and has a "donate" button for some tour, i'd gladly click if I consider the artist good enough.
Second, if you had to choose between spending $100 on the poor, and giving them to record companies, which one would you choose? You kill no one by downloading a file. And I'd rather download a song from the internet than financing kidnapper bands or druglords who sell pirated goods on the street.
Third, you can't force a teenager to give away his money to the poor. But in the same way, you can't force him to feed the RIAA monster companies who are already obsolete anyway. Why invest money in something that has no reason to exist?
Fourth, The only reason people have to pay for music is because the RIAA has twisted the law in their favor, lobbing them with the money the customers have paid. If I'm spending money on a music as a government tax (in the form of lobbying), I have the right to decide what should be done with my money, don't I? I'd rather download a song and donate a dollar to the group, than paying $20 to the RIAA, who will only give about 50 cents (or less) to the group in question.
Finally, The RIAA has stolen a lot of money from customers. Is it wrong to want to take that money back?
These are some of the reasons file sharers believe it's not only "not wrong", but a just cause, to share files. One thing can be wrong and legal, or viceversa. The laws supporting evil monopolies like the RIAA can, and must go away.
(You can quote, copy and link to this as the "File Sharer's manifesto". This is free speech and belongs to the public domain - permission to correct spelling / grammar is granted)
Re:Bleeding heart (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:The plastic age will melt (Score:5, Insightful)
Having you buy another one if you break it is still waaaay off this objective, but rest assured that they will do everything in their power to get there.
Same with the movie industry of course.
So, enjoy your free re-listening while it lasts.
Re:When's the next flight to Stockholm? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:da da dadada da DA dadada (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:da da dadada da DA dadada (Score:2, Funny)
"Hey this is like in that movie with that guy. You know the one who plays the boxer? Yeah and he like yells his wife's name and stuff at the end of the fight. This is just like that."
You're welcome.
Consumers to RIAA/MPAA: (Score:2)
Consumers to RIAA/MPAA: Your existance is futile.
It comes to no surprise (Score:2)