RIAA Says P2P Encourages Illegal Downloads 406
stlhawkeye writes "The RIAA is at it again, attacking inconvenient technology because it can be abused. They have sent another round of letters to P2P services, asking them to stop "encouraging users" to illegally distribute copyrighted material. eDonkey, LimeWire, and Kazaa are all on the RIAA's hit list, along with 2Hub, BitTorrent, WinMX and Free Peers, maker of file-swapping software BearShare. One wonders how they intend to attack BitTorrent, which can be and is used in legitimate mass distribution efforts of legal material, such as World of Warcraft patches. Are FTP and /usr/sbin/scp next?"
Limewire strictly prohibits it! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Limewire strictly prohibits it! (Score:5, Insightful)
Just because a company asks you not to do something doesn't mean that are necessarily liability free which is the point that the RIAA is trying to make.
Remember, in the RIAA's world, not only would software and hardware manufacturers say "please don't pirate" they would also take active steps in order to prevent such piracy absolutely... as impossible as such a dream is, the RIAA continues to strive for it every day.
Active steps (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Active steps (Score:5, Insightful)
The business model (Score:5, Insightful)
I am also surprised that nobody pays more attention to this. There's an elephant in the room, and nobody wants to believe it exists. Musicians are just as much a part of the problem as the RIAA. Why? Because musicians buy into the notion that they should sign with a label, have the label pay for everything, and receive whatever the label feels fit to give them in return.
Essentially everyone (musicians, labels, consumers) has bought into the notion that the huge crapshoot that the music industry has established, wherein a small minority of music gets major backing and the rest is given limited exposure at best, is a rational marketplace. If musicians in aggregate were less interested in becoming big stars, and more interested in making music and being justly compensated for it, the labels would lose all leverage over artists. For every Madonna there are 99 acts that got signed and never made any real money, because the labels were running a company store setup. The message has been put out by Courtney Love, Janis Ian, et. al. for years now. You have to be blind and deaf not to know that this is the system.
There is no longer any need for the enormous middleman structure that sustains the music industry. Hardly anyone is satisfied with the music being generated by the big labels. There are plenty of musicians who are content to play music and have more control over how their music is distributed. When the majority of musicians accept that a business model built on bloated middlemen is not in their best interests, the rest of us will benefit as well.
Re:The business model (Score:3, Interesting)
Though I think the recording industry as it stands won't survive for very long anyway, I think such a new service would hasten the fall.
Re:The business model (Score:3, Insightful)
On the other hand, local record shops are much more accessible and I'm sure they'd love to negotiate honest terms with indie bands if their stuff is worth the plastic it's pressed on.
As for the marketing aspect, how hard is it to hire a graphic/web designer ? Hell, just from playing at local venues you could sure
The Internet is definitely not a cure-all (Score:3, Interesting)
And I think almost everyone who cares about music would agree that the music business is deeply flawed in its current incarnation. I'm not blaming artists for the state of the industry. But if artists don't take charge of the industry and make it more artist-centric, who will? Where is the collective voice of artists? Where are the big-money artists who are not just talking about changing the industry, but actually doing something about it?
It is FUCKING DIFFIC
Re:The business model (Score:3, Insightful)
But web designers, savy developers, and marketers have all either:
A) Accepted that their skill/passion will not feed them, and have gotten another job to facilitate their life.
B) Excelled in the utilization of their skill/passion to the point to where they can support themselves on money made exercising that skill/passion.
The major difference being that the musicians I know bitch that no one appreciates them - that someone needs to
Re:Active steps (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Limewire strictly prohibits it! (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm not sure anyone (RIAA definately included) could be able to pull off a convincing argument one way or another.
Better to find a way to go after abusers rather than users.
S-
Re:Limewire strictly prohibits it! (Score:2)
But the USSC strictly stated that... (Score:2, Interesting)
In other words.. they must take ACTIVE MEASURES to "induce", and those active measures must be obvious and show ACTIVE INTENT.. not some tact "don't download wink wink" intent..
so long as you don't say in your ads (post grokster, as per the ex post facto clause of our constitution) please download copyrighted music now, they have no right to demand "filtering" or whatever flavor of the month nonsenses they want developed but
Living the lie (Score:5, Insightful)
All the sex shops here have racks and racks of exotic toys, all labeled "for novelty purposes only," because in Atlanta it's illegal to sell a dildo.
And all the head shops all sell "water pipes."
In either place, if you start asking questions about getting high or getting off, you get kicked out.
Interestingly enough, you can walk right into a gun shop and say "I need a gun to kill my husband with" and they'll still sell it to you (maybe). Okay, you have to go outside the city limits for that. I love that you have to go outside the city limits to buy a dildo or a gun, and I've seen more than one bumper sticker that says "when dildos are outlawed, only outlaws will have dildos."
Maybe if they called a gun a "hole punch" the way they call a bong a "water pipe" we could skirt this whole issue. I mean, we call it "the Internet" instead of "all the music and porno in the world for free," right?
Re:Living the lie (Score:5, Interesting)
The right to own a gun is a constitutionally protected. If you refuse to sell someone a gun for any reason other than the ones prescribed by your local, state, and federal laws - you are fucked. The gunshop will be sued into the ground, and the prosecution will win almost all of the time. You could have your license revoked, and you will probably be the target of much harrasment from gun lobbyists and fanatics.
ATL huh, I reside at 285 and Roswell Rd.
Re:Living the lie (Score:5, Insightful)
"We reserve the right to refuse service to anyone"?
You can refuse to deal with a customer because they are a jerk, they want to do something illegal and open you up to liability -- especially if you were told of their intent in the first place. The gun store in question can refuse, and if the customer makes a scene the store calls the police to handle a trespassing issue. I'm sure the customer would love to wait for the cops to explain the reason why she (or he, according to recent court decisions) was asked to leave.
You cannot refuse service based on certain other reasons that are protected, like race, sex, religion, etc.
Just wait for tomorrow's press release. (Score:5, Funny)
In other news (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:In other news (Score:5, Funny)
Dear RIAA,
It has recently come to my attention that a certain program with hundreds of millions of users worldwide can be used to easily distribute copyrighted content. In fact the product as shipped from the manufacturer makes it so easy that no additional work is required on the part of the end user, they simply connect their computer to the internet and within minutes it will start to deceminate any copyrighted content it contains, and is often used by others to hold content which they do not hold a valid license for. It would disturb me greatly if you did not seek to stop this insidious program after all of the recent media attention brought to your efforts to thwart the trading of copyrighted material.
Yours truely,
A concerned citizen (please think of the clidren)
p.s.
The name of the program in question is Microsoft Windows.
Re:In other news (Score:5, Insightful)
However, it's quite clear that Bittorrent is being used for real, legitimate data distribution. I'm not sure how common it is for a legitimate company to offer it's downloads through Kazaa or Bearshare, but certainly legitimate companies/individuals are using torrents.
um.. check the law? (Score:2)
Have you considered the possibility that the law here is false?
Re:um.. check the law? (Score:3, Interesting)
How does it get addressed? Well, the first thing is to find the causes of the problem, and then remove whatever causes are appropriate. Perhaps the law is bad, the bad law is the only real "cause" here worth addressing, and resolution to the issue is to change the law. None of that goes again
Re:In other news (Score:2, Insightful)
How about this angle... Isn't the RIAA fighting a problem of their own making. Maybe their products are over priced. Maybe if they lowered the price more people will find enough value in their music to buy it. For example, Les Schwabb is a tire store in the pacific northwest of the U.S.A. They can charge a high price for their tires and they are still swamped from opening to closing every day. They can do it because they are the best when it comes to cus
Re:In other news (Score:2, Interesting)
It's safe to say that most handguns are used overwhelmingly for illegal activity. Most handguns are sitting idle waiting to protect someone who will never actually be attacked. The ones that are actually being used are predominantly being used to do the attacking....
It's also safe to say that most computers are used overwhelmingly for illegal activity, since the vast majority of traffic on the internet is illegal downloads.
It's also safe to say that most automob
Re:In other news (Score:2)
So who has more money and better lawyers? The "War on Drugs" camp or the *AA's? I think if the "War on Drugs" camp can't stop a similar activity with our 3 governmental branches backing them up the RIAA is going to have a hell of a time p
P2P is often Legal ; Outweigh Options (Score:5, Insightful)
2- This is obviously the wrong approach. If person X doesn't get their movie from P2P, they'll join a group and get it from some private FTP site. They'll find it on the Web. They'll spread it out through direct file transfers. They'll pass it around class on CDs and DVD-Rs. They'll get it around. Hell they'll even print it off frame-by-frame and make a damn-flip-book for all I care.
The RIAA again needs to Embrace the technology. Provide an alternative. Clearly consumers (us) are saying "well it's either (a) not worth X dollars for this movie or CD, or (b) something is preventing me from getting it (DRM, whining babies at the theatre, poor quality, etc).
So solve the issue. Provide a legal download service that assures the quality and won't have a cam release on an angle and many will flock. Clearly there is a need or want here that people are fulfilling. There is something they are not meeting in traditional means. Feed that need/want and you can actually make some coin off of it.
As always though, they'll figure 5-8 people watch a movie at a time and want to charge you $50-$80 for a single movie though... which isn't quite right, in the same way that you should be saving the distribution and duplication costs in music downloads (but usually don't).
-M
Re:In other news (Score:4, Interesting)
Further, prior to P2P, web sites were used. P2P evolved as ISPs got wise to the illegal content and started cutting of people's accounts. If current P2P technology gets killed, another new technology will evolve to replace it. From what we've seen so far, each generation will be easier to use and harder to track back to the offending party.
Bottom line is that these little games the RIAA is playing aren't going to stop P2P's use for illegal purposes, and they have to realize this; they aren't idiots. If this were really about stopping distribution of illegal music downloads, they would have given up long ago. It's really about preventing indy bands from being able to distribute using those mechanisms and gaining popularity. It's primarily about maintaining strict control over the music market in the hands of their members, and it is disgusting.
Now, if the RIAA weren't so myopic about controlling distribution, they might see ways to take advantage of this. If, instead of suing the P2P users, they tried to get this stuff legalized (with mandatory identification) and tracked them for statistics, it's better than Neilsen ratings when it comes to finding out what music is popular. This can be used to help target advertising towards particular groups of people, and could be very lucrative for the industry.
Heck, the industry could use this as a means to figure out what bands are going to sell. Instead of A&R reps having to take a best guess, they could just do a live recording of a band and make it available, then see how many people bite, and use that to gauge the band's potential. It would save the industry millions---if not billions---of dollars on artists that never actually went anywhere.
Unfortunately, it's hard to convince someone to change their business model in much the same way as it is hard to convince a captain to abandon a sinking ship. If the RIAA drowns, thoughu, much like P2P technologies, another will take its place.
Nah.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Nah.. (Score:3, Funny)
Grokster Fallout (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Grokster Fallout (Score:2)
That cuts both ways. If the activity that the RIAA accuses the recipients of doing has been established as illegal, doesn't that push the accusation itself across the line between insult and libel?
Re:Grokster Fallout (Score:2)
"Your honor, I object!"
"On what grounds?"
"On the grounds that it's very damaging to my case."
The judge tells them they need to be able to show "active inducement", so they shout "you're encouraging illegal downloads!" for a couple months?
/usr/sbin/scp (Score:2)
(at least on my Gentoo box)
Re:/usr/sbin/scp (Score:2)
Anyone putting it in /usr/sbin really needs to consult man hier.
OS X, FreeBSD, OpenBSD and Fedora agree with you on this one. I don't know what the submitter runs, but I hop
Next... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Next... (Score:2, Funny)
You know, just FYI
Hey (Score:2, Insightful)
MAKE Music not SHIT
Re:Hey (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Hey (Score:2, Insightful)
So... this is really about you not having a credit card? Because every recording imaginable is available to buy online.
MAKE Music not SHIT
So... it's not about what's in your stores, but about what's being made? Which is it? If you're out pirating copies of music you want because you can't buy it in your local stores, that sort of implies that there is music you want, d
Re:Hey (Score:2)
Re:Hey (Score:2)
Root Cause (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Root Cause (Score:2)
The Next Step (Score:5, Funny)
DARPA: "Sure thing, what's your longitude, latitude, and elevation?"
Re:The Next Step (Score:4, Funny)
it's only time (Score:4, Funny)
The Ultimate Troll (Score:5, Insightful)
How could you respond to something like that? Politically the cards are stacked against you with such a baiting statement, so no matter what response these companies are on the defensive.
Unlike most trolls, ignoring them might land you with a lawsuit.
At best, disgusting. At worst, corporate terrorism.
Re:The Ultimate Troll (Score:4, Interesting)
Thanks for playing!
Re:The Ultimate Troll (Score:5, Insightful)
terrorism, n.
The unlawful use or threatened use of force or violence by a person or an organized group against people or property with the intention of intimidating or coercing societies or governments, often for ideological or political reasons.
In this case, the RIAA is using force (lawsuits), or threat of force, to intimidate companies and lawmakers for their own political and financial reasons.
The word was used correctly by the grandparent post. Just because *you* can't separate an appropriate word from it's current fad status doesn't mean everyone can't.
Submitter is on crack... (Score:5, Informative)
1. "Other companies in the peer-to-peer file-swapping market include i2Hub, BitTorrent, WinMX and Free Peers, maker of file-swapping software BearShare."
2. "BearShare, WinMX and LimeWire were identified in a Wall Street Journal story as recipients of the letters."
How does this equate to threatening BitTorrent, exactly? They're threatening companies with similar models to that of Grokster. Get a grip.
In other news... (Score:2, Insightful)
[1] We called them bakeries back in the day...
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
In Other News (Score:4, Funny)
Pope says "Abortion is Wrong".
Bill Gates says "Upgrade Now!"
Steve Jobs says new product is "Available Immediately".
Is this something new? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Is this something new? (Score:2)
Yes, and guns are responsible for wars... (Score:4, Interesting)
Sure... (Score:5, Funny)
"Are FTP and /usr/sbin/scp next?" You betcha! (Score:3, Funny)
We are also lobbying congress to allow open season on all penguins because they promote Linux which is "Open Sores" software and that promotes P2P which promote THEFT! Fello Americans! Stop your crimes against humanity! STOP THE HURTING!
Regards,
Your RIAA
Huh!? AGAIN!? (Score:2)
Ok, last time I installed Limewire it asked me to agree to not distribute illegal material or I couldn't use it. I've used BitTorrent to download Linux Distros. Yes that's plural, I've used it to download 5 different distros to date. I finally settled on Fedora FC4 for my laptop and it's running just fine. I think that the RIAA needs to realize where the problem is. It's not the software creators or distributors that are to blame but the end users. I guess it's harder to nab end users as we log on sometimes
and cars encourage speeding; guns - shooting; etc (Score:2)
As a practial matter, as long as the internet exists, P2P networks will exist. Get used to it folks.
Re:and cars encourage speeding; guns - shooting; e (Score:2)
Of course, firearm and automobile manufactrers don't encourage people to shoot innocent bystanders or drive drunk, either. In fact, they fall all overthemselves to lecture people about the appropriate use of their products.
And in this case, the RIAA is only sending letters to those entities that, like Grokster,
Grokster Doctrine (Score:5, Informative)
Whether the Court was correct in finding such encouragement by Kazaa is now merely post-game quibbling. So also are arguments about whether a person can be held liable for another person jumping off a bridge just because the person told them to. The Court has ruled. So the RIAA is now portraying any P2P operator as encouraging or promoting abuse, because that's the basis for attacking them under what will now be known as the "Grokster doctrine". Any publisher, developer, designer, or user of P2P SW (or anyone else associated with it) must now invest in producing evidence that they do not promote illegal abuse. How to produce evidence of something not happening is extremely expensive and ultimately impossible.
So, as usual, only the lawyers have won, and the RIAA can do whatever it wants under these deeply flawed legal doctrines. People who just want to use the content we own, fairly, have to look elsewhere for some way to protect our rights.
Re:Grokster Doctrine (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Grokster Doctrine (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wrong.. (Score:3, Informative)
But you're off the mark in what convinced the Supremes. They decided on evidence which was already settled as established "matters of fact". The arguments before them are predicated on that evidence, centra
Re:Wrong.. (Score:3, Interesting)
I note that Rehnquist,
Re:Wrong.. (Score:3, Insightful)
BTW, I'm really impressed by the rightwing consistency inventing flaws in people accused of being "on the left" that are merely your own guilty conscience. Your post is, of course, a frothing rant shilling for the right wing. I know you keep using it because
Re:Grokster Doctrine (Score:3, Insightful)
From: Concerned Citizen
CC: The Horse You Rode In On
It has come to my attention that the various companies represented by the Recording Industry of America sell, promote, and distribute music that contains material of an objectionable nature which may encourage listeners to commit various criminal acts.
I demand that you immediately cease the sale, promotion, and distribution of any and all music which could be interpreted by your audience (and audience which includes impressionable young list
In other news... (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, P2P doesn't really *encourage* illegal downloads. It only *facilitates* them. Which is very different. Of course, the possibility of committing an illegal act remains only a possibility, unless the motivation is strong enough to overcome the difficulties and risks. And the motivation for illegal downloads is the RIAA's fault only.
Nitpick... (Score:2)
Hmm... That's a wierd place for scp...
/usr/bin/scp
$ which scp
Re:Nitpick... (Score:2)
In Retrospect... (Score:5, Insightful)
Is it really "RIAA Says P2P Encourages Illegal Downloads"??? What it seems to me is that the RIAA is actually encouraging more pirating by making it such a big deal!
Take for instance a study that I read not too long ago on suicide. (I've not been able to find a link and do apologize, but it was only a few months ago) It basically came down the the psychology of what drives people to suicide. It stated something to the fact that once there was a suicide by someone that was broadcast on the news, radio, or in papers that there were statistically more suicides following the dissemination of the news. The concluded after much research etc that it was the sheep mentality, where someone may be feeling really bad, depressed, or whatever and not thought of suicide until they heard about jon or jane doe last week. They decide to follow suit and committ suicide. It was an interesting article that made very good points, and again I apoloigize for not being able to locate it.
My point is that maybe the P2P networks wouldn't be such a rampant pirates playground if they would let it die quietly. Maybe take care of the largest offenders, but quit wasting so much time and effort in harrassing software creators.
Rant over.
Re:In Retrospect... (Score:2)
From your post....
Re:In Retrospect... (Score:3, Funny)
Driving cars encourages DUIs and... (Score:2)
Also eyes encourage spying and voyeurism (let's not go there)...ears encourage eavesdropping so they should be cut. Brains encourage thinking, thinking evil thoughts that it, so they should be Ritalined(TM).
From now on, all civilians need to file an application with the *AA's to explain in a proper and documented manner what parts of their body they need to keep and why. Same applies for all house appliances, cars, goods,
This is not a flame (Score:2)
BitTorrent is different. Of course, BitTorrent is a lot less easy to use for piracy. It can't just find files. There has to be a torrent. Yeah, there are torrent search engines, but it isn't the same level of ease.
That's the difference. The level of ease. CD burners allow pe
Re:This is not a flame (Score:2)
Protocol vs. Service (Score:5, Insightful)
HTTP, and FTP also facilitate piracy. Are they evil? Nope. P2P is no different.
It's the service that indexes and provides easy access to illegal material (software, music, child pornography) that is at fault.
Don't blame the protocol for what people do with it. There are a ton of good uses for the technology.
You can blame guns for violence... or you can blame their owners. Same with TNT. You know people's lives have been ended by radiation right? Well, lives have been saved by it too... it's all about how it's used.
Beautiful technology (Score:5, Insightful)
The "I download Linux distros" argument was always a bit shaky, but Blizzard is a commercial company using a new technology and proving it's effectiveness each and every patch (every 5-6 weeks or so).
There was a fantastic commentary on the RIAA made by Scott Bradner of Network World about how media organizations (RIAA, MPAA) have always fought new technology to the bitter end, only to find out from hindsight that it actually was beneficial. On the contrary, when they try to usurp the technology, they shoot themselves in the foot.
Where would movies at home (i.e. DVD) be today without the permiation of VCRs and video casettes? I wonder if anyone at the MPAA ever goes "Whoops... Glad we never won that argument!"
Probably not.
Re:Beautiful technology (Score:2)
Bad example. Lol I've been playing Wow since release last year, and 90% of the patches I just waited for a kind soul to mirror them. The Blizzard downloader sucks, their bittorrent implementation is a piece of shit and totally useless. And its not a firewall problem or whatever, its just that people wont se
Re:Beautiful technology (Score:2)
I aksed Jack Velenti at the airport, both of us waiting to get on a United flight, that very question.
his answer was totally amazing.
"We're not after things like DVD players, only the software that allows you to illegally copy DVDs"
while i was a little flat footed for this confrentation - two weeks of 90+ hrs per week of work, mostly at night, mostly physical labor - it did not help that he had some lady in a wheelchai
What the heck (Score:2)
When did supporting/enabling downloads to any data == encouraging illegal downloads?
Funny, when DRM techs seem to encourage piracy more than anything else.
Observe their restrictions and even RIAA should understand why.
Allows them to avoid accepting any responsibility (Score:2)
Not Buying It (Score:2)
The RIAA is making a very broad statement that just doesn't jive with reality. Sadly, those is power are often too stupid to know better.
How about lowering prices? (Score:5, Interesting)
American Idol stars suck. I mean, there is that new chick who's doing M&M ads? WTF?
My big problem with new releases is the price. How can they keep charging $15+ a CD when I can buy 100 CDs in bulk for that much (or less!). I strictly buy my CDs used or via BMG. But BMG charges way too much for shipping. It's insane!
I can see how someone would just download it and not have to deal with it. I mean, who really cares about the latest Kayne West or Jay Z releases? They all sound like crap to me.
Wrong (Score:2)
RIAA is right on this one (Score:5, Funny)
I just ignored it at first, but then it started coming in the form of threats. Such as "We are now logging your personal information. And if you continue defying my requests we will kidnap your family and tie your dog to the rail road tracks with a collar made of dynamite." I even tried other file sharing programs, but they all did the same. It was just threat after threat after threat. Eventually, I had to change my identity and move to another state. Since then, i've had nightmares constantly, and am too afraid to use my computer.
I, for one, am excited that someone is finally standing up to these criminals. The RIAA is a great organization, one that really cares about my privacy and safety. And truely I hope they finally put an end to this conspiracy, once and for all. Because our precious freedom is at stake here.
Misleading Post (Score:2, Informative)
Definitely not buying any more music (Score:2)
How to thwart piracy... (Score:3, Insightful)
Some reasons piracy is so appealing is because it's:
1) Free
2) Convenient
3) Open
So obviously the way to thwart piracy is to:
1) Lower prices to a more reasonable amount.
If these companies are claiming such huge losses from the amount of piracy then they should find a price point that increases sales but still brings them above the level of loss that P2P is causing. Don't try to compete with a free price but do make the margin a little bit smaller.
2) Increase availability.
A lot of people just want a movie/album as soon as possible. Downloading stuff online is merely a way to accomplish this. Especially if it's something that gets leaked before it's released. I've seen people complain about a pre-order/retailer taking longer to deliver than it would have been to download it. That is pretty frustrating when you can download something for free before you can legitimately own it. Give people the option to purchase and download movies/music online at the exact same time or earlier.
3) Increase openness (yes it's a word).
The point of DRM is to stop legally purchased movies/music from becoming the source of piracy. But when has that ever been a problem? Sure it might be if legally downloading movies ever takes off. But piracy is going to happen. It's better to plan your business model around that fact instead of trying to fight it. Pirates are willing to bring cameras into movies theaters and steal silvers from DVD plants. Pirate groups are not lazy. Don't try to fight these people on their own turf.
I know some people that still download NOCD cracks and even full pirated versions of games they legally own, just because they don't want to worry about lost discs and sacrificing their CD-ROM every time they want to play a game. That strikes me as tragic, when the paying customers get worse treatment than the "criminals". So please stop ruining things for the rest of us just because of a few people.
i2hub, not 2hub (Score:2)
Meanwhile, gun manufacturers... (Score:2)
Re:Wow...shocking...absolutely shocking (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Wow...shocking...absolutely shocking (Score:3, Informative)
Re:WinMX?! (Score:2)
I was thinking... winamp... sure... So I start. And then realize it. Ack!
I gave him itunes and then showed him the internet radio feature. He's happy for now. WinMX got deleted.
Re:WinMX?! (Score:5, Funny)
Let's just hope they never find out that we're spreading files encoded in Slashdot moderation scores. If anyone ever starts to wonder why the scores bear no relation to the comments then we're ruined.
Re:WinMX?! (Score:3, Funny)
I've always wondered (very half-heartedly) if GNAA-style trolls were encrypted communications.
Re:This is "news"? (Score:2)
You know, I don't even expect readers here to RTFA anymore. But is it too much to ask for you to read the freakin' summary?
C&D's were handed out to actual P2P companies. That is the news (and yes, it is news, and has been reported many other places). It's not just that the RIAA doesn't like P2P generally. It is a specific act against P2P services.
Re:I confess (Score:2, Funny)
Dear consumer,
Yes.
Best Regards
RIAA
Re:Scape Goat? (Score:2)