MPAA Sues Company For Selling Pre-Loaded iPods 393
ColinPL writes, "The MPAA has launched yet another 'defensive attack,' this time on a small business that is pre-loading movie DVDs onto iPods and reselling them. The original DVDs of the movies that are loaded are also given to the customer. The MPAA is claiming that the service Load 'N Go Video offers is completely illegal because ripping a DVD is against the DMCA. The MPAA is also suing the company for copyright violation."
Double Edged Blade (Score:5, Insightful)
Stories in the press like this only hurt the Big bad Companys, by raising awareness
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This case is neither applicable nor consistent with personal format shifting, so while it might get someone's attention who'd never considered the issue, it's not really relevant to them.
If someone wakes up and is appalled by the DMCA because of a snippet s/he reads about this case, then they've been fed some crap by someone, be it a friend, a son, or a reporter. These kinds of suits would have happen
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It's a very fine point, but an important one. If you take your DVDs to a service which will convert them for you, there's certainly a strong case for that being legal and appropriate. However, if the format-shifting occur
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and we see again (Score:5, Insightful)
This is essentially the same way they sued mp3.com into the ground, and yet another example of why the DMCA is such a fucking horrible law. There's no damage being done here except to the iron grip the MPAA exerts over movie distribution.
They have no problem with the idea of selling movies on hard disc, it's just that they don't want competition.
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Re:and we see again (Score:5, Insightful)
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The MPAA can keep up this activity till they're blue in the face. The DVD is not going away anytime soon, and as long as movies are rentable on DVD, decss is out there in the wild, and I use Linux, they can fuck off.
Yes, I admit I'm 'guilty' of what I'm implying above and will continue to do so despite their continued shennanigans. And no. I don't feel any remorse.
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They have no problem with the idea of selling movies on hard disc, it's just that they don't want competition .
Um, yeah. I mean, no, they don't want competition. Nor should there be competition. That's what a monopoly means, which is inherent in the term 'exclusive,' which is in the Constitution...
Art. I, Sect. 8, Cl. 8: . . . securing for limited times to authors . . . the exclusive right to their respective writings . . .
Re:and we see again (Score:4, Insightful)
Your computer shop down the street is allowed to sell a copy of Windows pre-installed on a machine, if they include the original CD, right? They can also offer a service to install a legit version of Windows. Neither one is considered a crime, (or a copyright violation).
Re:and we see again (Score:4, Informative)
Not because of copyright law that is broadly applicable beyond computer programs, but because (1) the license for Windows specifically grants that right, and (2) there is a special provision of copyright law allowing making a copy or adaptation of a computer programs necessary to run the program in the ordinary way.
Neither of these is applicable to DVDs.
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Illegal maybe, but copyright violation? (Score:5, Interesting)
Now we've heard that space-shifting falls under fair use, as long as you don't distribute the copy. This is the principle under which it's legal to rip tracks from your own CDs and load them on your iPod.
Now, we've got someone who is oofering (1) a legit copy of the music and (2) a service that will take your DVD and transfer it to your iPod. All copies made under fair use are transferred at the same time.
Now it may be that circumventing copy protection is illegal under DMCA... but does that make it an infringement of copyright?
Re:Illegal maybe, but copyright violation? (Score:5, Interesting)
Imagine this scenario instead:
Company purchases a DVD
Company decrypts the DVD and burns to another DVD
Company sells the decrypted DVD with the original DVD
How is that different or more legal than this:
Company purchases a DVD
Company decrypts the DVD and encodes to MP4 onto an iPod
Company sells the iPod with the original DVD
Re:Illegal maybe, but copyright violation? (Score:5, Funny)
Neither senario should be "wrong."
Good thing for me, I believe in Moral Relativity. If it's wrong, but not really wrong.
Guns don't kill people.
People w/ decrypted movies that portray guns kill people.
Don't let the terrorists watch the Matrix on their IPOD!
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The scenario I think is "right" is as follows:
Company develops an iPod compatible program that plays DVDs
The company then provides a program to copy DVDs onto iPods without circumventing CSS
The company then sells iPods preloaded with this software, to copy and play back
At no case has the company violated the DMCA nor copyright law.
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I hit submit too early. What I'm getting at is that the decryption and the redistribution of copyrighted material look like two different issues.
Imagine this scenario:
Company purchases a DVD.
Company copies the DVD without decrypting it.
Company sells the copy and original to the same person.
Or this one:
Company purchases a DVD.
Company pulls the data off the DVD and puts it on a hypothetical device that can play encrypted DVD data.
Company sells the device with the original DVD.
If the copy and th
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Not that the MPAA isn't known for using insane trol
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No, not really.
It is prima facie infringement, that's certain. But the argument is that it is a fair use, and thus the infringement is defended against. The problem is that while it may be a fair use for the end user, there is a general principle that one party cannot stand in another's shoes for fair use purposes. Just because Alice could win on a fair use argument when she rips
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Not a good example. The
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Basically, they are just saving the consumer time, doing something they could easily do themsevles.
Given that the students were using library books they didn't own, the copy shop made the same argument: it's just saving the students' time, doing it for them instead of making them do precisely the same thing themselves.
This argument hasn't really worked yet.
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And CSS isn't really copy protection. You can copy it bit for bit and play the resultant copy. You don't have to understand encrypted bits to copy them.
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Re:Illegal maybe, but copyright violation? (Score:5, Interesting)
IANAL, but I did work at mp3.com. AFAIK, any copying of copywrited work in a commercial setting violates copywright. This would include: Kinko's using their copiers to dupe textbooks for their owners. mp3.com ripping CDs for people who already owned them. Also, I'm fairly certain it includes google's practice of scanning textbooks.
It's quite likely that the company mentioned in TFA is going to either lose or settle, but I'm interested in how this will pan out for google's lawsuit from the Author's Guild.
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Now we've heard that space-shifting falls under fair use, as long as you don't distribute the copy. This is the principle under which it's legal to rip tracks from your own CDs and load them on your iPod.
As far as I'm aware, space-shifting has only really been discussed in the Diamond case (RECORDING INDUSTRY v. DIAMOND MULTIMEDIA SYS., 180 F.3d 1072 (9th Cir. 1999)), which was specific to audio. As such, 'space-shifting' was analyzed under the Audio Home Recording Act.
Copyright law reserves the 17 U
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So? The DVD player manufacturer is who has purchased the license. If you did not buy a DVD player that was licensed, then you do not have permission to break the encryption on the DVD. If you get around that encryption, you are breaking the copy protection on that DVD.
The DMCA doesn't say anythi
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The copyright holders authorized DVDCCA to sub-authorize decryption. DVDCCA has sub-authorized certain manufacturers to make decryption devices, if they conform to certain criteria DVDCCA has set forth (e.g.
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The DMCA is such a fucking stupid law. I break it every time I watch a DVD on my computer, a DVD that in each and every case I paid in full for. Good thing I don't mistake legality for morality, or might feel bad!
Seems within the law, for better or worse... (Score:5, Interesting)
Should the law be changed to allow this? Perhaps, certainly I wouldn't object to deep sixing the DMCA, or to writing some kind of reasonable express format-shifting protection into the law, though its difficult to craft without undermining copyright entirely (unless you require destruction of the original before transfer.)
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Re:Seems within the law, for better or worse... (Score:4, Insightful)
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You are mistaken. The first sale doctrine means that the purchaser is free to transfer the physical copy they have received, not to make copies of it.
If I do it myselff... but if I pay someone... (Score:3, Insightful)
No, I think that is complete BS. It doesn't make any sense. Maybe they can force seperating the buying of the product and the shifting of the format but if we allow an individual to do $x, we should definately allow them to pay someone else to do $x for them.
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Let's say you are legally allowed to record something off television for your own use (which is probably true though may not be depending on where you are). Do you also think it is reasonable to pay someone else for a copy of something they made from TV? That would effectively remove the copyright holder monopoly on retail DVDs. I think it's fairly reasonable that fair use is limited to non comme
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Maybe. There is a little case law on "space shifting", but it can be distinguished from format shifting being done here, so its not clear that "format shifting" is clearly "fair use" to start with, legally.
When it stops being noncommercial, personal copying for personal use, the case for considering it "fair use" gets considerably wea
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And they are selling the copy together with the original - copyright doesn't need to be changed to allow this, it doesn't prohibit it to begin with. It's only the DMCA they are violating.
This company is making a profit off of someone else's intellectual property.
See, that's the problem with the made-up concept of "Intellectual Property": copyright grants a limited monop
Shouldn't be a surprise (Score:2, Insightful)
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Essentially, the Director of the film has the innate right to not get his work edited and sold by someone else.
In the U.S. this "moral right" applies to visual creations, so artists and film directors are allowed to say "No, you can't do that to my film/painting/picture".
DRM was an issue, but it wasn't the deciding factor in the case.
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Didn't ask (Score:2, Interesting)
They didn't ask, "Mother, may I?" or Simon didn't say, "Preload movie for consumer." Fair Use be damned.
In future plans, the MPAA will be suing people who have unauthorised memories of watching movies as that constitutes illegal copying to memory. From then on, brain surgeons will wait outside theaters to scoop out people's brains.
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Fight the laws.
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Free clue for the MPAA (Score:5, Insightful)
I can't think of a more stupid strategy for any business.
Re:Free clue for the MPAA (Score:5, Funny)
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I can't think of a more stupid strategy for any business.
Sure you can: suing your actual customers.
delicate (Score:5, Interesting)
This case may end up depending on: (answer what you want)
(1) Does the market allow for the selling of an iPod and a separate DVD disc?
(2) Does the market allow for someone to buy a movie onto their iPod?
(3) What is the difference between a movie on a DVD and a movie on an iPod? Are a distributor's rights changed?
(4) Can a business do for users what they can do for themselves? For example, rip a DVD copy onto a viewing device?
(5) Can a user pay someone, in any way, to copy their DVD onto any other device they own?
I bet there are some non-intuitive answers that the RIAA would put up there.
Comment removed (Score:3, Interesting)
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The {RI,MP}AA sues only ordinary Joes (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't see the EFF or ACLU or other legal organizations hopping aggressively into these lawsuits or doing anything beyond filing amicus briefs. Anyway, it's difficult (as in impossible) to get part or all of a piece of legislation overturned, or a law reinterpreted, when every case is either settled or dropped.
I can't characterize this behavior as SLAPP, because strictly speaking it isn't (SLAPP refers to legal maneuvering to dissuade public discussion), but it's one of those cases where it would be nice if there were a government organization, or powerful private interest, whose business it was to intercede in favor of individuals in these cases of imbalanced litigation on controversial rights issues.
How does this happen? Easy follow the money... (Score:5, Interesting)
America, best government money can buy®
Re:How does this happen? Easy follow the money... (Score:4, Informative)
Sponsors of the original bills introduced into each house:
Senate:
Sen Kohl, Herb [WI]
Sen Leahy, Patrick J. [VT]
Sen Thompson, Fred [TN]
House:
Rep Conyers, John, Jr. [MI-14]
Rep Frank, Barney [MA-4]
Rep Hyde, Henry J. [IL-6]
Rep Berman, Howard L. [CA-26]
Rep McCollum, Bill [FL-8]
Rep Bono, Sonny [CA-44]
These folks in the House co-sponsored it after it was amended from its original form, though it still included the anti-circumvention provision:
Rep Paxon, Bill [NY-27]
Rep Pickering, Charles W. (Chip) [MS-3]
Rep Bono, Mary [CA-44]
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Copyrights and wrongs (Score:5, Interesting)
IANAL, but this makes my head hurt!
I may be wrong here (Score:2)
The DMCA encryption question is another deal, but I'm sure the argument can be made that CSS is not an *effective* copy protection measure.
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This is not generally the case, though there are specific rules very much along those lines for computer programs when either necessary for use or a single archival copy, and somewhat different rules allowing copying by libraries and archives.
Better Targets? (Score:5, Interesting)
As an "honest" consumer -- I thought it was the best win/win situation ever.
I whip out my credit card and pay $15 for a CD, and I get to download and
listen to the songs I just bought right away until the CD itself showed up
in the mail in a week or so. Everyone gets paid the full amount and everyone
is happy.
Yet -- they chose to take mp3.com down to the ground because of it.
In this case they are marketing the ipod to people who are also paying the full
price for the physical media......
This is said....I don't shed tear 1 when they "take down" the criminals that stealing movies
or music where the content makers don't profit....But to take down the people who are selling
your product at full price seems pretty stupid to me. The people that suffer the most
are the honest consumers.
Unintended Consequence (Score:2)
If both are "illegal"... why should someone choose the more expensive method?
My simple solution to stick it too them (Score:4, Insightful)
Ripping outside of USA? (Score:4, Insightful)
When I return home, hungover, the next day, I send out my customers' backups along with their original DVDs.
Have I broken any American laws?
Under the DMCA (Score:4, Insightful)
Making a backup copy of a DVD is illegal.
Format shifting a DVD is illegal.
Possessing a tool which can do any of the above is illegal.
Distributing a tool which can do any of the above is illegal.
If the DMCA had been around in 1980, the VCR would have been shut down by the MPAA long before it ever hit store shelves.
The DMCA is a bad piece of legislation. Congress passed it because the movie industry asked them too.
Congress needs to start thinking for themselves and not passing every single BS piece of legislation that special interest groups ask them to pass.
We just got rid of a whole lot of congressmen, and brought in quite a few new ones, but unfortunately, I see no indications that the new lot will be any better than the old.
Re:'Nothing to see here' (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:'Nothing to see here' (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:'Nothing to see here' (Score:5, Informative)
It doesn't need to be. The Legislature has already spoken. See Title 17 Section 1008 of the U.S. Code [cornell.edu]:
(Emphasis mine). It says "no action". The use of a digital audio recorder by a consumer for non-commercial purposes is pretected. Note that the definition of "digital audio recorder" seem to include MP3 players or iPods. The grey area in this case is that it's not the consumer who's doing the transfer, it's the company selling the equipment.
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Re:'Nothing to see here' (Score:5, Funny)
Re:'Nothing to see here' (Score:4, Insightful)
It certainly didn't sound like it. I mean, there was no real sarcasm evident in your post. No reference to legality versus rationality. It sounded like you were seriously arguing that a sane argument would be legally sound.
I agree that the situation is pretty ridiculous. What I don't agree with is the approach that most slashdotters appear to take - trying to argue that all this copying is perfectly OK under existing laws, because they want it to be. What people should be doing is trying to change the stupid laws. If people think what they are doing is legal, but it is not, it will come back to bite them on the ass. Even worse, it just perpetuates the bad laws.
Law is what it is, it's not what you want it to be. The media companies can make the laws what they want them to be, because they spend a lot of effort and money making it that way. Meanwhile, people sit back believing they are fine because of mythical interpretations of the law.
It really is quite strange. People on the one hand complain about draconian copyright laws, but then turn around and claim that they have all these rights - which implies that the laws aren't draconian. So, which is it? Are we being screwed by copyright law, or does it guarantee us all these rights?
Re:'Nothing to see here' (Score:5, Insightful)
(1) its not an audio or digital music recording, but movies,
(2) the use to make the recording is not "by a consumer of such a device or medium",
(3) the use is not "noncommercial".
Anyone of those three would be enough to make the provision you quote inapplicable.
Re:'Nothing to see here' (Score:4, Funny)
You're Goddamned right it's pretected! I wouldn't have it any other way, and I'm sure I speak for everyone else here when I say that!
Hell, even if it weren't pretected, then it SHOULD be, dammit.
There ought to be a CLEAR law, ensuring pretection, for EVERYONE! We need to eliminate pretection greyosity, for certitudinousness, from now, into infinitis!
That's what I think, anyway.
'course, it's past time for my meds, so, I could be wrong.
The last sentence is a joke - I took my meds on time - otherwise I couldn't spell "certidudinousness" correctly
Agency law. (Score:5, Informative)
Basic agency law -- if you instruct someone to do something, they are your agent and it is as if you were doing it yourself. There are only a limited and specific few things that you can't do by using an agent like this.
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You seem to have missed a significant portion of the text you quoted:
Seeing as this use is both (1) commercial, and (2) not by the consumer, I don't see how this is applicable.
Excuse me? (Score:3, Informative)
Ah, no... Re-Read what you yourself typed:
No action may be brought under this title alleging infringement of copyright
There are three key words you left out: "under this title"
The title just says end-users can't be arrested for buying blank CDs/recorders/etc if they using them for non-commercial use.
I should think that using such devices to copy video/musical recordings and
Re:'Nothing to see here' (Score:5, Informative)
No, copyright is about making money distributing copies. The one doing the copying is not making a copy of their own DVD, they are making a copy of the customer's DVD for the customer.
Making a backup copy of a copyrighted work is completely legal and is explicitly spelled out in copyright law. If you don't own or don't know how to run a CD burner, is paying someone to make the backup copy for you illegal?
There's a reason the MPAA is invoking the DMCA, and that's because the DMCA is what makes breaking encryption illegal even if the actions performed thereafter are legal under copyright law. Were it not for the DMCA, the MPAA would not have a case here at all.
point of copyright (Score:2, Insightful)
If that was all it was, it would be no more legit than a pyramid scheme.
The meaningful purpose of copyright and patent law is to encourage useful innovation in science and art.
Yes, the DMCA and other copyright extensions are contrary to that purpose.
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In practice, we get the Sony Bono Copyrigh
Re:point of copyright (Score:4, Funny)
Man, Sony's been so evil lately it's even invading our subconsciousness!
Re:'Nothing to see here' (Score:5, Interesting)
Its about both, and even doing either without making money, which is why all of those are exclusive rights protected under copyright.
Right. They are selling the service of making the copy along with the goods (the source and target media.) It therefore is not noncommercial copying by the end-user for personal use, and insofar as there may be exceptions for noncommercial format-shifting for personal use (a disputed point!) that would cover DVD ripping, this is not covered by them.
Really, where? At least in the US, this is a popular myth, not a fact: "a library or archives" has a right to make backup copies with certain limits (see 17 USC 108), and the making of an archival copy of a computer program is expressly allowed (17 USC 117), but this is not generally the case for copyrighted works.
Since the exception for archival copies states "... it is not an infringement for the owner of a copy of a computer program to make or authorize the making of another copy or adaptation of that computer program provided...", probably not, where it is legal to make a backup in the first place.
Not that the copy being made here is for archival purposes, nor would a court probably find that it is of a computer program, though that's less clear. (A DVD contains principally, of course, one or more audiovisual works, it also includes some instructions that might make it a computer program. I don't know if whether the 17 USC 117 exception applies to DVDs has been litigated.)
No, because the MPAA is charging infringement as well as DMCA violation and seeking remedies for both; the DMCA expressly does not change the scope of any of the provisions or exceptions to infringement, so adding the DMCA claim does nothing to help their other claims.
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But its not copying by the end user for noncommercial use. Its copying for commercial purposes by a vendor, which is rather clearly a violation of copyright.
Yes, and it is the merchant who is making the copy, for commercial purposes, and then transferring possession of both the original and the copy
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They can "decide" that the moon is made of green cheese if they like, but it doesn't make it so.
Re:'Nothing to see here' (Score:4, Interesting)
On the other hand, given that the MPAA was largely responsible for the DMCA (even to have furnished draft copies of the legislation to involved Congresscritters) it's hardly surprising that they would invoke it here. This is exactly the kind of case for which they so badly wanted the DMCA
Re:'Nothing to see here' (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't agree with that interpretation of copyright. Copyright exists to encourage creative development by guaranteeing the creator a reasonable period of time where they can have the exclusive ability to produce (and sell) a specific kind of content. (it grants the creator a "limited monopoly" on their creation) The company that is doing the format shifting is not benefiting from having a copy of the work, and the consumer has already paid the creator for his work. The only possible lost revenue is if the riaa was offering the same service or if it was impacting the sales of their product. They are not offering the service, and it is arguably increasing the benefits from their limited monopoly.
What stumps me here is "why?" Why are they doing this? It costs them money and ill-will (which at this point I think they have so much negative karma that a little more really doesn't matter anymore) and I don't see what's in it for them. The iPod is designed to make it difficult to copy content off from it, so the odds of someone swapping tracks on their ipod with a friend is fairly remote. There must be either a paranoid dellusional in authority there or there is a classified pie chart somewhere that say that this will nick off 2% of their proffits due to some complex market dependency.
The RIAA is not doing this because it's illegal. They could care less what's legal and what's not from morality's sake. They have a reason they don't want customers to do it, and they are using the DMCA as a tool to try to make the world behave the way they want them to. Having a law that could cover it just makes this job easier. This is what makes general laws like DMCA so dangerous. The people sponsoring them say it's necessary to make a very broad law so that it covers the largest percentage of offenders they are after, and try to make us believe that the law will be "properly interpreted" such that no innocents (people that "were not meant to be included") will not be harmed. But history shows that in 100% of those cases, there are abuses and they generally go unchecked because after all, they've made it legal. Copyright, seizure laws, and a really fun one, "enemy combatant". They all force us to surrender our rights and fredoms in the name of protecting our rights and our fredoms. What a scam.
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Re:'Nothing to see here' (Score:5, Interesting)
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I agree.
The MPAA (and the RIAA) have systematically and emphatically drawn a line that delineates between "no rights for the consumer" - approved, and "everything else" - criminal.
Because of their hard stance that consumers have NO rights and their disregard of fair use rights, they have forced me, because I want my fair use rights, to become their opposition.
Now, if any of their reps are reading this, they should understand exactly what I mean and why they should notice. I am one of those people wh
Re:'Nothing to see here' (Score:4, Funny)
No, they're a terrorist. Try to keep up here.
In Their Eyes The're Stealing Because (Score:5, Insightful)
This is the only way they can make money. If you only pay for one copy anymore, then you have effectively cut deeply into their expected revenue. People aren't going to the theater's because it is a one time experience. Why not just pick the DVD up and watch at your own convenience than sitting in a sweaty, smelly seat with over priced popcorn? Why pay for an iPod offering if you can just rip it from the DVD?
Sure you are stealing, you've cost them over $200 in lost revenue per piece of content. That's why they are lobbying so hard for DRM. That's why none of it is compatible with everything else. Otherwise, you're still only paying for that one copy.
Re:"experimental threading One Two Three Four" (Score:5, Funny)
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One and four either shows the parent and its replies or the collapsed parent and a message stating "4 hidden comments" or whatever.
Two toggles the collapsed state of the comment you click and any of its children that don't meet your threshold or something.
Three basically just toggles the collapsed state of the comment you click, but doesn't modify its children, except from when you're going from four to three, in which case it collapses ones that don't meet t
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If they actually read the DMCA they will see that they are in the clear - PROVIDING they get a judge who isn't on the take.
The best course, though, is for this to go to
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Your post didn't help. Now I know how Yoda would sound after a Meth hit.