TGTheodore said:I hope the freaking pirates get heftier fines and longer prison terms. It's theft. Period.
Therefore, if you don't know the legal status of you're pouncing on, don't.
First of, what PKTrekGirl said.I see the parasites are out in force, loudly defending their right to take things without giving anything in return. It must be nice to be so richly entitled to the fruits of other people's labour.
Yeah pretty much my feelings. They focus loads of money on this and other actually important stuff gets the shaft.
False dilemma fallacy.
What's "actually important" here is the authority of the Swedish state, which presumably embodies the democratic will of the Swedish people.
Pirate Bay chose to flout that authority. That makes them no different from any other criminal, whether you consider their crimes trivial or not.
The plaintiffs in these cases are just as much citizens of your country as you are, and just as entitled to the protection of the law. Or are you saying that their civil rights should just be ignored? And if so, on what grounds?
Because that's what people do before they use a pic they found on the internet: Make damned sure that it's free and clear of all copyrights! "Dear so-and-so, I found such-and-such photograph of so-and-so via google image search. Is it cool with you for me to use it?"The photo of Captain Kirk in your avatar is the property of CBS. Do you have permission to use it? What about the pic of Ah-nold? Did you ask the copyright holder if you could use that?About time these guys get what they deserve.
Actually, you have no way of knowing the validity of your assertion. It could be a photo in public domain. Might not even be of Kirk. Likewise, the headshot of Arnold could be a public domain publicity shot.
--Ted (who doesn't create artistic material only to have snot-nosed punks steal my livelihood away from me)
My thoughts exactly. Maybe you should take your own advice TGTheodore, it's pretty obvious you don't understand this case.TGTheodore said:I hope the freaking pirates get heftier fines and longer prison terms. It's theft. Period.
Therefore, if you don't know the legal status of you're pouncing on, don't.
Hmm.
My thoughts exactly. Maybe you should take your own advice TGTheodore, it's pretty obvious you don't understand this case.TGTheodore said:I hope the freaking pirates get heftier fines and longer prison terms. It's theft. Period.
Therefore, if you don't know the legal status of you're pouncing on, don't.
Hmm.
Just because you've worked with copyright in your line of work doesn't mean that you automatically understand every copyright case. Do you know what kind of files they host on the Pirate Bay?So ......... 30 years of dealing with copyrights and TV and media mean nothing anymore. Thanks for showing me the light.My thoughts exactly. Maybe you should take your own advice TGTheodore, it's pretty obvious you don't understand this case.Hmm.
--Ted
It's amazing isn't it.
They do some simple file sharing and they get sentenced to a year in prision and 2.5 million. People convited of rape get around 6-12 months and no fine of any type.
Justice system working wonders, isn't it?
The irony here is all this is going to do is encourage more people to pirate.
Just a question, did the prosecution download every file in the pirate bay and determined that they were copyright material or just one or two movies? HOw did they get around proving the 90% of the sight is copyrighted material or whatever that number is?
Just because a file is called "Shrek 3" doesn't mean it is Shrek 3.
Edit: I was just listening to some music on youtube, why doesn't that site have to shut down and close?? There's tons of copyright stuff on there that isn't from the record studios or the movie studios.
I don't know for sure if they did, but several months ago Law Enforcement seized an entire server that Pirate Bay was using, Hardware and all.
I don't know for sure if they did, but several months ago Law Enforcement seized an entire server that Pirate Bay was using, Hardware and all.
No, that isn't correct. They seized a server that a distribution group was using but it wasn't actually affilitated with the Pirate Bay. Which is, of course, the entire point. The Pirate Bay doesn't actually host any illegal files.
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