Nobody loves me, everybody hates me, I guess I'm gonna have to eat sushi...L&L are the ones ignoring and twisting facts now??
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L&L are the ones ignoring and twisting facts now??
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This might be a good time to mention 17 U.S.C. § 506, which makes "willfully infringing" a copyright a crime--punishable by up to five years in prison--if said infringement was "for purposes of commercial advantage or private financial gain." And while I'd have to check with the Justice Department, I'm fairly certain, "But I'm Star Trek's biggest fan!" is not a viable criminal defense under this statute.Alec, you got caught with your hands in the cookie jar and now your paying it back. Had you not got caught, you would not be paying that money back. How stupid do you think we are? Self imposed restitution does not alter the fact that spend money that was not yours. Your a fucking thief and you got caught, nothing more to it. Many of these donors believed in you and gave you there a hard earned money.
This might be a good time to mention 17 U.S.C. § 506, which makes "willfully infringing" a copyright a crime--punishable by up to five years in prison--if said infringement was "for purposes of commercial advantage or private financial gain." And while I'd have to check with the Justice Department, I'm fairly certain, "But I'm Star Trek's biggest fan!" is not a viable criminal defense under this statute.
And while I'm thinking out loud here, I'd also direct everyone's attention to 18 U.S.C. § 1962, which is popularly known as the RICO statute. This happy little fellow makes it a crime to use any income "derived, directly or indirectly, from a pattern of racketeering activity" to establish or operate a business. And yes, criminal copyright infringement is expressly defined as a "racketeering activity." And the maximum penalty for racketeering is 20 years in prison plus forfeiture of all ill-gotten gains.
This might be a good time to mention 17 U.S.C. § 506, which makes "willfully infringing" a copyright a crime--punishable by up to five years in prison--if said infringement was "for purposes of commercial advantage or private financial gain." And while I'd have to check with the Justice Department, I'm fairly certain, "But I'm Star Trek's biggest fan!" is not a viable criminal defense under this statute.
And while I'm thinking out loud here, I'd also direct everyone's attention to 18 U.S.C. § 1962, which is popularly known as the RICO statute. This happy little fellow makes it a crime to use any income "derived, directly or indirectly, from a pattern of racketeering activity" to establish or operate a business. And yes, criminal copyright infringement is expressly defined as a "racketeering activity." And the maximum penalty for racketeering is 20 years in prison plus forfeiture of all ill-gotten gains.
So you are saying that it is possible that the NIGHTMARE SCENARIO isn't that "the film that thousands (or tens of thousands) of people want to see doesn't get made?"This might be a good time to mention 17 U.S.C. § 506, which makes "willfully infringing" a copyright a crime--punishable by up to five years in prison--if said infringement was "for purposes of commercial advantage or private financial gain." And while I'd have to check with the Justice Department, I'm fairly certain, "But I'm Star Trek's biggest fan!" is not a viable criminal defense under this statute.
And while I'm thinking out loud here, I'd also direct everyone's attention to 18 U.S.C. § 1962, which is popularly known as the RICO statute. This happy little fellow makes it a crime to use any income "derived, directly or indirectly, from a pattern of racketeering activity" to establish or operate a business. And yes, criminal copyright infringement is expressly defined as a "racketeering activity." And the maximum penalty for racketeering is 20 years in prison plus forfeiture of all ill-gotten gains.
On last Sunday's G&T Show someone--I think it was @jespah--compared LFIM to Frank Abignale, Jr., the famous con artist who was the subject of the Steven Spielberg film Catch Me If You Can. Personally, I think LFIM is more like Kevin Trudeau, the FTC's longtime arch-nemesis who is now serving a 10-year federal prison sentence.So you are saying that it is possible that the NIGHTMARE SCENARIO isn't that "the film that thousands (or tens of thousands) of people want to see doesn't get made?"
How lovely.![]()
Trudeau actually beat the contempt conviction in that case, but he was quickly cited again for failing to obey a 2004 FTC settlement, which led to his present incarceration. The Seventh Circuit upheld that conviction earlier this year.Trudeau, it seems, exhorted his devoted radio audience to send e-mails on his behalf directly to the court e-mail address of the district judge presiding over his case; he posted the radio broadcast on his web site, and followed it up with an e-mail blast asking his e-mail list to send e-mails to the judge. The district judge had not asked for any letters and the judge had not (he thought) made his e-mail address publicly available (it turns out Northwestern University Law School had listed it on its web site; the judge is an adjunct professor there). He was, therefore, surprised to see e-mail after e-mail come pouring into his inbox. He was also nervous. Most of the e-mails were polite and enthusiastic ("If loving the values Kevin Trudeau creates for society is wrong, I don't wanna be right!"), but some had threatening overtones ("Leave kevin and his right to free spach alone. I wish carma on your soul this very moment. may god touch you today." [sic throughout] and "More people than you know are keeping a close eye on this case, not just the special interests who will benefit from Kevin's silence, but every-day regular people. We know that if he can be persecuted, so can we. We are awake to the tyranny slowly and quietly creeping into our society. We are watching."). The judge alerted the marshal to the e-mails coming to his account, and the marshal performed a threat assessment to determine whether the judge was in danger. The judge received over 300 e-mails within a span of 36 or so hours.
Holey buckets, Alec will be apoplectic when he finds out. He strikes me as someone not used to being told "no". Kickstarter, what a bunch of #haters, eh?Someone got owned.........
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I am very familiar with Kevin Trudeau - having had to rescue a few family members from his scams and schemes - but I had no idea he was represented by W&S.Incidentally, Trudeau's lawyers are Winston & Strawn. Sound familiar?
So you are saying that it is possible that the NIGHTMARE SCENARIO isn't that "the film that thousands (or tens of thousands) of people want to see doesn't get made?"
How lovely.![]()
I mainly mentioned Abignale due to the Netflix wackiness. Agreed on Trudeau; he's like the evil version of Billy Mays.On last Sunday's G&T Show someone--I think it was @jespah--compared LFIM to Frank Abignale, Jr., the famous con artist who was the subject of the Steven Spielberg film Catch Me If You Can. Personally, I think LFIM is more like Kevin Trudeau, the FTC's longtime arch-nemesis who is now serving a 10-year federal prison sentence.
For those unfamiliar with the story, Trudeau spent years producing and appearing in infomercials designed to sell bogus cures to people on subjects ranging from curing cancer to getting out of debt. He was the subject of numerous FTC orders, which he largely disregarded, claiming he was the victim of a government conspiracy to silence him and his followers. Here's just one highlight of Trudeau's shenanigans, according to a 2010 opinion from the Seventh Circuit in Chicago:
Trudeau actually beat the contempt conviction in that case, but he was quickly cited again for failing to obey a 2004 FTC settlement, which led to his present incarceration. The Seventh Circuit upheld that conviction earlier this year.
Incidentally, Trudeau's lawyers are Winston & Strawn. Sound familiar?
I'm guessing Peters is going to find it difficult to ever raise money on Kickstarter or Indigogo ever again.Someone got owned.........
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Why us everyone taking Alec at his word that he paid anything back? Again, show us the cancelled checks and/or the bank statements.
On last Sunday's G&T Show someone--I think it was @jespah--compared LFIM to Frank Abignale, Jr., the famous con artist who was the subject of the Steven Spielberg film Catch Me If You Can. Personally, I think LFIM is more like Kevin Trudeau, the FTC's longtime arch-nemesis who is now serving a 10-year federal prison sentence.
For those unfamiliar with the story, Trudeau spent years producing and appearing in infomercials designed to sell bogus cures to people on subjects ranging from curing cancer to getting out of debt. He was the subject of numerous FTC orders, which he largely disregarded, claiming he was the victim of a government conspiracy to silence him and his followers. Here's just one highlight of Trudeau's shenanigans, according to a 2010 opinion from the Seventh Circuit in Chicago:
Trudeau actually beat the contempt conviction in that case, but he was quickly cited again for failing to obey a 2004 FTC settlement, which led to his present incarceration. The Seventh Circuit upheld that conviction earlier this year.
Incidentally, Trudeau's lawyers are Winston & Strawn. Sound familiar?
...But yeah, the main thing about the current W & S s/j filing is, those lovely unredacted documents? They have had over 3 full business days to try to petition the court to close the barn door. They have not done so.
Hence that is telling me that they don't want to. Mr. Lane can call for sanctions all he likes as can any of them, but it's Ranahan and Oki and the defense team who left 100% unredacted information out there. Which is under penalty of perjury, of course.
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