You are not logged in!

F.A.Q
Log in

Register
  
 
  
(nobody)
...and 267 guests

Last 5 registered
Oplandisks
nothingstar
N_loop
yipe
foxtrotromeo

Browse members...
  
 
Members 8025
Messages 2614155
Today 0
Topics 127544
  
 
Messageboard index
RIAA: Lawsuits against p2p sharers
 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 01:52 [#00758807]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker



linky

Topic discussion:
should we be more careful or should we stop?


 

offline Morton from out (Netherlands, The) on 2003-06-27 01:53 [#00758810]
Points: 10000 Status: Addict



nr. 5 :P


 

offline Morton from out (Netherlands, The) on 2003-06-27 01:54 [#00758812]
Points: 10000 Status: Addict | Followup to Morton: #00758810



sorry,
i think we shouldn't stop until they make original cd's
cheaper


 

offline Morton from out (Netherlands, The) on 2003-06-27 01:55 [#00758813]
Points: 10000 Status: Addict | Followup to Morton: #00758812



you could make this a poll at your site :)


 

offline Jedi Chris on 2003-06-27 01:55 [#00758814]
Points: 11496 Status: Lurker | Followup to Morton: #00758812



"Once we begin our evidence-gathering process, any
individual computer user who continues to offer music
illegally to millions of others will run the very real risk
of facing legal action in the form of civil lawsuits that
will cost violators thousands of dollars and potentially
subject them to criminal prosecution,"

Do you still think that then?


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 01:55 [#00758815]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to Morton: #00758812



dude...that's just a lame excuse and you know it...cd's
won't become cheaper...

reason: inflation


 

offline Morton from out (Netherlands, The) on 2003-06-27 01:56 [#00758817]
Points: 10000 Status: Addict | Followup to Jedi Chris: #00758814



huh they're only talking about people who offer the
music...

btw i find this a pretty difficult subject


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 01:57 [#00758819]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker



i'm seriously thinking about quitting the "hunting" of whole
albums...sure a song or to, but if i wan't to hear the album
I will try buying it instead.


 

offline Jedi Chris on 2003-06-27 01:58 [#00758820]
Points: 11496 Status: Lurker



Does this really worry anyone here?


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 01:58 [#00758821]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to Morton: #00758817



without sharers, there is no p2p - think about that


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2003-06-27 01:58 [#00758822]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to Morton: #00758810 | Show recordbag



6th actually- I've been counting :)

UK peeps- no need for us to worry yet, our equivalent of the
RIAA haven't taken similair action yet :D


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 01:59 [#00758823]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to Jedi Chris: #00758820



yeah...me

...and artists (no matter what style) that doens't get the
payment that they deserve


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 01:59 [#00758825]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ceri JC: #00758822



well...the Danish has

and in a couple of months Sweden will to...


 

offline Morton from out (Netherlands, The) on 2003-06-27 02:00 [#00758826]
Points: 10000 Status: Addict | Followup to Junktion: #00758815



they could be more cheap, most cd's are 20 - 22 euros's
here!
since the euro the price went up pretty much, it's not
normal inflation
and still, if they'd sell 'em for about 12 - 14 euro they
would still earn enough money


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 02:00 [#00758828]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ceri JC: #00758822



what are you guys counting?


 

offline Jedi Chris on 2003-06-27 02:03 [#00758829]
Points: 11496 Status: Lurker | Followup to Junktion: #00758828



The paragraphs I guess


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 02:04 [#00758832]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to Morton: #00758826



probly...but maybe they became so expensive because of the
the piracy...

Sure, putting the price down a bit will help, but it's the
main thoughts of this "sub-culture" we that has to be
changed to get these music-sales to work again. I don't
think shutting down p2p will help that much. It will probly
just cause another network to pop up. But I think if people
understood that they actually are making this industry (that
we musicmakers/listeners actually depends on) more
moneybased than it should be.


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2003-06-27 02:05 [#00758833]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to Junktion: #00758828 | Show recordbag



The threads that have been created relating to this topic...


 

offline Morton from out (Netherlands, The) on 2003-06-27 02:05 [#00758834]
Points: 10000 Status: Addict



i'm not worried at all, i buy all my music originally
anyway, just d/l some stuff to get a preview of some records
.. and i d/l stuff which i can't get on cd, HAB, MFM, AB5,
live sessions etc.
if it could really get me into trouble i wouldn't mind
stopping d/l-ing at all.
i don't believe it'll happen that soon though

as bill_hicks said in an other thread, sometimes on kazaa
there are over 4 million people sharing their files, i
wonder how they're gonna track'em all down


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 02:06 [#00758835]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ceri JC: #00758833



ah..i understand...it's a sign of thoughts ;)


 

offline mimi on 2003-06-27 02:07 [#00758838]
Points: 5721 Status: Regular



i hope they sue me -- i think it would be hilarious.

they won't, though. i don't think i have any mp3s they
would even care about at all.


 

offline eXXailon from purgatory on 2003-06-27 02:10 [#00758843]
Points: 6745 Status: Lurker | Followup to Junktion: #00758832



Well, we're in a vicious circle if you put it like that. CDs
are fucking expensive. It's just not normal anymore.
This hasn't just to do with piracy. I had to write a paper
on that last year. Turned out that (here in holland) the
sales of singles have decreased dramatically. However the
sales of albums have increased with 8%!!! Apparently the
recording industry didn't find that worth enough
mentioning... :\


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 02:11 [#00758844]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to mimi: #00758838



they sued a whole LANparty in denmark...all the kids just
payed the money, but one 14 year old kid was the only one to
go in court with it.
He lost and had to pay $200.000


 

offline Jedi Chris on 2003-06-27 02:12 [#00758847]
Points: 11496 Status: Lurker | Followup to eXXailon: #00758843



Do you not think the artists or the record companys deserve
the money they make from the CDs?


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 02:13 [#00758849]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to eXXailon: #00758843



yeah,....but I know some artists in Denmark that sell actual
records...

When selling a record as an artists, you only get approx 3%
of what it's sold for (atleast in Denmark)...I think THAT
sucks...


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 02:14 [#00758851]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to Jedi Chris: #00758847



the artists only earn real money on PR and jingles etc.
...cd-sales just helps them boost the commercialism


 

offline eXXailon from purgatory on 2003-06-27 02:16 [#00758853]
Points: 6745 Status: Lurker | Followup to Jedi Chris: #00758847



Of course I do, but the profits that are currently made from
(most) CDs are insane. I have absolutely no problem with
supporting an artist, but as Junktion said, the artist only
gets 2 or 3% of the profits anyway. BTW it doesn't have to
be like this with the current prices. I got my special
edition of Further down the spiral by NIN yesterday:
¤11,49!! And they STILL make profit on it!


 

offline Jedi Chris on 2003-06-27 02:20 [#00758855]
Points: 11496 Status: Lurker | Followup to eXXailon: #00758853



Business is business.....and people who share willingly
'copyrighted' material are breaking the law, and taking them
to court is a way of perhaps getting some cash back. If they
make an example of a few people, it is probably there
thinking that the sales will increase again, because more
people will start to buy music rather than risk the
penalties


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 02:22 [#00758856]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to Jedi Chris: #00758855



it's probly more profitable for the record-industry to sue
every sharer, than it is to sell the records they
downloaded...think of that


 

offline mimi on 2003-06-27 02:24 [#00758857]
Points: 5721 Status: Regular



hopefully nobody cares. i think that would be hilarious. i
can see the headlines. RIAA EFFORTS POINTLESS.

mp3s are like free radio -- if we can't hear any kind of
selection of music on the radio.....then people are just
going to download.


 

offline manticore from London (ON) (Canada) on 2003-06-27 02:25 [#00758859]
Points: 651 Status: Addict



from the RIAA website:

"ZOEgirl Group, top-selling Contemporary Christian artists:
“When we were little girls, we didn't see anything wrong
with copying cassette tapes, because it was so easy to do,
and we didn't know any better. Well, we know better now,
because with the availability of copying, uploading and
downloading cds, this kind of thing has severely affected
the funds that are available to record, market and package
the music we now make. People need to be educated on the
fact that if piracy continues at the current rate, very soon
there will simply NOT BE the amazing music that is out there
now.” "

well, thank fucking god! i hope you contemporary christian
tossers never record another CD in your lifetime! oooh nooo!
piracy is so eeeeeeevil! it says so in the bible - it's
wrong to steal music!


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 02:25 [#00758860]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to mimi: #00758857



some ISP's is actually working on a system that detects
copyrighted mp3's when downloading

...but that system will be cracked to ofcourse


 

offline Jedi Chris on 2003-06-27 02:26 [#00758862]
Points: 11496 Status: Lurker | Followup to Junktion: #00758856



You are perhaps right. Loads of people do this. That being
said, with programs like Kazaa, I don't share files, and in
SS I only share to people I know or people who have
asked...I know that goes against the 'purpose' of those
places, but I'm only in breach of accepting these 'stolen'
goods - not distrbuting heehhe


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 02:34 [#00758869]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to Jedi Chris: #00758862



same here, but have you noticed the amount of people NOT
sharing lately.
The ones who DO share has a shitload of stuff...that's why
there still is that much out there. But that also makes it
easier for people like RIAA to find the sharers, because it
almost is like organized crime.
If all the "big" shares wasn't there, there would not be any
p2p, and therefore the record-sales would go up.

But think of it in this way to:
While this mp3-boom has happened over the last couple of
years, the artists in the world has also boomed. There's a
lot more "known" underground genres and artists. And if we
came back to buying cd's, things like Autechre, BoC etc.,
would somehow be kept underground. So is that good or bad?


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 02:36 [#00758871]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to Junktion: #00758869



...and the "share or be cut off" remark is a hoax...no one
is monitoring uploads and downloads these days


 

offline Jedi Chris on 2003-06-27 02:36 [#00758872]
Points: 11496 Status: Lurker | Followup to Junktion: #00758869



The whole thing is a tricky situation isn't it?


 

offline eXXailon from purgatory on 2003-06-27 02:42 [#00758880]
Points: 6745 Status: Lurker | Followup to Junktion: #00758871



Won't people just use software that prevents your IP address
from being broadcasted?


 

offline manticore from London (ON) (Canada) on 2003-06-27 02:43 [#00758882]
Points: 651 Status: Addict



in all probablility, sooner or later, some sort of P2P
software will be devised which will mask the individual
users' ISP #'s, so the only way remaining to trace a
potential "thief" would be by the sheer volume of data which
passed onto his/her computer.


 

offline Jedi Chris on 2003-06-27 02:43 [#00758883]
Points: 11496 Status: Lurker | Followup to eXXailon: #00758880



Your ISP will always know what you are doing


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 02:46 [#00758885]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to Jedi Chris: #00758872



exactly...but for me is more like "should i really keep on
doing this?" ....

The effort you have to put into getting full-albums and
movies, is getting bigger and bigger. The reason is demand.
Pop is easier to find because it's popular, while
underground-music and not so popular movies are hard and
sometimes even impossible to find.

Besides - I will not waste my life by getting caught with
piracy...life is to precious...I would rather NOT download
stuff.

I think people sometimes forget that if they got caught
right in this moment, a lot of people would have the rest of
the life ruined by lawsuits.
I saw this show on Swedish tv where this guy got a aprox
$1.000.000 lawsuit.
He had nothing. He only could afford to live in a small
crappy apartment. All he had was a bed and a TV and he had
to eat at a shelter.

Who here would redo there choices if they where in the same
situation.


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 02:48 [#00758887]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to eXXailon: #00758880



If you where working at an ISP, and your job was to monitor
suspicious transfers, don't you think that it was obvious
that some guy with a 10GB transfer a month was downloading
illegal shit.

You can't find 10GB of legal data in one month ya' know...


 

offline eXXailon from purgatory on 2003-06-27 02:52 [#00758889]
Points: 6745 Status: Lurker



That's america!

1 million dollars...I don't call that punishing or setting
an example, I call that squeezing every last penny from
someone who has downloaded and shared a few CD, just like
millions of others do. 1 million bucks is immoral. Some
judges seem to have a knack of not seeing a certain ratio
between the act of crime and the punishment.

Sure, he has broken the law, there's no debating about that
but come on...


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 02:54 [#00758890]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to eXXailon: #00758889



as i said...this was in Sweden ;)


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2003-06-27 02:55 [#00758893]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to Junktion: #00758887 | Show recordbag



I forsee an increasing popularity of "non-pussy" ISPs that
whilst charging more, will fight to the last and demand a
court injunction to release your details... perhaps they'll
even intentionally implement their system in such a way that
even they can't tell who is doing what- just to cover their
back. You can already get "offshore" data stores (one of the
spitbank forts in the solent is used for this) that are
almost like pirate radio stations for datawarehousing.

If the demand is there, someone will provide the service.


 

offline eXXailon from purgatory on 2003-06-27 02:56 [#00758894]
Points: 6745 Status: Lurker | Followup to Junktion: #00758890



It was on Swedish TV (don't you guys get american people in
the news? ;) ) and you mentioned 1.000.000 dollars :P


 

offline Jedi Chris on 2003-06-27 02:56 [#00758895]
Points: 11496 Status: Lurker | Followup to eXXailon: #00758889



Don't worry mate, as I mentioned here yesterday I will visit
you in prison! ;)

Junktion: I think it is a matter of time before this
happens elsewhere. I think it is all very well for CeriJC to
say 'UK peeps don't worry'.....but I do not think that is
necessarily the case, we maybe living on borrowed time! :)


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 03:00 [#00758897]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to eXXailon: #00758894



i quickcalculated the sue, and it WAS a Swedish guy


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 03:02 [#00758898]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker



the solution for everything would be:

Putting your download limit for normal users on ALL ISP's
down to 3GB a month. If you download non-piracy, that would
actually be enough.... ;)


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2003-06-27 03:04 [#00758900]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to Jedi Chris: #00758895 | Show recordbag



"we maybe living on borrowed time! "

My plan; buy two 120gb HDs now... DL all material
available by artists you like, have had recommended etc.
remove these from your internet machine and put them in a
standalone PC for music. When the law is implemented here,
just be careful to never hav emore than an album or so on
your "net pc" so you will be well down the list of people to
prosecute. From time to time, disconnect your net
connection, LAN the 2 machines and move your mp3s across to
your music machine. Then disconnet the lan and reconnect the
internet :D


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2003-06-27 03:19 [#00758902]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ceri JC: #00758900



wouldn't it be easyer just NOT sharing files? :P


 


Messageboard index