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Danish Anti-Piracy Organization Bills P2P Users

faaaz writes "The danish anti-piracy organisation Antipiratgruppen has billed approximately 150 p2p users an amount of up to $14,000 each for sharing copyrighted material. The organisation says 'Pay up, or we'll sue!'" There's also a Reuters article.

643 comments

  1. Awww Crud! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    I thought P2P was supposed to be decentralized and less traceable? Hmmmmm?

    1. Re:Awww Crud! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they put a server out there and you connect to it they got your IP address.

    2. Re:Awww Crud! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it could be but would be a lot slower in the process. When you actually come to get your file, you make a 1 on 1 connection with somebody else, this is very traceable indeed. After all they know your IP (to send the file to you) and they know what you asked to download.

      I actually think it is a good thing. Piracy is still illegal no matter how much we may like it. I would also be pleased to see some of those people downloading child pornography get slammed and may some software to track their usage and IP's and pass them onto authorities for further investigation. I am sure there are many others monitoring the p2p networks right now.

      Piracy is not a good thing.

      If you want free music, make and support free music. If you want free software, make and support free software.

      There is no need to resort to stealing.

    3. Re:Awww Crud! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it's less stoppable. If someone connects to you P2P, you can get their IP address. In most cases, if you can get their IP address, you can get them.

      This is what projects like FreeNet are for. They hide who is requesting the file as well as who is sending it.

    4. Re:Awww Crud! by Bouncings · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Piracy is still illegal
      <sarcasim> Indeed it is although piracy would generally be tried in a maritime court, not a civil court. I have to admit I'm a bit surprised that these high schoolers could afford boats.</sarcasim>

      I'm sorry. I have to anal about this. Look through the Danish or United States laws passed on copyright, and you won't ever find the word "piracy." That's because the word piracy -- which is used to describe boarding someone else's seagoing vessil without permission and plundering -- is totally unrelated to copyright infringement in the English language. The reason the word "piracy" is used is because "copyright infringement" doesn't sound as bad. It doesn't sound as bad because it is not as bad. When you literally steal goods, you are depriving them of something. When you infringe on a copyright, you are depriving no one of anything but just that -- a copyright.

      The reason this is important is, (1) people need not be confused by words that don't actually exist in their used context, (2) you can talk seriously about what constitutes "copyright infringement." If you make a personal copy, is that copyright infringement? Legally, no. But because piracy has no legal definition, the copyright holders are free to apply the word at their discretion. Ie: Watching a DVD on Linux is piracy. -- there's no legal definition for piracy, so prove it wasn't! Now simply watching a DVD on Linux is not copyright infringement, and I can prove it because there is a legal definition of copyright infringement.

      When you use the word "piracy" you loose credibility with me. You are buying into the myth that copyright infringement is a legal and ethical parallel for stealing. In reality, there is no such thing as intellectual property or piracy of that property. There is a right to copy a work, and copying a work without that right is something else entirely.

      --
      -- Ken Kinder ken@_nospam_kenkinder.com http://kenkinder.com/
    5. Re:Awww Crud! by jedidiah · · Score: 2

      "Piracy" is only illegal under very particular sets of circumstances. Also, those criteria are subject to revision.

      Amateur "piracy" is pretty irrelevant.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    6. Re:Awww Crud! by c.derby · · Score: 1

      "When you infringe on a copyright, you are depriving no one of anything but just that -- a copyright."

      Well, you deprive them of money that they might have received had you actually purchased the software. Then again, I can think of plenty of software (Photoshop, Dreamweaver?) that I use in passing that I could definitely live without if I had to actually pay for it. Meaning, even though I use the software "sometimes", they didn't really lose money because I would have never paid for it.

      --
      -- derby
    7. Re:Awww Crud! by jratcliffe · · Score: 2

      >>

      When you make an otherwise very good post about language, you lose credibility with me when you can't distinguish between lose and loose.

    8. Re:Awww Crud! by Peterus7 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The problem with taking programs like photoshop is it does raise the price of programs extensively, which isn't fun if you wanna actually play by the rules for once. That's why you wouldn't want to pay for it. So thus you pirate it. Vicious cycle, eh?

      But Photoshop was overpriced to begin with, imoho.

    9. Re:Awww Crud! by Yossarian45793 · · Score: 3, Informative
      The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition, defines "piracy" as:

        1. Robbery committed at sea.
        2. A similar act of robbery, as the hijacking of an airplane.
      1. The unauthorized use or reproduction of copyrighted or patented material: software piracy.
      2. The operation of an unlicensed, illegal radio or television station.
    10. Re:Awww Crud! by walt-sjc · · Score: 2

      All the more reason to use the same open proxies in other countries that spammers use. Heh. Of course you can't run a server that way so you would be a leech, but it is a whole lot harder to trace.

    11. Re:Awww Crud! by Snaller · · Score: 2

      I thought P2P was supposed to be decentralized and less traceable? Hmmmmm?


      It isn't unless you design a program to be anonymous, and most P2P are not. (Yet?)

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    12. Re:Awww Crud! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And where do you think that 2nd reference comes from?

    13. Re:Awww Crud! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Yeah, the price would plummet if a lot of people who couldn't afford it wound up deleting it, and publishers started using Paint Shop Pro because they can barely find anybody proficient with Photoshop.

    14. Re:Awww Crud! by NevermindPhreak · · Score: 2, Interesting
      there is a difference between someone "pirating" something that they would never pay money for, and someone pirating something that, if it werent available for free, they would actually go out and buy the product. i dont really think the word "stealing" is accurate in describing the former, since stealing involves taking something from someone else. i, personally, wouldnt care if i made a program and tried to sell it, and some people who i know would never pay for the program got it for free. this might frustrate others who depend on such profits for their living, but if you took away all these "pirates", your profit margin wouldnt change at all.

      in the case of photoshop, i dont know of anyone who is willing to drop 500-1000 bucks for a single program. do the makers of photoshop give a rats ass? i doubt it. the fact that photoshop can be downloaded for free by those gosh-darn pirates just means that more people know how to use photoshop. almost no one is going to buy photoshop on their own at that price. however, if most of the people who are into graphic design and what not can use photoshop well, then it goes a long way towards making photoshop the industry standard. what does this mean to adobe? damn near every graphic design business is going to buy copies of their software at huge prices. a business wont pirate the software because it can mean MUCH stiffer punishment for a business than for a simple home user. if adobe wanted, they could incorporate much better copy protection into their software other than "enter your serial number". but why would adobe want to do this, if it can enoy huge profit margins from business by practically letting all home users have their product.?

      microsoft does this same thing. they barely have any copy protection built into windows. however, by being the industry standard, they can charge OEMs fees to install windows on the machines they sell. i dont know of a single person who has actually paid for an upgrade in windows, but i know of plenty who have bought new computers with windows preloaded.

    15. Re:Awww Crud! by Fizgig · · Score: 1

      The copyright-related use of piracy dates from at least the 1700s. People may be using it arbitrarily now, but by any lexicographical stretch of the imagination "violating copyright" is a fully accepted definition of the word "piracy". I would provide a link but it seems the OED site is now subscription only. Alas.

    16. Re:Awww Crud! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Semantic quibbles asserted by someone who can't spell "sarcasm" mean less than nothing.

    17. Re:Awww Crud! by Snaller · · Score: 2

      "When you infringe on a copyright, you are depriving no one of anything but just that -- a copyright."


      Well, you deprive them of money that they might have received had you actually purchased the software.


      MIGHT - is the operative word. And there is not MIGHT in a theft. Then something had been stolen, someone has been deprived. No might about it. That's why its not stealing. And this is not about semantics or splitting hairs - there is an important distinction.

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    18. Re:Awww Crud! by 'Lose',+Not+'Loose' · · Score: 1, Troll
      When you use the word "piracy" you loose credibility with me.

      Hi. That should be 'lose', not 'loose'.

      Thanks,
      'Lose', Not 'Loose' Guy

      --
      --thanks for the recent upmods! i'll be able to post again soon
    19. Re:Awww Crud! by 2short · · Score: 1

      Assuming your real question is "when": the 1700s. People who complain that "copyright infringement" is a totaly new meaning for "piracy" are just wrong.

    20. Re:Awww Crud! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How does one "loose" credibility? Oh, I get it! You meant "lose" and you're a big, stupid moron, right?

    21. Re:Awww Crud! by rreay · · Score: 3, Insightful
      And where do you think that 2nd reference comes from?

      I assume you're implying that it's a recent addition...

      An online Websters dictionary from 1828 defines it as

      PI'RACY, n. [L. piratica, from Gr. to attempt, to dare, to enterprise, whence L. periculum, experior; Eng. to fare.]
      1. The act, practice or crime of robbing on the high seas; the taking of property from others by open violence and without authority, on the sea; a crime that answers to robbery on land.
      Other acts than robbery on the high seas, are declared by statute to be piracy. See Act of Congress, April 30, 1790.
      2. The robbing of another by taking his writings.

      A 1913 Websters Dictionary defines it as:

      Pirate (Pi"rate) n. [L. pirata, Gr. fr. to attempt, undertake, from making attempts or attacks on ships, an attempt, trial; akin to E. peril: cf. F. pirate. See Peril.]
      1. A robber on the high seas; one who by open violence takes the property of another on the high seas; especially, one who makes it his business to cruise for robbery or plunder; a freebooter on the seas; also, one who steals in a harbor.
      2. An armed ship or vessel which sails without a legal commission, for the purpose of plundering other vessels on the high seas.
      3. One who infringes the law of copyright, or publishes the work of an author without permission.

      Maybe it's just me but I think that 175 years later it's time to accept that language changes.

      -rr
    22. Re:Awww Crud! by spoons67 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Absolutely! So many slashbots state that "I never would have bought the music anyway, so it's not lost revenue"
      What they fail to realize is that if you don't want to pay for it, then you, GASP! don't get to view, listen, or use use that content!

      --
      Begun, this browser war has.
    23. Re:Awww Crud! by Robber+Baron · · Score: 2

      How does one "loose" credibility?

      Maybe he means that their credibility breaks loose and starts rolling back and forth across the decks, eventually falling into the sea and sinking out of sight, never to be seen again!

      --

      You're using her as bait, Master!

    24. Re:Awww Crud! by zootread · · Score: 2, Funny

      I actually think it is a good thing. Piracy is still illegal no matter how much we may like it. I would also be pleased to see some of those people downloading child pornography get slammed and may some software to track their usage and IP's and pass them onto authorities for further investigation.

      So is it illegal now to download media that you already own? How does this organization determine who is downloading content they already own?

      As for child pornography. I think it is disgusting and wish it didn't exist. However, I don't think people downloading it should get into trouble for it. Here's why: I went on Kazaa the other day and did my usual search for "amateur" and then proceeded to download every file that came up. When I was checking out the porn, to my horror, one of the files was child pornography. I assure you the file name did not indicate this in any way. I immediately deleted it, but it already ruined my porn viewing for the night. I was furious. So now how do you determine who is intentionally distributing or downloading child pornography? Even if it is written in the filename, people like me who mass download stuff may still get it (which sucks, but its a risk we take).

      And back to illegal thing. I download amatuer porn. There is nothing illegal about watching some guy bang his wife, or some chick get naked in her dorm room.

      If you want free music, make and support free music. If you want free software, make and support free software.

      This point I sincerely agree on. I'd like to add: make and support free amateur porn!

      --
      Zoot!
    25. Re:Awww Crud! by ebyrob · · Score: 2

      I'm sure he'll run his next post by his editor. (unless he's a she... but you get the idea)

    26. Re:Awww Crud! by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

      I like the Mirriam-Webster website more anyway. Who's to say what dictionary defines the language other than the dictionary's creators?

    27. Re:Awww Crud! by aeschenkarnos · · Score: 1

      Yes, but only if you already buy into the 'copyright infringement = theft' worldview will you not get to listen to it. It's not a natural law, it's a business rule.

    28. Re:Awww Crud! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. The price for Photoshop has always been at the outer limits of common software. Long before P2P came along, Phoroshop was very expensive software for the average person. Many people steal the software without ever effecting Adobe's bottom line because there is NO WAY they would ever pay retail for it. These same people, most of them anyway are never going to make money using the software, many people steal it just so they can learn to use it properly for potential jobs. Or maybe they just use it at home to make a border on a picture. The end result is a boon to Adobe if later on, these same people need to use the software for work and typically purchase it from Adobe.

    29. Re:Awww Crud! by Peterus7 · · Score: 1

      Also, if you pirate a program and show other people what you can do with it, you increase awareness of that program and thus increase buyers. So in that respect it is nice... (Although half of the people who think it's a cool program will pirate it as well.)

  2. Who are they? by raydobbs · · Score: 1, Insightful

    My question would be, "Who are they screw-heads, and why should I PAY them?!" Bills I don't remember instigating don't get paid. And let them sue me - they have to prove it.

    1. Re:Who are they? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is what the problem is. If the claimer has a eg. screenshot of something shared it's the users responsebility to prove that it's NOT illigal. Something about the difference between civil and criminal court.

    2. Re:Who are they? by Alyeska · · Score: 3, Interesting
      And let them sue me - they have to prove it.

      Can't say I'm an expert on the Danes, but if this were the US, that's exactly what they'd be getting ready to do.

      Since there was no purchase agreement between the "buyer" and "seller," the seller has to put a dollar value on the product by invoicing the "buyer." This way, they can take the cases to CIVIL court (suing for non-payment under much looser juries -- preponderance of evidence rules instead of reasonable doubt, etc., etc.) instead of waiting for the government to get involved with CRIMINAL charges.

    3. Re:Who are they? by boomer_rehfield · · Score: 1

      No, they would have to prove that I don't have the CDs. (at least in the U.S.)

      --
      Carpe Canem - Seize the Dog
    4. Re:Who are they? by boomer_rehfield · · Score: 1

      guh...I was trying to reply to the message that has no score...not the main parent... *sigh*

      --
      Carpe Canem - Seize the Dog
    5. Re:Who are they? by Tackhead · · Score: 2
      > Since there was no purchase agreement between the "buyer" and "seller," the seller has to put a dollar value on the product by invoicing the "buyer." This way, they can take the cases to CIVIL court (suing for non-payment under much looser juries -- preponderance of evidence rules instead of reasonable doubt, etc., etc.) instead of waiting for the government to get involved with CRIMINAL charges.

      IANAL, but "Me too".

      They can sue in court for non-payment of the bill, which they'll probably lose, because there was never an agreement from the "buyer" to pay for the wares of the "seller".

      They can, of course, not sue for non-payment of the bill, and instead, sue for civil copyright infringement. That suit, they might win.

      But I still think linking a frivolous bill ("Pay $7000 for no reason at all!") to a non-frivolous claim of copyright infringement ("If you don't pay the frivolous bill, we'll file suit against you for $14,000 for copyright infringement") is ethically questionable at best, and under some legal systems may even be illegal.

      If they wanted to do it right, IMHO, they'd have filed suit for $14,000 for infringement, and then offered to settle out of court for $7,000. There may not be much practical difference to the warez-d00d getting the subpoena, but IMNSHO there's one hell of a legal/ethical difference.

      Disclaimer: IANAL. Can any US or Danish lawyers clear this up?

    6. Re:Who are they? by Alyeska · · Score: 1
      They can sue in court for non-payment of the bill, which they'll probably lose, because there was never an agreement from the "buyer" to pay for the wares of the "seller".

      Untrue. Again, in the US, if you take something from my shop without paying for it, and I don't call it "theft," you (the Buyer) simply waived your right to negotiate the terms of the sale. If the Seller tries to bill you $1,000 for the box of thumbtacks you took, however, the Uniform Commercial Code allows you to dispute the value by comparing it to the fair market (don't have the exact formulae handy).

    7. Re:Who are they? by netsharc · · Score: 1

      The trouble is, a screenshot is just bitmap data. It can easily be faked. Well, maybe that's what Palladium is good for, take real screenshots that you won't be able to edit with MS Paint. :p

      --
      What time is it/will be over there? Check with my iPhone app!
    8. Re:Who are they? by mentin · · Score: 2
      My question would be, "Who are they screw-heads, and why should I PAY them?!"

      A more interesting question is why should I pay THEM?

      Even assuming the copyright infringment was proven, still why should one pay some random organizations for all the CDs he had? Obviously this Danish organization does not own the copyrights of all the CDs that were traded. So who they are?

      --
      MSDOS: 20+ years without remote hole in the default install
    9. Re:Who are they? by Tomble · · Score: 1
      The trouble is, a screenshot is just bitmap data. It can easily be faked.
      Heck, yes, especially if it's of an application that must primarily display text.

      Even if the screenshots were real, it wouldn't even mean that they had that actual content, they could be random files with fake names- potentially even created with a virus.

      If that sort of thing can be considered sufficient evidence to effectively extort money from people in a court, then you might as well cobble together some image of a program window wtih "I support Al Quaeda and give them money" written in it, and claim that it was gleamed from someone's machine (perhaps by hacking, or that Tempest thing).

      In fact, maybe these people being put through the wringer for doing something so minor, should do that, say "They're trying to bring down the western world by prosecuting innocent members of the public!". OK, possibly that's tasteless (not very).

      Anyway, ultimately this kind of thing just proves how important anonymous data-sharing networks like GNUnet * and Freenet are- people keep on saying things like "Oh, why would you want anonimity, you must be up to no good"- but as you can see, pretty much anything you might want to share with someone, it is likely that someone somewhere will want to stop you. Whoever it was that created DeCSS would probably be quite content and comfortable, not worrying about prosecution (OK, maybe he was let off, maybe not, I can't keep up with it all), if he'd distributed his initial code via GNUnet or Freenet. And now, so would these people in Denmark.

      * - After a few times of trying to get GNUnet to work, I got pissed off at it seeming so impossible to setup properly (because the documentation was too unclear, or there were still bugs, I dunno), and a month ago I mouthed off about it on slashdot somewhere. Since then, I ended up having another try as they released 0.4.7, and tada, I got it to work. And once it was working? Pretty decent. Bit slow, but that's because of the anonimity measures. Not much content there, but the way to improve that is to join in and provide some! Anyone who decides to use it should realise that it's still work in progress, and could well give you a hard time. But, unlike Freenet, it doesn't need Java, and is capable of making use of "transient nodes" (fairly sure) - so if you use it on dial-up, you aren't just leaching -I believe this was why I always found it so hard to get anything on Freenet, not enough permanent nodes. So to sum up, I'm now backing GNUnet big style! Watch out for version 0.5, coming soon apparently.

      No, they're not paying me ; )

      --
      Be careful! New moon tonight.
    10. Re:Who are they? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you were downloading them, chances are you don't, or you could've just ripped them yourself in most cases.

      Since you were getting them off someone else who is infringing copyright by sharing them, instead of doing it the 'fair use' way, it doesn't seem too unreasonable for them to ask you to prove that you DO have the CDs.

      At which point you either produce them, lose, or buy them and give the RIAA the money instead of this Danish group.

    11. Re:Who are they? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When 2 'normal' people or organisations sue each other in Denmark its in a civilian court where the proof of an action only has to be highly probable (sorry i may lack the correct words). Its illegal to share copyrighted items, so if you have a screenshot of another users files and they are named lets say 'Metallica - One.mp3' and so on its highly probable that it is infact copyrighted material and thus its illegal. It does not matter if the file is empty infact since its your own fault naming it that way then. Why would you name a file that way if it was not metallicas number called one and no an mp3?? So to save time for the courts and the one sueing thats how its setteled. Now i know alot will think WHAT you can have a justice system like that, but its actually quite good. There is no question that the people being asked to pay did something illegal ... noone is questioning that because we all know they did have the albums and not 2000 empty files named the exact names of music numbers.

      In a criminal court the proofs has to be ALOT stronger as we all know.

    12. Re:Who are they? by boomer_rehfield · · Score: 1

      I'm not taking every CD I have with me to work... I constantly download the same music I have at home, to my work computer...

      and I see your point, but you can't go around just assuming that everyone using a specific service is guilty until thier proven innocent... it's the other way around....

      also, the fact that I am getting them from someone that I don't know, means that it doesn't seem unreasonable that "I" might be infringing is a fallacy...

      --
      Carpe Canem - Seize the Dog
    13. Re:Who are they? by boomer_rehfield · · Score: 1

      that I don't know and that has infringed a copyright , means...... it's early...

      --
      Carpe Canem - Seize the Dog
    14. Re:Who are they? by bjoeg · · Score: 1
      They can sue in court for non-payment of the bill, which they'll probably lose, because there was never an agreement from the "buyer" to pay for the wares of the "seller".

      They can, of course, not sue for non-payment of the bill, and instead, sue for civil copyright infringement. That suit, they might win.

      This is actually interesting. APG is in fact (AFAIK of ealier news) a private organization and not created by the Danish Government.

      This action from APG only secures the victims (sorry my lack of sympathy to programmers and artists), that APG will not make a lawsuit regarding copyrights.

      This means that if BSA did surveillance of Kazaa and eDonkey like APG, they could make lawsuit regarding copyrights to people who already have made a settlement with APG.

    15. Re:Who are they? by jweatherley · · Score: 2

      If the claimer has a eg. screenshot of something shared it's the users responsebility to prove that it's NOT illigal.

      In SOVIET RUSSIA maybe - but not in Denmark or anywhere else in western Europe for that matter.

      --

      --
      Reverse outsourcing: it's the future
    16. Re:Who are they? by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
      Disclaimer: IANAL. Can any US or Danish lawyers clear this up?

      IANAL either, however one salient fact is likely to be that Denmark is not a common law country. So while UK law is markedly similar to US law, extrapolation from US to Danish law is going to be problematic.

      Another major issue that should be considered is that most countries other than the US have severe penalties for abusive lawsuits, ranging from payment of the winner's legal fees to fines. Certainly in English law an ill founded threat of litigation over an intellectual property claim is itself actionable - as Prince sports discovered when they tried some domain name grabbing.

      As such I would be suspicious of cliams that the group would have made the threats lightly or that they are likely to be ill founded. The copyright owners have a pretty sound claim that the users of the P2P networks are infringing their copyright. Clearly there is a legitimate case that can be built, clearly the copyright owners are employing local lawyers with expertise in the field. I certainly would not place a great deal of faith in chat room lawyering working from third hand accounts...

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
  3. Well I guess they'd better pay up then. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  4. Ex-wife by johnraphone · · Score: 5, Funny

    Sounds alot like my ex-wife.

    1. Re:Ex-wife by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      She's better in bed though. Those antipiracy lawyers: frigid.

    2. Re:Ex-wife by bozojoe · · Score: 1

      I wonder if the letters they sent out sounded like they were drunk (like the ex-wife's phone calls)

      --
      lick the cancle button (at least thats what our Chinese QA says)
  5. sounds familiar... by fishnuts · · Score: 1

    acting as if they own the PATENT on p2p or something.

    1. Re:sounds familiar... by Moonshadow · · Score: 3, Funny

      You hadn't heard? They were granted a patent on "a method of transferring copyrighted bits between two computers via a large scale electronic network" last week. It's such an innovation! After all, such innovators should be able to sue their way to the top, shouldn't they?

      Yes, that was sarcasm, for the humor-impaired.

    2. Re:sounds familiar... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, that was sarcasm, for the humor-impaired.

      Glass house, throwing stones, &c.

    3. Re:sounds familiar... by aerojad · · Score: 1

      Al Gore, creater of the internet, must have something to do with this then.

      --

      SecondPageMedia - Wha
  6. Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by targo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I mean, going after those who actually possess and distribute something that they have not legally purchased? Sounds legitimate to me.

    1. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by jmenezes · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yea but who are these guys?
      is it M$ thats chraging the pirates?
      is it adobe, or macromedia, or whatever company who's software is being distributed?
      no.
      its just some company who's supposedly against piracy, who is gonna make a profit off of piracy.
      will adobe or M$ or anyone else see that money?
      i highly doubt it.
      all they are doing is basically going around and saying pay us, or pay us and some lawyer to protect your ass.

      definately not what we've been asking for

      --
      Stop over-analyzing your analizations
    2. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by fobbman · · Score: 2

      How do THEY know that the person hasn't legally purchased the CD? Do they register all CD purchases over there?

      I don't like the idea of any anti-piracy group assuming that I'm guilty prior to a fair hearing by billing me.

    3. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem I have with it is, if they bill one for the product and they pay for it, then they should be able to keep using it.

    4. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't matter if they legally purchased it, you can't share it with the Internet at large, that's called PIRACY.

    5. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      /. impressions on this issue are, largely, not very thorough, although I feel that they have the right idea (restrictive copyrights a la intellectual property is not true property; like wealth back by something of worth versus an economy based on the idea of worth, it's the presentation of worth that seems to satisfy some people and dis-satisfy others).

      Anyways, I think the anti-piracy group is approaching this correctly. But they need to flesh out who they are representing and whether payment is legitimately made to them and not to the person harmed. Just because someone floats around saying they represent someone doesn't mean that, if harm is shown, the money is going to the right folks.

    6. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by pesc · · Score: 3, Interesting

      How do THEY know that the person hasn't legally purchased the CD?

      They don't, and it does not matter. The person does not own the copyright so he cannot legally distribute the material.

      By the way, I guess both articles got some basic facts wrong. I don't think they are going to be sued for downloading but for offering copyrighted works. IMHO, this is what the **AA should have been doing all along instead of trying to block new technology.

      And to answer all those comments that the anti piracy group cannot know what the files contain and should not have the right to set the fines themselves: You are right!

      Just consider this fine as a generous offer. If you think it is unfair, then let the police investigae exactly what you have shared, and a court decide what you should pay.

      It will be interesting to see where all this will end up...

      --

      )9TSS
    7. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by johnkp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      To answer your question:
      AntiPiratGruppen or APG is Danish organisation represented by some lawyers (Bech-Bruun Dragsted) who works together with their clients from the music/movie/software industry. This includes CopyDan who pays of royalties of copyrighted material whenever it's preformed. E.g. played on the radio. APG primarily targets music and movie piracy and I would guess that whenever APG sues someone, some of the $$ goes to CopyDan and from there to the artists.

    8. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by C_To · · Score: 1

      What happens to users who have trojans on their machines, sharing their files or who are unaware that their entire C:\ drive is shared (because of an improper File & Print Sharing setup)? Due to a lack of knowledge of how security works in Windows, they can get fined (at least in theory) if they have any copyrighted works on their machine. Not cool if you're the average joe consumer.

    9. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Omnifarious · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yes, I hope every single Danish citizen participates liberally in P2P file sharing networks. It'd be fun to watch the country dissolve into a police state in which normal human behavior is supressed so that a stupid obsolete law can be enforced by the state. It's wonderful to watch, really.

      Every time you remember a word you've read, you've violated copyright you know. We must extract those patterns from your brain cells after you've finished that book. Can't have you walking around with an illegal copy in your head.

    10. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is probably legitimate in alot of situations.. but I can see where "getting a screenshot" isnt always going to work. For some files you are trying to download on kazaa for example, there are a bunch of columns that might say one thing but you are actually getting another thing. Like songs that are titled from one artist, might actually have the filename from another artist, etc.. And this thing happens alot on Kazaa in my experience atleast. There are also live songs. What about ones where artists give people permission to record a live concert (except for profit im sure)? As far as I know if the artist lets you distribute the live music, then how can these people come by and try to charge you, thinking its the original recording? Unless these people downloaded ALL the material in question and verified (which would be alot of work) I can't see how using screenshots of filenames can be used as any kind of evidence.. But maybe the laws are different there.

    11. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by rworne · · Score: 1
      Just because someone is ignorant of computer security, or just a plain moron, does not excuse them from properly securing their equipment when hooked up to a global, public network.

      Not securing your equipment is like leaving your door open and unlocked. In the case of the Internet, that door is on a house in the seediest, most crack-infested neighborhood ever.

      I say, they get what is coming to them.

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
    12. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by fobbman · · Score: 2

      Bad analogy. Leaving my door unlocked, no matter how seedy the neighborhood, does not give anyone the right to walk in.

    13. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by PjotrP · · Score: 1
      actually what ive always wanted (who cares what /. wanted anyway) is to have normal prices for cd's. I've always wanted that ONLY the artist would actually make some money from a piece of art he made. What this means to me is that the public has once again lost its only way to express its views to the multinationals...

      Apparently the globalised multinationals couldn't win this discussion about fair prices in a normal way and in the end had to cheat (ie use their fists instead of talking).

      And dont tell me to "talk" by just not getting their stuff... I AM a member of this culture and the art of this culture is as important as food to me... depriving myself of culture is not an possibility.

      As you might have noticed already i dont believe in intellectual property at all. Once Art has been given to the world by the Artist its no longer his! If it ever was... asking money for art is the utmost extreme of the individualistic view on humanity. As if the artist doesn't owe the world just as much as the world owes the artist...

      --
      PjotrP
    14. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
      So by your logic, if I leave my door unlocked I should be sued by all the retail merchants in my area for depriving them of the opportunity to sell to the theves what they instead stole from me?

      The only difference is if a thief enters my unlocked house and takes my VCR then I'm out a VCR; if a thief enters my unlocked C: drive and takes my MP3s I still have the MP3s.

      Now, what if someone enters my unlocked C: drive and erases my MP3s (without copying them) -- am I still guilty by your reasoning, even though the only person harmed was me?

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    15. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by rworne · · Score: 2
      Not really. Whoever comes in can copy what they want (read books on my shelf, use the toilet, listen to my CD collection) and leave.

      This same group can also trash my files after helping themselves to what they want (stealing a VCR, or getting credit card info for instance).

      No one having the right to walk in does not change the fact that eventually, someone will. Whether they have the right to or not.

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
    16. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by kableh · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes, I hope every single Danish citizen participates liberally in P2P file sharing networks. It'd be fun to watch the country dissolve into a police state in which normal human behavior is supressed so that a stupid obsolete law can be enforced by the state.

      You mean, like the U.S.?

      (Score: -1, Unamerikan)

    17. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by rworne · · Score: 1
      My point was that if your box is insecure, or your house unlocked, then someone will take advantage of the situation, it is all a matter of time. Whether the tresspasser has the right to do so or not does not matter.

      If you had your drive improperly shared with read/write permissions, it could be used as a drop box for pirated material. On a windows box with a shared C:\ drive and no logging, how could you prove it wasn't you when the **AA come's a knocking? That might be the first time you hear of it.

      Granted 'visitors' can 'share' computer resources in ways an inexperienced user might not notice, although they would notice if it were their home that was being shared (where'd all the beer go? who left the seat up?)

      If you left on vacation, and unsavory types took up residence in an unlocked home and committed various illegal activities, I would bet that the legal authorities would come down on the property owner as well.

      As for local merchants, well if the house had a limitless supply of VCRs and other household items, say via a ST:TNG replicator, then I would bet there would be lawsuits.

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
    18. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Not really. Whoever comes in can copy what they want (read books on my shelf, use the toilet, listen to my CD collection) and leave."

      So what? Are you under the impression that a company could sue you becuase this happened? Hint: The answer is "no".

      "This same group can also trash my files after helping themselves to what they want"

      See above.

      "No one having the right to walk in does not change the fact that eventually, someone will. "

      Amazing how many people don't know the definition of the word "fact". Not only is it not a fact, it is not even probable.

      Scythe

    19. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Ironpoint · · Score: 1

      "Sounds legitimate to me."

      Legitimate if you are the police or the copyright holder.

    20. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Niggaz, please!

    21. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A few corrections to your post.
      1. The US isn't a police state. If you believe so, you are just another ignorant conspiracy theorist who is yet to actually read the laws being passed.

      2. Normal human behavior is supressed? What normal human behavior is that? Pirating music? Didn't realize basic human behavior included eating, sleeping, procreating, and now music sharing.

      I fail to see the connection with the U.S.

    22. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (Score: -1, Unoriginal)

      They won't allow me to steal other peoples things!
      At the airport they had the nerve to serach me, take away my guns, and then throw me in jail!
      Once they realized I was an idiot, they said "Silly rich white boy / Muslim. You have the brain of a peanut. Stupidity isn't a crime so we will let you go."
      I showed them!
      I bought an American flag and lit it on fire.
      The police officer said that I had to put it out because it was a fire hazard.
      When I refused, they put me in jail again!
      I started chanting One Two Three Four I don't need your racist war!
      They said because of my stupidity they would have to keep my locked up for observation.
      I've been trying to kill myself with a plastic knife ever since then.
      Saints be praised to Allah!

    23. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by irc.goatse.cx+troll · · Score: 2


      "Just consider this fine as a generous offer. If you think it is unfair, then let the police investigae exactly what you have shared, and a court decide what you should pay."

      What garuntee do you have that they wont just go to the court after they get your money?

      --
      Pain lasts, kid. Its how you know you're alive. Sometimes I think this growing up thing is just pain management-TheMaxx
    24. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. The US isn't a police state.

      Only one who is really afraid of them would say that.

    25. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Isle · · Score: 2

      Yes, it matters. In new danish law distributing first copies are allowed. In other words, if you copy directly from you CD you are free to give the copies away. (To solve the problems about backups).

    26. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Yottabyte84 · · Score: 1

      ....so then someone will set up shop in your living room and start selling drugs from there? And of source the home owner gets the blame. I think that's about equivlent.....

    27. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What, you think the US is more free than Denmark? Perhaps you'd like to wander past the US embassy in Copenhagen - its amusingly well protected - in stark contrast to the others in the same street! Highly amusing!

      land of the free, yeah right. Time for a new slogan, losers.

    28. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try posting as a non-Anonymous Coward.

      Maybe then someone will take you seriously.

    29. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by kableh · · Score: 2

      The US is rapidly devolving into a police state. If you don't believe so, you're probably a card carrying member of the GOP.

      I was mostly making a lame joke. Why it got modded up so high I don't know. Maybe a lot of my fellow citizens agree?

    30. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Omnifarious · · Score: 2

      Normal human behavior is to be social and share information with your neighbor. Copyright is a totally broken system when the cost of distribution is very low. Copyright is an incentive to distribute, not to create.

      If you want a way encourage people to create, find some model that doesn't rely on copyright. Copyright is broken, and it will require putting millions of people in jail to enforce, and even then people will ignore it. It'll make the drug war look like a benevolent government.

    31. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WOW! He badmouthed THE UNITED STATES! This man is INSIGHTFUL!

      Let's all give him a prize.

  7. Probably just a pittance by Noose+For+A+Neck · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Considering that P2P programs like KazAA and others allow people to share huge amounts of copyrighted material, I'm surprised that they are only charging around $14,000 each. The amount of lost sales caused by each user improving the "quality" of files on P2P networks alone and encouraging others to pirate must be phenominal.

    If I were these guys, I'd consider myself getting away with a slap on the wrist.

    --

    Software piracy is victimless theft.

    1. Re:Probably just a pittance by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      puh-lease.

      The very fact that they charge each user 14,000 apiece means that these clowns have no way to measure or guage exactly how much piracy goes on, let alone what a single users portion of it would be.

      It would be a far more legitimate campaign if they somehow tracked activity, and presented an itemized bill listing each and every provable download made by an individual.

      It's a publicity stunt... Or extortion, if one could prove they actually believe anyone would pay the 14 Gs for fear of being sued.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    2. Re:Probably just a pittance by pdboddy · · Score: 1

      I'd like them to prove that they lost sales.

      Yes, the recording industry says they have lost money due to declining sales. But prove that it's because of P2P.

      I hear more and more people saying they buy more cds *because* they are downloading music off the net. Music they'd never consider buying before P2P came along.

      The record companies claim they lose money to P2P because they claim each download is a lost sale, which is pure BS.

      --
      Julie Moult is an idiot.
    3. Re:Probably just a pittance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Usually, in a civil case, you have to show harm was done. At least in the US. Probably also important to mention is that a mistake is not the same as harm; there are plenty of cases where a mistake was made, but if no one was harmed, they have no standing in civil cases (and some would argue where the "emotional distress" started popping up readily in US civil cases as an infliction of something suggesting harm so damages could be found).

      The reasonable doubt standard in criminal cases does not apply; more like who has the most persuasive argument showing harm (or no harm, if the defense) wins in civil cases. Nevertheless, if they cannot shown harm was done, I think they would have a difficult time with this, esp. if they are pressing forward before a criminal case and decision has played out.

      But, IANAL, so there.

      As to $14,000 being a slap on the wrist, I suppose I should go sue a high school bully for $14,000 for lifelong emotional distress. The anti-piracy groups are being idiots and this simply shows the divisiveness of the issue; they are unwilling to find a middle ground, so I will support whatever political candidate or group that supports limiting copyrighters, ALL copyrighters unfortunately due to their transgressions. So be it.

    4. Re:Probably just a pittance by offpath3 · · Score: 1
      If you read the article you would have noticed that this is what they did. Don't remember the exact numbers, but they said it was something like $2.67 or a song, $50 for a game, etc. The users were not charged a flat 14k a piece the way the headline seemed to imply, and actually the article said that the user who was charged the most was actually on the order of $13,500 or so.

      Now whether these were _provable_ downloads is a much different story, indeed!

    5. Re:Probably just a pittance by Splab · · Score: 1

      I find it rather funny to see this on slashdot being a dane n all.

      The reason why the charge is "only" (its sure as hell alot of money from my perspective) is the fact that they are less likely to try it in court.

      The way the data is collected violates alot of rights, the way they charge people and presetle it is an indicates the fact they know this. Also danish law actually allow you to copy music from libaries, friends and relatives. Since mp3 aint exactly a bit to bit copy there could be some arguing, but you could get the music back on a cd and thus claim the mp3 is just your way of storeing the data.

      Now the reason they try this is they use the argument that the people in question has been distributing the files, that isn't leagal (since the downloader from somewhere in downtown nowhere, most likely aint your pal) so you are distributing. If they go to court APG is bound to lose since they cannot prove that the data is genuine (not some dump file to gain access) since that would involve them downloading it and I think that's called entrapment (aint legal here).

      This isn't the first time they did something like this, last time those who challenged APG in court actually never had to meet in court since APG dropped the charges.

      Now why do they do this? Simple, they know most of the users are of low income (students and other creatures like that :P) and thus havent got that much money, so they figure, keep the charges low and no one is willing to challenge them and just pays up, the larger fines are sent to people who knows they are in deep shit (they could probably get away with it afaik since the only evidence is a screenshot, had they had anything really good, they would have confiscated the machines), people with the large bills se a easy way out (to go for the "only" 14 grand fine) in stead of risking it in court and thus risking a 28K fine + leagal expenses.

      Hope this makes any sence (its 4:30 in the morning)

  8. Whoa... by c0dedude · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If this organization isn't government sponsored, this sounds a lot like blackmail. I mean, pay or we'll sue? Who'll they have to go to? The big record companies, so pay up or we'll turn you over. And what guarantees does anyone have they won't turn around and sue anyway?

    --
    Since when has this country used intellectual elite as a pejorative term?
    1. Re:Whoa... by MSZ · · Score: 2, Funny

      And what guarantees does anyone have they won't turn around and sue anyway?

      The "word of honor"? Ah I forgot, these are probably lawyers... can't expect that to work.

      --
      The moon is not fully subjugated. I demand a second assault wave preceded by a massive nuclear bombardment.
    2. Re:Whoa... by cryofan2 · · Score: 1

      You would not have to be a lawyer to do that, would you?
      And besides, I think that what you described is blackmail or extortion.

    3. Re:Whoa... by Arandir · · Score: 2
      I think the technical term for this is "barratry".

      Main Entry: bar*ra*try
      Etymology: Middle English barratrie, from Middle French baraterie deception, from barater to deceive, exchange
      ...
      3 : the persistent incitement of litigation
      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    4. Re:Whoa... by drzero · · Score: 1

      Actually APG is like the BSA - it is an organization formed by the copyright holders to enforce their rights.
      The real problem is in their methods - they have been known to trample people whom they have visited to take away their computers as evidence.

  9. Who gets the money? by edashofy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Okay, so assuming this extorti...I mean apparently-legal action goes through, who gets the money? Is this anti-piracy group going to go out and distribute the monies to the appropriate copyright holders? Who decided what price to set for the various downloaded artifacts? Certainly there's a significant markup here.

    Assuming a CD has, on average, 15 songs, and you can get a CD for $12 at Best Buy, $2.67--that's a 250% markup on each song.

    And, who is going to ensure that paying these folks will prevent future prosecution by the copyright holders? Do I get to keep the songs and movies that I downloaded if I pay up?

    1. Re:Who gets the money? by C0deM0nkey · · Score: 4, Informative
      Do I get to keep the songs and movies that I downloaded if I pay up?

      No.

      From the article:

      "If they pay now - and delete the illegal content from their hard drives - then the amount is cut in half and they avoid going to court. Those who don't pay up are to be sued."

    2. Re:Who gets the money? by unicron · · Score: 1, Troll

      See what happens when you try to think off the medication?

      --
      Finally, math books without any of that base 6 crap in them.
    3. Re:Who gets the money? by ModernGeek · · Score: 0

      It says in the article they have to pay up AND delete the files, so I assume they do not get to keep the content.

      --
      Sig: I stole this sig.
    4. Re:Who gets the money? by D+iz+a+n+k+Meister · · Score: 1

      OK, Jimmy... see Jimmy's shotgun... you pay us now and we won't kill you

      Actually, it's more like:

      Jimmy, go get the ball clippers out of the trunk. Still don't feel like paying, huh?

      --

      He painted a unicorn in outer space. I'm askin' ya, what's it breathin'?
    5. Re:Who gets the money? by the_truk_stop · · Score: 1

      >Certainly there's a significant markup here.

      It states the approximate price of each ($16/CD, $60/movie). So I didn't quite follow your math. $2.67 isn't labeled at all, so I assume you were trying to state the price of each song? If so, I think the approximate price per song is more like $.80 per song. The article doesn't tell how many songs the APG estimates are on an average CD, so it would be rather difficult to approximate a markup based on individual songs. I'm used to paying ~ $16 per CD (if not more), so I would say the APG is charging market price.

      But $60 for a movie! Egad!

    6. Re:Who gets the money? by SLOGEN · · Score: 1

      who gets the money?

      Lindegaard is the spokes-person for APG.

      We are demanding full payment for the use of these copyrighted materials," Lindegaard said.

      I think I'll demand payment too, it's not my material, I hold no copyright on it but I demand payment!

      Who decided what price to set for the various downloaded artifacts?

      For a single music file, they were charged $2.67; $26.70 for a movie and approximately $50 for a video game, Lindegaard said.

      APG, It seems like. It must be their idea of "full payment"

      And, who is going to ensure that paying these folks will prevent future prosecution by the copyright holders?

      A good question, but there's a 50% discount if you erase the files and pay now (what you paid for is then rather unclear :)

      Seriously, I think that this is going to cool down again. I'm a dane, IANAL but I don't think the cases are going to hold in a danish court.

      indicators of just how flimsy the cases are, can be that APG:

      1. didn't run a case to try out the validity
      2. Offers to not go to court (if they were out to set an example, thay would probably want at least one conviction)
      3. Offers a "discount"-solution

      I wager they are just out to create

      1. Awareness of piracy
      2. Scary stories
      3. A name for themselves
      4. Basis for more extortion

      And maybe even a bit of pocket-money

      --
      SLOGEN [ http://ungdomshus.nu : Sebastian cover music]
    7. Re:Who gets the money? by Jumperalex · · Score: 1

      Actually they do get to keep the songs.

      If you read it closely enough you will notice that it says if they 1) pay now + 2) delete the songs = they 3) only have to PAY HALF.

      That sure sounds to me if they PAY IN FULL they get to keep the songs.

      --
      If you can't be good, be good at it!
    8. Re:Who gets the money? by Happy+go+Lucky · · Score: 1
      indicators of just how flimsy the cases are, can be that APG:

      1. didn't run a case to try out the validity

      2. Offers to not go to court (if they were out to set an example, thay would probably want at least one conviction)

      3. Offers a "discount"-solution

      That would make Danish civil law very markedly different from any system based upon English common law (like the US, for instance.)

      If they file a test case, that'll take forever to resolve. If there's a "speedy trial" rule which applies to civil matters anywhere in the world, I've not heard of it.

      Your second two points illustrate a time-honored tradition: The out-of-court settlement. In general, out of court settlements are merely agreements in which both parties to a suit agree to dispose of it (typically by the defendant paying damages less than the plaintiff would have been awarded at trial) and usually without anybody formally admitting fault.

      In other words, IN THEORY it's a way for a defendant to say "I screwed up. Let's fix this without wasting a judge's time."

      If you've ever been in an auto accident, and you and the other driver agreed that you would just pay for the repairs without reporting it to your insurer, that's a similar behavior. One party agrees to make the other one whole for injuries or losses, without involving a third party. (I've done that. It's legal in most or all of the US. I've no idea what the rule is in Denmark.)

      It's a lovely theory. Personally, for professional reasons (I'm a cop) I have to worry that someone will file a civil rights lawsuit against my city because I told him to sit down and shut up. People will often file such suits because they know the city will settle: settling a bullshit lawsuit is often cheaper than fighting it. After paying the barracuda, the plaintiff will usually be able to take six months off work.

      So, yes, settlements out-of-court make a lovely theory. And usually they're a pretty good idea. If two people can come to their own solution, they'll live with it a lot better than if it were forced upon them.

      And in practice (and probably in the specific case of the Danish piracy group also) you got it right: Extortion.

    9. Re:Who gets the money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Better make sure you burn it to a CD-R before deleting it from your hard drives, and then you get to keep it. Nice and legal, goes exactly with the wording of the letter!

    10. Re:Who gets the money? by SLOGEN · · Score: 1

      I thought the situation might be a little different when you:

      1. don't sue to stop a single person for a single crime, but rather to scare other people from committing the same crime.

      2. don't have a direct financial gain in settelling, but rather in a conviction.

      It seems to me, that if APG was about to go around sending bill's to everyone that does p2p filesharing (as a legit activity), it would be rather nice for them to have at least one court ruling supporting their claims.

      This is probably best achieved by selecting one case where the offence is rather obvious, and get that tried in court. A rather bad move (I would expect) was to start 10-50 cases, and only win 2, that doesn't look half as scary.

      Also, there's really no financial gain in setteling with those 150 people, less that $200.000, that's probably less than the APG spends a year on saleries.

      I would suspect that the reasoning behind the "bill's" is somewhere along:

      1. We can't really smack down on every little fish

      2. We want people to stop p2p'ing our customers copyrighted material (which is OK in my book)

      3. We can select some big fish, and fine'em, but that has proven to be ineffective (this has been tried before in Denmark)

      4. We had some nice media coverage when we raided a college last year, and had a file-server closed, that made our funding explode by 300%

      5. Why don't we do something outrageous, and get some more media-coverage. And maybe this time we can show a financial result to our customers (last time was actually a financial disaster, but a media success), and we can say to our customers: we estimate that piracy has gone down $5 mill, because of the campign, so the $500.000 you spent on APG last year is well spent.

      6. The really good bit: if nobody covers the lack of payment of the bill's in the press (which was what happened in the collage-raid), in time we may even make a living one day, just sending out bills, when people are convinced that they have to pay.

      --
      SLOGEN [ http://ungdomshus.nu : Sebastian cover music]
    11. Re:Who gets the money? by Happy+go+Lucky · · Score: 1
      I thought the situation might be a little different when you:

      1. don't sue to stop a single person for a single crime, but rather to scare other people from committing the same crime.

      That might just be another difference. The use of lawsuits to deter certain conduct is generally accepted in the US. Ford and Firestone can't go around selling cars which they know will roll over and burn, killing the occupants. They're getting a very expensive reminder right now. Animal rights people can't break into the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center labs and burn the place-not only are there criminal charges, but once they lose that lawsuit they won't even own the hair on their own asses.

      2. don't have a direct financial gain in settelling, but rather in a conviction.

      I'm not seeing how APG has an interest in this at all. At least in US courts, we have a concept called "standing." You can't raise an issue in court unless you have standing to do so. That means you can't raise an issue unless it actually somehow affects you. If APG actually represents a copyright owner, they might have standing. On first appearances, though, it looks like they're just puffing their chest to look important.

      Or I might be really ignorant of some part of this case. Non-common-law civil codes are generally a mystery to me.

      It seems to me, that if APG was about to go around sending bill's to everyone that does p2p filesharing (as a legit activity), it would be rather nice for them to have at least one court ruling supporting their claims.

      A lovely theory, unless they have something which hasn't made the press. Anything is possible, and lawsuit settlement offers, like the stock market, work by the Greater Fool Theory.

      Also, there's really no financial gain in setteling with those 150 people, less that $200.000, that's probably less than the APG spends a year on saleries.

      I think you misplaced the decimal place. 150 people * $14,000 makes $2.1e6.

      As for your guess as to the reasoning behind APG, I'm not going to argue. All I know about this is what I've seen on /.

    12. Re:Who gets the money? by RPoet · · Score: 2

      You can read the original Danish article here. The group's lawyer, Morten Lindegaard, is quoted as saying "The money will be for the victims - the artists. They're not to be spent on administration." (my poor translation)

      --
      "Oppression and harassment is a small price to pay to live in the land of the free." -- Montgomery Burns.
    13. Re:Who gets the money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about if you just delete the songs ahead of time and save having to pay anything? (remember to use wiping software that overwrites the files and erases slack and directory entries folks!).

      Without any evidence on the old HD, I rather doubt that any judge would be willing to impose a $14,000 fine on someone based soley on a listing anti-piracy fanatics have obtained over a P2P network created by hackers...

      The obvious solution to this problem is to modify the filesharing P2P clients to work more like freenet, and set aside a few hundred MB of "junk" space to automatically store and share bits and pieces of files that have a high popularity on the network.

      Since users would have no way of knowing which files are on their own system in the "junk space", or of manually downloading them, it would foil this sort of snooping attack, and would additionally help complete files which are popular for trading over the network.

    14. Re:Who gets the money? by mpe · · Score: 2

      The group's lawyer, Morten Lindegaard, is quoted as saying "The money will be for the victims - the artists. They're not to be spent on administration."

      Would these be the same artists who cannot recieve money except through their publisher without it being a breach of their contract?
      This cropped up a couple of days ago when someone said "why not simply donate, rather more than the typical royalty, directly to the artist?"

    15. Re:Who gets the money? by mehfu · · Score: 1

      Assuming a CD has, on average, 15 songs, and you can get a CD for $12 at Best Buy, $2.67--that's a 250% markup on each song.

      Actually, a CD is around $20 here (Sweden; Denmark has similar pricing). That would make a 15 song CD 1,33%. Still robbery, but only 100% higher ;)

      My american hallmate was upset when he was buying a CD. Now he's using my computer/CD-writer to get songs. Schh...

  10. Well.. by dj28 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is exactly what the majority of slashdotters have been screaming for. Go after the abusers rather than the technology. It'll be interesting to see what the comments on this thread will be like. Let this hypocrisy begin... now.

    1. Re:Well.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't call it hypocrisy. Their dissatisfaction just proves that no matter how governments, big business, technologists and users approach the issue of copyright and piracy, someone will always get horribly shafted. In this particular instance, it looks like the victims are both the users and the copyright holders (if they don't get payoff from the anti piracy group).

      I think it's important to realize that there is no way to solve this issue of piracy in a way that everyone will agree on. Musicians want to get paid what they deserve for their works, labels want to get their enormous cut, users (ideally) want everything for free, and lawmakers will go with whoever offers them the most money.

      But don't worry, it's always been this way to some extent.

    2. Re:Well.. by Jugalator · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yeah, we've all been screaming for random organizations being able to force ISP's to do what only the police use to have the power to - make them publicize their customer information. Yes, "force", since this is never done willingly by the ISP's since it gives them very bad PR when the average user find out that they tend to give away their customer info like that.

      My problem is that I don't see how they suddenly got this power without having the police involved.

      Also, as The Register mentions, this can surely backfire:

      "Also, the labels, movie studios and video game makers have increasingly distributed bogus files on P2P networks that resemble the genuine article, down to file size and title, to frustrate would-be downloaders."

      From the antipiracy bureaus, I hope for their own sake that they brought CRC checksums of each file with them and that they can connect those to the actual transfer of the p2p user.

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    3. Re:Well.. by Jonny+Ringo · · Score: 2

      Not this slashdotter! I'm for the bust out some consumer friendly, nicely priced, easy to use way of buying music approach.
      Leave the users (aka: long time customers sick of being gouged) and technology alone please!

    4. Re:Well.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My problem is that I don't see how they suddenly got this power without having the police involved.

      Which part of "they went to court" is unclear to you? You don't police to press charges.

    5. Re:Well.. by Jugalator · · Score: 1

      Ok, I can't speak for the danish people, but in swedish law, ISP's don't give away customer information regardless of how long listings an organization have with illegal p2p transactions.

      Sure, they might be allowed to go to court with me, sue me and whatever, but how were they allowed to know how I was in the first case?

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    6. Re:Well.. by Jugalator · · Score: 1

      Oops.. Should be "...but in swedish law, ISP's don't give away customer information to a random organization ..."

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    7. Re:Well.. by RatBastard · · Score: 2

      Before they screamed about going after the makers of their favorite P2P tools and said that "they" should go after the users, not thinking they would ever bother going after John Q Filesharer. Now they see that someone IS going after the end user and they are scared shitless that the legal guns are going to be turned on them.

      It's a case of "Oh, shit! It COULD happen to me!"

      --
      Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    8. Re:Well.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of the people forced to pay up should sue the studios and video game makers for distributing the wrong product.

    9. Re:Well.. by Seahawk · · Score: 1

      Why do people mod up people that have no idea what the are talking about???

      The courts WAS involved and the ISP turned over the Customer info due to a court ruling!

      So please stop modding people up that doesnt have a clue!

    10. Re:Well.. by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      I hope for their own sake that they brought CRC checksums of each file with them and that they can connect those to the actual transfer of the p2p user

      Why? It will be a civil case, not a criminal one. If Denmark follows the US and UK then the standard of proof will be "balance of probabilities", not "beyond all reasonable doubt".

      Frankly, all they'll have to prove beyond doubt is that these people are users of Kazaa. After that, the balance of probability is that they are content raping leeches (aka freedom loving subversives, pick your own spin for the same activities). For every person that screams about their fair uses of P2P on Slashdot, there are hundreds? thousands? millions? of people who just don't care, and probably haven't even thought about what they're doing. Hey, if it was wrong, somebody would make them stop, right?

      Well somebody just has, and if these people are smart, they'll pay up now. It's not a good risk for any individual to stand up to this. It'll take somebody very dumb, brave and/or rich to fight it.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  11. People are finally starting to "get it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When I watch Buchanan and Press, and see Press describe mp3 as no bigger a crime than not stopping at a stop sign, I realize it's finally beginning to hit the public at how much power RIAA is getting. People are getting sick of it, and if RIAA doesn't watch it, they'll find a lot of young people taking office and changing laws.

    1. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by PaulQuinn · · Score: 1

      Not stopping at a stop sign is a FAR WORSE crime than downloading/sharing/copying MP3s. People have died running stop signs. No one has even stubbed a toe 'doing mp3'.

    2. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I burned my penis due to listening to mp3s on my laptop.

    3. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      except people can get hurt very badly by ignoring stop signs.

    4. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by ebbomega · · Score: 2

      We should illegalize lawn chairs as well, then.

      --
      Karma: Non-Heinous
    5. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by OverCode@work · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Though really it's less of a crime. When you don't stop at a stop sign, you endanger the lives of others. MP3 trading never killed anybody.

    6. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by Fluid+Truth · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The replies to this are correct: people should realize that sharing music is actually much less of a crime than failing to stop at a stop sign due to the very real danger of bodily injury from failing to stop.

      However, we have to make small steps. According to the current punishments for sharing copyrighted materical, it's actually worse than some degrees of murder. If we can get the punishments from being several years in jail down to the level of a minor moving violation (mp3 school for people who haven't been caught in the last 18 months? ), that will be a MAJOR step in the right direction.

      Simply saying "but it shouldn't be a crime now!" isn't helping. It is a crime, purchased as the legislation may be. And I'm not even sure that I disagree with the fact that it is illegal. But the punishments have NEVER fit the crimes.

      --
      Apparently, of the rich, by the rich, for the rich.
    7. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "they'll find a lot of young people taking office and changing laws. "

      Sarcasm, right?

      Cmon, whoever gets into power far enough to make such a different has already found out who his 'friends' are in politics and plays the game according to the rules.

      Dont believe me? Check out the freaking mess of the 60's generation. The ones who are in power from generation have either sold out or were conformists back then as well.

      zeke

    8. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by Asprin · · Score: 2



      So today, one of my bosses walks into my office and sez, "so what program do you use to download music?" I sez, "legal or illegal?" And he sez, "Well, it's *ALL* illegal."

      Any that's when it hits me: the RIAA is right -- it's doomed.

      Fortunately, more people will be making more music than ever before, and the companies that arise to replace the RIAA members will do so with more realistic expectations.

      Ultimately, this is going to be legal whether they want it or not -- it's too powerful to be contained.

      --
      "Lawyers are for sucks."
      - Doug McKenzie
    9. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by Chromonkey · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Actually music piracy HAS killed people. There was an article posted on CBS (CBS Report) recently about how the same sort of violence that one finds in the drug dealing crime circles is starting to appear in the music piracy circles.

      --
      There are very few real things in this world...this isn't one of them.
    10. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless you're making thousands of copies and selling them, copyright infringement is not a crime. It's tort. Traffic law varies but failing to stop at a stop sign is probably some kind of misdemeanour. If you were inebriated or just deranged you could be charged with driving to endanger, a felony.

    11. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by outsider007 · · Score: 2

      if RIAA doesn't watch it, they'll find a lot of young people taking office and changing laws.

      That won't happen in the real world.

      A politicians doesn't make decisions based on personal vendettas, he makes decisions based on the needs of the people who voted him into power and the corporations that funded his campaign. Also anyone who has a picture of him with a dead hooker.

      --
      If you mod me down the terrorists will have won
    12. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by Splab · · Score: 1

      Uhm, not killed anyone _yet_. I'll bet somewhere in USA (united stupidity of A, sry folks, I know you got the bomb, but take a look around) RIAA and all their friends are preparing a law to allow them to kill (litteraly :P) any users doing file sharing, or actually, doing anything but sending them money.

    13. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, I think you are missing a few points here... You mean geeky little wanks are now becoming mafia-style violent if someone cancells their download of Napste_of_Puppets.mp3? ;-)

      CD piracy would involve illegally mass-producing CDs I believe, and that would be a money maker just like any other, so of course the fuckers would protect it. But I don't think there is much money, or violence, in downloading music that you don't immedately pay for. More like cursing over cancelled downloads and fake files.

      One serious problem I have found to be increasingly prevalent is people who are extremely gullible and misinformed are confusing what is and isn't legal, and this seems to be encouraged by some groups. And ignorance of the law is one thing that allows it to be abused so badly, so you know that there must be a storm a-brewin'.

      You know, if you do drugs, you kill X amount of people. If you don't waste so much money on crap, you are plotting the downfall of the economy. If you download MP3s and stick them on your "legal" portable player, you are a pirate too. With all of this unnecessary shit-smearing, and common sense leaving town, how can someone who cares but doesn't have the time to know the facts make an educated decision? That's right, educated decision be damned, just supply them with there beliefs, and don't give them enough information to be able to question it, just a snazzy little clip that makes sense just as long as you check your brain at the door.

      I think the facts against drugs can stand on there own. I don't think it will help, and indeed think it will actually make people lose respect for these "announcements". And talking about drug users supporting terrorists (wich I am sure some or much of the money might be coming from from various groups, but it isn't like there is a shortage of commodities for them to choose from), that means a lot of people in our goverment are or were agents of the Taliban. I am sure I don't have to mention names or offices, but that shows how stupid a simplification it is.

    14. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This really depends on whether it is logical to measure the "badness" of a crime. Not all laws are to prevent the deaths of humans.

    15. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by InvaderSkooge · · Score: 1
      And talking about drug users supporting terrorists (wich I am sure some or much of the money might be coming from from various groups, but it isn't like there is a shortage of commodities for them to choose from), that means a lot of people in our goverment are or were agents of the Taliban.

      Actually, some members of our government were agents of the Taliban (in the sense that they supported them) when they were trying to STOP drugs. Remember all that money we gave them about year and a half ago?

      --
      Erik
      YOU ARE SAYING IMPUDENCE TO ME! THAT IS IMPUDENCE!
    16. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by InvaderSkooge · · Score: 1

      So can we say that "if the RIAA doesn't watch it, they'll find a lot of young people getting pictures of office holders with dead hookers and changing laws."?

      --
      Erik
      YOU ARE SAYING IMPUDENCE TO ME! THAT IS IMPUDENCE!
    17. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope you mean not coming to a "full and complete" stop as opposed to not stopping at all, which is incredibly dangerous.

    18. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by thimo · · Score: 1

      Except for the starving artists... ;-)

      Thimo
      --

      --
      Avoid the Gates of Hell. Use Linux!
    19. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by Blue+Stone · · Score: 1

      Errr... "music piracy circles"???

      People sharing their music tastes via p2p, from the comfort of their own home, for no profit, does not a "music piracy circle" make.
      IMO, P2P copyright infringement, is just like copying a cd for your mate, only bigger; after all the internet brings people together.
      These lawyers are not going after people for doing damage to record sales, if that's what the music industry was concerned about, they'd drop their prices, they're being sic'd on them to preserve the high-profit cartel.
      And when artists get hurt, it's mostly their own fault for siding with the devil. IMO.

      --
      Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility. - Ambrose Bierce
    20. Re:People are finally starting to "get it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But we do measure the "badness" of crimes. Murder is worse than rape which is worse than robbery which is worse than speeding. The "badness" level is related to cost to society, and in our society, we tend to value human life above everything else, and in particular, the life of children.

  12. Yay! by CableModemSniper · · Score: 1

    They are actually going after individuals who pirate copywritten material instead of trying to destroy the system itself. Go Danes! Although $14k kinda sucks.

    --
    Why not fork?
    1. Re:Yay! by Karamchand · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ok, now think about for example Kazaa without all those evil pirates. Guess what - this cool technology wouldn't exist and wouldn't be used without them.

    2. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Ok, now think about for example Kazaa without all those evil pirates. Guess what - this cool technology wouldn't exist and wouldn't be used without them.


      Oh yes it would. It would be used to share and trade ... ummm ... legal stuff. Yeah, that's it. I'm sure it's true 'cause I heard it on Slashdot.

      OTOH, if P2P _does_ fold w/o pirates to keep it going, then it isn't that cool (or even useful) after all.

  13. Lol ... by SuperDuG · · Score: 2, Flamebait
    Okay ummm I would just respond simply to this bill

    BRING IT

    Where's my services rendered, where's my product delivered, and where's the sales agreement which was signed that justifies you billing me?

    They've got a term for this in America, we here like to call it extortion.

    --
    Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
    1. Re:Lol ... by Loki_1929 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Settlments in lieu of lawsuits are quite common and perfectly legal in the US, and most other countries I'd suspect.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    2. Re:Lol ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      where's the sales agreement which was signed that justifies you downloading their copyrighted works?

      there is a term for this in America - theft.

      it amazes me how people can be breaking the law, and stealing software and music, and still have the nerve to act all self righteous!

    3. Re:Lol ... by SuperDuG · · Score: 2
      Proof.

      There is none, there is meerly a letter. Posession is 9/10's of the law here. You can't just go around threatening people.

      --
      Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
    4. Re:Lol ... by SuperDuG · · Score: 2

      This isn't a settlement, this is outright extortion and threatening legal action. I wouldn't be surprised if this vigillante justice against copyright violators is in itself prosecuted more harshly than posessing copyrighted material. No one can take the law into their own hands, no one.

      --
      Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
    5. Re:Lol ... by MaximusPrime · · Score: 1, Interesting



      downloading copyrighted works is theft ?

      Jeez, man, what if I let other people read some of my books?

    6. Re:Lol ... by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2

      " This isn't a settlement, this is outright extortion and threatening legal action. "

      A threat to do something which is legal, (such as saying, "I'll sue you"), is perfectly legal; at least in the US. Basically, they're telling these people that a lawsuit is on the way, but that they can avoid legal action by entering into a settlement agreement. This is not extortion.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    7. Re:Lol ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did these people have their computers seized? How can they prove that they were using p2p softare. Where is the prof, and how did it come to $14,000.

    8. Re:Lol ... by jratcliffe · · Score: 2

      That's not the same thing! The better comparison would be giving total strangers a perfect copy of your books.

    9. Re:Lol ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you post such a comment, you appear to have no clue about the law and what is legal or not?

    10. Re:Lol ... by SuperDuG · · Score: 2

      They are saying pay me or I'll Sue. Settlement is suing then saying you don't want to anymore. One is a settlement one is extortion.

      --
      Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
    11. Re:Lol ... by Alyeska · · Score: 1
      In the USA, your taking of the goods would initiate an implied agreement under the Uniform Commercial Code.

      If I have evidence you've taken something from me, I invoice it to tell you the value. I do not have to offer you the right to return. Non-response to the invoice would be seen as grounds for suit.

      During the course of the Civil action, I could also demand forensic examination of your computer as part of the Discovery process -- which will likely prove the sniffers to be correct. In return, if you think the invoice amount is far, far out of line with industry standards, there are "Common Sense" sections of the UCC that govern what the Seller can ask for as compensation in these implied agreements where no formal price was set.

    12. Re:Lol ... by ebbomega · · Score: 2

      Oh, then it's not extortion, it's blackmail. Thank you for clearing that up.

      --
      Karma: Non-Heinous
    13. Re:Lol ... by Tackhead · · Score: 2
      > A threat to do something which is legal, (such as saying, "I'll sue you"), is perfectly legal; at least in the US. Basically, they're telling these people that a lawsuit is on the way, but that they can avoid legal action by entering into a settlement agreement. This is not extortion.

      Both the Reuters article and the Inq article described the offer not as an "invoice", not as an offer of an out-of-court settlement.

      IANAL, but an invoice for services (not) rendered is not the same as an offer of an out-of-court settlement.

      IANAJudge, but if this came to my courtroom and the defendant had countersued for the bogus bill, I'd say "Warezd00d infringed $14,000 worth of copyrights and is ordered to pay der UberGruppenFuhrer of Copyrights. Warezd00d prevails in his countersuit against Der UberGruppenFuhrer of Copyrights for false billings of $7,000. UGFoC is ordered to pay Warezd00d $7,000 in damages and $6,999 for being a bunch of extortionate assholes. Now both of you, get the fsck out of my court!"

    14. Re:Lol ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Something which, by the way, is legal in a lot of countries. Certainly in Norway and I wouldn't be surprised if it was in Denmark as well.

    15. Re:Lol ... by Snaller · · Score: 2

      They've got a term for this in America, we here like to call it extortion.

      In Denmark they call it a Fine for breaking the law.

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    16. Re:Lol ... by hitzroth · · Score: 2

      So, an independent organization with no legal jurisdiction can levy legal fines on private individuals in Denmark? Guess where I'm not moving.

      --
      In mathematics, one does not understand things, one merely gets used to them.
      --VonNeumann
    17. Re:Lol ... by AndroidCat · · Score: 2
      I think the term that you're looking for is collection agency. (Although that usually involves a contract and an unpaid debt.)

      That's probably the line that they'll take. If they can it apply to copyright violations, I don't know enough about law, especially Dutch law to speculate.

      What I mainly have problems with is their lack of proof that (a) the files really were the copyright works they claim, (b) did the p2p users have the right to have a legal copy? (c) Are they providing an itemized list? (d) Do they have actual authorization to act as agents of the copyright holders?

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    18. Re:Lol ... by Snaller · · Score: 2

      So, an independent organization with no legal jurisdiction can levy legal fines on private individuals in Denmark?

      If they can remains to be seen. Their point of view is that they are allowing a criminal to get of easy.

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    19. Re:Lol ... by WCMI92 · · Score: 2

      "What I mainly have problems with is their lack of proof that (a) the files really were the copyright works they claim, (b) did the p2p users have the right to have a legal copy? (c) Are they providing an itemized list? (d) Do they have actual authorization to act as agents of the copyright holders?"

      IS evidence based on hacking a network admissible in court?

      These goons hacking into your file lists was not a consensual act...

      Such evidence wouldn't be admissible in court in a criminal case, IANAL.

      The big problem (speaking from a USA pov) is the fact that civil tort needs to be reformed. There are FAR too many baseless sivil suits. The main problem seems to be that the burden of proof for conviction "Perponderance of the evidence" (ie: 51%) is easier than "Beyond Reasonable Doubt" (ie: 33%), and the fact that an initiator of a suit who loses isnt' required to pay all legal fees of the winner...

      Your "collection service" point is interesting... Ok, do they have proof that they were engaged by ALL the copyright holders they are claiming to collect for?

      AND, is there a paper record of a "debt" owed?

      If not, this is extortion.

      --
      Corporatism != Free Market
    20. Re:Lol ... by Ironpoint · · Score: 1


      No shit.

      The difference is that the defendant proposes the settlement instead of the plaintiff demanding it.

    21. Re:Lol ... by AndroidCat · · Score: 2
      IS evidence based on hacking a network admissible in court? These goons hacking into your file lists was not a consensual act... Such evidence wouldn't be admissible in court in a criminal case, IANAL.

      I haven't used Kazaa, so I'm not sure how much information each node shares. (Probably quite a lot, the idea is to distribute the load across the network rather central servers and a lot of file-suckers.)

      I imagine each node that is also serving must respond to requests for a catalog of what they have. They could just start up a Kazaa node, see what's available for downloading and where. (How they verified the contents of the files, and got the ISPs to turn over names and addresses is unknown so far.)

      They could have used their own reverse engineered software to do the checking, but that's nothing new. There were Kazaa-compatable programs until Kazaa changed their protocol. There might be ones compatable with their new protocol. The question is: did they do anything that a normally operating Kazaa node wouldn't do to get the information?

      As for which court, the Dutch probably have a Napoleonic system. I have no clue how that works. I wonder if the global record/movie companies picked this as a small "test market" for the technique for that reason?

      For now, without enough information, I guess it's time to get another beer and put some popcorn on. This game's going to be on for some time yet. (Is there a Dutch/European EFF?)

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    22. Re:Lol ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IANAJudge, but if this came to my courtroom and the defendant had countersued for the bogus bill, I'd say "Warezd00d infringed $14,000 worth of copyrights and is ordered to pay der UberGruppenFuhrer of Copyrights. Warezd00d prevails in his countersuit against Der UberGruppenFuhrer of Copyrights for false billings of $7,000. UGFoC is ordered to pay Warezd00d $7,000 in damages and $6,999 for being a bunch of extortionate assholes. Now both of you, get the fsck out of my court!"

      And that's why YANAJudge...

    23. Re:Lol ... by Rothron+the+Wise · · Score: 1

      "What I mainly have problems with is their lack of proof that (a) the files really were the copyright works they claim, (b) did the p2p users have the right to have a legal copy? (c) Are they providing an itemized list? (d) Do they have actual authorization to act as agents of the copyright holders?"

      I've read some of the original danish articles, so I can help you out with some of these questions.

      (a) They didn't download anything so they do not really know.

      (b) Even if the users in question owned the material, they did not own the right to distribute it on Kazaa. That's the issue here. Leechers are off the hook.

      (c) They have kazaa screenshots. I don't know if the bills sent out are itemized or not.

      (d) Yes.

      IS evidence based on hacking a network admissible in court?

      These goons hacking into your file lists was not a consensual act...


      The "find more from same user"-function in Kazaa hardly constitutes hacking. A court order was obtained to get the ISPs to map IP-adresses with users.

      --
      A witty .sig proves nothing
  14. haha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Put that in your pipe and smoke it you snobby euro fuckers.

  15. You mean, -1 Redundant? n/t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    n/t

  16. Isn't this called... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Blackmail?

  17. Getting out of hand by megagurka · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Seems like the anti piracy groups are getting desperate and taking the law in their own hands. I hope some of these cases get to court, and that they lose big. That will put an end to this stupidity...

    1. Re:Getting out of hand by afidel · · Score: 2

      umm as owners of copyrights they have every right to tell you to pay for their works or else be brought to civil court. The fact that you can make a deal to delete the copies and get half off makes no sense unless you view it as possesion of the works for the time between the download and the agreement, but in the US that would break first sale doctrine.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    2. Re:Getting out of hand by Splab · · Score: 1

      Well the thing is (have no clue bout the legal terms) the copyright part of the law is no longer under criminal law, but civil law (as said, dont really know what to call it in english), which means theres a whole new set of rules, and afaik they actually have more rights than the police, think its like bounty hunters in US.

  18. Think before you post... by mattypants · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Before any of you americans start quoting your constitution, please remember that this is Denmark and the law is different there. Why not wait and see what happens first, eh?

    1. Re:Think before you post... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "eh?"

      That's Canada, not Denmark.

    2. Re:Think before you post... by mattkinabrewmindspri · · Score: 1

      That's not the Constitution. That's the Gettysburg Address. Just FYI.

    3. Re:Think before you post... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Thanks for --

      a) validating about a dozen stereotypes.
      b) getting the saying wrong and validating about ten more.

      You're an idiot. You're an American. Sorry for repeating myself.

    4. Re:Think before you post... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would kill the lawyers as they exit the court
      and any body else I could find.

      good thing in america we still have our guns

      here in los angeles we killed 580 assholes already this year

      you get the same amount of time here so you might as well go ahead and shoot.

    5. Re:Think before you post... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hadn't realized we still had a constitution in america...

    6. Re:Think before you post... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's nothing. Here in Oakland, which has like 1/10th the population of LA, we have 100 homicides this year. That's almost twice as many per capita. We're kicking your asses yet again.

    7. Re:Think before you post... by mattypants · · Score: 1

      What makes you think I am Danish?

  19. Idea... by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2, Troll

    Maybe it would be a good idea for them to sell the content they've downloaded on eBay to raise funds for paying the bills or hiring a lawyer... Yeah, I'm sure that'd solve all their problems.

    --
    -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  20. Antipirategruppen Rommel by Utini420 · · Score: 1

    I wonder what kind of tanks an Antipiratgruppen uses in the field. If properly supported by infantry and dive bombers, this blitzkrieg thing might just work...

    --
    A little inaccuracy sometimes saves tons of explanation.
  21. This is dangerous by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    This may set a precedent for allowing big companies to define something as "stealing" and then send a bill. Consider a bill coming from mail.com for blocking their pop-up ads, or from the Cable TV company for not watching commercials (they DO know when you change channels and for how long).

    How 'bout I send a bill to Kazaa for 'stealing' information about me that is used to provide ads that bother the shit about me? Oh wait, I can't threaten them with legal action like they can.

    --
    Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
    1. Re:This is dangerous by dj28 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What? That's how the legal system works. You don't have to pay the bill. You have a choice of either paying the bill for the music you are accused of pirating, or you can take it to court and make them prove that you pirated it. This is no different than a company or individual accusing you of vandalizing property, and then sending you a bill for the damages with a letter attached saying, "Pay up, or we'll sue."

    2. Re:This is dangerous by GMontag451 · · Score: 2
      or from the Cable TV company for not watching commercials (they DO know when you change channels and for how long).

      Wow man, I think you need to stop sucking on that crack pipe. Just how could the cable company tell when I change the channel on my TV?

    3. Re:This is dangerous by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2

      "Consider a bill coming from ... the Cable TV company for not watching commercials"
      "I can't threaten them with legal action like they can."


      Welcome to the world of ultra powerful multi-national megacorporations. You can threaten to sue them, but even if you get it into court, you'll most likely not be able to sustain legal action (mainly due to costs) and almost certainly won't be able to afford a legal team capable of matching that of said corporation. The fact is that when it comes to civil lawsuits, the one who has more money to throw at the suit almost always wins. Why is that? Because our justice system wasn't designed with multi-billion dollar corporations paying a 12-lawyer legal team with 50 para-legals in mind. Thomas Jefferson would be offended if he saw what our legal system is used for these days, and he'd probably do a complete re-write on article III.

      You can threaten them all you like, and their legal department will file it in the dumpster. Your tax dollars at work.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    4. Re:This is dangerous by JordoCrouse · · Score: 1

      This may set a precedent for allowing big companies to define something as "stealing" and then send a bill.

      Except in this case, it really *is* stealing. There is a long jump from a fairly cut and dried legal issue to a company whining that less profits == stealing.

      Of course, at some time in the future, enough money might change hands so that the things you mention really would be illegal. In my opinion, that is the real issue that we need to worry about instead of freting becuase you can no longer steal music on the internet.

      --
      Do you have Linux and a DotPal? Click here now!
    5. Re:This is dangerous by alienw · · Score: 2

      Cable companies can not determine what channel you are on if you use regular analog cable - the technology doesn't allow that. Digital - possibly.

    6. Re:This is dangerous by Mitreya · · Score: 1
      Wow man, I think you need to stop sucking on that crack pipe. Just how could the cable company tell when I change the channel on my TV?

      If you check your cable channels closely, you will see that they offer a pay per view service that allows (using existing remote) to not only to view movies but to stop and/or rewind them. To me this implies that there is *some* feedback coming from my remote that can be classified...

    7. Re:This is dangerous by TekReggard · · Score: 1
      Consider a bill coming from mail.com for blocking their pop-up ads, or from the Cable TV company for not watching commercials (they DO know when you change channels and for how long). Ok, now everyone else here is missing some factors. Cable TV already costs you something. You pay for it. If you're hijacking a Cable line and they find out then you're the one who was stealing. If they want to say that when you change the channel, you're stealing from them, then you best be damn sure some other company will start up that says its OK to change the channel, and look who will get the leading edge in that market? [Even if they might charge a slightly higher price.]

      So the difference between Cable TV and P2P networks sharing mp3s and videos, is those mp3s and videos DO NOT BELONG to you, and you havent paid for the service, either. If you paid Kazaa to share those files, then the RIAA / etc would be filing lawsuits against KAZAA for selling copyrighted material, and the cost would fall on them. Who knows if they'd let you keep the mp3s / videos or not.

      You pay for Cable TV, you DONT get a reciept for using kazaa.

    8. Re:This is dangerous by NineNine · · Score: 1

      Uh, horseshit. A Fortune 500 company refused to pay me for a bit of coding I did for 'em. I got a lawyer. He contacted their lawyers... a bit of back and forth happened, and I got paid. The courts can work. If you're in the right, then just a threat of legal action is often enough. If they know they can win, then they'll defend it. You've been watching too many movies.

    9. Re:This is dangerous by dissy · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually they not only log each channel change, but power on/off, and the volume/mute changes done through your converter (Of course not the volume/mute done through a TV)

      All of this data is sent back along the cable feed to their log server in real time.

      A simple call to tech support with a problem will prove this, as when they ask you do to something such as change a channel, they will tell YOU when you did it or if you didnt do it right.

      In addition, they can also feed commands into your converter to change its channel, power settings, etc.

      Each converter has a serial number on it that is tied to a household/billing account.
      If you ever call and report your name they log that with which converter at the time you called about as well, so if you only call for one and your buddy calls for another, they can narrow it down to who has which converter as well (Thou they dont really use that particular data, its more of a note than anything.)

      A simple notch filter on the cable line can block these signals, but dont expect any help from tech support if you do that. They will tell you they arnt getting a reply from your converter and something must be wrong with the connection to it, most likely dispatching a technition to fix the problem locally.

      Officially they claim to only use these logs for trouble shooting, but its also been proven they use them to watch for cable pirates.
      If you continuously change to channels you dont get and Watch those channels for any amount of time, yet you dont pay for them or havent orderd the pay per view show, it sets off flags that alerts them.

      This is why 'test boxes' that are just descramblers also include these notch filters.
      As far as the cable co can see from one of those, the converter isnt even hooked up to their network.

    10. Re:This is dangerous by Chutzpah · · Score: 1

      Cable companies don't give a shit whether you watch commertials or not, they only care if you pay you monthly bill for access, it's the TV stations that care about whether you watch advertising.

      This is why satellite TV is better than cable, don't hook your reciever to a phone line, and there is absolutely no way they will know what you watch. (I prefer to have my privacy, I especially don't want any personal information being used to advertise "better" to me)

    11. Re:This is dangerous by NeuroBoy · · Score: 1

      Well, items like ReplayTV and Tivo aside (which obviously monitor viewing habits and report them back to the parent company for various reasons), for at least a few years set-top digital cable boxes collect viewing patterns, channels watched, time spent, etc. and are capable of transmitting this information back to the cable provider. I don't know how wide-spread it is in practice among providers, however, the tech is there.

      I grant you though, for your low-end TV with a cable connection straight from the cable box on the outside of the house, it's not likely a cable company will put something in place to monitor viewing habits.

    12. Re:This is dangerous by Apparition-X · · Score: 0

      Except the Danes really were "stealing" by any commonly accepted definition. The precedent for punishing thieves was set a few millenia ago... you are a little late to the party on that one.

      As far as Kazaa goes: you choose to use the service. You know what it entails. If you don't like it, don't use it! Just like TV: don't like content? Change the channel man.

    13. Re:This is dangerous by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 2

      Ok, how 'bout I threaten you. I will come to your house and kill you tonight. You don't really take it seriously, do you? You shouldn't, because I won't. We can rattle sabers all day against the giants, but ultimately we can't effectively fight them here (using my example about KaZaA; there are plenty of instances where the "little guy" threatens and wins). Within this context of defining something as "theft" and collecting damages, however, I just don't see it happening.

      --
      Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
    14. Re:This is dangerous by bstadil · · Score: 1
      Oh wait, I can't threaten them with legal action like they can

      Why can't you sue them? You can sue anybody for anything. Your case might be thrown out, and you might have to pay for a frivilous suit, but in principle you can sue. You can send them a bill to start with. Go to small claims court to state your case. Chances are they will not show up and you win by default. Then you have a legal claim you can use to attach any assests they might have. Etc. Etc.

      I guess what I am trying to say you can harrass them as much as you like.

      --
      Help fight continental drift.
    15. Re:This is dangerous by bmwm3nut · · Score: 1

      pay per view requires an additional cable box. when you call and say 'i want to watch this movie at 6:00' they program your box with the code to descramble that movie. i've never heard of stop/rewind stuff except on tivo like things, and here, they're just streaming the data and you're buffering it on your end. afaik there is no feed back from your tv/cable box to the cable company...lots of cable repeaters are only 1 way...thats why much of the country has cable tv but no cable internet service...they can't send stuff upstream.

    16. Re:This is dangerous by JordoCrouse · · Score: 1

      If you check your cable channels closely, you will see that they offer a pay per view service that allows (using existing remote) to not only to view movies but to stop and/or rewind them.

      What you are talking about is VOD - which is actually streaming video over TCP/IP. The content may be delivered over the same coax cable (using cable modem-like techology), but it is definately not the same techology that delivers cable television channels.

      A standard cable television setup cannot transmit data upstream. Thats why most boxes have a built in modem that connects to your phone line (for "interactive" ordering of movies) (same goes for satellite too).

      --
      Do you have Linux and a DotPal? Click here now!
    17. Re:This is dangerous by Happy+Monkey · · Score: 2

      If you have a cable box, they know every keypress on the cable box remote. Even if they have no idea what to do with all that information, there's a cottage industry in finding new ways to sort, package, and sell customer data. If your cable is plugged directly into the TV, they probably don't know anything, but it is probably theoretically possible to get channel changes and power on/off if they were desperate.

      --
      __
      Do ya feel happy-go-lucky, punk?
    18. Re:This is dangerous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And when Microsoft comes to your door, demanding ten thousand dollars, and threatening a lawsuit if you don't pay up, are you going to have the balls to stand up to their legal team? I think not. With some of the lawsuits that make it to court today, I would be scared if anybody threatened to sue me for any reason, and I would be especially scared if I was being threatened by a large organization.

      Yes, piracy is illegal. Yes, these people probably should be punished for it. But a large, private entity like this should not use its size and apparant legal power to bully people.

    19. Re:This is dangerous by ebyrob · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Except the Danes really were "stealing" by any commonly accepted definition.

      Why do people think they can get away with such foolish and lazy definitions? Copyright infringement is not "stealing". Anyone taking the time to properly understand the issues will agree that copyright infringement and stealing are different crimes. Perhaps for simpletons that don't understand law very well I should begin pushing a new word "criming" that applies to all illegal activity from jaywalking to murdering in laws (This would of course include .

      Either way, I don't see how it's okay to do the following:
      1) Observe a theft of someone else's property.
      2) Ask the thief for money to avoid trouble.
      3) Tell the owner of the property only if the thief doesn't pay.

      The precedent for punishing thieves was set a few millenia ago... you are a little late to the party on that one.

      Oh, right! My bad. Whose right hands should be chopped off in this case?

    20. Re:This is dangerous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I sure as hell WOULD have the balls to stand up to them, because I don't HAVE $10G. They may as well ask me for a billion dollars while they're at it, because I don't have that either.

    21. Re:This is dangerous by Apparition-X · · Score: 1

      Gee nice flame. Ummm... why is it that everybody else here seems to agree that one of the issues is theft? So if copyright infringement in this case is not stealing, why is it not? Be specific please.

    22. Re:This is dangerous by Cruciform · · Score: 2

      There was an entrepreneurial show on CBC (it might have been Venture) back in 98 or 99 that showed a company with a wall of 500 VCRs set up for remote access by home users. You selected a movie, at the designated time one of those VCRs played your movie for you, with RW/FF etc.
      It was an interesting story, but it didn't seem very practical considering the advances being made in net technology at the time.

    23. Re:This is dangerous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, not all countries work like that. Not sure how it is in Denmark but in Sweden (which is close by) the loser pays both sides legal fees. Sure it has its own drawbacks, but it prevents some of the problems you mention.

    24. Re:This is dangerous by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 2

      Well, except its not the company who was "vandalized" who is saying "pay up or we'll sue". This is more like your neighbor saying "pay me money or I'm taking your kid to court for spray painting the town last night".

    25. Re:This is dangerous by Chicks_Hate_Me · · Score: 1

      And you'll end up paying because the amount of money owed to your lawyer will be astronomical. So much for a 'just' system.

    26. Re:This is dangerous by ebyrob · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Gee nice flame

      Thanx, guess that's better than a "shabby" flame.

      why is it that everybody else here seems to agree that one of the issues is theft?

      Maybe because those who take the time to think about what they say have less time left over to hit the "submit" button?

      So if copyright infringement in this case is not stealing, why is it not?

      Because data is not the same thing as material goods. There are numerous dialogues on this topic. Here is one easy list to remember on a related topic. The gist is that having copied a peice of data, I have not in any way diminshed the original data. It is quite plain that copying a file off of your hard-drive is very different than taking a beer out of your fridge and drinking it. In drinking a beer I've lowered your beer count by one. In copying a file I diminish your data count by none.

      Okay, so data is different than physical objects. But what does stealing mean?

      ----From dictionary.com----
      v. stole, (stl) stolen, (stln) stealing, steals
      v. tr.

      1. To take (the property of another) without right or permission.
      2. To get or effect surreptitiously or artfully: steal a kiss; stole the ball from an opponent.
      3. To move, carry, or place surreptitiously.
      4. To draw attention unexpectedly in (an entertainment), especially by being the outstanding performer: The magician's assistant stole the show with her comic antics.
      5. Baseball. To advance safely to (another base) during the delivery of a pitch, without the aid of a base hit, walk, passed ball, or wild pitch.
      ---------------------

      Clearly sense 1 applies here, but in the case of copyright infringement what is owned by the copyright holder (exclusive right to authorize copies) is only partially subsumed. The infringer does not put their name on the registered copyright document and begin sueing others for infringement (that would be plaguerism, which is much closer to stealing), they merely disregard the exclusive granted right.

      What *is* stealing?
      1) Breaking, entering and leaving with physical goodies.
      2) Credit card fraud.
      3) Pretending to work on company time. (like posting to slashdot for instance)
      4) Lieing on income tax returns.

      What *isn't* stealing?
      1) Trespassing. Land, has many characteristics in common with other physical property. And yet, occupying that land without permission is not considered stealing. It is trespassing. Stealing the land would require taking full ownership, not just partial unauthorized use.

      Looking over this list, it's plain that copying data without permission (copyright infringement) is very different than other activity associated with "stealing". If anything it has more in common with trespassing, another activity that only affects part of a property right. But even trespassing deals in limited physical goods whereas copyright deals with unlimited logical goods.

      Because of this and similar issues, copyright and property laws have very seperate paths of evolution. Even today, you would not go into court being unsure whether you were charged with stealing a physical good or infringing on another's right to copy.

      This isn't to say copyright infringement is "okay" or that it is not a crime. Merely that it is not the same thing as stealing. It also doesn't imply that wielding teams of lawyers and a weighty judicial system against "joe sixpack" to squeeze more cash out of him is a morally agreeable or ethically defensible activity.

      This is to say copyright infringement is not the same as stealing. It also implies the motivations of anyone pushing the infringement=stealing notion are suspect.

      Be specific please.

      You asked for it!

    27. Re:This is dangerous by LMariachi · · Score: 2

      I think they can -- I have analog cable, and I used to be able to order pay-per-view movies by switching to the channel I wanted and pushing "AUTH" on the remote, and the name of the movie would show up on the bill. (NOw they've moved all the PPV channels up into the digital-only range.)

    28. Re:This is dangerous by Apparition-X · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I did ask for it and I appreciate the time you took. Having said that, there is an obvious issue of "unfairness" here about using the judicial system and a large team of lawyers against somebody who will clearly be outmatched financially. Further, it is not the case that I think the motivations of the dutch association are not suspect or even remotely pure. Nor am I dismissive of the ongoing (and previous)discussion here. Passing over all of that...

      But to say that it has been discussed before is not to say that there is consensus. When you say that what is going on on P2P networks is solely copyright infringement, and not stealing, I would argue that misses a couple of pretty fundamental concerns:

      1) It feels like stealing. It may be a weak argument to resort to "intuition" but I think most of us here have a sense that we are "taking" somebody's property without fair compensation. Pretty close to dictionary defintion 1. (And btw, just because your definition #1 state the item has to be physical, don't mean it is so!). This may not capture all P2Pers, but it sure captures a lot of them: notably, all those who do it because the RIAA is "screwing them" or because the record companies aren't providing the distribution channel we are asking for (the internet). I think it captures alot of the other excuses for not paying for music too...

      2) I think we need to distinguish between just "any old file" and a file that is music, and clearly valuable to the owner and artist. I have taken "something" without compensating the owner, and without their permission. When I take something of value without paying for it, over P2P, I think I have met dictionary definition #3. If it is something that somebody would normally be financially compensated for, it becomes theft. That it is an idea is irrelevant, I think. I would even say that the P2P network provides the "surreptitiously" part of the equation. (Not very many but the most injudicious would advertise publicly their enormous collection of downloaded mp3s today!)

      So is copyright infringement different than stealing? I think that may be stretching it. It feels far more natural to me to say that it is a subset of stealing, with some unique attributes. But you know what else: I think using the word stealing is useful, because it forces us to think about the issue in a way that pays attention to morally right and wrong.

      To say somebody committed copyright infrigement is to only faintly damn them. Joe Sixpack would say "WTF is copyright infringement" and leave it at that. I feel that it almost lets us all of the hook of confronting the issue: is it Wrong? (Big "W" on purpose!) Or is it not? To ask if it is "theft" and "Wrong" is a little more powerful and meaningful (and again, intuitively more comfortable) than to ask if it is "infringement".

    29. Re:This is dangerous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How are they going to prove anything? If I destroy the hard drive (or low-level format or something), they ain't got shit! Posession is 9/10ths of the law as they say. I don't think ISP logs or whatever is sufficent evidence.

    30. Re:This is dangerous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have taken "something" without compensating the owner

      But you haven't "taken" anything... That would imply that the owner no longer has the thing in question.
      What you have done is obtain a copy of it. Still a crime, but just not theft.
      Sorry, I just get annoyed at the misuse of certain words these days like stealing and terrorism for example. I (as part of a particular community) have been labelled (by a government!) a terrorist simply because of where I am from. I am not, but that type of thing doesn't help you in life.

      Also, if justice elsewhere is like justice here, they will win in the end, regardless of right or wrong. Rights don't come into it when there are large amounts of money involved, only when the parties involved are on an equal footing.

    31. Re:This is dangerous by glesga_kiss · · Score: 2
      Not all PPV systems require that you make a phone call, or have additional hardware. The UK digital cable system is fully bi-directional; the purchase is done when you want to watch the film. You can also e-mail and order pizza etc over it.

      The UK digital satelite system works differently, having a bi-directional satelite is a bit more complex and expensive, so the feed from the user to the service center is over dial-up modem. Your actions are buffered up and sent during the night occassionaly. Sending e-mail and the other interactive services causes the dial-up to come up on demand.

      And yes, both systems have the capability to track what you are watching. My cable box has an IP address and gets software updates from my provider now and again, giving new features etc. It's a clever system...

    32. Re:This is dangerous by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2

      "If you're in the right, then just a threat of legal action is often enough. If they know they can win, then they'll defend it."

      No, if the cost of fighting a court battle (A) is greater than paying out the settlment (B), then settlement B is paid. Otherwise, they fight it out in court and generally win. In your case, They probably looked at how much you wanted, (let's say $10,000), and the legal dept estimated it'd take $100,000 to beat you in court because you really are entitled to the money, so it'll take some extra time and people to slam your case.

      If you need any proof, take a look at the insurance business. There's a business that basically lives by hedging bets on who will sue, how much those lawsuits will cost, and how much settlements/payouts/payoffs will cost and rolls everything into a business formula that works.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    33. Re:This is dangerous by ebyrob · · Score: 2

      Pretty close to dictionary defintion 1. (And btw, just because your definition #1 state the item has to be physical, don't mean it is so!).

      Definition #1 doesn't say a single thing about "physical". Neither do my comments other than as an added distinction. My whole point about definition #1 (and you seem to agree on this) is that when copyright infringement occurs only a part of what is owned is affected, not the whole enchilada. This effectively means that copyright infringement is much more akin to trespass than to actual theft. What is infringed is of value, but is not diminished (much) by the mere unauthorized presence of a few copies.

      It feels far more natural to me to say that it is a subset of stealing, with some unique attributes

      I can't argue about what does or doesn't feel natural. Saying that copyright is a subset of stealing with unique qualities will certainly get you a lot more mileage than simply saying "infringement=theft".

      When I take something of value without paying for it, over P2P, I think I have met dictionary definition #3.

      I don't well understand item #3. But I'll give you that *something* has been wholly subverted without proper authorization over P2P. The problem is that something is different than the something Jack Valenti would like us to think is stolen over and over again.

      I could be happy with the following definition. When copyright is infringed, a "copy" is stolen in the sense that it is "taken without permission". However, in making such use, it is very important to point out that a "work" is NOT stolen in such a situation. A whole work can be stolen, or subverted by plaguerism which is a far worse crime (I would think) than copyright infringement. It is also important to point out that "taken without permission" is a very loose definition of stealing. I can pass gass in your presence (taking liberty without permission) but I have not really commited a theft in that situation, though it would be appropriate to say I had "stolen" that liberty.

      I would further argue that when a copy is stolen, it is not stolen from the copyright holder, it is instead stolen from society at large (or the government as society's proxy) because that is where the exclusive right that is being subsumed is derived in the first place. From this it is also plain that Copyright infringement is "stealing a copy" whereas plaguerism is "stealing a whole work". I don't think I have to point out which of those is less likely to get prosecuted or which is more likely to be committed by the RIAA or MPAA.

      So if stealing and copies are used together to denote copyright infringement I think I can manage to keep things corked up. When stealing alone is used things feel a bit muddy, so my ears perk up. Of course, whenever someone attempts to push the "stealing" paradigm in the wrong direction I tend to feel a need to whip out the old flame thrower... In your case, I may have been a tad trigger happy.

      To say somebody committed copyright infrigement is to only faintly damn them. Joe Sixpack would say "WTF is copyright infringement"

      Isn't that exactly what he should be saying at this point?

  22. Body of article by magiluke · · Score: 2, Informative
    By Bernhard Warner, Reuters, 11/26/02

    LONDON -- In a unique crackdown on illegal file-sharing, a Danish anti-piracy group mailed invoices to alleged pirates demanding compensation for downloading copyrighted materials off the Internet, an attorney for the group said on Tuesday.

    The Danish Anti Piracy Group (APG) identified 150 alleged pirates asking them to pay a combined $133,600, said Morten Lindegaard, an attorney for the group. The biggest offenders face a bill of $13,360.

    "We are demanding full payment for the use of these copyrighted materials," Lindegaard said. The APG has worked with the Danish branch of music trade body International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, to crack down on online piracy. The decision to seek compensation for downloads opens up a controversial new front in copyright holders' ongoing campaign to curb consumer piracy on the Internet, a phenomenon blamed for a decline in CD sales and upswing in the free trade of video games, computer software and video games.

    The tactic is drawing protests from some technical and legal experts who insist that without the violators' computer it's impossible to prove the existence of copyright violations. Others question the size of the bills.

    "In this case, we're talking about compensation for the damage the Anti Piracy Group claims its members have suffered. It's the courts that decide the amount of compensation to be paid due to copyright infringement, not the victim." said Martin von Haller Groenbaek, a Danish attorney specialising in IT law.

    KAZAA, EDONKEY USERS TARGETED

    In each case, the Danish users were accused of downloading copyrighted materials from file-sharing networks Kazaa and eDonkey, two popular so-called peer-to-peer (P2P) networks in Denmark, Lindegaard said.

    Lindegaard, 29, and his helpers -- four Danish university students -- developed a software program that monitored Danish file swappers on the two P2P networks, honing down to the users' Internet Protocol, or IP, address to confirm they were logged on from Denmark.

    The program also traced the files shared and the time at which they were downloaded. After reviewing the evidence, a judge ordered the users' Internet service providers to pass on the violators' billing addresses.

    In each case, the alleged pirate first learned they were being investigated when they received a bill in the post, which began arriving late last week.

    A spokesman for the Danish Consumer Council said they received roughly 50 complaints from the fined individuals. After an initial investigation, the council determined the APG complied with local data protection laws, the spokesman added.

    STUDENTS, PROFESSIONALS FINGERED

    Lindegaard said the accused range from high school students to professionals. They downloaded materials ranging from Eminem songs to the latest Star Wars film to the video game, "Grand Theft Auto."

    "The top 10 computer games, music and movies -- it's all there," said Lindegaard.

    The alleged pirates were billed based on the amount of files they shared. For a single music file, they were charged $2.67; $26.70 for a movie and approximately $50 for a video game, Lindegaard said. But technical experts threw into question the fairness of the bill, pointing to the fact that copyrighted material from time to time is distributed for free across the Internet in a legitimate manner.

    For example, major record labels allow users to download select songs from new album releases off the Web. The tracks typically expire after a period, but in some cases the deactivated track may still appear on a users' hard drive.

    Also, the labels, movie studios and video game makers have increasingly distributed bogus files on P2P networks that resemble the genuine article, down to file size and title, to frustrate would-be downloaders.

    "How do you know each of these copyrighted materials is illegal? That's the big issue here," said Urs Gattiker, a professor of technology and innovation management at Aalborg University in Denmark.

    --
    -Magiluke

    Earl Grey, Hot.

    1. Re:Body of article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kill this guy Morten Lindegaard.

      Every time one of these lawyers pops up there head shoot it off

      This only about lawyers getting money.

    2. Re:Body of article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Dear Sir,

      thank you for your interest in The Register articles. As you may be aware, The Register is a well established IT publication, which is currently funded through advertising. To further generate advertising funds to help us write articles, we must rely on people to actually view our site. Therefore we have to enforce our copyrights rather strictly.

      Your unauthorized redistribution of the article Anti-pirates hit Danish P2P users with huge bills by Kasper Larsen on the file sharing forum "Slashdot" can therefore not be tolerated. But please don't misunderstand me -- we value our readers and like to treat them with respect. However, in order to deter further copyright violations, we ask you to pay a small fine of

      60 British Pounds
      to us immediately. If you do not comply within 7 days, we have no other choice but to sue you for damages in a court of law. Note that copyright violations can be prosecuted under both civil and criminal law, so imprisonment cannot be ruled out. If you do not reside in the United Kingdom, your extradition will be requested. I'm sure the "Slashdot" personnel will be cooperative in determining your identity.

      Please contact me immediately to discuss payment details etc.

      Very truly yours,

      Drew Cullen, The Register
      drew.cullen@theregister.co.uk

    3. Re:Body of article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oops, sorry, confused Reuters with The Reg. Well, substitute accordingly. ;-)

    4. Re:Body of article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In each case, the Danish users were accused of downloading copyrighted materials from file-sharing networks Kazaa and eDonkey, two popular so-called peer-to-peer (P2P) networks in Denmark, Lindegaard said.

      The alleged pirates were billed based on the amount of files they shared. For a single music file, they were charged $2.67; $26.70 for a movie and approximately $50 for a video game, Lindegaard said.

      So, they charged those who downloaded based on the amount they shared? If the downloading is the problem, shouldn't they be charged based on the amount they downloaded?

      I caught that apple vendor stealing an orange from my cart so I sent him a bill based on the number of apples he had for sale.

  23. And the money goes to... by MSZ · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...not the artists. Why should they get any? Like in Napster case...

    Also it's interesting as the people in The Register note, that proving, even with the lower standard of civil action, that particular user had real movies or who exactly set up p2p on particular computer might be a little problematic.

    Looks like a scare tactics to me.

    --
    The moon is not fully subjugated. I demand a second assault wave preceded by a massive nuclear bombardment.
  24. Moral ? by Maxime+Lefrancois · · Score: 1

    They pay for everyone else, I guess, although I would like to see the names of those poor souls ... I have my doubts.

  25. Well at least... by blenderfish · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...now we know what Step 2 is.

    Step 3: Profit!

    1. Re:Well at least... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have known for weeks. Step 2 is ...

  26. How do the Danish know ... by Rev.LoveJoy · · Score: 3, Insightful
    That these users do not already own the material on the up and up?

    The article says that they are billing by file name. This method has its own, shall we say, limitations. I would imagine it would be embarrasing to take the p2p users to court only to have them show up with recitps for the material the rightly own.

    Cheers,
    -- RLJ

    1. Re:How do the Danish know ... by Anonymous+Cowtard · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sure, I may have purchased some CD lately (say, Bob Dylan's latest), but the act of purchasing it does not give me the right to share the MP3s I rip from it with the world via a P2P program.

      Sure, there's the people who will respond with "Well, I can make a copy for a friend or my spouse can't I?" I suppose, but that sort of copying isn't near of the scale of distribution that offering your MP3s on Kazaa gives you.

    2. Re:How do the Danish know ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      By Swedish law you are guilty if you make copies of copyrighted material available to the public, regardless of if you own it or not. Guess it's the same in Denmark /moon

    3. Re:How do the Danish know ... by nakedbonzai · · Score: 1

      I'm also wondering how they're verifying that the user really has what they think. For instance, say the user has a wireless network card, and some neighbor is leaching of their connection. I would think they could just plead their version of the 5th. I think they would have to rely on harder evidence, like confiscating their machine.

    4. Re:How do the Danish know ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The text is very confusing, sounding as if the downloaders were charged, when at the end it suddenly becomes:

      The alleged pirates were billed based on the amount of files they shared.

      You can buy as many CDs as you want, that doesn't give you the right to allow others to copy them.

  27. Sharing or downloading? by Karamchand · · Score: 2

    The article on theregister says they have to pay for "illegally downloading copyright material". The article on slashdot says "for sharing copyrighted material". The article on reuters says also for downloading material.

    So what?! Why put funny things in the slashdot article?!

    1. Re:Sharing or downloading? by NineNine · · Score: 1

      Big difference. You can't "share" what you don't own.

    2. Re:Sharing or downloading? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the article on Reuters first talks about downloading, and near the end (where the billed amounts are detailed) it suddenly turns into "per file shared".

  28. Who's copyrights? by pknoll · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I'm assuming Antipiratgruppen are the copyright holders, or acting on their legal behalf. Right?

    Otherwise their actions are about as threatening as the BSA's. Right?

    1. Re:Who's copyrights? by Splab · · Score: 1

      BSA being bull shit agency, then yes. APG is something like KODA (also a danish weird thing) which charges for every paper copy you make, these charges get back into the system and distributed to special things (like art promotion etc.) but the likeliness of any of the artists, programmers og whatever who got their stuff ripped getting any of the dough is 0%.. They never see this money which makes it even more stupid...

  29. What about legit material? by Hi_2k · · Score: 1

    I have about 20 cd's on my hard drive. I own all of them, as well as all but one of the movies I have. So who's gonna say that I have to pay rediculous fee's for them? It'd be cheaper to buy the cd's, making all the content completley legit, and if the fu^H^H^H morons at the RIAA want to sue me they can sure as hell try. It is NOT, repeat NOT illeagal to have copies of stuff you OWN in any civilised nation, and if it is over there, they should move.

    --
    When life gives you crap, Make Crapade.
    Sluggy Freelance.
  30. What's it worth? by Yoda2 · · Score: 2

    $16 per CD and about $60 per full length movie How much for each p0rn JPG?

  31. screen shots != great proof by xintegerx · · Score: 2, Insightful

    1) the evidence used are screen shots (can be faked)
    2) the file names could be misleading (i.e., the file's contents not illegal)
    3) which family member used the computer?

    Basically, they are saying pay us $60 bucks. Otherwise, they will take you to court.

    However, if they take you to court, you might win!

    This is like me sending random letters asking to be PayPal'd or expect to see me in court! If people comply... well then thanks!

    Which by the way would be like holding people up for ransom?

    Maybe this story affected the Danishes, eh?

    1. Re:screen shots != great proof by Loki_1929 · · Score: 5, Informative

      "3) which family member used the computer?"

      This isn't like a motor vehicle; the person who owns the ISP account is responsible for how it's used. This is why a company can be liable for its employees' copyright infringment.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    2. Re:screen shots != great proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the person who owns the ISP account is responsible for how it's used

      Link please? You're telling me that if someone steals my cellphone, and makes crank calls that I'm responsible, because it's my account? I find that hard to believe.

      This is why a company can be liable for its employees' copyright infringment.

      Ehrm, NO.

      A company can be liable for it's employees copyright infringement, even if no communications technology is used. For example, it's possible for SOCAN to go to a place of business, and fine the owner because an employee has a radio that's loud enough fo co-workers to hear.

    3. Re:screen shots != great proof by HBI · · Score: 1

      Sorry, you're wrong. At least by any definition of liability I was ever exposed to during my years of settling claims (not all that different than what we have here).

      The owner of a car is not liable for the negligent actions of a driver of the same vehicle. You'd have to construct some type of theory as to why the owner is somehow liable - poor selection of driver, unsafe conditions, whatever. The point is that this isn't cut and dried and you can't make that assumption that because someone owned the vehicle/computer/whatever that they have engaged in some sort of tort. You need to demonstrate that via evidence, which may be a large barrier against lawsuits. For example, 'my minor child did this' would be one very effective (and probably true) explanation. Just try extracting the cash from a typical family under those circumstances. Isn't happening.

      This is a flawed strategy unless Denmark is a lot different than the US in public reaction. Where are they going with this? Scaring people? Isn't going to work. Not really - the targets that might be scared of this are probably not trading files anyway.

      --
      HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
    4. Re:screen shots != great proof by TraxPlayer · · Score: 1

      You are wrong so I guess you are not a danish citizen. In Denmark you can't be punish for anything you haven't done. So the APG (Anti-Pirat Group) must found out who in the household did the illegal download or they have no case.

      --
      If the code and the comments disagree, then both are probably wrong. - Schryer
  32. now by Unknown+Poltroon · · Score: 2

    Can they go after me for merely having this stuff availbe on my computer, or do they have to go after the people who have downloaded it? If im plying my car stereo and someone comes by and makes a tape of it, its not my fault, is it?

    --
    All Troll + "offtopic" mods are meta moderated as "Unfair", because you abused the system.
    1. Re:now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No.. but if they show you are playing something on purpose so people can make copies, yes.

      Hardly a good analogy. you put copyrighted material online, made it accessible via common search methods people use to find music they want to download, and now want to claim you did nothing wrong?

    2. Re:now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their tape is also not an exact digital copy that can also be copied exactly as the original.

      Neither are mp3's. They employ lossy compression.

  33. SaveKaryn... by edashofy · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Hey, remember SaveKaryn? Well, I guess it's time for the /. crowd to set up:

    http://www.saveapoordanishpir8.org/

    My Money: $320
    Your Money: $524.53
    Ebay Sales of Breakfast Pastries: $2.25

    Remaining total: $12,348.23

  34. How would they prove this? by Cipster · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Unless they had actual physical proof that the file in question was the copyrighted material I cannot see how they could sue them. Screenshots are a joke (give me 30 min and Photoshop and I could make a credible screenie of Kazaa with anything I would want on it). Also all they have is a file name on the screen. Just because it's labeled Adobe Photoshop it is not necessarily that (the amount of mislabeled stuff on p2p is pretty signinficant).

    1. Re:How would they prove this? by Zemran · · Score: 3, Informative

      This is a civil case, not a criminal case. They do not have to prove beyond all reasonable doubt, just in all probability.

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    2. Re:How would they prove this? by DarkSkiesAhead · · Score: 1
      Also all they have is a file name on the screen. Just because it's labeled Adobe Photoshop it is not necessarily that (the amount of mislabeled stuff on p2p is pretty signinficant).
      Yeah, but it's normally called something like photoshop.exe.mpg.
    3. Re:How would they prove this? by snakecoder · · Score: 1

      Are you sure this applys in denmark?

      --
      -Nuke the moon
    4. Re:How would they prove this? by DarkSkiesAhead · · Score: 2
      This is a civil case, not a criminal case. They do not have to prove beyond all reasonable doubt, just in all probability.
      Even that seems difficult. If the defendants delete the files from their computers now (before any search warrants are granted) there will be no evidence the copyrighted material was on the machine. Anti Pirat Gruppen has only file names which do not necessary represent copyrighted material with the same or similar names.

      But, this dosen't really matter. Clearly, Anti Pirat Gruppen is just trying to scare people out of using p2p software. And it will probably work.
    5. Re:How would they prove this? by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      Screenshots are a joke (give me 30 min and Photoshop and I could make a credible screenie of Kazaa with anything I would want on it).
      I'd "make" a screenshot of the judge's computer to prove that point...
    6. Re:How would they prove this? by mnbjhguyt · · Score: 1

      give me 30 min and Photoshop

      give you photoshop? you can download it from kazaa!

    7. Re:How would they prove this? by hitzroth · · Score: 2

      I'd "make" a screenshot of the judge's computer to prove that point...

      Not the judge's... The prosecuting party's.

      You might piss off the judge pulling that kind of stunt with his computer. And last time I checked that was a bad thing.

      --
      In mathematics, one does not understand things, one merely gets used to them.
      --VonNeumann
    8. Re:How would they prove this? by TraxPlayer · · Score: 1

      > Screenshots are a joke (give me 30 min and
      > Photoshop and I could make a credible screenie of
      > Kazaa with anything I would want on it

      That will be very very stupid. You can go many month in jail for making false evidence.

      --
      If the code and the comments disagree, then both are probably wrong. - Schryer
    9. Re:How would they prove this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even that seems difficult. If the defendants delete the files from their computers now (before any search warrants are granted) there will be no evidence the copyrighted material was on the machine. Anti Pirat Gruppen has only file names which do not necessary represent copyrighted material with the same or similar names.

      Mind you, if you're sharing "Harry Potter.avi" it's either going to be copyright infringement of the movie, or a user deliberately trying to attract a wrongful lawsuit for copyright infringement. Either way the court wouldn't look on it too kindly. And then since it's on a sharing network, they could presumably keep full records of how they downloaded it off you and checked that it was the movie in question and here's the exact file as Exhibit B (they probably won't, but not hard to do).

      The other possibility is that it's another anti-piracy group trying to share bad material to put people off using the network, that could be fun to watch the results from...

    10. Re:How would they prove this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not false evidence at all. It's new evidence to establish how easy it would be for the prosecution to have faked the original evidence: establishing reasonable doubt.

  35. And then it becomes legitimate by gorf · · Score: 2

    So, if someone pays the bills, he can then legally digitally own everything he got billed for! With no EULAs in sight, presumably.

    1. Re:And then it becomes legitimate by C0deM0nkey · · Score: 1

      Read The Register's article -- the fee is a FINE -- you are supposed to delete the content after paying the fine.

    2. Re:And then it becomes legitimate by gorf · · Score: 1

      The fee cannot possibly be a fine. The most it can be is an out-of-court settlement.

  36. what if..... by ejaw5 · · Score: 5, Informative

    In the instructions made to install Kazaa (Full)without adware (cydoor, et al), one of the things to do was to delete the ~/KaZaa/db folder and replace that with a dummy file by opening notepad and saving a blank file as "db" (no extention). As a result of this, all downloaded files in (~/Kazaa/My Shared Files) would appear to have "failed" in Kazaa, and the downloaded files would remain in their *.dat files. It would also NOT include them in your list of files shared. You'd then have to rename the files with extentsions before exiting Kazaa or else you'd lose them.

    So...if you want to download on P2P you could probably take these measures and be okay

    --

    $cat /dev/random > Sig
    1. Re:what if..... by pcardoso · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's all ok, but there's a flaw..

      Download the files from where? Assuming most people did this, there would be nowhere to download the files from, as noone would be sharing their files.

    2. Re:what if..... by tfazzone · · Score: 1

      Indeed, those *.db files can contain a full record of files shared and downloaded. I found this tool that allows you to read these files.

    3. Re:what if..... by suwain_2 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      What would be more intersting, IMHO, would be if the files were 'encrypted' -- it just has to be some absurdly simple encryption. However, to install the encoder/decoder, you have to agree to a list of terms that include agreeing to not pursue (or threaten to pursue) legal action against anyone seen on the network, or attempting to obtain any information about them without their permission.

      In theory, you can then have the RIAA arrested for violating the DMCA, or at least try to get your case thrown out. (The "evidence" that you had the MP3 is inadmissible if they obtain it illegally, is it not?)

      And if they convince the judge that my idea is total crap, haven't they just set a precedent weakening the DMCA? Might as well fight fire with fire. :)

      --
      ________________________________________________
      suwain_2 :: quality slashdot p
    4. Re:what if..... by no+soup+for+you · · Score: 2
      In theory, you can then have the RIAA arrested for violating the DMCA, or at least try to get your case thrown out. (The "evidence" that you had the MP3 is inadmissible if they obtain it illegally, is it not?)

      This is an interesting legal argument, but it doesn't apply to non-US users as it's a DMCA provision. And I'm pretty sure the companies would choose to apply the US copyright law, but not the DMCA anti-reverse engineering laws.

      --
      If you blog it...
    5. Re:what if..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure they'd argue that the DMCA doesn't apply when used for legal purposes. (legal as in 'for purposes of enforcing the law' rather than just 'not illegal')

  37. can't pay the fine, don't do the crime by eht · · Score: 1

    just because you think you have the right to take something because information wants to be free, don't be surprised when people come knocking, look at the people who uncapped their cable modems or the cracking ring that got busted a little while ago, of course i would *never* use something i didn't pay for

    1. Re:can't pay the fine, don't do the crime by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You dont pay for the air you breathe, stop breathing now! :-)

  38. Bullshit evidence so far by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "APG monitored the file sharing networks for available files with Danish IP addresses - and went to court to get the users' personal details from their ISPs, armed with screen shots of, for example, the KaZaA window showing the files on the user's hard-drive."

    So if I go out wearing a shirt that says "I'm a murderer, please arrest me" am I going to go to jail too?

  39. Those knuckleheads .... by bizitch · · Score: 1

    Those p2p users should have formed the
    Weuseanonymousproxyandcanpiratallwewantgruppen

    --
    ---- "Logoff! That cookie shit makes me nervous!" - A. Soprano
  40. Pay to play by Dolphy · · Score: 0

    Well, if Danish court systems are anything like that of the United States, I would be willing to wager that a large percentage of people will pay the bill...just to avoid the cost, time, and red tape of the lawyers and associated annoyances. This kind of reaction could lead to a self-righteous anti-piracy group getting bloated results to their demands, and thereby stepping up their activity...not to mention the precedent which will be set for groups to follow.

  41. Big Deal.. by alexjohns · · Score: 0, Troll
    This is in Denmark. There's nothing of any concern to us Americans. We live in a free country, remember. No way anything like that will have any effect over here. We're protected by that Bill of Rights thing.

    Even if this was the beginning of something, Denmark is like, really small, right? It would probably only take one nuke to clean their clock.

    BTW, have we started kicking Iraqi ass yet? Gas prices are way high, here. They need to start coming down soon. I'm itching for a cross-country road trip in my new H2. It'll be sweet when we own all that oil. 10 cents a freakin' gallon, man.

    (Note: The above was sarcasm. A little bit of irony, too. FTHI.)

  42. Tough situation by mao+che+minh · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The names of the files can be rather incriminating, since it isn't likely that a file named "U2-Sunday Bloody Sunday.mp3" is anything but that song, by that artist. Coupled with the fact that these users probably have hundreds of similarly named files, it won't be easy to dissuade a jury of your peers that you were not illegally obtaining copy righted music. Yet, with this being the only evidence that they have to go by, a defending lawyer might be able to prove that there is reasonable doubt - especially if the files are no longer present on the culprits system at the time of a law enforcemnet raid (if that ever happens over there).

    The most obvious answer is to stop pirating. A person can come up with all of the self serving rationalizations that they want, like "I wasn't going to ever pay for it anways" or "the industry charges too much", but in the end, you obtained material that is explicitly protected and must be obtained through a legitimate sale in an illegal manner. Pay up.

    1. Re:Tough situation by gorf · · Score: 2

      The names of the files can be rather incriminating, since it isn't likely that a file named "U2-Sunday Bloody Sunday.mp3" is anything but that song, by that artist.

      Probably, yes. But if the prosecuters are the same people who are trying to exasperate filesharing attempts by putting fake files out in the wild (correct name and size), then a defendant might have a good point demanding evidence that the file actually does contain the song.

      The most obvious answer is to stop pirating...must be obtained through a legitimate sale in an illegal manner. Pay up.

      Just because something is illegal does not mean that it's wrong. Not that I'm making any comment on any particular case or law, but it isn't as straightforward as that. Yes, said defendant will end up with a court order to pay up, but he is perfectly entitled to whine about it being unfair (this depends on his opinion about the law, of course; being a hypocrite is no excuse).

    2. Re:Tough situation by sweetooth · · Score: 2

      Just because I have a file on my harddrive named U2-Sunday_Bloody_Sunday.mp3 doesn't mean I don't own the cd and have every legal right to use the cd.

      The text of the article lead me to believe they were asking for money becuase the files were illegaly downloaded, not because they were shared. In which case I'd tell them to please try and prove I don't own the cd.

      If they were suing for the act of distributing copyrighted materials that would be VERY differant. That doesn't appear to be the case though.

    3. Re:Tough situation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      it won't be easy to dissuade a jury of your peers that you were not illegally obtaining copy righted music


      Let's see... WON'T. DISSUADE. NOT. three negatives... so that adds up to...


      It will be hard to persuade a jury of your peers that you were illegally obtaining copyrighted music.


      Which is exactly the opposite of what you meant to say.



      thank you!

    4. Re:Tough situation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >law enforcemnet raid (if that ever happens over there).

      From www.siffan.dk/siffansversion.asp
      Translated with www.tranexp.com:2000/InterTran
      (I doubt this makes sence)

      Hi all there be at liberty to være interested. My name is Michael and i am a from they people there d. 16 September getting attendance from APG to corporation by a judge foged and a " aversion IT expert. I've at my homepage could read through , that i've laid my version from the elapsed forth at my homepage. This aren't correct. They things there stood at the face from wwwsiffandk is written from a friend that took the the mission by that update homepage , while i was except computer. He wrote , as directed by me , a little account from our telephone conversation and it is that decent have been able read through at the face from wwwsiffandk they last teams days. My version vil i with pleasure tell here : D 16 September kl. 1930 come my dearest , hers daughter vores corporate daughter at 2 1/2 month and i myself homes from family - attendance.

      There moment' of truth vi putting the key to the door to go in proves vi encountered from 3 committee , that upcoming forth from , respectively a car there keeps parking awhile up from the access , and round about the corner to vores cottage. They introduce themselves reasonable fast and telling me , what the question turns themselves about , that is to say that i've a edonkey server driving. They notifying me too about , that i've correct to that demand the police attendance and correct to a solicitor. I gets stukket a award to the hand , that is at whole part pages written to a highly technical languages , while they chatting away , so i no can be find brain and pull at anything that preferably. My dearest gets ascertain , that she no must go in , and i stands and experiences that define they , that it is all by to the weather that be included a award on account of , that i should orchard a edonkey server driving. Firstly had i no a edonkey server driving , i telling , that that had i had at a dance time , however no to correct tall age and it was known that være anything age the paper. Secondly intended i certain no , that it was disallowed that orchard a such server. After awhile the chat back and forth goes vi in. Decent can realize , that a situation that that can be operate highly stressende and confusing , when decent all along proves the shelled by question from they three committee but identified themselves except name and action. I've at the time when settled no had alternative to read through the award , when i all along proves chin through calm question. I've after certain me to , i gladly vil display they my computer , so they can be find , that i no has a edonkey server driving. I'll too gladly display they a log - file there can be tell they when the server ultimate were asset and telling that that in all well turn themselves about a month age after no whole a nine days' wonder. The IT - expert sat themselves known my computer. The access to the computer went blockade so i no could add the imminence from the. The It - expert certify so highly fast , that there no drew a edonkey server at my computer and so ought the question well properly speaking være out from universe. I giving phrase to , i no were agree to that it was illegally that orchard a edonkey server , however of which it was be at liberty to i why admit that i had overdrew the law at that item. After no at the time when , where APG foged / judge and IT - expert were condition. Abrupt begins the IT - expert that interest themselves fierce by my computer. Peeked to various brief case and the like. He had too fussy by that have one's eye on cd'er at the bureau and here and there. He mentioned so oposite they others person present , that i had illegal things at my computer. I , that believed that this here " appointment " turn themselves about a edonkey server went awhile weird to fashion and had a feeling from , that this were that snap they rights the award giving those present correct to. My version vil i with pleasure tell here : D 16 September kl. 1930 come my dearest , hers daughter vores corporate daughter at 2 1/2 month and i myself homes from family - attendance.

      I giving phrase by extensive disaffection by this , however agreed after a bit age to that spot they illegal things , that were at my computer. I am giving phrase to , i good were distinct by that this were illegally , however that i no intended that had anything by the question that do. I am at this point come so dense at the computer , that i can be spot things and matters by the IT - expert. It was at the time when my concept , that vi could find that that were illegally , certify that with a view to a bødeforlæg / claim for damages and from now on erase that.

      The IT - expert operate at this point no particularly aversion , after that the award giving phrase to he should glance at my edonkey server and this were why by for the longest time get over , however i had actually resolved me to være samarbejdsvillig , after awhile the chat back and forth vil a from they two ( the judge fogeden or the attorney from APG ) abrupt orchard confiscate this and that. There's whole part mp3 files at my computer , that i doing considerate at is legal when they're copied from the top copy borrowed cd'er. I gets ascertain , that they no can be look some cd'er by me , however i can so tell , that vi straight has moved , whatever they certainly had guessed when the old petition stood at the award , and i no had got arc'ed all forth yet , after displayed i they ca. 500 music cd'ere that were a estimate compound from the top copy and copied cd'er , whatever why is duly , of which decent has copied they from a a bit cd , that decent has borrower. They'll after at this point confiscate both that alone and the other thing. Contemporary vil they orchard me for saying certainly to things , that i no understood anything that preferably from. I felt me grossly chikaneret and assault. I interpret no myself that apathetic to the idea or anything , however there went only said so a lot of things , highly technical and highly fast. When i settled no had got read the award through and at this point , where they ville to that confiscate this and that , felt i , that actually had i displayed use by a solicitor. I had why got told that i had correct to a such. I getting too law to that insignificant to a solicitor , however when i no there daily spending attorneys , and when the time at this point were round ville that why no være easy that afford a solicitor. I experiences that insignificant to a couple of friends and gets a number to a solicitor private number. When i attempting that phone to the solicitor begins the IT - expert again that chin to me and when i shall try that answer him and the phone has duttet 4 times lays i the pipe at. I calling so to another friend , to hear about he can be find a solicitor to me here and now. That can be he no however memories me about , that i why can be get delegation a. I interrupter so the dialogue and says to fogeden / the judge that i at this point from the day no can be find a solicitor and i therefore gladly vil orchard a delegation gets i ascertain , that she no vil adjourn the question to wait for a solicitor. Hmm What shall decent so do. Here stands i by several prosecutor that i brief understands ( this treats i several times phrase by ) and shall answer in the affirmative to that they can this and that and write off me the court to that carry the question ( i am why settled no once all distinct by whatever question in question ) known a civil action. I feel me no capable that get calling to prosecutor , seizure and civil trials , however all ends by , that they trailing be off by my computer , mine musikcd'ere and some cd'ere that i assign they. They laying at the bureau and the most intended i contained illegally material.

      To get peace and get age going bear at , what there occurs and get read the award , requests i at a dance time those present about that walk without and await to the police upcoming when i why had got ascertain , that i had correct to this. I cant exact retain when to the elapsed it was , however was informed from the judge fogeden that of which they should forth be at liberty to i throw they forth. It was i after no straight certain at were a good idé and nor certain at , that i could. So nor there were there anything that do. They surrender iøvrigt none receipt by they things they had taken by.

      When they were gone sat i back and imaginary : What occurred there straight here!!! I had settled no got read the award through and wasn't certain at what i had said certainly and no to. Actually is it the night to thursday d. 19 September and i i am pleased to that look what there stands to the retsbog , that hopefully nearly header up , there should there displayed stand anything about that there were happened at my petition. I've actually read the award through , however has settled no fattet all , when it is written to a , in my opinion , highly technical languages. I am too today been insignificant up from a solicitor that represent APG. he explained me , that i should get one's skates on me that write off me the court going proven the question to a civil action when he shall sue me by 14 days. I feel me settled no certain at , what the action goes forth at and vil therefore no dismiss the court to anything that preferably.

      I can admit , that i no themselves can be cope with that here and can orchard a solicitor to that be of use me. After seem i , that the thing is correct technical and therefore require a solicitor by speciality to IT and when the catalog from the plaintiff is highly tall , is it difficult , that find a solicitor there no has a interest - clash to the question. It is alas no succeeded me yet , though a couple of pieces from they i've chin by highly gladly ville ha' had the question. Actually can i first time get one's skates on me that find a solicitor that can be be of use me by that get straight , what it is i shall tell certainly or no to , however ultimate and advance get straight about decent can be discuss potential criminal in that way that i went treated the evening. That works as though , that of which you are potential criminal and you contemporary are you occupancy from a computer , i see can be you kiss all yours rights goodbye. I had to my vildeste fantasy no believed , that decent to Denmark should become declined a solicitor. At last vil i phrase my compassion by others there's been treated thus and tell that : I am no standing forth to they shall orchard evil from me , or seem that i am a unfortunate cousin. I've been in receipt of illegally material and vil gladly admit that , however therefore vil i absolutely no honour to be treated in that way that i was exposed to. I hope that my construction from the question vil have a hand in that give rise to a debate about APG's methods and possibly can be be of use coming devote to that være awhile better secure against at their rights. All shall contemporary call on to that have a hand in the debate , that hopefully vil crop up to forum at wwwsiffandk They by glimpse to Law and IT shall være highly velkomne , so they possibly can be be of use us by that give rise to lucidity by vores rights and chances in case APG throbbing at the door. A lot of hils'ner from Michael 19 september Siffan

  43. it's not hypocrisy by kilonad · · Score: 2, Interesting
    It's not hypocrisy in this case. If the Danish RIAA were going after the users themselves, that's fine. But what's going on here would be like the BSA (business software alliance, not boy scouts) going after some pirates, saying "pay up or we'll sue" but never really saying what they'll do with that money, and charging the pirates $500 for each copy of windows downloaded and $1500 for each copy of ms office.

    That having been said, I do enjoy watching slashdotters squirm in their pants when accused of hipocrisy. ;)

    1. Re:it's not hypocrisy by Alyeska · · Score: 1
      ....like the BSA... going after some pirates, saying "pay up or we'll sue" but never really saying what they'll do with that money

      Nope, not quite. It is more like the RIAA, in that it is empowered by its "members" (per the article) to represent them in anti-piracy causes. As for where the money goes, there are likely by-laws for APG, agreed upon by the members of the consortium, that direct the funds to their final destination -- most likely, back to fund the APG's efforts.

    2. Re:it's not hypocrisy by KaptajnKold · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That having been said, I do enjoy watching slashdotters squirm in their pants when accused of hipocrisy.

      I don't get this ceaseless talk about hipocrisy. The people who read this forum should know that there are as many many opinions (at least) as there are slashdotters. Yet som posters seem to think that slashdot has some kind of united voice and that it is hence suspicious whenever it is caught in a selfcontradiction.

  44. Why stephen king? by Unknown+Poltroon · · Score: 2

    Could you pick another name?

    --
    All Troll + "offtopic" mods are meta moderated as "Unfair", because you abused the system.
  45. You ignorant turd by mattypants · · Score: 0

    It's Denmark, stupid. And don't be so rude about the Germans - a far more polite people than the americans.

    See my previous posts regarding your capital 'A'.

    1. Re:You ignorant turd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      get over it, turd, I thought the Antipiratgruppen was damn funny, and as for germans being more polite than americans... go ahead and ask the older generation in denmark how much they enjoyed the german "visit" back in the early 40's

    2. Re:You ignorant turd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and as for germans being more polite than americans... go ahead and ask the older generation in denmark how much they enjoyed the german "visit" back in the early 40's

      Yes, and then go to Afghanistan and ask the average people about the recent visit of the Americans. Or the Irak people or the Vietnamese or the Korean or the Japanese and oh yes, how about asking some native Americans?

      Ignorance is bliss.

  46. Ridiculous.. by xchino · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This is completely ridiculous. If any of the victims of this fold and just pay, shame on them. IINAL, esp not a danish one, so I don't know how the court systems work over there, but I have a feeling this same case in America would be thrown out of court. Unless they can explicitly prove they were sharing data with users who did not already have a license to the data (which should be protected under Fair Use). And unless they have subpoeniad the receivers of said data, they have no case at all. However if I had been one of the victims of this suit, I think it would have caused me severe emotional distress, and slandered my good name. At least that's what my counter suit
    would claim.

    --
    Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. It's just that yours is stupid.
    1. Re:Ridiculous.. by SigveK · · Score: 1
      Unless they can explicitly prove they were sharing data with users who did not already have a license to the data

      Still, sharing the files on kazaa would mean that any user has the ability to download the files. This means that the user in this case has published copyrighted material.

    2. Re:Ridiculous.. by Mitreya · · Score: 1
      If any of the victims of this fold and just pay, shame on them.IINAL, esp not a danish one, so I don't know how the court systems work over there, but I have a feeling this same case in America would be thrown out of court.

      I do not have to be a lawyer to see that even seemingly ridiculuous cases are not thrown out fast enough for individuals to afford it. Shame on them, yes... but would you stand up and go to court if that meant your life will be screwd over in the process?
      Have you noticed how many buisnesses bent in front of PanIP claims? And those were small companies... clearly on a slightly larger budget than an average individual...

    3. Re:Ridiculous.. by Splab · · Score: 1

      The danish law is a bit week on suing, you wouldn't get jack shit in denmark.. Example, you get hit by a drunk driver doing 60 mph, get paralysed from neck down, the amount you would get for suing (this also counts the money from insurance) would be in the neighborhood of $2-300K But you could quite easy get the case thrown away, make a little program that makes dump files and get it to match the exact same files they claim you had and then say you were on the hub for chatting (the hubs were afaik restricted to minimum amount of shared data) or looking for leagal music then delete all the files you dont have the right for and you are in the green...

    4. Re:Ridiculous.. by herbierobinson · · Score: 2

      Don't forget that anybody could have downloaded the files; so, APG might have copied the necessary evidence before sending the letters. They would only need to copy a few files from each user so they could pull the rug out from under them if they make false claims about the file contents.

      --
      An engineer who ran for Congress. http://herbrobinson.us
  47. Like these people dont earn enough money. by skybuck · · Score: 0

    It think it's ridicolous. What are they going to do next ? Sue people for listening to radio ? Like music artists don't make enough money hahaha. What... the need more money for their 11th rolls royce and another one for their dog ? Ofcourse they need more money to buy their 50th house :) Get real people, enough is enough.

    1. Re:Like these people dont earn enough money. by RatBastard · · Score: 2

      Them having more money than you entitles you to rip them off? I suppose that gives the homeless the right to steal from you?

      --
      Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    2. Re:Like these people dont earn enough money. by skybuck · · Score: 0

      No... The rich should give to the poor :) Anyway that was not that point. Copyright is ment for people that produced something with their mind and earn some money with it. Like to pay for the time/costs. Not to make people filty rich :)

  48. Blank mp3s by Zemran · · Score: 5, Funny

    I think this is the most brilliant piece of marketting yet. First they jam up P2P with blank mp3s to put people off using P2P and then they send those people a bill for accepting the blank mp3. $10 for a loop of nothing?

    Do they have a copyright on the blank loop? If not I think I should hurry up and copyright it :)

    --
    I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    1. Re:Blank mp3s by Jester99 · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's only copyrighted if it's 4:14 in length. :)

    2. Re:Blank mp3s by GreatOgre · · Score: 1
      Do they have a copyright on the blank loop? If not I think I should hurry up and copyright it

      I think it depends on the length of silence. I seem to remember a lawsuit brought by one "composer" of silence against another. The only difference between the two was the length. Forgot who they were and who one. Anybody know?

    3. Re:Blank mp3s by ModernGeek · · Score: 0

      >Do they have a copyright on the blank loop? If not I think I should hurry up and copyright it >>I think it depends on the length of silence. I seem to remember a lawsuit brought by one "composer" of silence against another. The only difference between the two was the length. Forgot who they were and who one. Anybody know? I think they should should copyright the silence for .1 seconds, and say the music was just thier song going over and over again.

      --
      Sig: I stole this sig.
    4. Re:Blank mp3s by TarPitt · · Score: 1

      In which case the current owner's of John Cage's intellectual property will be paying you a visit....

      --
      If your children ever found out how lame you are, they'd murder you in your sleep
    5. Re:Blank mp3s by Ironix · · Score: 1

      No... I do belive that would still constitute Copyrite Infringement.

      --
      Still #1 -- Lonely Gay Geek
    6. Re:Blank mp3s by TeknoHog · · Score: 5, Informative

      Don't you mean 4:33?

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    7. Re:Blank mp3s by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This lawsuit isn't about people accessing copyrighted works, it is about people distributing copyrighted works. There is a big difference. Suppose someone downloads a copyrighted song from an RIAA server. Downloading the song would only be a violation if the RIAA did not have permission to distribute the song; otherwise the RIAA is just giving away free music.

    8. Re:Blank mp3s by Jester99 · · Score: 2

      Yup. ;)

    9. Re:Blank mp3s by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      John Cage owns it and his heirs will sue over having a blank track. They have done it before.

    10. Re:Blank mp3s by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not sure but I'm pretty sure it was a successful suit...

  49. Good on them! by Noose+For+A+Neck · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I'm glad to see that somebody out there is going to punish the P2P abusers. Pirates are giving P2P a bad name.

    For example, I'm in a small, unsigned punk band. We distribute our music over P2P because it is a lot cheaper than getting webspace to host stuff and paying for bandwidth. But right now, we have to compete with all these ultra-shitty, ultra-popular bands like Metallica and Jon Bon Jovi for the eyes and ears of P2P users. On top of that, it gives us a bad name. People look at me funny when I say we distribute our music on KaZaA, like I'm some kind of criminal.

    When we clean out the abusers and criminals from P2P and let the real people, the small-time, unsigned artists, get exposure, then we will have won. And I won't shed a single tear for these people who are fucking it up for the rest of us.

    --

    Software piracy is victimless theft.

    1. Re:Good on them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And then no one will be left on Kazaa to download your music.

    2. Re:Good on them! by josh+crawley · · Score: 1

      Just a personal question: does your group upload lower quality MP3's or do you upload higher quality compressed (MP3 or Ogg), or do you use FLAC?

      Thanks

    3. Re:Good on them! by pdboddy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I hate to burst your bubble a bit...

      I understand your sentiment about people mucking up P2P with big name bands and such. I know it's hard to be a small, unsigned artist.

      But if you think the recording and movie industries will allow P2P to stay free, and unhindered, you have another think coming, hard and fast.

      Even if the P2P networks were totally clean, and only had legal files to be downloaded, I doubt the recording and movie industries would allow them to live free. Do you think they want people to be able to find you and listen to you without their help? Numerous big names (Tom Petty being one) have tried to distribute their latest singles via P2P, only to have their ideas squashed by their labels. If the big names can get bitchslapped, do you think the little ones won't?

      RIAA and MPAA are going to slowly hunt down and kill the P2P networks, and replace them with their own, craptacular, pay P2P networks

      End result? Your band's still out in the cold.

      --
      Julie Moult is an idiot.
    4. Re:Good on them! by Spy+Hunter · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You think anybody would be ON Kazaa, etc if it wasn't for "ultra-shitty, ultra-popular bands like Metallica and Jon Bon Jovi"? Think again. Nobody would be on Kazaa if all it had was "small, unsigned punk bands". And with good reason - most of them are nothing special (which is why they are small and unsigned). Nothing personal against your band in particular, you might be great. But the fact is that there are oppportunities for good bands, and bands with nothing new to offer will stay small and unsigned.

      --
      main(c,r){for(r=32;r;) printf(++c>31?c=!r--,"\n":c<r?" ":~c&r?" `":" #");}
    5. Re:Good on them! by corby · · Score: 5, Funny

      ...Jon Bon Jovi for the eyes and ears of P2P users. On top of that, it gives us a bad name.

      I hear you, dude. It's almost like Bon Jovi's been shot in the heart, and you're to blame.

    6. Re:Good on them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you realise that if someone that this group is going after had your files on their Hard Drive, that they will be attempting to collect royalties on your music? Do you think you'll ever see the money?

      Not Likely...

    7. Re:Good on them! by Snaller · · Score: 2

      When we clean out the abusers and criminals from P2P and let the real people, the small-time, unsigned artists, get exposure, then we will have won. And I won't shed a single tear for these people who are fucking it up for the rest of us.

      So your goal is to one of those who expect to get payed a million times for a job done once? Interesting.

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    8. Re:Good on them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right. The guys in black helicopters are coming. It's all a conspiracy. They're here to make sure we're never happy.

      Yeah, yeah.

    9. Re:Good on them! by vadim_t · · Score: 2

      So what's your band's name?

      I wonder why there are so many people who are in some band that distributes their music over P2P but they never tell the name. Heck, you're complaining about having to compete with famous bands and don't use this opportunity to promote your band a bit?

    10. Re:Good on them! by pdboddy · · Score: 1

      Heh, no conspiracy, just watch.

      Napster's gone, do you think they'll let the other P2P networks off?

      --
      Julie Moult is an idiot.
    11. Re:Good on them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ummm,

      FYI, punk died in the 70's. Wrong decade.

    12. Re:Good on them! by lpret · · Score: 2
      He played with your heart, got lost in the game.


      Ooh, baby, baby...

      --
      This is my digital signature. 10011011001
    13. Re:Good on them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm gonna fucking curb stop you, you piece of shit! MY band is the best motherfucking punk band on the planet, even though we're small and unsigned. If I hear you insult an unsigned band again I sware you'll regrat it... ASSHOLL

      Punk 4 ever!!!!!!!!!!!

    14. Re:Good on them! by rolfwind · · Score: 1

      How on Kazaa will people tell if downloading your stuff is legally legit. Some small bands (nobody heard of) could be signed and still pirated even though they aren't famous, how will the audience know that it's ok to download yours? P2P ESP?

    15. Re:Good on them! by dswan69 · · Score: 1

      most of them are nothing special (which is why they are small and unsigned)

      That's just drivel. Getting signed is at least 90% luck. We have to change the ridiculous assumption that signed==must be good, not signed==must be bad.

      I seldom use P2P networks, but when I do it is purely to find interesting music that will never get anywhere near the radio or my local music shop.

      bands with nothing new to offer will stay small and unsigned

      More likely they'll get huge recording deals - much easier to sell the same old trash to the public than challenge them with new sounds.

    16. Re:Good on them! by Beliskner · · Score: 2
      I don't want to flame you, but nobody wants your shitty music. I've heard your band, they are shit. People demand McDonalds, cigarettes, and Britney Spears because they like them. They're not necessarily good food/music. A couple of dweebs with an electric guitar just doesn't cut it

      I don't want to flame you, but Kazaa et al are popular because you can share what you like, even in the old IRC/FTP days it was popular music that ruled the FTP Serv-U's

      --
      A caveman dreams of being us, the incalculable power and riches. We dream of being Q, then what?
    17. Re:Good on them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When we clean out the abusers and criminals from P2P and let the real people, the small-time, unsigned artists, get exposure, then no-one will be using it any more.

  50. I didn't do it by koh-der · · Score: 1

    Was running windoz and got hacked. since reformatted. :)

    1. Re:I didn't do it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would want to put linux on those boxes quick. Maybe reformat a few times as well. KaZaA? What's KaZaA?

    2. Re:I didn't do it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That might make it hard for them to prove that you actually had those files.

  51. Re:Sad day ... Stephen King dead at 55 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh my God!
    They killed Stephen!

  52. If they pay by hrieke · · Score: 2

    do they get to keep their downloads or is this like a fine that one pays to a court?

    --
    III.IIVIVIXIIVIVIIIVVIIIIXVIIIXIIIIIIIIVIIIIVVIIIV IIVIIIIIIVIII...
  53. Good! by afidel · · Score: 2

    Keep copyright law where it should be, a civil matter. Why the heck the goverment thinks copyright protection should be worthy of arrest let alone jail time is beyond me. In most cases copyright infringement is just that infringment on someones rights as sole distributer, not theft, as there is no loss of goods to the victim. This strikes me as being the appropriate response to the matter.

    --
    There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
  54. Advice to edonkey (or emule) users by Cryogenes · · Score: 2
    eMule (the Free successor to edonkey) makes very efficient use of the bandwith donated by its users. Even if I share only a single moderately popular file (e.g. an Ally McBeal episode) my upload pipe tends to be maxxed out. Therefore, a user who shares one file contributes just as much as a user who shares a thousand . In fact, even more, because he generates less overhead.

    You should therefore radically reduce the number of files you share. The ideal situation is a net with ten million users each of which host exactly one file (popular files get hosted by more nodes than rare ones, of course). Let the RIAA deal with that!

    Do you believe in death after life?

  55. Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Drestin · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Ahh... the hipocracy begins to spue. I thought that P2P had legitimate purposes and that all the legitimate users would love it if the nasty abusers doing illegals things were punished and removed so that nothing would soil the pure clean image of P@P for ... um... legit uses, if we can think of some.

    BUT, putting that aside. Some points:

    Too all those "They can't make me pay cause I didn't sign anything" or "Go ahead, sue me for not paying the bill.": You guys missed the point. This bill is an option. They are being nice to you. They are saying; OK, look, you're busted and, deep inside, you know you are busted. We are giving you a chance to avoid court and make this go away as if you were legit. Just pay this bill and you won't go to court. Oh, don't agree? Want to deny it? Won't pay? Fine. We'll take you to court. Oh... NOT for not paying this bill. You are right, you didn't sign or receive a service for THIS bill. Nope, we're taking you to court for the copyrighted material you have stole and are redistributing.

    Too all the photoshop wannabe's with this: we could fake those screenshots. Do you honestly (stupidly) think that all they have are some dot-matrix printouts of some screen dumps? Think people. They probably had notarized witnesses present while capturing the data, or cops or the equivilent - for one. And they probably DID download the files from your computer and categloged them neatly with the IP your ISP DHCPed to you along with the records from the ISP where you dialed up from or which IP they gave to what MAC address on who's cable modem or what IP went to what DSL caller.

    People - listen. This is not a troll or flamebait. Remember something
    If you are not doing anything illegal - you have nothing to worry about!

    Obviously legal users of P2P networks aren't concerned, they are happy. All those bandwidth hogs trading illegal stuff are being forced off. This is a GOOD thing remember? You have said you actually want this right? How could you possibly complain?

    Before replying, think: only the thieves have anything to worry about - and you aren't a theif are you?

    1. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by blincoln · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you are not doing anything illegal - you have nothing to worry about!

      Yeah, because legal systems the world over are infallible and cost defendants nothing to participate in. Especially where large multinational corporations and their pseudo-police are concerned.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
    2. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by stoolpigeon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I agree with you for the most part but the bit in bold.

      A lot of innocent people are in prison right now. A lot of the people on death row right now did not commit the crime for which they will die. (This is a fact not my opinion- DNA evidence has proven this to be the case again and again.)

      I'm all for punishing people who violate the law but we must always watch the watchmen- for they are human and prone to fall.

      .

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    3. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Learn 'to' spell, fuckwit.

    4. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For what it's worth, I agree that this is an interesting (and favorable) turn in the P2P area.

      However, I think part of the problem people have is the question of athority. Typically here in the US atleast, a 3rd party can't bring charges against someone on behalf of someone else. aka, I can't prosecute someone for vandalizing my neighbor's property.

      That part asside, I'm sure they can get backing from many of the copyright holders - the other point is that it is NOT theft. It's copyright infringment. Theft is a whole different area of law, concerning property. Property is not something that's infinitly duplicatable. Data however is, that's copyright. Now whether sharing that data online like that is fully legal is yet to be seen in court, and the challenge is welcome.

    5. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Tackhead · · Score: 2
      > This bill is an option. They are being nice to you. They are saying; OK, look, you're busted and, deep inside, you know you are busted. We are giving you a chance to avoid court and make this go away as if you were legit. Just pay this bill and you won't go to court. Oh, don't agree? Want to deny it? Won't pay? Fine. We'll take you to court. Oh... NOT for not paying this bill. You are right, you didn't sign or receive a service for THIS bill. Nope, we're taking you to court for the copyrighted material you have stole and are redistributing.

      Then for Chrissakes why don't they just sue for $14,000 and when serving notice of suit to each copyright infringer, deliver an offer to settle out of court for $7,000?

      What you call the "nice" option - sending a made-up bill for services not rendered, payment of which will (assuming the Ubergruppenfuhrer of Copyrights doesn't change his mind after the check clears) somehow get the UoC off one's back - is very close to what I call "barratry".

      This isn't quite up there with threatening criminal prosecution in order to win a civil suit ("Pay up or we'll call the cops!"), which would be way over the line in my limited understanding of legal ethics, but IMNSHO it's pretty damn close.

      IANAL. Any American/Danish lawyers care to comment over whether the "pay us or we'll sue" (as opposed to "suing and offering to settle out of court") would be legal/ethical for an attorney practising in the States? Or Denmark, for that matter?

    6. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Woogiemonger · · Score: 1

      What about this defense? Umm, Your Honor? I had this worm/virus that I saw infecting my installation of Kazaa, forcing my computer to download lots of popular software via P2P networking. I deleted the files when I noticed this. Shouldn't happen again, unless I conveniently get that virus when need be...

    7. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      only the thieves have anything to worry about - and you aren't a theif are you?
      We're going to search your car randomly. What do you have to worry about? You're not breaking the law are you?
    8. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Mitreya · · Score: 1
      They are saying; OK, look, you're busted and, deep inside, you know you are busted. We are giving you a chance to avoid court and make this go away as if you were legit. Just pay this bill and you won't go to court.

      Ok, now the question that this brings to my mind -- who the f***k are they to bill me for infringing some third party's copyright? Article, at least, says nothing about them being hired by copyright owners.

      If you are not doing anything illegal - you have nothing to worry about!

      Ah, but it should be "If you are doing something illegal, you have something to worry about". The question of people who downloaded blank files remains... If I were to steal some free books from a bookstore, can I be fined for anything?? Even if I did mean to steal some valuable books?

    9. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by gl4ss · · Score: 2

      what i would like to know: did they contact the author/copyright holders of every song&movie they billed for, and is the billed money going to them.

      if not, they can go rot in the sea of dead weiners, and what i would really get kicks from would be some indep. artist suing them for billing for his work(hey, somebody might have renamed that artists songs to look like elvis presley mp3's). and since there's no list of the songs.. nobody can be sure even.

      they probably have the necessary evidence though, paper printouts of router logs is enough, to prove they were online & yadda yadda yadda. some serious issues may arise though, as they weren't notified until the bill came, and now they have plenty of time to erase their hd for good before the police raid that might come if they refuse to pay and the raid comes(oh, believe me, they would want those hd's examined in case of police action, and use that as evidence, if you're one of them, wipe your hd, get some old malfunctioning hd's in your case(for fun), and don't admit anything and read what confession they're getting you to sign)

      they aren't being nice. sending a notice would have been nice. now they're just enrolling some money to run the organization.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    10. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you never met a malicious person? Never been accused of something you did not do? When this experience came to me, I learned to fear kangaroo courts, and the laws that criminals hide behind.

      I have something to fear. I fear the long reach of the law -- not because I break the law, but because the law depends upon human interpretation and decisions. It is filled with mistakes and shortsightedness despite the best efforts of brilliant people. But I also fear a world without law, because I know malicious people, and some of those people know and do not like me.

      I do not have a solution to any of these problems, but I do have a voice and my thoughts. Complete freedom leads to anarchy, while complete control leads to governments that are more criminal than those they protect us against.

      Just some thoughts.

    11. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by m00nun1t · · Score: 1

      The system isn't perfect, I don't think any one is pretending it is. But should we stop jailing all criminals on the basis that every now and again someone innocent gets put away?

    12. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Cryogenes · · Score: 2

      I would prefer the word para-police here.
      Pseudo-police would be something that pretends to be police (but doesn't actually function as police). Para-police (like in paramilitary) is private organizations that functionally compete with the real police.

    13. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Mr+Rohan · · Score: 1

      Too all those "They can't make me pay cause I didn't sign anything" or "Go ahead, sue me for not paying the bill.": You guys missed the point. This bill is an option. They are being nice to you. They are saying; OK, look, you're busted and, deep inside, you know you are busted. We are giving you a chance to avoid court and make this go away as if you were legit. Just pay this bill and you won't go to court. Oh, don't agree? Want to deny it? Won't pay? Fine. We'll take you to court. Oh... NOT for not paying this bill. You are right, you didn't sign or receive a service for THIS bill. Nope, we're taking you to court for the copyrighted material you have stole and are redistributing.

      Of course they could just be relying on that technique used by many companies - especially insurance companies - bluff. Standard tactic 1 - send out a bill and hope that they are scared into paying it, costs nothing and maybe gets you some investment. Take them to court - now that takes a big investment for which you might not get much in return.

    14. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by blincoln · · Score: 2

      But should we stop jailing all criminals on the basis that every now and again someone innocent gets put away?

      Put away the straw man, please. I was attacking the asinine concept of "if you're not doing anything wrong, you have nothing to fear!" and nothing else.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
    15. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with you, but you did make a mistake. Copyright infringement is NOT theft. Theft is when I take another person's property and that person no longer has said property (because I took it). Copying is different because the owner still has the property, and are only out a potential sale. Both are illegal, (although the federal government has legalized theft as long as it is the perpetrator) but copyright infringement and theft are not the same thing.

    16. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by plasm4 · · Score: 0

      Even with all this evidence, you still might not have done anything illegal. Lets for instance you leave your car door unlocked and someone comes in and steals all your CD's. well since you already bought the CDs you can download them again all you want off p2p.

    17. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The system isn't perfect, I don't think any one is pretending it is. But should we stop jailing all criminals on the basis that every now and again someone innocent gets put away?

      Perhaps you should ask the innocents

    18. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by ebyrob · · Score: 2

      This bill is an option. They are being nice to you. They are saying; OK, look, you're busted and, deep inside, you know you are busted.

      Yeah. It's just as nice as when I offer (for a small fee of course) to protect small shopping centers in my neighborhood from being vandalized because I have "connections". It's also just as nice as sending a "bill" to someone I witnessed breaking into an apartment and stealing the TV saying if they pay up and put the TV back, I won't tell the apartment owner or the police. Extortion? That's just a dirty word. We're being "nice".

      The fact is these guy had no connection with the copyright holders. If these letters came from authorized copyright holders things might be a little different, but they didn't.

      If you are not doing anything illegal - you have nothing to worry about!

      That sounds like a phrase any inquisition could get behind. If this were a case to stand on, you wouldn't be listening to me list holes in it.

      People - listen. This is not a troll or flamebait.

      What could I possibly add to that?

      How could you possibly complain?

      Because how you enforce is just as important as whether you enforce. "Well captain, he was jaywalking, so I shot him. There was no question he was jaywalking. How could anyone complain?"

    19. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For you I say dont worry because it you the one not sharing that i have hacked and it you they are sending the bill

      I have executed more p2p on other peoples computers than you can shake a stick at.
      After all the song I want are downloaded I stop back by and pick them up.

      What Sucker fish

      Thanks all you windoz users for the bandwidth.
      Giving grandma a 3000 mhz with a 100 gig drive.

      I put it to good use.

      LOL

    20. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Happy+go+Lucky · · Score: 1
      I would prefer the word para-police here. Pseudo-police would be something that pretends to be police (but doesn't actually function as police). Para-police (like in paramilitary) is private organizations that functionally compete with the real police.

      That's exactly why "psuedo-police" is a better term.

      Unless something has changed, the RIAA does not employ anybody with the lawful authority to serve criminal summonses, execute warrants, make custodial arrests based upon probable cause for offenses committed outside of their presence, carry firearms concealed upon their person without a permit, et cetera.

      Nor does this Antipiratgruppen, unless something has changed. IIRC, Denmark is very restrictive on firearms ownership and most of Europe doesn't have citizens' arrest laws that we'd recognize as such in the US. I don't see them allowing some MADD-style busybody group to carry weapons and hook people.

      Granted, I'm speaking from a state that won't let ANY non-governmental organization commission peace officers. (Okay, railroads and the E-470 toll road excluded.)

    21. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Drestin · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Yeah, because legal systems the world over are infallible and cost defendants nothing to participate in.

      They made a mistake and handed you a "bill" that doesn't show your system but someone elses? Well, then - don't pay it. And if they try to sue you, you prove that it wasn't your system they are saying it is and you sue them for wrongful prosecution and get your attorney fees back and more.

      Again - common sense. They probably spotted a LOT more people distributing illegal files than they handed out. a ***LLLOOOTTT*** more - but they picked the creme of the crop. Probably picking those guys with fixed IPs who had thousands of songs that they actually downloaded dozens from on more than one occasion with a room full of witnesses to swear to it.

      They aren't chasing Joe Junior with an 8-mile soundtrack song - they are after teh guys with 1000s of *obvious* bootlegs that they can be 99+% certain of. They don't want this to backfire either so they are only going to pursue those they know they'll "win."

      Now - if you KNOW that they are handing you a screen shot of your own system - are you going to actually fight this? Could you be that stupid? They hope a few do, I'm sure, so they can make examples of them.

      I can imagine someone who says, "Screw this, I ain't paying" and who really is doing something illegal. They sue him and then tell him, ya know where we gave you the chance to get outta this at under $3 a song? Guess what - it's $250,000 PER Each violiation and lesse, in the 3 months we monitored you we saw at least 10,000 downloads so... you got a few billion laying around?

      I feel that at some point one of these music organizations is going to find some sucker with a penguin on his T-shirt and 30,000 MP3s on a P2P who, even through he knows he is caught red handed, will fight it in the forum of the EFF and Slashdot etc. And THAT will be the guy that the big time lawyers will say, ok, lets his him with the big one. Slam this guy and sue him for more than he's worth x 1000 and lets see how many others suddenly decide to fight.

      Think of it - you are a burgler. You go and steal something. The police show up at your door and whip out a video tape showing you actually doing it with your face smiling into the camera as clear as day. They tell you: "either you pay for what you stole and we completely forget all about you, or we throw your ass in jail without any plea bargin" - tell me which burgler isn't going to whip out his wallet and pay on the spot. He'll even ask them to take paypal!

    22. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Drestin · · Score: 2
      Lets for instance you leave your car door unlocked and someone comes in and steals all your CD's. well since you already bought the CDs you can download them again all you want off p2p.

      Huh? Show me that law!!

      So I buy a copy of software at the computer store. But it gets stolen before I can even remove the shrinkwrap. I can download it from a warez site and it's legit now?

      Dream on!

    23. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude.

      Using the 'redbaiter!' defense is really, really, old and really, really tired at this point.

      No, it's not at all like a 'protection' extortion ring.

      Think things through a bit longer before you make your next comment of this breadth. Right now you look like a damned teenager from what you've written.

    24. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Think of it - you are a burgler. You go and steal something. The police show up at your door and whip out a video tape showing you actually doing it with your face smiling into the camera as clear as day. They tell you: "either you pay for what you stole and we completely forget all about you, or we throw your ass in jail without any plea bargin" - tell me which burgler isn't going to whip out his wallet and pay on the spot. He'll even ask them to take paypal!

      There's a word for that kind of thing in most countries. It's called "taking bribes", and it's highly illegal. Remember, it isn't the police's job to determine punishment, especially not when it's in their own financial interest.

      And remember, in this case, the people demanding money aren't the people who own the copyrights -- a police force demanding money for their own interests. This is a problem.

      The police have one job -- to enforce the law. They are to do it, in an ideal world, completely impartially, and completely effectively, prosecuting all crimes to the full extent of the law. In practice, this doesn't happen, but that's not because it's not what should happen. In good countries, the police enforce all the laws they can, placing their greatest emphasis on the crimes that they feel are the most severe, like rape and murder, and lesser emphasis on lesser offenses, like jaywalking.

      It may be a good deal for the burgler, but it's a bad deal for society. No one wins when law enforcement stops doing it's job. Except possibly the crooks who pay them off.
      --
      AC

    25. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Before replying, think: only the thieves have anything to worry about - and you aren't a theif are you?

      omg I seriously hope that was sarcasm. Thats very much along the lines of if you aren't a criminal you have nothing to worry about which has been used as an excuse to violate basic rights. This is a very slippery slope and your rights will be next. how about if cops randomly searched your house ? after all you have nothing to worry about if you're not a criminal.

    26. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by ebyrob · · Score: 2

      sing the 'redbaiter!' defense is really, really, old and really, really tired at this point.

      So are phrases like this: If you are not doing anything illegal - you have nothing to worry about! I'll stop when the silly phrases stop, deal?

      No, it's not at all like a 'protection' extortion ring.

      Actually it very much is. If you'd read the article, you'd know that the 5 blokes sending out these "bills" had no affiliation with the copyright holders. If they had such affiliation things might be different, but alas, they didn't. (If think they did have such affiliation, say so, I'm not playing bugs bunny here)

      Heck, throw the copyright infringers into court for all I care, just as long as these Antipiratgruppen wind up in the same place...

      Think things through a bit longer before you make your next comment of this breadth. Right now you look like a damned teenager from what you've written.

      Hmm... I should make that my sig or something. Probably have to take out the part about breadth, being the narrow kind of guy I am.

      Actually, it's even writing this response that makes me look like a moron. I'll live with it somehow.

    27. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about the innocents that are affected by the criminals?

      It's not a perfect system, and innocents will always be affected. It's a matter of reducing that number as much as possible.

    28. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Splab · · Score: 1

      "And they probably DID download the files from your computer and categloged them neatly with the IP your ISP DHCPed to you along with the records from the ISP where you dialed up from or which IP they gave to what MAC address on who's cable modem or what IP went to what DSL caller. " No they didn't, because that would be entrapment or what ever thats called, and that aint leagal in denmark unless the possible sentence is abouve 5 years in prison, and sure as hell aint leagal for a privat company (The police has not been in on this) But you are right on the screenshot thing, but that doesn't prove anything but the fact that you have a file with that name, thats not enough to get you a sentence, thats why they didn't go and grap the users computer, they just don't have enough evidence, they count on the users to pay up and scare the living crap out of everybody else plus the publicity aint that bad for them. Now the comon users know that APG got some magic program that can tell who they are (IP, screenshots are waaaay to advanced for the common donkey) so they don't use p2p for some time. So all in all, APG actually got something good out of it, broke a few rules on the way, but who cares, no one is daring enough to complain.

    29. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IANAL, but this is a no-brainer. Pay us or we'll sue is the ultimate offer for an out of court settlement.

    30. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Reziac · · Score: 2

      So if you were in fact innocent and sue them for wrongful prosecution, even if the initial finding is in your favour, 10 years later the case is still in appeal so you've not recovered a dime, and meanwhile you've spent another $100,000 on legal fees while trying to get your original costs back.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    31. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by itsme1234 · · Score: 1

      And because in Europe you never know for what you have to pay. Let's take Germany for example: if you have a PC with a modem you have to pay the TV&radio tax (and is not cheap, something like 15$/mo.) ! If you don't read your mail and you get a form from "The office for statistical data" (www.hsl.de) you have to pay 75 EUR. The form will come again (with the bill) one month later. Forget to fill the form in time (and to send it back using your own money) ? Thats's another 150 EUR !

    32. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Seahawk · · Score: 1

      Indeed!

      Remember - there actually is a world outside the US, where the justice system works!

      I am 99.999% sure that our(the danish) courts wouldnt nail you if you were innocent...

    33. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by TraxPlayer · · Score: 1

      >They aren't chasing Joe Junior with an 8-mile
      > soundtrack song - they are after teh guys with
      > 1000s of *obvious* bootlegs that they can be 99+%
      > certain of. They don't want this to backfire
      >either so they are only going to pursue those they
      >know they'll "win."

      Well that is not true. One of the person who got the letter from APG (Anti-Pirat Group) had downloaded 5 songs and they wanted about 120 USD from him for these 5 songs.

      Also it is illegal in Denmark for APG to put files on Kazaa and make people download them. APG can't help people doing anything illegal if they want to
      win the courtcase.

      --
      If the code and the comments disagree, then both are probably wrong. - Schryer
    34. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by endeitzslash · · Score: 1

      People - listen. This is not a troll or flamebait. Remember something
      If you are not doing anything illegal - you have nothing to worry about!

      Who are you? John Poindexter? That's just the kind
      of attitude that leads to a well-surveilled police state.

    35. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by HiThere · · Score: 2

      You sound like a person who keeps his lawyer on a retainer, so it won't cost you any more than court costs, unless you need to appeal.

      But that doesn't describe most people. Most people would go broke trying to defend themselves no matter how good their evidence. So is it surprising that this kind of action is automatically hated? I know a doctor who is now living with his parents, his practice destroyed. And his parent's house mortgaged. And the case hasn't even come to trial yet, though it's been years.

      So hell, yes, I distrust the legal system. It's rigged.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    36. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by Omnifarious · · Score: 2

      So, would you say the same thing if the law said that you weren't allowed to talk about firearms? Would all those horrible nasty people who insisted on talking about firearms when the law very explicitly said they couldn't deserve as much jail time as they got?

      How about people who comb their hair wrong? If there was a law against that, would you be so bully about its enforcement. After all, the nice government has this wonderful law that says you aren't supposed to comb your hair wrong, and these awful criminals are violating it. They deserve a life sentence.

      The point is, that copyright, in its current form, is dead, broken, obsolete, pointless. It was largely an incentive to distribute anyway, and for many works, that incentive is no longer needed. Distribution is incredibly cheap. Less than a penny usually.

      Copyright is largely a subsidy to an industry that no longer needs to exist.

      Now, creators being compensated for their efforts is good. But, copyright, in its current form, is no longer the most efficient way for a society to do that. It deserves to be ignored. It is a useless relic of a bygone era.

      Your attempt to use the legality of an action is an intellectually bankrupt attempt to avoid having a conversation about the actual issue, which is whether copyright, in its current form, is worth having around at all. If you really are upset about the illegality of it, then why aren't you also complaining about all the people illegally committing sodomy, adultery and fornication. After all, those laws are on the books too.

    37. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by samdu · · Score: 2

      We'll have the government (or RIAA) install the video cameras in YOUR house first, then.

    38. Re:Shortsighted quick readers should not post by plasm4 · · Score: 0

      Show me that its illegal. You've purchased the CD. You can download the mp3s of it because you already own them. I have a win98 license in my drawer. I no longer have the CD for it. If I downloaded the software and used my registration key it would be legit.

  56. They should be called... by girish · · Score: 1

    The Danish Ass Pirat Gruppen...

  57. That's gonna make for some pissed off parents... by Yo+Grark · · Score: 2

    What is the legal right of a 13 year old?

    Are they holding the Parents of minors accountable?

    Are they providing cushions for the all the smacked asses they have caused?

    Yo Grark
    Canadian Bred with American Buttering

    --
    Canadian Bred with American Buttering
  58. Re:This is dangerous (ignore it!) by dagg · · Score: 1
    You can simply ignore it. There is no legal reason why you should pay it. But. They will likely sue you if you don't pay. And then you may be compelled to legally pay them money.

    --
    Sex of you

    --
    Sex - Find It
  59. Moderators: Parent= -1 Redundant by ectoraige · · Score: 1

    Not +1 Insightful.

    The Reg isn't about to be slashdotted, nor is bostom.com. Posting the text of a link is just wasteful, and makes my reading time slower.

    I will of course lose karma now, but at least I didn't +1 myself.

    --
    Vs lbh pna ernq guvf, ybt bss abj. Tb bhgfvqr. Syl n xvgr.
    1. Re:Moderators: Parent= -1 Redundant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well your post complaining about that post is taking up my read time! And my post complaining about the post you are complaining about....

  60. Easy by wantedman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You weren't the one downloading the movie/CD, you are legaly making a backup, and allowing other people who also own that movie/cd to get a backup...

    Everyone can make an MP3/divx, but not everyone understands it enough to make a good MP3/divx...

    Before user-friendly mp3 programs, I know lots of people who used Napster just for that...

    That would be the basic argument in the USA, I'm unsure about the Danish argument tho...

    1. Re:Easy by JordoCrouse · · Score: 1

      You weren't the one downloading the movie/CD, you are legaly making a backup, and allowing other people who also own that movie/cd to get a backup...

      That would be the basic argument in the USA, I'm unsure about the Danish argument tho...

      And at that point, when they drag everybody in, you simply provide a physical copy of the media for the court. The court says "Great. Next!", and everybody moves on.

      But, in the majority of the cases, people are actually stealing the content without owning a copy of the media.

      Just broad "what if" comments don't stand up, these days - either you have the physical media (and thereby the license to use it), or you don't. Simple as that.

      --
      Do you have Linux and a DotPal? Click here now!
  61. Re:Sad day ... Stephen King dead at 55 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You Bastards!

  62. Danish info by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apparently APG first hit down on eDonkey servers according to this discussion. They tracked users down to their IP number and made a screenshot of the material hosted on their computers. This information was enough for the main ISP in Denmark (Teledanmark) to give up personal information about subscribers.

    On a sidenote APG has gathered quite some attention in Denmark because of their agresseive tactic showing up at major LAN-parties, dorms etc.

  63. Danish users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quick- replace all file contents with /dev/zero and claim that you "made up" the files in order to get access to shares.

    It's not illegal to share filenames, is it?

  64. Let's bill them... by joebeone · · Score: 1

    We should have those p2p users bill the Antipiratgruppen for loss of fair use. Instead of doing calculations, you could just bill them what they billed you and ask them to call it even.

    1. Re:Let's bill them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what's the standard going rate for 'loss of fair use' then? And which of these p2p sharers were exercising fair use anyway?

  65. nobody read the article by phoenix123 · · Score: 0

    "In this case, we're talking about compensation for the damage the Anti Piracy Group claims its members have suffered. It's the courts that decide the amount of compensation to be paid due to copyright infringement, not the victim." said Martin von Haller Groenbaek, a Danish attorney specialising in IT law. - emphasis mine -

    I would hold on to this point. While the MPAA/RIAA can hack, whack or kill any copyright-offending citizen in the USA without needing to bypass stupid anachronistic hurdles placed by the nostalgic constitution, such as legal defense, courts, a fair judge or even a hearing of the suspect, its not the same in other places of the world.

    Accept this or face a massive bill for compensation of headaches reading your presumably totally wrong reply! :) - If you find self-defense actions like this acceptable, fine. But don't expect the world to be a better place afterwards. Be prepared for MS suing you to death because of compensation fees for bad-mouthing their cashcow-product. Hehe

    This reminds me of that cool game Syndicate, We aren't that far away anymore (Of course it was pirated, but sadly it didn't run under anything but pure DOS)

  66. Thats a lot of checks by Ironpoint · · Score: 1


    Its going to take a lot of checks to pay all those Danish artists.

    1. Re:Thats a lot of checks by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 1

      No, no!! They're going after Danes, not Czechs!

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
  67. hey cool by Fo0eY · · Score: 1

    so if I go collect a bunch of IP addresses of people I suspect are breaking a law, I can go to a danish court and get their personal information? unless they legally represent the labels, why shouldn't I have the same access this information as the anti-piracy group?

  68. Conflicting article? by Rader · · Score: 2

    I'm confused. It says that they were targeted for downloading a file. But then later in the article, it says that they were charged according to the files they shared.

    How are the 2 related?

    Not only that, but I thought that obtaining files was fine, but distributing them was not fine.

    Otherwise, if I was these kids, I would go buy every single movie and album that they ever downloaded ASAP. Can't get in trouble downloading something you already have, right?

    That's right, we don't really know. I guess it's time to go to court and then figure out the laws then.

  69. But again by Unknown+Poltroon · · Score: 2

    *I* am not the one copying it. I own it, i put it on my computer. *THEY * copy it by downloading it. The digital/analog copy dosent matter for this point.

    --
    All Troll + "offtopic" mods are meta moderated as "Unfair", because you abused the system.
  70. Hrm by autopr0n · · Score: 2

    Better then the american approach of having the FBI raid your house and confiscate all your computers, never to be returned...

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  71. $14,000? THAT'S CHEAP! by AtomicX · · Score: 1

    $14,000?

    It's probably still cheaper than actually paying for all the music they traded.

    If one person posts a single (worth £2) and 1000 people download it = £2000 lost, if that guy posts 8 or 9 singles then...

    In other news... New Kazaa Privacy options

    1. Re:$14,000? THAT'S CHEAP! by Peyna · · Score: 2

      It's not 'loss'. There is no right to profit. It might be potential loss, but you have no reason to believe that all/any who download would buy otherwise.

      --
      What?
    2. Re:$14,000? THAT'S CHEAP! by DarkSkiesAhead · · Score: 2
      $14,000?

      It's probably still cheaper than actually paying for all the music they traded.
      Uh, no. They were charged $16 per album and $60 per movie. I think they could probably find CDs and DVD cheaper than that.
  72. pay and delete? by DarkSkiesAhead · · Score: 2

    The users are charged about $16 per CD and about $60 per full length movie. If they pay now - and delete the illegal content from their hard drives - then the amount is cut in half and they avoid going to court.
    Hold on, they have to pay and delete the files from their harddrives? So, if you steal from a store you have to pay for the item and return it? That makes no sense. If they pay for the material, they should at least be able to keep it. Not that they should have to pay at all, but this seems even more rediculous.
    1. Re:pay and delete? by puppetman · · Score: 2

      I think the fine is more about the copyrighted material being shared.

      Joe has a copy of Star Wars on his computer, and gets caught. He will be fined $60 for it. No, he won't get a copy of Star Wars once Joe pays the $60. George figures someone out there has an illegal copy of SW that was downloaded from Joe's computer.

      It sounds like the fine is not for having copyrighted material, but rather for sharing it a P2P application.

      Just like the drug war, they are going after the distributors (dealers) rather than the possessors (junkies). Personally, I'm a junkie (metaphorically speaking).

    2. Re:pay and delete? by DarkSkiesAhead · · Score: 2
      I think the fine is more about the copyrighted material being shared.
      Wrong. Read the article again: "Then the bills were in the post ... landing on the mats of the unfortunate downloaders over the last few days."

      The fines are for material downloaded, not material shared. It would be different if APG had asked them to pay and stop sharing. But, that's not what they asked for.
  73. Hurrah! by mythosaz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let me be one of the first hundred people or so to say, "GOOD!" For far too long every post where anyone dares say anything that even remotely links P2P and piracy is instantly modded down and disagreed with under the guise of freedom.

    Well, it's not about freedom. It's mostly about stealing music and movies.

    People stole stuff, or at a minimum, engaged in the redistribution of it. Those people should pay.

    Break the law, get in trouble. Oh, and don't explain why it shouldn't be against the law, and how it's better for record companies for us to share music. That's a rationalisation of the sickest kind. It's still illegal, and if the people who do it could spent one tenth the time they spend stealing things actually trying to change the law and they'd get it changed.

    Nah, I'll keep stealing stuff until someone busts me.

    1. Re:Hurrah! by MarcQuadra · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Except it's not STEALING by LAW if it's just for my own personal use. Yes we're getting it without paying for it, but it's not the same as getting it without paying for it and then SELLING it. When you don't have a license to it all you can do is look/listen and pass it on, not make money off it. This is what the laws are all about, they were made under the assumption that the citizens have the right to access ALL the information and the copyright holder has the right to SELL it.

      --
      "Sometimes, I think Trent just needs a cup of hot chocolate and a blankie." -Tori Amos on Nine Inch Nails
    2. Re:Hurrah! by freeweed · · Score: 2

      For far too long every post where anyone dares say anything that even remotely links P2P and piracy is instantly modded down and disagreed with under the guise of freedom.

      I don't know what version of Slashdot you've been reading, but your very post (and many more like it) is modded up to +3.

      Break the law, get in trouble.

      I can't quite figure where this attitude is coming from lately, maybe the anti-60's backlash is still with us. Believe it or not, there are a great many unjust laws on the books. And a great deal more that have been removed over time.

      200 years ago it was legal to own slaves - does that mean it's ok? Whatever the current law says is right is what you should base your morals on? Try thinking for yourself once in a while, you may surprise yourself.

      --
      Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
  74. Here's a question by liquidsin · · Score: 3, Interesting

    IANADL (D is for Danish) but I thought theft was a criminal matter, not civil (especially in the ammount of $14,000). And if you just pay the bill, do you get to keep everything? If not, then it's not really a bill...more like a fine. Seems like they're trying to get the best of both worlds here...they want your money for things you allegedly owe them money for, but they don't want you to keep what you've now paid for. And what if someone disputes the validitiy of the screen caps?

    --
    do not read this line twice.
    1. Re:Here's a question by Snaller · · Score: 2

      IANADL (D is for Danish) but I thought theft was a criminal matter

      But since its not theft, but a copyright violation ....

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    2. Re:Here's a question by Happy+Monkey · · Score: 1

      IANADL (D is for Danish)

      Good enough for me!

      --
      __
      Do ya feel happy-go-lucky, punk?
  75. The Iron Curtain by Kirby-meister · · Score: 1
    I am one of the resident "computer guys" over at Virginia Tech. You wouldn't believe how many people have knocked on my door wanting to know why they've been served judicial referrals for file-sharing.

    During one of the monthly training sessions we have, we were located to the center of operations for our service in good ol' Torg. I noticed one of the posters there from the RIAA, saying, and I quote, "When you pirate MP3s, you're downloading COMMUNISM!" Here is the poster.

    So, in effect, this is just a post-Cold War effect of the Truman Doctrine to stop Communism from spreading into other European countries.

    1. Re:The Iron Curtain by ebbomega · · Score: 2

      Sweet! There's still a Communist party in Canada, which means Communism must technically still be legal! Noice! I can pirate to my heart's content!

      --
      Karma: Non-Heinous
  76. uh....what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How can they tell what individual people have downloaded? If they can tell that, hell, i don't want to use kazaa, too much pr0n!

  77. Re:I am an artist, and you WILL pay me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What would I search for on the p2p networks to get your stuff?

  78. No it isn't by Jumperalex · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The only problem is that they are NOT doing that. As it even states in the article (RTFA?) there appears to be no proof that the songs on those computers are illegal (ie they own the actual CD. They also make a mention that there doesn't appear to be proof that the files displayed on the screen are actually songs. That is of course a very "lawyer" thing to say but it DOES matter in at least US courts; but it isn't like it would have been too hard to at least check a few of the songs and try to get the judge to believe that if 20 out of 200 songs are real than the other 180 are real.

    But the important thing here is that they do NOT have any proof that those people are in possesion of the songs illegally. To my knowledge there is no law against posting your songs up on a network. [wait for the whole point] They could of course make a case that you are putting them up there with the express intent of facilitating piracy (ie Napster) but that isn't what the people are being charged ($$$) for since it would be a criminal charge not something they could send you a bill for.

    The individuals could of course say that it was simply the easiest way for them to make their own, legally obtained music available to themselves when not at home.

    No this is not what Slashdot has wanted all along. What we have wanted all along is for them to bust people who are DOWNLOADING / possesiing songs they don't have the licence to; versus the simple act of posting a legal song. Of course the "posters" who do so for profit should be shut down because no matter if they own a real licence to the music they do not have the right to distribute. That is the discriminator: you have no way to deny inent to distribute if you are engaging in the business of selling the data. Remember the rules of logic and debate in the court room are very specific compared to a conversation in a bar or a chat room. Afterall how do you think OJ got off??? :)

    Back to the point ... what I said above would include NOT busting me for downloading Metallica, Ride The Lightening because I do own that CD but it is scratched beyond repair. I legally own the CD and I have every legal right to have the song. The only gray area is who is allowed to provide me with the replacement data. It would be understandable for the publisher to want to charge me for the costs invovled with providing me the data again but certainly NOT to charge me for another licence. The key would be once I were to become in possesion of that data again, unless they observed me getting it they would have no way to tell if I got it from my own CD or someone elses, and it wouldn't matter if they did observe because they would have to prove I denied them revenue which I did not since I am in possesion of a legal licence. So far I know of no case law or legislation that would actually make me quilty of anything if I were to get a copy of that data from another legally licenced data source (aka friends CD).

    To put it simply ... we want our FAIR USE RIGHTS facilitated (not expanded) by technology not abridged by it.

    That is what Slashdot has wanted ... or at least my interpretation of the VAST myriad of opinions that should NOT all be lumped together as, "Isn't that what SLASHDOT has wanted."

    --
    If you can't be good, be good at it!
    1. Re:No it isn't by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 5, Informative
      No this is not what Slashdot has wanted all along. What we have wanted all along is for them to bust people who are DOWNLOADING / possesiing songs they don't have the licence to; versus the simple act of posting a legal song.
      Did you RTFA? They are going after the people who downloaded the files, not those who served them. The servers could be in a country with no copyright laws (and thus legal); they don't care about the servers, they're going after the downloaders. Hell, for all we know these clowns ran the servers (would that be entrapment?)

      Of course, as others have pointed out: 1) These guys are not the copyright holders and thus have no standing to demand payment, and 2) They have no proof that these are illegal copies. But what do they care? If I wasn't encumbered with ethics, I might try this scam myself. Then again, if I wasn't encumbered with ethics I'd be spamming you all with ads to my porn sites.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    2. Re:No it isn't by c.derby · · Score: 1

      damn.. and me with no mod points...

      you go boy! :)

      --
      -- derby
    3. Re:No it isn't by darf · · Score: 1

      IANAL, but I am fairly certain that you have to be a part of law enforcement to "entrap" someone. I do not believe that private citizens can be accused of "entrapment".

    4. Re:No it isn't by Snaller · · Score: 2

      1) These guys are not the copyright holders and thus have no standing to demand payment,

      They represent the copyright holders, they have been hired by them.

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    5. Re:No it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They also make a mention that there doesn't appear to be proof that the files displayed on the screen are actually songs.

      If I break into your home and steal your computer I am guilty of theft. Doesn't matter whether the computer works when I try to use it. Doesn't even matter if it's a picture of a computer and I'm too dumb to know the difference. I would still be a thief.

      No?

    6. Re:No it isn't by Jungle+guy · · Score: 1

      Sorry, dowloading Ride The Lightening AFTER you have scratched it is not fair use. You bought the CD, it was lost/stolen/damaged, it's your problem. If you had a personal backup, you could listen to the previously recorded CD-R and exercise your fair use.

    7. Re:No it isn't by Rader · · Score: 2

      Kind of reminds me of when Franco Begsbie from Trainspotting robbed the jewelry store with a rubber gun and just got costume jewelry...

      good times.

    8. Re:No it isn't by anno1a · · Score: 1

      When making these files available on a filesharing network it's resonable to believe that the intend is to share them. That is illegal.
      1) These guys are not the copyright holders
      These guys represent the copyright holders and thus have a standing to demand payment.
      2) They have no proof that these are illegal copies.
      No, but still, the users are probably illegally sharing the files (Nothing about that in linux you can disable the read flag, so no one can touch them. And as mentioned elsewhere the files may be fakes).

      What APG is doing is the same thing they have always done: They try to scare the users. They go after the weak, who think APG has a case against them. What they're sent isn't a bill, it's a settlement offer. Often for without telling the person what he will be sued for - you have illegal copies on your computer. Settle for this amount or we'll sue. AFAIK APG hasn't won one single case in court yet.

      --
      ------- I fumbled my registration and I now must suffer
    9. Re:No it isn't by Yottabyte84 · · Score: 1

      You are on crack, of cousr it's fair use to download MP3s of songs off CDs you own. Please back you your statments with reasoning.

    10. Re:No it isn't by Beliskner · · Score: 2
      I bought the CDs, ripped them to my computer, then I had an argument with my ex-girlfriend, she stole my CDs and I haven't seen her since, I didn't ask her name or address or anything, I just had sex with her. Her description - she's white and has big breasts.

      Only geeks argue over stupid unenforceable stuff, look at how the Jocks live, we live under their laws after all.

      --
      A caveman dreams of being us, the incalculable power and riches. We dream of being Q, then what?
    11. Re:No it isn't by Jumperalex · · Score: 1

      Where in the article does it say that they have proof that they downloaded the songs? AFAIK all they know is that the songs are on their computers and available over a peer-to-peer network. Without proof that 1) the actualyl downloaded them and 2) *** they don't have a legal license to the intellectual property in question ... they have no case for infingement. They only have a possible case for facilitating distribution of copyrighted works.

      --
      If you can't be good, be good at it!
  79. Re:Good on them! X0X by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yea, that's exactly the fucking type of response I'd expect from a real punk.

    ?

  80. Not quite... by sterno · · Score: 1

    What we've suggested is that they should use the existing laws to go after people who are legitimately stealing their products. In this case you've got an organization trying to extort money from people without any clear evidence that any of them have actually pirated a signel thing. If I shared thousands of totally legitmate files, I might still show up on their radar. Then my option becomes to either pay their fines or take the chance that I can win in court and that I won't lose more money there defending myself.

    What I'd like to see is them actually going to court with a list of specific files that a person shared that are all, in fact, a violation of copyright. If they can do that, then fine, do so and enjoy. That's not what is happening here.

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
  81. Hypocrisy Abounds by Apparition-X · · Score: 1

    The responses on this board baffle me. Sure, I expected a certain amount of resentment towards the RIAA or whatever acronym they adopt over there, but people here seriously need to redirect their vitriol. Sure, the record companies are a bunch of stupid Fscking dinosaurs who seem incapable of delivering their content in a way that most everybody here has been demanding for years. But... any this is a big but, just like mom told ya: two wrongs don't make a right. These people were busted. Done deal. People can make all the excuses they want, but it is 99% likely that these people never bought the CDs in the first place, actually downloaded the tracks in question, and where not "framed" or "photoshopped" into guilt. They stole. Now the people they stole from want them to stop it and cough up for their crimes. Good. Just because the RIAA doesn't do business the way that we want doesn't make it any less wrong for Danes to rip them off. I don't get it. Can someone here explain to me (using valid logic) why just because someone is a total dickhead (the RIAA) it is OK to steal music? Step right up...

    1. Re:Hypocrisy Abounds by CrackHappy · · Score: 1

      I've seen a couple of comments so far relating to the fact that if the actual copyright holders came forward and sued these offenders, or if this Danish organization turned these offenders names and evidence over to the copyright holders for suing, that it would be just fine.

      What I think some people are taking offense to is the fact that Danish organization which is threatening and invoicing these people does not own the copyrights! Where does this organization get the right to pursue other people for illegally downloading content? This is vigilantism, pure and simple.

      I personally believe that downloading music / movies, etc. is illegal, is justifiably illegal, and that copyright holders do deserve to be compensated for their works. Nor do I believe that just because those copyright holders cannot get their heads out of their asses and deliver their content in a sensible manner is any justification for stealing.

      --
      1f u c4n r34d th1s u r34lly n33d t0 g37 l41d Capitalization really works: i helped my uncle jack off a horse
  82. Free Music all you ever want by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, there are gazillions of fresh, highest quality free music and video that you can rip - all you need is a library card.

    Support your local public library

  83. Yessss!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I could do the same thing in the US and make a mint!

    \What are these guys doing with the money? Under whose copyright/authority are they suing? Is it just some random people suing other semi-random people and keeping the loot, or are they giving the cash to the copyright holders or what?

  84. Turnabout by 0x0d0a · · Score: 3, Funny

    Actually, send them an invoice for your time and upset in having to read an article about them on Slashdot. It makes as much sense as random organizations sending out bills to people, regardless of what the reason is.. You can even threaten to sue them if they don't pay up.

    1. Re:Turnabout by Afrosheen · · Score: 2

      And on that note, I think I can sue/bill advertisers on websites and spammers for wasting my bandwidth. I didn't request their service but they shoved it down my throat, so it's time for them to pay me back.

      Not only should the bill include time spent downloading images/junk mail but punitive damages for hurting my feelings. All those emails about viagra really made me upset. How do they know I can't get it up? How dare them! I'll throw in my bill for therapy as well.

      (note to trolls: I really can get it up, this is just a facetious example.)

  85. Excellent comment. by BitterOak · · Score: 2
    I wish I hadn't used up all my mod points earlier, or I'd mod the parent up. I was just about to ask the very same question.

    This is a very important distinction, because in America, I believe (IANAL, so correct me if I'm wrong), the AHRA allows downloading for personal use. The 9th circuit court of appeals stated (in the Napster case) that sharing isn't so protected because you are making the file available to a wide audience, but copying for your own personal use (which is what downloading is) is protected. Whether the same protection applies to movies or not is unclear, since I think the AHRA applies to music only.

    I know nothing about Danish law, so I don't know what their situation is, but I'd love to know if these people receiving bills are merely downloaders, or sharers, and which activity are they being billed for. Can anyone fill us in? The article is indeed self-contradictory on this point.

    --
    If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
  86. Danish copyright group sued by Music Industry. by Civil_Disobedient · · Score: 1

    Now, I might be missing something here, but it seems to me that the only way the Danish group could have actually verified that the music/videos/software was real, and not, say, a 3 meg renamed JPG file of goatse.cx, is that they actually downloaded it off the offender's hard drive.

    Is it illegal to have your own, legally purchased stuff on your hard drive? I don't think so. Is it illegal to share it? That's the question.

    "Sure I have it in my shared directory. I want to be able to access my music at my office."

    Now, the fact that this Danish organization downloaded some other person's files which they have not legally purchased would indicate that they are the actual copyright offenders here.

    Eat that!

  87. Re:I am an artist, and you WILL pay me. by Faggot · · Score: 3, Insightful
    You're not a real recording artist. I am.

    Know how I sniffed you out?

    I'm sorry, but the only reason I even bothered signing with a label was to SELL MY STUFF. Make money, that's all.

    There are *SO* many reasons to sign to a label!
    • they sell your shit (which you mentioned)
    • they distribute your shit
    • they promote your shit
    • they book your shit
    • they speak "on your behalf" in these kinda situations
    • etc.

    I mean, don't get me wrong. Even with all these advantages there are significant disadvantages:
    • you must sell or you are dropped
    • you get a fraction of what you'd make on an indie
    • you often end up owing the label money
    • occasional legal nightmares
    • etc.

    No actual recording artist these days is naive enough to think that labels are solely useful for printing and sales.
    --

    But what do I know. I'm just looking for anonymous gay sex.

  88. I'm guilty! Send me a bill by drayzel · · Score: 1

    I grab all sorts of junk from Kazaa. New release Movies and DVD's, music, eBooks, TV shows EVERYTHING.

    Why would I go buy this stuff? Most of it is CRAP. It's almost like a game for me, get as much CRAP as I can and then share it and see how fast my status can rise to 'Guru' or 'Diety'.

    Actualy it is even worse than that, I use Kazaa Lite so I don't get all those annoying ads popping up all the time. Not only am I stealing from the Media giants aI am stealing from Sharman/Kazaa.

    Humm.. I wonder if slash posts are admissable in court?

  89. How Can This Organization Sue? by kmactane · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I seem to recall that the FSF can only sue a GPL violator if the violation is on a program that the FSF has the copyright on. The general rule, then , would seem to be that only a copyright holder can sue for copyright violations.

    So, who the hell is this anti-piracy group? And what gives them the right to sue on behalf of George Lucas, Eminem, and Rockstar Games?

    If the Anti Pirat Gruppen had used their (admittedly quite reasonable-sounding) tools simply to report the violations back to Lucas/Eminem/Rockstar et al., and then let them sue, I'd have little problem with this.

    As it is, though, I can't help but wonder what Anti Pirat Gruppen is planning to do with the money. This sounds sort of like if I saw a burglar breaking into my neighbor's window, and I said, "Hey, buddy... tell you what, how about you climb back out that window now, and pay me $100, and I won't call the cops on you."

    I wonder if Lucas and the others have heard about this... and what they're planning to do to Anti Pirat Gruppen as a result.

    1. Re:How Can This Organization Sue? by Jugalator · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Exactly.. I'm 99% sure the artists won't get a dime from these bills. They mention Star Wars Ep 2 as one of the movies shared, but I don't think the APG will pay Mr Lucas anything personally. They're essentially living off the value of copyrighted material, and there should really be some law prohibiting this.

      I would surely understand this case better if the copyright holder sued.

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    2. Re:How Can This Organization Sue? by Snaller · · Score: 2

      So, who the hell is this anti-piracy group?

      They are the chosen representatives for the copyright holders in Denmark.

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
  90. You don't have to see the ads by myowntrueself · · Score: 2

    in kazaa;
    "How 'bout I send a bill to Kazaa for 'stealing' information about me that is used to provide ads that bother the shit about me? Oh wait, I can't threaten them with legal action like they can"

    If you have kazaa installed on a filesystem that supports permissions and you deny yourself write/create permission to the directories that kazaa stores its ads in then it can't show you the ads and doesn't complain.

    *zap* no ads in kazaa.

    Plus adaware can make the spyware safe.
    But remember, the procedure I describe here is purely cosmetic.

    Have fun!

    --
    In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
  91. blackmail? by Evil+Adrian · · Score: 2

    Pay up or we'll sue? Isn't that fucking blackmail??

    --
    evil adrian
    1. Re:blackmail? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it's just blackmail.

  92. Screen shost == great proof by janaagaard · · Score: 1

    From http://newz.dk/articles_item.php?id=100 (it's in Danish): It's true that's relative easy to fake some screenshosts. But really - how plausible is that? You would have to convince the judge that the loyer from AGP is responsible of document forgery, and that certainly wouldn't be an easy task. So the screenshots are actually a pretty good proof.

    1. Re:Screen shost == great proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Glitch in the program. Reported wrong IP. That ain't me. Meanwhile, all the other "evidence" is long gone.

      These guys are just another group of money grubbers. Even though the law may be on their side, they're sleazier than the "criminals" they intend to extort.

  93. Ontopic Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where can I get some good Danish porn mpegs?

  94. Are those civil or criminal charges? by Alex+Belits · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If they are civil, how an organization that is not in any way related to the original copyright infringement can seek any damages? Their lawsuit would be pointless, they have to go to original copyright holders and ask them to sue -- something that is very unlikely to succeed being a horrendous waste of money.

    If criminal, "anti-pirates" have obtained an information about alleged crime, and withholding it from authorities and demanding payment from alleged perpetrators to continue witholding it. Sounds like they have already commited a crime of extortion.

    I am not sure if Danish law works the same way, however those things are usually pretty similar everywhere.

    --
    Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  95. Nope by bstadil · · Score: 2, Informative
    Pay up or we'll sue? Isn't that fucking blackmail??

    No, threaten to sue is perfectly legal.

    --
    Help fight continental drift.
  96. Hypocrisy? How bout some rational thought? by ebyrob · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Certainly, go after the abusers. But don't expect to tread on law and common sense while you're at it!

    4 of my friends and I getting together and doing this in the USA would get us all thrown in jail for fraud. Why? Because I don't have any affiliation with the owners of the material that is being infringed. Sure, I could go out and gather information on everyone who is downloading or offering for download copyrighted information, but to actually use that information requires the support of the coypright holder. Basically, I can't sue you for infringing Eminem's copyright, only Eminem's label can bring that suit because they are the copyright holder.

    So, when these "university students" gathered all this infringement data, the first thing they should have done is contact the copyright holders to see what the copyright holders wanted done about it... Another alternative would have been contacting the proper authorities to have them bring criminal charges if any are warranted. Threatening the infringers before taking either of those actions is not "policing copyright". It's something else entirely called "extortion". Basically these guys are saying "We've got the goods on you, pay up or we'll tell." Last I checked, extortion carried a worse criminal penalty than copyright infringement.

    This isn't to say money couldn't be made by policing copyright. This very group could have done something much closer to legal by contacting copyright holders worried about infringement and getting them to bankroll just such an evidence gathering service. The data they've already gathered could even have ethically been offered free as a sample...

  97. And I bet I know where the money is *NOT* going to by solostring · · Score: 2

    ......the artists of the pirated material. Its amazing - another greedy bastard has found a way to make ridiculous money off of someone elses work.

  98. Irrelevant Whether It's Actually the Named File by jratcliffe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A lot of folks seem to be hung up on the "how do they know that "Half-Life.zip" is actually Half-Life, the game. Fact is, it doesn't matter. Under US law (yes, I know, it's Denmark, so YMMV, but I'm pretty sure the same holds), if you buy a kilo of powdered sugar from an undercover cop, you've just committed a drug crime, so long as there's reasonable evidence to indicate that you _believed_ that you were buying cocaine. By the same token, you'd have a hard time making the argument that you like to download files entitled real_slim_shady.mp3 because you like the name, but had no intention of actually getting an Eminem song.

    1. Re:Irrelevant Whether It's Actually the Named File by stud9920 · · Score: 2
      if you buy a kilo of powdered sugar from an undercover cop, you've just committed a drug crime
      Wrong. Under US law, cops cannot pull you to commit a crime. So, they cannot sell drugs or sex. They may leave a bait car for a thief to steal, but cannot put a "STEAL ME" sign on it.
    2. Re:Irrelevant Whether It's Actually the Named File by lightspawn · · Score: 2

      By the same token, you'd have a hard time making the argument that you like to download files entitled real_slim_shady.mp3 because you like the name, but had no intention of actually getting an Eminem song.

      This file exists on my hard drive as a kind of protest, see. I hate people stealing music over P2P, so I have lots of files that seem to be stolen music but are actually a couple of megabytes worth of silence.

      If you didn't download my files, you can't tell whether I'm stealing music or protesting the stealing.

    3. Re:Irrelevant Whether It's Actually the Named File by jratcliffe · · Score: 2

      Entrapment is an entirely different issue, I'm talking about the question of whether the files downloaded actually need to be the programs/music files/movies the titles claim they are. If you walk up to a guy on the street, and say "I want to buy some cocaine," and he hands you a cellophane packet of white powder, and you pay him, and he turns out to be a cop, you're guilty, regardless of whether the packet contains cocaine or baking soda. The fact is, you _thought_ you were buying coke, and that makes you guilty, even if you actually bought baking soda.

    4. Re:Irrelevant Whether It's Actually the Named File by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      That wasn't his point.

      If some crack dealer sells you a phoney rock and the two of you get busted during the deal, you're in trouble, even though it has no cocaine in it.

  99. odd by SHEENmaster · · Score: 1

    Notepad and ~/ in the same sentence!?

    Please, no karma whores replying to this with advertisements for wine; we have enough drunk developers as it is!

    --
    You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
    1. Re:odd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Notepad and ~/ in the same sentence!?

      Ever heard about Wine?

      Please, no karma whores replying to this with advertisements for wine; we have enough drunk developers as it is!

      *phew* Luckily, I made an advertisment for the emulator Wine, not the wine you can get drunk from.

      tee hee

  100. Re:I am an artist, and you WILL pay me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Aha! Neither of you are! I am! HAAHAHAHAA!

  101. Using old propaganda to illustrate NEW propaganda by cryofan2 · · Score: 1

    Uh...no. The poster draws on the rather obvious propaganda posters of an earlier era in order to make a point that nowadays the media is being used by the RIAA et al in order to spread a new type of propaganda, a type of propaganda that aims to infect minds with the idea that file sharing is evil, or something like that.

  102. Not exactly what I wanted by Anenga · · Score: 2
    I mean, going after those who actually possess and distribute something that they have not legally purchased? Sounds legitimate to me.

    I think your a little confused. I thought that "Slashdot" wanted the people who burn the stuff and sell it on the black market (who earn profit off of piracy) to be caught and thrown in the slammer, not "innocent" P2P nodes.

    Actually, what I would like to see is a 11 year old minority girl who has random MP3's of her favorite American artist (of which her and her minimum wage working class parents can't afford to pay for the overpriced CD's) to be thrown in jail. Once that gets released to the press, it will destroy the RIAA/MPAA.

    If that happened, I predict a private concert for the girl by her favorite artist and a basket of free CD's on the TODAY Show or something :P

    Then the RIAA would creep back into the dark corners of the corperate industry and never bother "poor innocent P2P nodes" ever again, and perhaps actually think up a better buisness model instead of throwing of thretening and throwing their customers into jail.
    1. Re:Not exactly what I wanted by Jace+of+Fuse! · · Score: 2

      You're kidding, right?

      They'd laugh at their victory and then move on to others just like the little girl. They could give a shit less.

      After all, this girl's minimum wage working class parents weren't doing too bad. The girl had a computer, didn't she? If she has a computer, she can afford CDs even if it means she has to save for them.

      Not being able to pay is not a valid reason to steal. So your example girl that is stealing music is in a sense "wrong", if there is such a thing as right and wrong anyway.

      On the other hand, being greedy cocksuckers isn't a valid reason for the RIAA to steal from artists, either.

      --

      "Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"

      Moderation Totals: Wrong=2, Stupid=3, Total=5.
    2. Re:Not exactly what I wanted by Robert+The+Coward · · Score: 1

      I don't known about Danish law but in the US the person that would be screwed is her Poor parents they are the one who would be forced to pay. It does raise 1 Questions how is RIAA and group like it around the world going to deal with the fact that most of the people that are doing fileshare are not adults but teens many under 14 which means that you can't be consider an adult in most states. They will most likely go after there parents for not controlling there children but that could get really ugly which is why the RIAA hasn't been going after the sharing in the US.

  103. Danish copyright law by Inf0phreak · · Score: 2, Informative

    is downright weird. Get this: I may go to the library and borrow a CD, make a perfect digital copy of it at home and take the CD back to the library. I may also borrow a CD from a friend of mine and make a copy of the CD. However, I may not receive a copy of said CD from my friend. The difference is that in the last case I had "outside help" in copying the CD. Thus, it wouldn't save my a** a whole lot to show up in court with the physical media and pointing to it - it would still have been illegal. On the Danish site Newz.dk a couple of guys have pondered if they should make a few "APG target marks" consisting of files like "Harry Potter CD1.avi", "LOTR_TTT CD2.avi", etc. containing nothing but junk data or something they have a legitimate right to distribute (Linux ISOs might be great for this. They are the right size too ^_^). It would be interesting to say the least to see APG look real stupid in court then.

    --
    ________
    Entranced by anime since late summer 2001 and loving it ^_^
  104. Re:And I bet I know where the money is *NOT* going by Jugalator · · Score: 2

    Yeah, I think the time has come for some laws protecting from non copyright holders sueing others for violating laws and gaining the profit themselves. About as bad as the piracy itself IMHO.

    --
    Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
  105. It's from screenshots of what they're sharing by janaagaard · · Score: 2, Informative

    According to a posting by an eDonkey user who got busted (edonkey2000.dk/phpBB/viewtopic.php?t=4117 - it's in Danish), the screenshots are of the files you're sharing. eDonkey has a file listing feature, so you can check out what the other clients are sharing.

    It seems to me that it's that it would be pretty hard for APG to find what you're sharing or downloading if it wasn't for the listing feature, unless they're willing to set up a client or a server and start sharing illegal stuff themselves. So that's one more reason to use eMule in stead of eDonkey, since it let's you disable the file listing feature. ;)

  106. illegal by whose standard? by linuxislandsucks · · Score: 1

    Most countries that signed the geneva convention for copyrights woudl agree that the DMCA is illgeal subjecting them to a treaty they did not sign or law..

    --
    Don't Tread on OpenSource
  107. nostalgia by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 2

    I'm thirty-(mumble) and married, etc. My parents recently gave me three garbage bags full of old cassette tapes that I'd left at their house aeons ago.

    Among the gems, a tape of some favorite LPs! But for a crackle or two, "perfect", er, analog copies :) (Actually, only one crackle that my ear could detect. The copies are perfect from my point of view)

    They were albums that a high school friend had owned. I think the bands in question withstood my "piracy" and survived for years. Certainly the record companies in question did ;)

  108. P2P Needs to Get "Corporate" by BlackBolt · · Score: 1
    Every P2P download should have a EULA stating something like:
    The file I am about to transfer is from one computer I own to another which I also own. I am not transferring this file to another individual, but from my server to my workstation. I am merely using this P2P network to accomplish my file reorganization. This is a legal and ethical use of this peer to peer network. Also, please note that I am in the habit of naming my personal, encrypted accounting files after Metallica songs, so they are easy to remember and will confuse any hackers trying to access my finances. I am not worried that anybody would mistake my personal files for actual Metallica songs and download them, because as everybody knows, Metallica sucks. This makes these files totally unappealing and therefore they are left alone. Since they are encrypted, I claim the protection of the DMCA. If you try to run these misnamed "mp3" files in any application other than Quicken (for the Macintosh of course), you are in violation of the DMCA and will be punished to the full extent of the law.
    Well, it could use some work, but there's got to be some sort of legal disclaimer that protects the masses against people who pry into your business.

    Okay, chop me to pieces, I'm ready.

    BlackBolt
  109. Oops... by EllisDees · · Score: 2

    Someone evil hacker must have broken into my computer and illegally installed that file sharing program. Windows *is* known for its weak security, you know. How can I possibly be liable for what a hacker (and weak windows security) did with my computer?

    --
    -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
  110. Not this shit again! by RatBastard · · Score: 2
    When you infringe on a copyright, you are depriving no one of anything but just that -- a copyright.

    No, you deprive the rightful/legal owner of the copyright the revenue that illegal copy would have bestowed upon them. That is why it is considered theft. That's why it's not only illegal, but immoral.

    --
    Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    1. Re:Not this shit again! by ctxspy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Although it may have gotten lost in the translation to the digital world, legally speaking, deprivation of potential revenue has always been a difficult thing to prove, and was never the same thing as theft.

      And why drag morality into it?

    2. Re:Not this shit again! by Bouncings · · Score: 2
      On the contrary, the basic notion of theft is the deprivation of a scarse good. Because information is not scarse, it is not theft. It is a crime indeed, but it is not legally the same crime as theft, nor is it ethically the same crime as theft. If it WERE the same crime as theft, the Constitution would have been drafted to define a copyright as such -- but it didn't.

      As for "morally" -- morals are arbitrary, so perhaps it is against your system of morals. But most morals are either based on ethics or religion. There is no mention of copyright in any major religion, so copyright infringement is not religiosly immoral. Most systems of ethics attach something to owning the right to copy works, but none of the mainstream ethicists have made the leap from copyright infringement to theft.

      So you're pretty much on your own on both regards. There's the rest of the world's opinion, and then there's yours. Hm.

      --
      -- Ken Kinder ken@_nospam_kenkinder.com http://kenkinder.com/
    3. Re:Not this shit again! by Snaller · · Score: 1, Troll

      -When you infringe on a copyright, you are depriving no one of anything but just that -- a copyright.
      No, you deprive the rightful/legal owner of the copyright the revenue that illegal copy would have bestowed upon them.

      No, you haven't understood. The law does not agree with you. When you STEAL something you have 100% take deprive someone of thing. When you copy an mp3 you have deprive them of NOTHING. Because they person might NOT have bought it.

      That is why it is considered theft.

      Its only considered theft by those of low IQ.(or low moral)

      That's why it's not only illegal, but immoral.

      It seems the immoral part is keeping wanting payment for the same job over and over...

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    4. Re:Not this shit again! by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 2

      Yes. And when I simply choose not to buy their products, I deprive them then, also.

      When I don't close out my savings account, and send the RIAA a cashier's check for the complete amount, I also deprive them of this money.

      As a matter of fact, right now I am depriving close to 6 billion people an almost infinite amount of money, whether or not I have it to give. Because wheen people are allowed to fabricate fictional sales, then accuse me of somehow thwarting that sale, I then owe them that amount, no matter what, right?

      Copyright doesn't bestow any revenue at all. You have some really twisted morals, not to mention an RIAA lackey's understanding of the law.

    5. Re:Not this shit again! by Dirk+Pitt · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Sorry to enter the fray so late, but this post smacks of convenient rationalization, to say nothing of bad spelling.

      If we want to talk about software IP rights in terms of 'ownership' and 'theft', we can define theft in terms of the unwillingness of the owner to part with what is rightfully his. We can then argue the 'rightful' part of this argument relative to IP, but applying the term theft is perfectly reasonable--in terms of whichever of the *thousands* of defintions of 'theft' you'd like to argue. ('Piracy', no matter how misapplied a term, has become a defacto term. There's no more use arguing it than arguing that your neighbor's hot tub isn't really a 'Jacuzzi')

      I agree that this isn't necessarily a moral discussion, but one of laws--although I question your assertion that morals are arbitrary. This again sounds like convenient justification.

      The bottom line is, if you're a US, British, Canadian, Russian, or one of any number of citizenry, you're obligated by the laws of your country to respect copyright, patent, and other IP-related laws. If you don't, you hurt the people that depend on these laws to make a living. If you don't like the laws, go lobby against them!

      I work as an application developer. I'm not a rich man, I'm just a normal guy making a decent living. The team I work for _depends_ on people adhering to these laws to generate revenue, which ultimately generates my paycheck. If the laws change, hey, I'll go find something else to do. Consulting sounds interesting. In the meanwhile, every company that steals our software and can't think beyond convenient, bullshit semantic arguments against copyright laws puts another one of my team closer to the reduction-in-force list. You live in a country that enforces a system. You profit from the system. Respect the system until you can legitimately effect change in it.

      But hey, these labels like 'piracy', and 'stealing', are inaccurate and heinous, right? So you'll just do your part for the cause not by some active means, but just by copying the occasional CD or app. They're just bits and bytes, words on a page--it's not hurting anyone--right?

    6. Re:Not this shit again! by Bouncings · · Score: 2
      Here's the basic, simple justification as to why copyright infringement and theft are unrelated: theft has always beem a crime. It's not a tort, or an unpaid bill, it's a crime. In the case of copyright infringement, criminalizing is a recent development of the last century.

      If copyright infringement is and has always been theft, how come it has only been a tort for most of its existence?

      --
      -- Ken Kinder ken@_nospam_kenkinder.com http://kenkinder.com/
    7. Re:Not this shit again! by aeschenkarnos · · Score: 1

      Any religion that works on the basis of dissemination of belief is pretty much against the notion of copyright, unless there's a specific priest class who have the sole right to teach the religion.

    8. Re:Not this shit again! by DEBEDb · · Score: 2

      Well, US Constitution gives Congress the
      right to regulate Copyrights. It then
      is perfectly constitutional if the Congress
      equates it with theft (provided it's for
      a "limited time", the only contraint
      IIRC).

      --

      Considered harmful.
  111. Killing the internet by theolein · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I don't download stuff from Kazaa, Gnutella or even Limwire because I don't have them installed on my computer for one, and don't have the time to do this. But I must say that when I read things like some big organisation suiing the hell out of some teen or twenty year old (for whom $14000 is a hell of a lot of money) then I realise why I dislike the internet more and more. I remember working in an internet agency in the napster days where my coworkers downloaded about 200 Gigs of CD's in a couple of months and nobody really cared. Those were young guys who didn't really have the money to spend on dozens of originals, and they were fun, nice people and we had a good time listening to good music while coding websites for our soon-to-be-bankrupt agency. The net was fun and interesting. There were thousands of interesting sites and nobody was all too worried.

    With the crash of the internet boom and the lack of cash, it seems as if all the ugliest bunch of greedy scum has crawled out of the woodwork to try and resttrict peoples lives and freedom so that they can rape them for as much money as possible. Christ it's like big brother in 1984. They watch everything you do, strip you of all your privacy and then have the fucking balls to pretend to be righteous about it as well.

    Perhaps some time we'll have the last laugh...

    1. Re:Killing the internet by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Yep.

      Reality hit, just like slamming into a brick wall driving drunk in daddy's Mustang.

      The joy ride is over.

      Doesn't mean life won't go on, though.

    2. Re:Killing the internet by marko123 · · Score: 1

      Without being a killjoy, 200GB of bandwidth could send most struggling companies broke.

      --
      http://pcblues.com - Digits and Wood
    3. Re:Killing the internet by rolfwind · · Score: 1

      It's not their intention, it's too scare other downloader scared running to the hills, these people are just being made examples of, that is all there is to it. It's too much hassle to go after every pirate, so they'll figure to scare most people away from the dealers so to speak, instead of arresting the dealers themselves. I'm sure they won't care about the money itself, just had to make it big enough to get people crapping in their pants.

    4. Re:Killing the internet by theolein · · Score: 2

      It did help :)

  112. Not quite. by mindstrm · · Score: 2


    The AHRA states that making recordings of copyrighted material using certain methods is not actionable in and of itself. You can't be charged with making a copy of a CD with your DAT player. That's a separate issue from whether copyright violation occurred... it's about the actual tools and items in use and whether such use is legal.

    You can copy for personal use, yes, but not when the original material is not yours to copy in the first place (as it would be if it was illegally distributed).

    1. Re:Not quite. by BitterOak · · Score: 2
      As to your first paragraph, you are correct in that the hardware you use to make your digital recordings must conform to the Serial Copy Management System in order for you to be protected under the AHRA. However, as far as I can tell the only evidence in this case is download logs, so I don't know how they would know if you are recording the music using an SMCS compliant device or not.

      As for the second paragraph, it is simply not correct. The AHRA exemption for personal use copies does not require that you own the original copy.

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
  113. Antipiratgruppen is representing by SigveK · · Score: 4, Informative
    In short, they are representing most of the record labels, virtually all danish musicians and performers, music distributors, games and movie makers and distributors. Translated from antipiratgruppen.dk: The music industry is represented in the group by
    • IFPI - The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry
    • NCB - Nordic Copyright Bureau
      Quote from the site:
      The transfer of rights to NCB is organised in the following way: rights owners in the Nordic countries and the Baltic States transfer all their rights to the national performing rights society. This society administers the performing rights and transfers the mechanical rights to NCB. Thus, NCB represents virtually all copyrighted music in the Nordic and Baltic areas in connection with recording and the manufacture and distribution of copies of recordings.
    • DMF danish site - Danish Musician Union. some english info
    • DAF - Danish Artist Union
    In addition, the members of APG is
    • MUF Danish site - Multimedia Union, which represents makers and distributors of computer and console games
    • FDV - Union of Danish Video distributors, which by large is local branches of the major movie companies or their danish representative

      So this is basically a group representing many, if not all copyright holders for the material in question

  114. This won't be the last case by Trogre · · Score: 2

    We'll be seeing more of this as the corporations struggle to maintain their dominance.

    They won't be around much longer, as their business model crumbles, but for now we still have little alternative. A few good independent music sites that run on a donation basis, but nothing has made it 'mainstream' as far as I know.

    The problem is that it's idiots like copyrighted-file-sharing p2p users who provide ammunition for the RIAA, MPAA etc to put anti-piracy measures in place, and make all us anti-DRM people look bad.

    That just ruins it for the rest of us who legitimately copy media for personal use.

    --
    "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
  115. Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I knew the Danish were poor but.. wow they must be broke.

  116. Pay now, and save 50% by Mighlo · · Score: 1

    Funny thing is, AGP allowed for a 50% discount on the fine, if people payed up instantly.

    This sounds to me like they dont exactly trust their own evidence, and hope to bully people into paying.

  117. APG and their reputation by Inf0phreak · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Antipiratgruppen (in Denmark often reffered to as APG - or AGP by morons who can't tell the difference between an organization and a hardware interface...) has a pretty bad track record with respect to their ability to abide by Danish law. My personal favourite examples of their behaviour are the following two (restated here to the best of my recollection - any fellow Dane may correct me on the facts as best s?he can):

    1) They at one point were questioning a 14-year-old boy without calling his parents and without him having a lawyer present (in case you are wondering - Danish law does not allow for this).
    2) They showed up at a private appartment or house with a court order (most likely gotten from a technologyimpaired judge), entered the suspect's house, and then proceeded straight to his PC where a "computerexpert" (whatever that means) proceeded to look through it for illegal materials. This was done without the suspect was allowed to watch what they were doing (which he is entitled to according to Danish law).

    It should be obvious that APG is loathed for their methods, not for their goals. Most tech-litterate people agree that it is fair that they attempt (and most often fail) to stop copyright infringement, but we (I like to consider myself tech-literate, yes) feel that it is a shame that the Danish media doesn't take a more critical stance towards APG. Basically, they print/run whatever propaganda APG has manufactured about their latest bust, unless some other organization (like the public office for consumer rights (Forbrugerrådet)) raises questions.

    Personally, I am of the opinion that they should just roll over die if they refuse to change their methods (and I just don't see that happening).

    --
    ________
    Entranced by anime since late summer 2001 and loving it ^_^
    1. Re:APG and their reputation by The+Bungi · · Score: 3, Funny
      This is interesting but in most modern democracies (method of government to which I assume the Danish subscribe) search warrants have to be obtained and served by members of the Judicial branch... are these people part of the police? The army? Non-profit organization? The Danish Boy Scouts?

      If not, I hope the RIAA doesn't try the same tactics over here... instead of meeting Mr. Joe The Pirate (arrr matey!) they'd have a rather grave encounter with Mr. Remington the .12 Gauge Shotgun.

    2. Re:APG and their reputation by Inf0phreak · · Score: 1

      It is possible for them to get a search warrant in a civil matter, but it (like in criminal cases) has to be very specific as to what is to be searched, when it is to be searched and who is to be present at the search. (This, I believe, is written in the American constitution as well - although it has become rather insignificant as of late with the post-9/11 anti-terror laws). Also, an officer of the court (Fogeden. I have no idea on what that would be equivalent to in USA. I suspect you have no such thing.) has to be present.

      --
      ________
      Entranced by anime since late summer 2001 and loving it ^_^
    3. Re:APG and their reputation by adb · · Score: 2

      The US has the concept of an "officer of the court": it generally includes everyone from the judge to the clerks, cops, and so on. It usually seems to include all lawyers in the state as well, and to require one to be truthful and forthcoming in court and to report certain facts. But mileage varies from state to state, apparently.

  118. Some questions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some questions:

    (1) What will this anti-piracy group do with the money they collect? How do we know that they're not just going to spend it on hookers and beer?

    (2) What process will ensure that each entertainment company gets their equitable share of the money collected? For example, do Sony's laywers know that there's some Danish company that supposedly has the legal standing to collect revenues that are due to Sony? What kind of input have Sony's lawyers had into this collection process?

    (3) Is there any provision in Danish law that gives this company the legal standing to collect these revenues? Does Danish law even allow this kind of fee to be collected?

    (4) Who invented that $16 per CD fee? Where is the breakdown analysis of that fee? For example, does it take into consideration the fact that some downloaders may have already purchased the CD?

  119. We'll Sue! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Pay up, or we'll sue!



    What are we going to see?

    Antipiratgruppen v. 201.12.3.56
    1. Re:We'll Sue! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good idea... they sue... we /. the shit out them!

      Mwwwuauahahahahahahaha!

      >:-)

  120. Are you sharing them with Kazaa? by RatBastard · · Score: 2

    They were looking at machines running P2P software, Kazaa (sp?) in this case. If your MP3s/OGG files are not being shared they don't care about you. (Yet.)

    --
    Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
  121. They paid for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shouldn't they be allowed to keep the items they downloaded after they pay for them?

  122. Copyright Filenames? by limekiller4 · · Score: 2

    The article states, in part:
    "APG monitored the file sharing networks for available files with Danish IP addresses - and went to court to get the users' personal details from their ISPs, armed with screen shots of, for example, the KaZaA window showing the files on the user's hard- drive."

    First, since when did naming a file after a popular song become illegal? Second, were the files checked to make sure that the associated file did, in fact, violate copyright? Third, did the people submitting these screenshots swear to the authenticity of the screenshot (ie, not forged)?

    --
    My .02,
    Limekiller
  123. ownership by scottp · · Score: 1

    From the article: "How do you know each of these copyrighted materials is illegal? That's the big issue here," said Urs Gattiker, a professor of technology and innovation management at Aalborg University in Denmark.

    Did they go to each of the people they billed and MAKE SURE they didn't own the material they are accused of downloading? Or was it the ole "Well he's downloading stuff off Kazaa/eDonkey he's got to be doing it illegally" assumption? I'm not for it (piracy), but the RIAA/MPAA, & other agencies, should quit whining about it and quit trying to stop it (it ain't going to happen).

    What did Harry Potter make it's first weekend? $87.7 million? What about Eminem's new cd, 8 mile? Sold like 1 millon copies first week and still going strong? Didn't both of these items SET records? Yea, try to say P2P is hurting the industry. The RIAA/MPAA slit their own throats and continue to do so with outrageous prices for cd's and movies.

  124. Bring on the flames by pacnudge · · Score: 1

    All the excuses for piracy (for want of a better word) seems to be "I think that the goods are over priced therefore I will just take them". I think coke is over priced but this would not justify me just go into a store and take one. Someone owns that music because they created (and marketed etc) that music and you are stealing from them taking it without their permission end of story. If you do not like the conduct of the record and movie companies there is an easy remedy DO NOT BUY (OR USE) THEIR PRODUCT. Also this is not a civil rights issue, no one has died from not seeing the latest star wars movie. NOTE : I am talking about P2P sharing of music and movie here not personal use. The people using P2P networks to share music know exactly what they are doing.

    1. Re:Bring on the flames by adb · · Score: 2

      Oh, just shut the fuck up. If you can't bother to examine even the factual parts of the opposition's arguments (to start with, copyright is a government-granted monopoly, which may or may not be a good thing but is sure as hell not a generally acknowledged moral right), then you don't get to play. The discussion of whether and when that monopoly is a good thing is where the bit about "overpriced goods" comes in.

      Become literate in this discussion and try again. Alternately, if you're a troll, grow up; parrotting a genuine naive viewpoint (if one rather painfully so) is a boring troll.

  125. Re:That's gonna make for some pissed off parents.. by RatBastard · · Score: 2
    What is the legal right of a 13 year old?
    Not a hell of a lot.

    Are they holding the Parents of minors accountable?
    I would assume so. Parents and/or legal gardians are responcible for the actions of minors. This case would be no different.

    Are they providing cushions for the all the smacked asses they have caused?
    Yes. Nice $14,000.00 (US) cushions.

    --
    Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
  126. WTF? by greymond · · Score: 1

    "Question is: if the APG has only the file names from KaZaA or eDonkey - how can it make sure that they really are illegal files and not only "similar named files" or hoax files? Can APG prove that is the work of a certain user in a household - or will it go for the entire family? "

    Not to mention what if you own the cd and just wanted the mp3's?

    This article seems brief and probably BS, but if it is true they shouldn't have posted such a short blurb. The article doesn't tell me much. - aslo how did they get screenshots of the users downloading the files unless the users submitted there screen shots - which would be fucking dumb on there part?

  127. Accepting that copyright violation. . . by kfg · · Score: 2

    is a form of theft, just for the sake of argument, the term 'piracy' would still not apply. The correct term would be, oddly enough: theft.

    Nobody has jumped aboard your property, not even your landbound property, cutlass firmly clasped in gnashing teeth, and robbed, burned, pillaged, raped, or otherwise commited various violent felonius acts.

    Nobody 'pirates' an apple from a street vendor. They steal it. Period.

    Of course that's just for the sake of argument. There is a difference between a crime and a tort. That's why most countries have a distinct division in the courts between wrongs that are criminal and wrongs that are civil.

    For wrongs that are criminal you owe the state a penalty, most often taken as incarceration. For wrongs that are civil you owe the wronged party money. You owe the state nothing. Note that Danish party feeling they have been wronged threaten a civil suit, not arrest. The simple reason for this is that *nothing was stolen.*

    They may well have been deprived of a right, but they were NOT robbed.

    Why, because in any civilized society such wrongs are not criminal.

    When you infringe on a copyright you invoke a debt to the copyright holder. That's all, just a debt. You have taken nothing from them, you have deprived them of nothing other than monies which *should* have been due to them. You did not raid their cash box and remove funds from it.

    Ethically, morally and legally you have done nothing worse than not pay your phone bill. At least by the legal tradition prevailing in most countries.

    When you take the services of the phone company and do not pay they have the right to seek redress. That redress is generally limited to the *actual debt* and perhaps a bit for expenses. The offense isn't even a tort ( such as wrongful death). It's just an unpaid debt. Period. There are legal limitations on the collection of unpaid debts, as there should be.

    Of course in their current religous zeal to protect certain special interests who, by law, don't actually deserve such protection, the American Congress had recently made various aspects of copyright and patent violation actual crimes. This turns all of legal history and philosophy on its head and is, well, criminal.

    KFG

  128. This is one of the guys..... by TomMajor · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is one of the people presued by the APG. He calls himself Siffan and he runs a danish website. Unfortunately his website: http://www.siffan.dk/ is mainly in danish.
    He has written his version of events that happen when the APG came with the courtorder.

    In short, it goes something like this: The APG came with a courtorder to see if he had an eDonkey-server up and running on his computer. They tell him he has the right to a lawyer and the presens of the police. He tells them that there is not running an edonkey server, but ther was some time ago...

    The AGP has an "IT-man" with them... he is allowed to look at the computer to see if there is a server running (according to the courtorder) He agrees with Siffan, but then he browess through his harddrive and finds illegal software and mp3 files... Siffan was not comfertable with this,and points out that most of the mp3s are legal copies of his own cds. but agrees that he has illegal stuff on his computer and desides to be cooperative. Now AGP wants to take his computer with them. Siffan now says he wants a laywer, he is not able to get one a the pressent time, but the APG will not delay the case to the next day. So it ends with the APG straling off with his computer and some cd's.

    The next day a lawyer representing the APG calls him and ask him to give up his right to have the case tested in a civil court or he will sue him within 14 days.

    That is about it. It's late and I'm tired... But I hope you find this intresting.

    --



    Ask me no questions, and I'll tell you no lies...
  129. TROLL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Noose For A Neck is a troll. Read his previous posts. my favorite is when he says that "there is X-Windows, which is the UNIX equivalent of Microsoft Windows, but it can't run over networks like Windows can (it's fairly new and still a work in progress)" convince you? now mod him down.

  130. See the light by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder when people (non geek people) will start to understand the anti-piracy groups trying to destroy the technology are only trying to lessen exposure for unsigned bands. Free advertising works both ways. They dont want you to hear what they havent bought and watered-down yet.

  131. All a bit sad really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well I find the whole thing a bit sad really. I have to feel a bit sorry for people that have gotten themselves into real trouble by serving other people with misguided community spirit, particularly when the materials they are serving are in the most regurgitated acoustic tripe that was created with about 3 minutes of 'artistic' effort (perhaps a week if the 'artist' is genuinely thick as two short planks) and usually sounds as if it has been computer generated.

    Hopefully they and others will in future help to support Indie bands/artists who either sell their material cheaply or distribute it freely and with thereby hopefully drop CD sales even further. Because in the end making music isn't rocket science and now distributing it isn't costly either, there are tens of thousands of equally 'talented' musicians out there and people shouldn't be putting themselves at risk of prosecution from a cartel of powerful distributors and multi-millionaire pop faces by illegally copying transitory junk.

  132. It'll never work by grundie · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What I see happening here is a classic example of scare one and the rest will follow. I don't know much about Danish law, but I will assume it is roughly similar to other European countries. If all they have to go on is screen grabs of files names, then the don't have a leg to stand on, like the expert said without access to the alleged offenders computer they are largely unable to prove the case.

    Also consdider where the files came from. If they have screen grabbed an image of what is in someones share list, all that proves is they have a file called 'such and such' on that users HD. If the user downloaded a file from another user and APG had some way to monitor that, then that probably breaches all sorts of privacy and computer misuse laws. But, if the user had downloaded the files from computers belonging to AntiPiratGruppen then you are getting in to the realms of entrapment, plus you must ask if AntiPiratGruppen wasn't breaching copyright itself. All this is speculation, but it leads me on to an important point.

    It is certain some of these 150 so called 'Pirates' will pay up. They might not pay the full amount, they may negotiate a lower price and it will be because they are scared of what AntiPiratGruppen may or may not do to them. Once one person pays up APG will shout that fact from the roof tops and it will no doubt have the effect of scaring others in complying with the wishes of RIAA/BSA/FACT etc and leave P2P well enough alone. Effectively they will be using bully boy tactics to succeed. Regardless of your view on the legality and morals of P2P, you must admit this is a not a good thing as it sets a dangerous precident if it works.

    1. Re:It'll never work by Yotus · · Score: 1

      For about a year ago the AntiPiratGruppen visited a LAN party in Denmark and busted them.

      They had some insiders to the party and they were connecting to some ftps and taking screenshots as evidence.
      When APG then came they headed to the people who were running these ftps and took their machinery. Some from the crew got busted too and this incident has caused the organizers of danish LAN parties to be extreme aware of this issue, because the organizers had to pay a lot of money to APG because it was on their network that the pirating was happening on.

      They are trying to scare the "small" pirates, but IMO it's the wrong people they are after.

      --
      Just because I ROCK; it doesn't mean I am made out of stone!
  133. Entrapment Issue? by Inhale · · Score: 1

    For these people to record who was downloading the files, they would have to offer them up in the first place for download. Isn't this a form of entrapment?

  134. It's not what I wanted by twitter · · Score: 4, Insightful
    It's true that I wanted normal copyright laws enforced rather than the creation of newer more restrictive laws. This represents neither. According to the Register Article, this FreeBooter group is charging people for having downloaded the files reather than uploading them. Mark the difference. Publishing is what violates copyright, owning it does not. Just where the line between sharing and publishing is is another matter. Is this where our new laws is taking us?

    Let's take a trip down memory lane. Me making a copy of a CD for a friend technically violates the copyright, but only the dumbest and most opperesive states would bother to enforce it. What monetary damage was done by my "perfect" seleveless, artless copy for my friend? Generally zero as my friend would never have bought the thing in the first place but has an inferior copy which might lead him to buy the "real" thing. We could walk further down that road to tapes where courts upheld your right to do just that. We could go even further back before acid paper and comercial pulp printing and find much weaker copyright laws. We could go back even further and find that for the majority of human history writers expected no finicial reward for their efforts and considered it an honor when others would publish their work.

    What I see comming is some awful invasive world where others think they have a right to search my personal effects at will. They have screen shots of the victim's computers? They must have been windoze users, but the precident is disturbing. Suppose my ISP is pressured to not allow connection from "insecure" platforms that do not allow such spying? Well, screw that. I don't go places where people treat me like a criminal. I'm not intersted in RIAA music, I never ran Napster, nor have I ever fooled around with newer music sharing junk. I want to share my own work, not that of others. These jackasses seek to prevent others from publishing their own music. If they get away with it, soon other forms of publishing will be prevented. We are on the road to Tycho.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:It's not what I wanted by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Clearly, the issue is, we are going to hell in a handbasket because people are getting in trouble for distributing copyrighted material illegally.

      Furthermore, we all log onto slashdot so we can rant and ramble and rationalize why it shouldn't be illegal, etc. etc. and come up with excuses and reasons why it isn't illegal anyway and shouldn't be wrong, etc. etc. etc.

      *yawn*

    2. Re:It's not what I wanted by Zocalo · · Score: 2
      They have screen shots of the victim's computers? They must have been windoze users [min.net], but the precident is disturbing.

      Not necessarily, since it's KaZaA they are talking about. The client is Windows only, but does run through WINE on *NIX, so the majority of users probabably were Windows users. However, just because they were Windows users does not mean the boxen were compromised in any way. Try pointing a web browser at port 1214 on a box sharing files with KaZaA (http://<IP address>:1214/) and you get a nice list of all the shared files in the form of clickable links.

      I *never* install dubious software without running some packet captures on a test box first! That means YOU, Microsoft. ;)

      --
      UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
    3. Re:It's not what I wanted by Ost99 · · Score: 1
      Let's take a trip down memory lane. Me making a copy of a CD for a friend technically violates the copyright, but only the dumbest and most opperesive states would bother to enforce it.

      In Denmark (or Norway) this isn't illigal (yet?). As long as your friend owns a licenced/legal copy, he may give you a copy, you can make a copy or a third party may make a copy for you as long as it isn't done for profit. You cannot do this with your unlicensed (but still legal) copy. This applies to music and movies etc in Norway, but not programs / games. I don't know if it applies to more than music in Denmark.

      This is a right WTO is trying to force the scandinavian governments to remove. Last I heard Denmark was considering extra taxes on CDR/DVD media to compensate the hungry multinationals, in Norway the laws will probably be changed to criminalize this form of cultural exchange.

      In Denmark (and Norway) copyright is limited to (at the moment):
      * Sole right to profit from distribution of the work
      * Sole right to mass distibution
      * Sole right to any form of distribution IF: the work has no CULTURAL importance (ie. computer program)

      - Ost
      --
      ---- Sig. gone.
  135. that article is crap though by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

    Or at least as far as the sensationalist headline goes. That was a case of a gunman going into a place where people were counterfiting DVD's and selling them for profit, *not* a bunch of young people sitting around downloading stuff off of Kazaa. It was simply a case of a ciminal breaking into a place where other criminals were making money, then stealing that money.

  136. Screenshots? by grub · · Score: 5, Interesting


    Any defense lawyer worth his weight in golfballs would demand proof that the screenshot was not doctored with a graphics editting program.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:Screenshots? by TomMajor · · Score: 1

      I think they meen screenshots of the search result on theire own pc(The APG's pc that is)

      --



      Ask me no questions, and I'll tell you no lies...
    2. Re:Screenshots? by Hektor_Troy · · Score: 2

      And that would prove what? Remember - this is a civil case; there is no jury, and you're innocent until the judge thinks otherwise.

      I've gotten a court order to get the ISP to hand over your address, so getting them to hand over some simple statistics shouldn't be too hard either.

      According to the screenshots, you have 600+ music files shared along with 200+ movie files.

      According to the statistics from the ISP, your connection has rutinely been used to send an amount of data that corrosponds with one of the shared files size.

      Neither may be direct evidence, but they'd be pretty convincing circumstatial evidence to me.

      Oh - and in case you're wondering, 1) I'm Danish and 2) I don't like what APG is doing either. But that doesn't mean that they don't have a case.

      --
      We do not live in the 21st century. We live in the 20 second century.
    3. Re:Screenshots? by Reziac · · Score: 2

      And even if you can prove that -- now prove that it wasn't a screenshot made on a system set up to provide the desired screenshot. (Maybe a reason to severely customize your desktop.)

      This whole thing smacks of privateering (if we're going to call copyright infringers "pirates", we might as well extend the metaphor).

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    4. Re:Screenshots? by Penguinoflight · · Score: 2

      Yeah, that and he'd know how to spell editing!

      --
      "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
      1 John 4:14
    5. Re:Screenshots? by grub · · Score: 1


      Yeah, that and he'd know how to spell editing!

      yeah yeah, spelling flames.


      "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World" 1 John 4:14

      Fuck your christian mythological delusions.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    6. Re:Screenshots? by reflector · · Score: 2


      According to the screenshots, you have 600+ music files shared along with 200+ movie files.

      According to the statistics from the ISP, your connection has rutinely been used to send an amount of data that corrosponds with one of the shared files size.

      Neither may be direct evidence, but they'd be pretty convincing circumstatial evidence to me.


      well, then you haven't thought this through thoroughly enough. you can't tell just by a file name and file size that a given file is a copyrighted work or a derivation thereof. 'star wars.avi' could be the copyrighted movie, or it could be a home video parody i made of star wars.

    7. Re:Screenshots? by Penguinoflight · · Score: 2

      Dude, it was a joke :-)

      Mythological... explain.

      Anyway, what's your religious belief? you obviously have one by your sig.

      By the way, I could come up with a lot more aggressive bible verses, Just want to be a small light so people can ask questions, or rethink their life for a sec.

      --
      "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
      1 John 4:14
    8. Re:Screenshots? by grub · · Score: 1


      My apologies on that. Rotten yesterday and I took it out on a stranger.

      Religious beliefs? If they could prove any facet of any religion with hard facts then I'd have some. ;)

      --
      Trolling is a art,
  137. Sorry, but money changes laws.... by Rai · · Score: 2

    And who has more of it--RIAA or young people?

    1. Re:Sorry, but money changes laws.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People change laws. Money only influences people. People still have the ability to stand up and fight.

  138. Slashdot group disclaimer. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually I want to add to this. The majority here are not lawyers in any capacity, and the advice you see here reflects that fact. There's a reason it takes several years to be a lawyer. And no Websters(TM) isn't going to make anyone an instant lawyer. If the "/." are going to be true to what they profess to believe (the results of a "/." poll come to mind)? Then they need to have a firmer grasp of both the legal, and political system. A court, nor a politician is going to be impressed by your ability to yell at the top of your voice "I want my rights!", or "You evil people are taking away my rights!". The opposition has a firm grasp of both processes, and the results reflect that fact. The "/." wants to change things? Then drag yourself out of your self-imposed isolation, and study the law and politics with the same fevor that you devoted to technical issues, otherwise you'll lose face when you complain about the results..

    US Legal resource

    Danish law in english

    Foregn law resources

    US guide to Denmark

    The US political process & advocacy

  139. Except smartass.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The most obvious answer is to stop pirating. A person can come up with all of the self serving rationalizations that they want, like "I wasn't going to ever pay for it anways" or "the industry charges too much", but in the end, you obtained material that is explicitly protected and must be obtained through a legitimate sale in an illegal manner. Pay up.

    What most Danes download are american TV series! which are not broadcast locally. Most of which you CAN'T buy, on tape or DVD.

  140. Reasonable amount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is money a person could actually pay off eventually.
    It is also enough so that it would hurt most of these peoples economy.
    And basicly you are responsible for what the computer is sharing that is on the internet under your name. Because most of these people probably have a contract saying something like "everything I share on the internet can be used against me in a court of law"
    This isn't of course going to kill off the supply but long term it may kill off the demand as people don't want to pay up $14,000 each time they share adobe or whatever.
    This would however have been a quite interesting case in the wonderful US of A with scores of people filing for personal bankruptcy after getting hit with a $200,000 for doing the same thing. Yay for greedy lawyers and a screwed up version of the sue system.

  141. Screenshots? by LPetrazickis · · Score: 1

    This doesn't seem to have been asked yet, but how did they get these screenshots? Did they social engineer their victims into installing some sort of spyware? Is that a built-in KaZaA function?

    --
    Is this a sigs-optional kind of place? 'Cause I am totally down with that if you know what I mean.
  142. Um, what? by DigitalDad · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Wouldn't this be a form of extorsion? I mean, how the hell can they prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the "screenshot" they have are of...

    - illegal copies
    - files intentionally put up to share outside the contrtaints of acceptable use
    - actually the movie / mp3 / warez and not a zip file containing data files

    Beyond this, how hard can it be to make a Photoshop special containing a different ip!? Gimme a break.

    Each case that I can think of should be able to be argued in court. Maybe someone heard of this fancy new software (Kazza, whatever), loaded it to see what the fuss was about and never uninstalled it while all the time it's in the Windows startup and showing fully legal software / programs or mp3's. Many people I know install software unaware of what it's actually doing and never uninstall it.

    In my eyes this would be similar to someone looking in my parked car window and casually wondering if they could get away with stealing it, but not attempting to. Oh, and no, I don't use any P2P software.

    This just sounds like some company crying wolf, getting sympathy from the courts and digging their failing business out from Chapter 11 by padding their wallets with law suits.

    --


    My good sig is in the laundry
  143. Pay up AND DELETE !!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WTF is that, pay for the content and delete it ??
    Wow that is a great deal...Gotta love that set up...Soon to be picked up here by some bright Asslicking Law firm...

  144. Re:I am an artist, and you WILL pay me. by droopus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nice post. I agree by and large.

    * they sell your shit

    Yep, they arrange with both brick and mortar retailers (B&N, Tower, HMV, Sam Goody) and digital retailers (Amazon, CDNow) globally to put your music in their bins. Now, how good your placement is, how much in store advertising you are given is based on how much your label likes you, and how many CDs you'll probably sell. Moby? Front and center. End caps. Posters. A "rub Moby's bald head for luck" cardboard cutout at the door.

    Fluffy and the Puffboys? 2 CDs in the "F" bin.

    * they distribute your shit

    Well, they sign with distributors, but ok, they manage your distribution.

    * they promote your shit

    True, but again, the amount and energy of that promotion will be very different for Linkin Park than for up-and-coming punk band Pus Casserole.

    * they book your shit

    Touring? Don't you have a booking agent? A sponsor? You might think about that.

    * they speak "on your behalf" in these kinda situations

    Again true, but the RIAA is much more of the "industry voice." And yeah, label attorneys are typically pretty good.

    I mean, don't get me wrong. Even with all these advantages there are significant disadvantages:

    * you must sell or you are dropped
    * you get a fraction of what you'd make on an indie
    * you often end up owing the label money
    * occasional legal nightmares


    These are minor to you? As I said, I spent fifteen years in the business, and I know of a few multi-platinum artists that either never recouped, or have such gargatuan legal bills that any profit is long gone.

    Here's another one for you to ponder (and reply to if ya like.) Whose count do you accept when royalty time comes along? Every six months I get at least twenty phonebook sized royalty statements, telling me how many copies of a particular album sold in Burkina Faso, Singapore, Trinidad and Tobago, South Africa, Israel, Anguilla, yada yada. I get an equvalent sized package from my publisher, with similarly arcane Excel effluvia. I think I read one once. Reversed, they make wonderful scratch printer paper, but otherwise, they mean little to me (except for the attached check which is always disappointingly low.)

    I wouldn't even know where to go to get an independent auditor but I know of a few bands that did, and let's say...their figures differed from the publisher and label. A lot.

    Basically, the labels/publishers tell you how many sold, and the band usually has to take that word as gospel. You comfortable with that?

    In short, while there are big issues, I think labels DEFINITELY have a function. MP3.com proved that mass Internet distribution is a joke. The labels may have an 85% failure rate, but they are damn good marketers, and Kazaa would be much less popular without BMG music.

    What films do people request on IRC film channels? The ones all over TV and print advertising. What CDs are most anticipated by the unwashed masses? The one's most heavily marketed. They watch the QT trailer for Nemesis with drooling glee. They hear a new Korn CD is forthcoming on radio and TV. And what do they say?

    "Hey I gotta download that when it comes out."

    Labels and film studios are neither anachronisms or useless. They still serve an essential function, and you're right - no signed artist would think that their label is merely a manufacturer.

    Things have to change, but labels aren't going anywhere.

    --
    "The pie shall be cut in half and each man shall receive.....death. I'll eat the pie."
  145. Except... by Snaller · · Score: 2

    Nah, I'll keep stealing stuff until someone busts me.


    Its a copyright violation, not stealing.

    --
    If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
  146. This is extortion by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    IANAL, but

    They do not have the right to take matters in their own hands. The court system is not a tool to be bargained with, and I am sure a judge will see things cleared up. You should even be able to get a nice compensation for being threatened.

    Take those letters to the police NOW.

    And the best part ? Extortion is a criminal offence (it is here). The person who sent those letters is personally liable. If you get the police on his tail, he has a chance of finding himself in prison for a few months (and for the very least you could get his computer confiscated and his house searched), and he will have to personally foot any bills the court grants you (and if the company pays them, they will have to pay big money on taxes for doing that).

    That $14000 is much better spent on a lawyer, in my opinion.

    Keep in mind that they play this by the numbers, if a sufficient number of people move against them, they will lose money on this, and the court will not let them make "examples" of anyone.

    BTW do not forget to tell newspapers, magazines, as well as anyone who cares (and a few who don't) about this. Because we live in a democracy and a LOT of people use kazaa ;-).

  147. Who they are... by Cheese+Cracker · · Score: 2

    "Who are they screw-heads, and why should I PAY them?!"

    They're representing the Danish record industry as well as individual artists... in other words... they're about the same as RIAA, but in Denmark.

    Why should you pay them? Ask yourself why anyone should have to pay for things you try to sell?

    1. Re:Who they are... by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 2

      If you aren't getting the things from me, you shouldn't have to pay, period. Regardless of whether I sell such. And as long as you aren't actively selling those things things in a retail or wholesale way, I don't care, EVEN IF I do own the copyright.

      That's why Walmart is the #1 retailer, they (for the most part) don't bother selling things that every highschool student in the country can give away infinite copies of, for virtually no cost.

      Then again, I'm not some fuckhole corporate entity, trying to exact some quasi-tax on everyone even though I serve no useful purpose whatsoever. In some countries, you pay them even when you don't use any of their "product".

      Someone please tell me how many legal/managerial jobs there are in the recording industry, vs. how many 'performer' jobs. Then explain to me what the hell it is that they do, that makes them think I should care whether or not they starve.

  148. Re:I am an artist, and you WILL pay me. by Snaller · · Score: 2

    Faggot wrote:

    You're not a real recording artist. I am.

    Michael J.? Is that you?

    --
    If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
  149. But what's the overwhelming threshold? by Travoltus · · Score: 1

    If all 150 users decide to fight it in court, this will certainly prove to be painfully costly for even an antipiracy organization.

    And if they win against all of THESE people, p2p users / pirates are not the type you scare away by making an "example" of. Everyone knows you can't kill 'em all. They'll keep coming - and they already do.

    If this "making an example of" strategy worked, dissidents in China would have shut up LONG ago...

    --
    --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
    1. Re:But what's the overwhelming threshold? by Rader · · Score: 2

      I think the point of the parent's post is that the APG would only pick one person to sue.

      It's not about the money. It's about scaring file sharer's. And if they can get one case to stick, make an example out of hir, then the next batch of letters they'll send out will probably be more than 150, and the return %% of money for payment will probably be higher, AND people will start dropping from P2P.

      So to repeat... Let's say all 150 don't pay. (Doubtful, but for this example) The APG isn't going to go "aw shucks" we didn't get any money. They're going to pick the best case they have and sue them.

  150. if you do need to pay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ask for help online.. I'll give you a dollar, and if everyone else does.. you'll be able to counter sue them

  151. Is it just me....? by filmsmith · · Score: 1

    Or was anybody else distracted when 'quilty' popped up?

  152. clear cut case... by MORTAR_COMBAT! · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... of extortion.

    A company cannot send you a "bill" for a contract you never signed, stating "pay up or else". This is not an electric company talking about getting reimbursement for an unpaid bill. This is a company with which these people have no agreement sending them threats which amount to, "give us money or else".

    A straightforward company would simply inform the police if they believe these people to have committed criminal acts and the culprits would be arrested, or simply serve them a summons in the case of a civil dispute.

    --
    MORTAR COMBAT!
    1. Re:clear cut case... by Enfors · · Score: 1

      Not exactly. What you say would be true if they tried to *force* people to pay the bill. They don't.

      They have every right to sue right away. But instead, they choose to be nice and offer the offenders to pay up to avoid being dragged off to court. Therefore, it's not extortion.

      Let's make an analogy:

      You sell your car to a buddy. Said buddy refuses to pay after you give the car to him. So, you say, "pay for the car, or I'll sue you". Is that extortion too? Ofcourse not.

      Ok, I'll admit that this analogy isn't 100%, since in the case of a car sale, there's an agreement, which there isn't in the case of downloading copyrighted material. But still, I think the analogy is useful for comparison.

      --
      -Enfors-
    2. Re:clear cut case... by TraxPlayer · · Score: 1

      >A straightforward company would simply inform the
      > police if they believe these people to have
      > committed criminal acts and the culprits would be
      > arrested, or simply serve them a summons in the
      > case of a civil dispute.

      It is not a police case but a civil case and therefore the APG can't just go the police.

      --
      If the code and the comments disagree, then both are probably wrong. - Schryer
    3. Re:clear cut case... by MORTAR_COMBAT! · · Score: 2

      They have every right to sue right away.

      Yup, they have every right to sue right away. They have no right to send people threatening letters, demanding cash.

      What you say would be true if they tried to *force* people to pay the bill. They don't.

      What do you call the threat of a legal battle against a multi-million dollar corporation with lawyers on retainer, and politicians in their pocket? That is force.

      --
      MORTAR COMBAT!
  153. They're not being "billed" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These p2p users aren't being "billed", they're being threatened with a lawsuit and offered settlement terms.

  154. interesting name... by Tomble · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    by 'Lose' Not 'Loose' on ...
    Somehow, I suspect that somebody somewhere really has a grudge to bear with all this :P
    --
    Be careful! New moon tonight.
  155. Re:And I bet I know where the money is *NOT* going by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

    another greedy bastard has found a way to make ridiculous money off of someone elses work

    You mean, like the people who (erroneously) thought they could get away with that and invested in Napster?

  156. Obligatory Onion Link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If only you knew the truth.

  157. Tsk, Tsk, TSK! by thegnu · · Score: 1

    You right bastard!

    --
    Please stop stalking me, bro.
  158. The RIAA is winning the war by Coward+Anonymous · · Score: 3, Insightful

    From reading through some of the posts it appears the RIAA is already winning the war. No one appears to find the implied illegality of copying a file in your possession an incongruous proposition anymore.
    This is the core of the issue, not "pirates" or "artists" or other fictions. The problem with the RIAA and its discordant crusade is the fact that it runs against a widely accepted social norm - I have the right to copy my files. This is where the RIAA is weakest and is the only avenue for its defeat. If this idea is forgotten, the RIAA wins. Everyone else loses.

  159. Young people have *much* more money by Gorimek · · Score: 2

    Young people, as a group, have much more money than RIAA and it's members. I mean, RIAA gets pretty much all it's money from perhaps 1% of the money spent by those young people.

    Now, since RIAA is a concentrated and organized special interest that can get very good return on every dollar spent lobbying, while young people who donate money to the other side simply lose that money, RIAA spends a lot more on lobbying, and have more political influence.

    It's the same as how many other small special interest groups control things at the expense of much larger groups. Search for "public choice theory" for an economic theory background.

  160. Same old "blackmail", only new targets... by JohnDenver · · Score: 2

    And what guarantees does anyone have they won't turn around and sue anyway?

    This sort of "blackmail" is nothing new. It's the same sort of "blackmail" that patent holders use to extract money from patent infringers.

    Here's a hint: If you want to make sure they won't sue anyway, make sure you have something in writing.. Even if it's only an invoice (stating they wont' sue if you pay), they are still implicitly offering a contract, and therefore bound by that offer (giving accept the contract's conditions), which a judge will most likely rule in your favor (unless you live in a backwards country).

    Oh yeah, IANAL, but I watch Judge Mathis... :)

    --
    "Communism is like having one [local] phone company " - Lenny Bruce
  161. Re:Using old propaganda to illustrate NEW propagan by Kirby-meister · · Score: 2

    My post was a joke.

  162. So the law in Denmark is ... ? by wytcld · · Score: 2
    Before any of you americans start quoting your constitution, please remember that this is Denmark and the law is different there. Why not wait and see what happens first, eh?

    Took a train across Denmark the summer before last. Commented to my buddy's buddy in Koebenhavn, "Wow, so many wildflowers between farmers' fields. Totally unlike Germany. Beautiful."

    He said, "Yeah. That's the law here. They have to grow 'em."

    So given that I'm favoring the legal system in Denmark - from that one slim evidence (coercive though it be) - what do you, as a Dane, expect from your courts?

    For bonus points, detail what you Danes intend to do to resist the imposition of what's left of the U.S. Constitution on the rest of the world.

    --
    "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
    1. Re:So the law in Denmark is ... ? by Kynde · · Score: 2

      Took a train across Denmark the summer before last. Commented to my buddy's buddy in Koebenhavn, "Wow, so many wildflowers between farmers' fields. Totally unlike Germany. Beautiful."
      He said, "Yeah. That's the law here. They have to grow 'em."
      So given that I'm favoring the legal system in Denmark - from that one slim evidence (coercive though it be) - what do you, as a Dane, expect from your courts?


      Doh, all countries have silly little laws, but I do have to admit that the best ones would appear to be US though... (some are outdated)

      Alabama
      It is illegal for a driver to be blindfolded while operating a vehicle.
      Brewerton: Use of motor boats forbidden on city streets.
      Alaska
      It is forbidden to push a moose out of a plane in motion.
      It is against the law to look at a moose from an airplane.
      Fairbanks: No moose is allowed to have sex on city streets.
      Arizona
      Glendale: It is against the law for a car to back up.
      Mohave County: Anyone caught stealing a soap, must wash himself with it, until it's all used up.
      Arkansas
      A man has a legal right to beat his wife, but only once a month.
      It's illegal to mispronounce the name of the state (ie of course Arkansas).
      Little Rock: Flirtation between the members of the opposite sex on the streets may result in a 30-day jail term....
      California
      A woman cannot drive a car while she is dressed in a house-coat.
      It is illegal to set a mousetrap without a hunting license.
      It is illegal for anyone to try and stop a child from playfully jumping over puddles of water.
      Belvedere: "No dog shall be in a public place without its master on a leash."
      Blythe: A person must own at least two cows before he is permitted to wear cowboy boots in public.
      Hollywood: It is illegal to drive more than 2000 sheep down Hollywood Bouleward simultanously.
      L.A.: A man can legally beat his wife with a leather strap, as long as it is less than two inches wide, or she gives him permission to use a wider strap, preferably in advance.
      L.A.: You cannot bathe two babies in the same tub at the same time.
      L.A.: If robbing a bank, shooting at the teller with a water gun is prohibited.
      Okland: Illegal to rob a birds nest from a public cemetery.
      Ventura County: Cats and dogs are not allowed to have sex without a permit.
      Colorado
      Denver: It is illegal to mistreat rats.
      Logan County: Illegal for a man to kiss a woman while she is asleep.
      Pueblo: Illegal to raise or permit a dandelion to grow within the city limits.
      Sterling: Unlawful to allow a pet cat to run loose without a taillight.
      Connecticut
      You can be stopped by the police for biking over 65 miles per hour.
      Harford: Crossing the street walking on your hands is not allowed.
      Hartford: Illegal to educate dogs.
      Delaware
      Lowes Crossroads: It is a violation of the local law for any pilot or passenger to carry an ice cream cone in their pocket while either flying or waiting to board a plane.
      District of Colombia
      It is unlawful for small boys to throw stones, at any time, at any place.
      Washington: The only acceptable sexual position is the missionary-style position. Any other sexual position is considered illegal.
      Florida
      Illegal for single, divorced, or widowed women to parachute on Sunday afternoons.
      Rats are forbidden from leaving the ships docked in Tampa Bay.
      An elephants tied to a parking meter must pay a regular parking fee.
      Women may be fined for falling asleep under a hair dryer, and som may the salon owner.
      Men may not be seen publicly in any kind of strapless gown.
      Hunting and killing a dear while swimming is illegal.
      You're not allowed to break more than three dishes a day, or chip the edge off more than four cups and/or saucers.
      Miami: Illegal to go around imitating animals.
      Saratoga: Illegal to sing while wearing a bathing suit.
      Georgia
      It's unlawful for a barber to advertise his prices.
      It is a misdemeanor for any citizen to attend church worship on Sunday unless he is equipped with a rifle and it is loaded.
      Jonesboro: Forbidden to say "Oh, boy".
      Idaho
      Illegal for a man to give his sweetheart a box of candy weighing less than fifty pounds.
      Coeur d'Alene: If police officers suspect a couple is having sex inside a vehicle they must honk their horn three times, and wait two minutes before being allowed to approach the scene.
      Idaho Falls: Forbidden for anyone over the age of eighty-eight to ride a motorcycle.
      Wallace: Unlawful for anyone to sleep in a dog kennel.
      Illinois
      Women must address bachelors as master instead of mister.
      It is against the law to speak English in Illinois.
      Prohibited to drive a car without a steering wheel.
      Chicago: Eating in a place that is on fire is forbidden.
      Cicero: Humming on public streets on Sundays prohibited.
      Evanston: Unlawful to change clothes in an automobile with the curtains drawn, except in case of fire.
      Kenilworth: Roosters must be at least three hundred feet away from any residence if he wishes to crow. Hens that wish to cackle must be two hundred feet away from any residence.
      Oblong: It is a crime to make love while fishing or hunting on your wedding day.
      Urbana: No monster may enter the corporate limits.
      Zion: Illegal for anyone to give lighted cigars to dogs, cats, and other domesticated animals kept as pets.
      Indiana
      Bathing is prohibited during the winter.
      Citizens are not allowed to attend a movie house or theater nor ride in a public streetcar within at least four hours after eating garlic.
      Elkhart: It is illegal for a barber to threaten to cut off a youngster's ears.
      Iowa
      No kiss may last more than five minutes.
      Aimes: A husband may not take more than three gulps of beer while lying in bed with his wife, or holding her hands.
      Ottumwa: "It is unlawful for any male person, within the corporate limits of the (city), to wink at any female person with whom he is unaquainted."
      Kansas
      Wichita: A father cannot frighten his daughter's boyfriend with a gun.
      Kentucky
      "No female shall appear in a bathing suit on any highway within this state unless she be escorted by at least two officers or unless she be armed with a club."
      An ammendment to the above law: "The provisions of this statuate shall not apply to females weighing less than 90 pounds nor exceeding 200 pounds, nor shall it apply to female horses."
      Forbidden to appear on the streets of any town or village in bathing dress without police protection.
      Transport of an ice cream cone in your pocket is prohibited.
      Anyone who has been drinking is sober until s/he "cannot hold onto the ground".
      Everyone must take a bath at least once a year.
      Louisiana
      In Louisiana, biting someone with your natural teeth is considered 'simple assault' while biting someone with your false teeth is 'aggravated assault'.
      Maine
      Rumford: Illegal to bite the landlord, no matter how much he deserves it.
      Maryland
      It is illegal to mistreat oysters.
      Baltimore: Illegal to wash or scrub sinks, no matter how dirty they get.
      Baltimore: Illegal to throw bales of hay from a second-story window within the city limits.
      Baltimore: Illegal to take a lion to the movies.
      Halethrope: Illegal to kiss for more than one second.
      Massachusetts
      Christmas was outlawed in 1659.
      It is forbidden to put tomatoes in clam chowder.
      It is unlawful to deliver diapers on Sunday, regardless of emergencies.
      All dogs required to have their hind legs tied during the month of April.
      Cooling one's feet by hanging them out the window is forbidden.
      Law declares that peanuts may not be eaten in court.
      Mourners at a wake may not eat more than three sandwiches.
      Snoring is illigal unless all bedroom windows are closed and securely locked.
      Goatees are illegal unless you first pay a special license fee for the privilege of wearing one in public.
      Taxi drivers are prohibited from making love in the front seat of their taxi during their shifts.
      Boston: Illegal to take a bath unless one has been ordered by a physician to do so.
      Brockton: Any person need a license before they are permitted to enter a sewer.
      Fitchburg: Barbers are not allowed to carry combs in back of their ears.
      Holyoke: It is unlawful to water your lawn when it is raining.
      Salem: Even married couples are forbidden from sleeping nude in rented rooms.
      Southbridge: Illegal to read books or newspapers after 8 p.m. in the streets.
      Michigan
      A woman's hair legally belongs to her husband, consequently she's not allowed to cut her own hair without her husband's permission.
      If any man kisses his wife on Sunday, the party at fault shall be punished at the discretion of the court.
      Detroit: Couples are not allowed to make love in an automobile unless the act takes place while the vehicle is parked on the couple's own property.
      Rochester: Anyone bathing in public must have his or her bathing suit inspected by a police officer.
      Minnesota
      Alexandria: Illegal for a husband to make love to his wife if his breath smells like garlic, onions, or sardines. The wife can by law force her husband to brush her teeth.
      Blue Earth: Law declares that no child under the age of twelve may talk over the telephone unless accompanies by a parent.
      Missouri
      Kansas City: Minors are not allowed to purchase cap pistols; they can, however, buy shotguns freely.
      Merryville: Women are prohibited from wearing corsets because "The privilege of admiring the curvaceous, unencumbered body of a young woman should not be denied to the normal, red-blooded American male."
      St. Louis: Illegal to sit on the curb of any city street and drink beer from a bucket.
      Montana
      Bozeman: You can't perform any sexual acts in the front yard of any home, after sundown, and if you are nude (socks is OK).
      Helena: A woman cannot dance on a saloon table unless her clothing weights more than three pounds, two ounces.
      Nebraska
      A parent can be arrested if his child cannot hold back a burp during a church service.
      A motorist approaching a horse at night must send up warning red rockets and Roman candles, throw a scenic tarpaulin over his car to conceal it from the horse, and take his machine apart and hide the parts in the grass it the tarpaulin doesn't soothe the horse.
      Hastings: Hotel owners are required by law to provide a clean, white cotton nightshirt to each guest. According to the law, no couple may have sex unless they are wearing the nightshirts.
      Omaha: It is against the law for a barber to shave a man's chest.
      Nevada
      It is illegal to drive a camel on the highway.
      Sex without a condom is considered illegal.
      Eureka: Men who wear moustaches are forbidden from kissing women.
      New Hampshire
      It is against the law to tap your feet, nod your head or in any way keep time to the music in a tavern, restaurant or cafe.
      New Jersey
      Cresskill: Cats must wear three bells to warn birds of their whereabouts.
      Liberty Corner: Any couple making out inside a vehicle, and accidentally sounding the horn during their lustful act, may be taken to jail.
      Trenton: Unlawful to throw any tainted pickles in the streets (good pickles, however).
      New Mexico
      Carlsbad: During lunch breaks no couple should engage in a sexual act while parked in their vehicle, unless their car has curtains.
      Carrizozo: It is forbidden for a female to appear unshaven in public (includes legs and face).
      New York
      Albany: Disallowed to play golf in the streets.
      Carmel: A man cannot go outside wearing unmatching jacket and pants.
      Greene: Illegal to eat peanuts and walk backwards on the sidewalk during a concert.
      NYC: Illegal for a man to turn around and look "at a woman in that way", and violators are forced to wear horse blinders.
      Rochester: Firemen must wear ties while on duty.
      North Carolina
      It is illegal to take a dear swimming in water above its knees.
      Asheville: You can't sneeze on the streets.
      Barber: Cats and dogs are not allowed to fight.
      Thomasville: No airplanes are allowed to fly over the town on Sundays during the hours between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.
      Winston-Salem: It is against the law for children under seven years of age to go to college.
      North Dakota
      Beer and pretzels cannot be served at the same time in any bar or restaurant.
      Illegal to go to bed wearing boots or shoes.
      Ohio
      Berea: Any animal that is out after dark must have a tail light.
      Cleveland: Women are not allowed to wear patent-leather shoes.
      Cleveland: Operating a motor vehicle while sitting in another person's lap is forbidden.
      Oxford: Illegal for a woman to strip off her clothing while standing in front of a man's picture.
      Paulding: A policeperson may bite a dog to quiet him.
      Portsmouth: The law ranks baseball players with "vagrants, thieves and other suspicious characters."
      Youngstown: Running out of gas is illegal.
      Oklahoma
      Criminals can be fined, arrested or jailed for making faces at a dog.
      Whale hunting is strictly forbidden throughout the entire state.
      Females are forbidden from doing their own hair without being licensed by the state.
      Dogs need a mayor-signed permit to congregate in groups of three or more on private property.
      Clinton: Masturbating while watching two people having sex in a car is forbidden.
      Tulsa: Kisses lasting more than three minutes are forbidden.
      Tulsa: Against the law to open a soda bottle without the supervision of a licensed engineer.
      Oregon
      A dead person cannot be required to serve on a jury.
      Use of canned corn in fishing is illegal.
      Hood River: You can't juggle without a license.
      Willowdale: No man may curse while having sex with his wife.
      Pennsylvania
      "Any motorist driving along a country road at night must stop every mile and send up a rocket signal, wait 10 minutes for the road to be cleared of livestock, and continue."
      Housewives may not hide dirt and dust under a rug in a dwelling.
      No man may purchase alcohol without written consent from his wife.
      Danville: All fire hydrants must be checked one hour before all fires.
      Harrisburg: Illegal to have sex with a truck driver inside a toll booth.
      York: You can't sit down while watering your lawn with a hose.
      Rhode Island
      Newport: Illegal to smoke a pipe after sunset.
      Province: Illegal to sell toothpaste and toothbrush to the same customer on a Sunday.
      South Carolina
      Fountain Inn: Horses were once required to wear pants at all times.
      South Dakota
      Sioux Falls: Hotels are required by law to furnish their rooms with twin beds only. There should be a minimum of two feet between the beds, and it is illegal for a couple to make love on the floor between the beds.
      Tennessee
      It is illegal to use a lasso to catch a fish.
      It is illegal to drive a car while sleeping.
      You can't shoot any game other than whales from a moving automobile.
      Dyersburg: Illegal for a woman to call a man for a date.
      Memphis: Illegal for a woman to drive by herself; "a man must walk or run in front of the vehicle, waving a red flag in order to warn approaching pedestrians and motorists".
      Oneida: Forbidden to sing the song "It Ain't Goin' To Rain No Mo'".
      Texas
      Criminals are required to give their victims 24 hours notice, either orally or in writing, and to explain the nature of the crime to be committed.
      Illegal to raise alligators in your home.
      When two trains meet each other at a railroad crossing, each shall come to a full stop, and neither shall proceed until the other has gone.
      You need a five-dollar permit to go barefoot.
      Kingsville: Two pigs cannot have sex on the city's airport property.
      Lefors: Illegal to take more than three swallows of beer at any time while standing.
      San Antonio: Illegal for both sexes to flirt or respond to flirtation using the eyes and/or hands.
      Utah
      Birds have the right of way on all highways.
      A husband is responsible for every criminal act commited by his wife while she is in his presence.
      Utah state legislation outlaws all sex with anyone but your spouse.
      Adultery, oral and anal sex, masturbation are considered sodomy and can lead to imprisonment.
      Sex with an animal - unless performed for profit - however is NOT considered sodomy.
      Polygamy - provided only the missionary position has been applied - is only a misdemeanor.
      Tremonton: No woman is allowed to have sex with a man while riding in an ambulance. In addition to normal charges, the woman's name will be published in the local newspaper. The man does not receive any punishment.
      Trout Creek: Pharmacists may not sell gun powder as a headache cure.
      Vermont
      It is obligatory for everyone to take at least one bath each week, on Saturday night.
      Rutland: Cars are forbidden from backfireing.
      Virginia
      The statute of The Virginia Code: "To prohibit corrupt practices or bribery by any person other than candidates."
      Norfolk: No woman may go in public without wearing a corset.
      Washington
      All lollipops are forbidden.
      Having sex with a virgin is illegal under any circumstances (including the wedding night).
      "It is mandatory for a motorist with criminal intentions to stop at the city limits and telephone the chief of police as he is entering the town."
      Seattle: Goldfish can ride the city buses in bowls only if they kept still.
      Seattle: You may not carry a concealed weapon that is longer than six feet.
      Wilbur: Illegal to ride upon the streets on an ugly horse.
      West Virginia
      Children may not attend school if their breath's smelling "wild onions".
      Peewee: It is illegal to let your horse fall asleep in the airport.
      Wisconsin
      Connorsville: No man shall shoot of a gun while his female partner is having a sexual orgasm.
      Racine: Illegal to wake a fireman when he is asleep.
      Wyoming
      Newcastle: Couples are banned from having sex while standing inside a store's walk-in meat freezer.

      --
      1 Earth is warming, 2 It's us, 3 it's royally bad, 4 we need to take action NOW
  163. Re:Think before you put it in the skin box by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think Austin Powers was right about you Danes. Wasn't Goldmember one of your own?

  164. Aare They Charging Full Retail Price? by Royster · · Score: 2

    Those fiends!

    --
    I have discovered a truly marvelous sig, unfortunately the sig limit is too small to contain i
  165. Re:And I bet I know where the money is *NOT* going by iggymanz · · Score: 1

    another greedy bastard has found a way

    we call them lawyers, and if they're really twisted power hungry megalomaniacs in addition to being greedy money grubbing scum, we promote them to be judges

  166. Sue them BACK! by slavik · · Score: 1

    Just sue them for invasion of privacy! :)

  167. And I say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The organisation says 'Pay up, or we'll sue!'

    And I say in response "lick my ballsack"

  168. Anonymity by ShadowEater · · Score: 1

    OK. I haven't actually read the article yet because it's bed time, but, from a technological point of view, why don't people who are in danger of getting caught simply throw all of their packets through an anonymizer or switch to/develop a fast, open-source, anonymous file sharing service... one where the content can't be associated to an ip?

  169. FOR GOD SAKE!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Question is: if the APG has only the file names from KaZaA or eDonkey - how can it make sure that they really are illegal files and not only "similar named files" or hoax files?"

    THEY DON'T HAVE TO!!!!

    This is Denmark, the rottenest state in the world PERIOD!!

  170. Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They'll just look at what's on your hard drive during the discovery process.

    If they are desperate enough, they get the judge to allow them to analyze your hard drive to see if you deleted it.

  171. Interesting, but a little skewed by racerx509 · · Score: 2

    Interesting approach, making the copyright violators pay. While I am still against it, I think its better than the US method of fining them $500,000. Instead of a flat rate, the list price of each item should be payed. If I bootleg Serious Sam, I shouldn't pay $50, I should pay $20. Aso, shouldn't the person who payed up for the IP in question get to keep the file?

    --
    13 year old white supremacists are shitty web designers.
  172. pirates on the loose by snarkh · · Score: 2, Informative

    Here is a quote I pirated from the Oxford English Dictionary. Note the date:

    1668 J. HANCOCK Brooks' String of Pearls (Notice at end), Some dishonest Booksellers, called Land-Pirats, who make it their practise to steal Impressions of other mens Copies.

  173. How much this all really cost by alricsca · · Score: 1

    Well let me see after we remove the 2000% mark up on the average CD's base creative costs, remove the costs of shipping, packaging, the medium or server space to store them that never needed to pay for; that should leave about 10 cents per download. So say I have downloaded 300 songs that would be $30 dollars. Which I would gladly pay and which is the whole problem with these jerks. They want their cake and to eat it too. They know the Internet is the ultimate equalizer, they can only earn what they are really worth and they hate it. Perhaps they are making a mistake, if the judge really analyses how much these songs are actually worth he might levy them at their real cost. I can imagine a lot of people happy with that idea. Remember, before all you naysayers start commenting on my logic, do not compare these with store bought CDs. The industry makes a big deal of the business they are not getting in the stores because of the Internet, but that is not a valid comparison anymore, if it ever was. The reality is that many people like me would never buy a CD in a store and especially after they started paying the state to start acting like Nazis. No doubt with all the bad blood they have created I am not the only one who feels that way. Take those poor US cadets who had their dorms raided and all their computers confiscated. Do you think they are going to be more afraid or angry when all is said and done? I do not know about you but, I would never buy a CD from someone who ruined my career over 10 cents nor would I not think that my choosing to download a song when it is so overpriced was particularly wrong. One thing that really brought this all into focus for me was a comment I read once about the disparity in costs for various intellectual properties so I did a little looking and found some information that I want you all to think about. The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring cost half a billion dollars to produce and market. Based on its predecessor the DVD is likely to cost $38.88 to buy on Amazon. A super hit single by Janet Jackson costs $10 million to produce and sold for $28.00 dollars when it was first released. That means that the DVD only cost 1/3 more than the CD even though it took 50 times more money to produce. Given how many more CDs are sold than DVDs this should tell you something about just how grossly high their margins really are. Among other interesting items the DVD of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone had no Macrovision on it so analog copies of it are easy to create. Interestingly there was not a noticeable increase in piracy, it was cheaper to produce without the security, more information fit on the DVD, and it was of a higher quality. In fact, people still seem to be buying the DVD in droves. Makes you wonder.

    http://www.billpetro.com/holidayhistory/hol/LOTR .h tm
    http://www.uwgb.edu/ogradyt/blackpop.htm
    http ://news.com.com/2100-1023-938008.html?tag=rn
    http ://www.amazon.com

  174. I don't get it. by GabrielStrange · · Score: 1
    I honestly don't understand how you people think.

    I've been reading SlashDot for a week or two now, and you people seem to all pretty much agree that using Mozilla to block pop-up ads and SpamAssassin to block spam is great and wonderful. But you also all seem to agree that pirating music over P2P programs is a bad thing.

    Is there something I'm missing here? Either content providers deserve to be compensated for the content they create or they do not. MP3.com provides me with free hosting for the music I record at home with my 4-track and you people have no problem with automatically ignoring the ads that make this hosting possible. But if I dare pirate the music of such no-talent hacks as Britney Spears and Fred Durst, you're going to tell me I'm doing something wrong?

    You're all a bunch of hypocrites.

    --
    Please God, let me find my blue hat with the red trim. (Frances Farmer)
    1. Re:I don't get it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I've been reading SlashDot for a week or two now."
      heh heh heh heh eh heh heh heh . . . he doesn't get it heh he heh.

  175. entrapment by arcadum · · Score: 1

    It is entrapment when an agent incites a suspect to commit an act they would have otherwise not commited.

  176. They should pro-rate the downloads by lexus99 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If they insist on doing this, I think the material should be pro-rated on the encoding quality. If you d/l mp3s that are encoded at 128k, this is not equal in value to the uncompressed CD by no means. How can 'they' expect to sue for full price of the CD for an inferior product?

    The media companies seem to forget the quality standard. They seem to forget that most downloadable media files are inferior to the store bought product, which further proves that the downloaders will eventually BUY this stuff if they like it.

    I'm not a regular downloader of copyright materials, but when I do.....if I like it, I buy it. If I don't, why keep the shit laying around taking up my HD space. Besides, there's a ton of stuff out there that's not for sale by the media companies at any price, like recording outtakes and unreleased bootlegs. These items are only valuable to hard core fans anyway and by no means would the media companies ever consider releasing them....well, then again, there was the Beatles Anthology series. That was worth buying simply because the quality was so much better than the boots.

  177. Extortion by motox · · Score: 1

    This is classified as extortion. If you have to report a crime, you report it to the police. Not ask for money or else you report it. This is a crime too, so i don't see much future for them if not in the same jailhouse...

  178. Screenshots do not constitute proof by stwrtpj · · Score: 3, Insightful
    This is exactly what the majority of slashdotters have been screaming for. Go after the abusers rather than the technology. It'll be interesting to see what the comments on this thread will be like. Let this hypocrisy begin... now.

    Let the correction of misguided statements like this begin ... now

    Show me the proof. Show me something beyond filenames and IP addresses, which is what both articles appear to be implying is the main source of evidence for billing these people. Filenames alone don't cut it. If I'm missing something else here in these articles, by all means, someone correct me, but I have not seen any definitive statements that anyone looked at the actual digital content.

    I am not naive enough to think that NOBODY was pirating copyrighted material. But before you go convicting someone without a trial (which is what this organization is essentially doing by simply billling them). Screenshots of filenames on people's drives constitutes proof? Bullshit.

    Here, how about this? I'll create a directory on my drive. Let's call it "/home/stwrtpj/al_qaeda_plans". Now let's copy some files in there from other directories, but lets give these files name like, oh, I don't know "plot_to_kill_george_w", "destroy_america", "smite_the_infidels", aaaaand "plans_to_blow_up_hoover_dam". Now let's take a screenshot of Gnome's file manager proudly displaying those filenames. So does this mean I'm a terrorist? Does this give anyone the right to pursue civil or criminal charges against me? No. "plot_to_kill_george_w" could contain a freaking grocery list for all you know.

    So, no, Slashdotters are not going to be hypocrites for the most part. I for one am not. Show me the proof of what they are allegedly doing and I'll be the first to agree that some restitution is in order. Until then, all you have are filenames and supposition.

    --
    Karma: Frotzed (mostly due to the Frobozz Magic Karma Company)
    1. Re:Screenshots do not constitute proof by chrj · · Score: 2, Informative

      Here, how about this? I'll create a directory on my drive. Let's call it "/home/stwrtpj/al_qaeda_plans". Now let's copy some files in there from other directories, but lets give these files name like, oh, I don't know "plot_to_kill_george_w", "destroy_america", "smite_the_infidels", aaaaand "plans_to_blow_up_hoover_dam". Now let's take a screenshot of Gnome's file manager proudly displaying those filenames. So does this mean I'm a terrorist? Does this give anyone the right to pursue civil or criminal charges against me? No. "plot_to_kill_george_w" could contain a freaking grocery list for all you know.

      A danish slashdot-like site has been speaking to some lawyers in order to get their facts straight. Given the fact that the AntiPiracy-group is not some government thing set up to nail those pirates - this has to go to civil court. The "innoccent until proven otherwise" concept then gets transformed into "we'll just have to convince the judge". If you and your lawyers can explain to the judge that screenshots doesn't prove anything it would be nice. Right now there a now legal precedence in using screenshots in court.

  179. Well... by Sanity · · Score: 2

    ...DUH!

  180. Good point... by Peterus7 · · Score: 1
    So if I were a programmer I should be flattered to learn that people are pirating my stuff. It means people like it.

    Of course I'd be a tad bit pissed because I wasn't getting the money, but assuming I made a program that made that much, I wouldn't care. I think that people should be happy with just enough to get by, and get a nice computer (of course.)

    But the fact that people pirate your software should come as a plus. Also, what I think Adobe could do to stop Pirates is just have a shareware version of photoshop. You play with the demo that has a few of the filters, some of the basic functions, enough to get you hooked, and then you buy the real one. Easy as that. And offer the demo at a nice speed for free. That would make people who really would use it buy it, and the people who aren't so hot on it decide not to. Everybody wins, imoho.

    1. Re:Good point... by NevermindPhreak · · Score: 2, Insightful
      actually, its eaiser for adobe to just let people pirate their stuff. just look at the reasons.

      with a shareware demo, the install would be decently huge, and adobe would have to host that file somewhere. with piracy, its all on the p2p networks, so adobe pays no bandwidth costs.

      some companies might just say "all we really need is the demo version" or something like that (my school did that with mcafee antivirus). not a smart way to run a business, but many business managers arent very smart about the technical aspects of such things. if you offer no shareware, or a shareware version thats crap, then companies cant do this.

      with a shareware version of a product, you would still run the risk of not enough people using your software. they might opt to get something with all the features they need, and learn that, for much cheaper than adobe is prepared to offer. personally, i almost never use shareware, unless its fully functional even if i dont pay (WinZip). seems to me like adobe (and many other software companies) know exactly what theyre doing.

      as a programmer, though, im not saying you should be happy people are pirating your stuff. im saying that you should be happy people are pirating your stuff if it means that it will cause your program to become an industry standard, and you can charge 10 to 29 times what you should to businesses who want to use it.

    2. Re:Good point... by Peterus7 · · Score: 1

      Excuse my ignorance, but is the general price for companies buying a program greater than individual users buying the same program? It would be nicer if there was just a photoshop professional edition and a photoshop home user edition, the latter being a lot cheaper... Or does that already exist?

  181. SUE THEM BACK ... by slavik · · Score: 1

    Why not sue them for invasion of privacy???

  182. maybe its time to start using freenet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe it is time to start using freenet
    I have not used freenet, but it may be time to start using it. how well does it scale? maybe someone that has used it can anser that.

  183. what crap dannish music by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    who's f'ing heard of some dannish f'ing music...r they suing on behalf of snoop dog? r they trying to protect there 5 or so international artists...imagine if the world started downloading danish music...u know then the artist would be hitting the big time

  184. Fair Use by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How does the APG know that the downloads were not in fair use? Other people have said that they had to do a research paper on a song and downloaded a song for their paper.

    Those persons aren't quite using $16 worth of "media entertainment" and quite frankly have the right to research and know generally public information.

    All this anti-copy talk is very dangerous. It could lead to an environment where we can secretize communications, publications, thoughts, media, etc. such as the Scientologists vs. Google. The most at danger here are the children, where people will not be able to freely copy media to show to parents to inform them of the 1) dangers to children and 2) the damage already done to children by influence of the media.

    I think there is a lot of unfair presumption that all copying of copyrighted materials, but not distributing, is of mal intent.

  185. Re:Isn't this what Slashdot has always wanted? X0X by Rader · · Score: 2

    So if one day you forgot to lock your bachelor pad before going to work at Pizza Hut, some guys walk right in and steal all your appliances. They then proceed to go to their fence and sell your stuff.

    They get caught in the act of selling. So you're saying that you should go to jail for fencing your stuff.

  186. Yeah, flood the courts! by Saint+Fnordius · · Score: 2

    If I read the article and the warning correctly, it's a "pay up or meet me in court" letter. Well, maybe those hit with that letter ought to call their bluff. Let's see if the Group is willing to go after these people!

    In a normal world, I wouldn't give them much of a chance, simply because it's nigh impossible to prove that the label truthfully describes the contents. Or that the "return address" wasn't spoofed by someone else. Not only that, but if this was a "sting", i.e. posting the data themselves, then they would be the guilty party for offering the works in the first place.

  187. Fair Use in Denmark by Simon+Kongshoj · · Score: 4, Informative

    Well, speaking as a guy who actually lives in Denmark.....

    Since Summer 2001, various forms of digital copying have been legal in Denmark. Before that, Danish law on this area bore obvious marks of being written by people who had no idea what the whole thing was all about (prohibiting all forms of digital copying without prior permission -- bye bye Internet :) ). The laws are confusing, though. According to Forbrugerrådet (the "Consumer's Council" -- I'm not sure if you Americans have a similar organization), Danish citizens are allowed to:

    • Perform a digital copy a legally obtained work, eg. a legally purchased CD, book, tape, whatever.
    • Copy a work, where the artist or copyright holder has permitted copying.
    • Copy a legal CD borrowed from a friend.
    • Play a legally copied CD in a social setting such as a party.
    • Copy to your personal computer with intent for "electronic execution within the home" (ie. home listening, but no P2P warezing)
    • Listen to your copy at home, in your car, in your summer house, on your boat, on your discman, etc.

    We are not allowed to:

    • Copy a copy of a CD
    • Copy works fetched from the network that have been placed there without the artist or copyright holder's express permision.
    • Copy a CD and play it at someone else's party (this I find a little strange -- but oh well)
    • Listen to a copied CD on your place of work's music system.
    • Give away a copied CD.
    • Lend, swap or sell a copied CD.
    • Send a digitally copied work using e-mail.
    • .

    (from Forbrugerrådet's web page)

    I hope this helps shed a little light on the situation.

    --
    Six sick .sigs, the Number of the Beast!
  188. Re:I am an artist, and you WILL pay me. by Afrosheen · · Score: 2

    LOL!

    I wanted to take you seriously until I noticed all your info at the top:
    "by Faggot (choads.gay@com) on Tuesday November 26, @05:34PM (#4763431)
    (User #614416 Info | http://gay.com/) "

    If you couldn't take the time to fill out some decent info, how can I take your points seriously? It's like a politician going to a debate in a clown suit.

  189. Is downloading even illegal? by rolfwind · · Score: 1

    I don't think downloading copyrighted stuff is illegal, is it? I thought it's actually the "copying and distributing" of copyrighted material that is illegal (except for GPLed and similiar items of course). If it were illegal to download copyright material, every person reading this right now is breaking the law, as most web sites are copyrighted, not only that, delete your cache sinces it's full of that nasty copyrighted html pages, gifs, jpegs, etc. Next time your at the local Walmart, and there playing a movie in a VCR, turn your head, you didn't pay for it! Only asking since this is denmark we are talking about, but it sounds like blackmail or extortion, and I wouldn't be surprised that this group will get countersued. They may think they are spreading fear into downloaders, but personally I think it's only going to piss more people off into doing it. Anybody can send you an invoice, if it's legally owed to that person is another matter.

  190. LOOPHOLE by katalyst · · Score: 1

    Ok.. how about this. Someone sets up a company, in Denmark or wherever and he stocks or pretends to stock a helluva lota these audio/video cds. Now if the(bad)guys trace a downloader and demand payment from him, he approaches this company which claims that it was selling him these secondhand cds for a sum of $1 or lesser each (who can regulate second hand prices?) and the downloader can pay them that wee bit of money. After all he technically would have owned these second hand cds and can claim to have downloaded these cds in anticipation. Its a vague idea... but I guess even a group of friends can set up such an arrangement... ie a second/thirdhand sale...

    --
    |/________
    |\A|ALYS|
  191. Danish Law, 2002 1984 by kjeldsen · · Score: 3, Informative

    A Danish Law from April 2001 actually makes this possible.

    It gives the copyright holders the right to collect evidence and present this to a judge. The judge then issues a warrant based on the evidence (yes no 3rd party is involved). The warrant can be for a house search or in this case to get information from a isp based on the ip's they collected. The law has been used to raid netparties as well.

    The problem is that all this happens outside the criminal courts, they run all the cases as civil law suites.

    I hope they stepped over the line, and that our silly goverment that doesn't know a power button from the reset button, changes this absurd law.

    Look a pig that flies (sponsered by S O N Y)

  192. Encrypted P2P by atarian · · Score: 2, Informative

    www.filetopia.org for P2P chat and file sharing using strong encryption and IP hiding.

    --
    xGSV Consolation of Dreams
  193. Re:Think before you put it in the skin box by Caligari · · Score: 1

    Uh, I believe you mean the Dutch.

    --
    The moving cursor writes, and having written, blinks on.
  194. Not the first time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually the Antipirat-gruppen have been working in Denmark for a while now. First known in the public, when they sued some kids for creating pirate-cds with software and more. Then they went to MP3, where some kids got a bill on several million DKK, which created a lot of demonstrations by the parents, which just saw it as teenager-playing-around (which in Denmark actually is not that criminal :). I first saw them on first-hand as a part of a local network-group, serving 1000 users. The Danish movieindustry send mails (two a month I think) about IPs possesing danish songs (some which they actually dont have copyright on :). Our admins just said fuck off, and will not do anything without police-involvement... nothing has happened since then at our network (according mp3s and movies that is).

  195. Anton Pillar court orders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Being danish, I know a bit about this, though IANAL. I have been wondering why nobody else has mentioned this:

    About a year ago, Denmark was forced by the US (through WTO) to implement Anton Pillar orders.

    An Anton Pillar court order basically gives one part in a civil case about copyrights, patents or trademarks to enter the premises of the other part, possibly by force, and without informing the other part first. Anything considered evidence can be confiscated. The police is not involved - not even when private homes are searched.

    When this law was passed, we were told that this was only beant for the worst illegal commercial exploitations of IPR.

    But all that is needed for Piratgruppen today to get an Anton Pillar order is to show a Kazaa printout and claim (no proof needed) that some of the material is copyrighted by somone they represent.

    What happens during the execution of these Anton Pillar orders is as follows: Antipiratgruppen shows up in the home of a private citizen. They tell him that he has the right to call a lawyer (they have to do that), but that it would be better if he cooperated with them. Then they look into the victims home computer, and if just a single piece of (supposedly) pirated material is found, they confiscate all computers found in that home.

    This modus operandi was recently discussed in the Danish Parliament, but no law change is planned. This is partly because the US is threathening with trade restrictions if we do not have this Anton Pillar order.

  196. Forgot to read the article? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The people being billed are the ones who shared the files, at $2.67 per mp3, $26.70 per movie and $50 per game.

    Even if you have a CD, you can't legally put it online.

    What I'm wondering about is why the IFPI are bothering with movies and games.
    I suspect them to be the real driving force, because they've started similar actions in other countries. For instance in Belgium, a number of users of a certain ISP can start expecting lawsuits for files they posted on usenet (suits instead of bills because the provider refuses to disclose identities to the IFPI without a court order, or: how privacy protection can kick back).

    1. Re:Forgot to read the article? by boomer_rehfield · · Score: 1

      ahhhh... that I agree with... I somehow got the impression that they were nabbing you for downloading them... thx for the clarification...

      --
      Carpe Canem - Seize the Dog
  197. Re:I am an artist, and you WILL pay me. by brain159 · · Score: 1
    But in Capitalist America, Clown goes to debate in politician suit!

    (c'mon, you know I'm right!)

  198. Be careful when you name your files by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From now on I guess you have to be very careful what you namn your files, I wouldn't want to pay $10 fine just because I tried to imitate Britney Spears and saved the recording as BritneySpears.mp3

  199. Phew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Luckily I only use Kazaa to download mpegs of kiddie rape. I'm glad it's the real abusers that are being pursued.

  200. Read the Article by ckokotay · · Score: 2, Insightful

    APG monitored the file sharing networks for available files with Danish IP addresses - and went to court to get the users' personal details from their ISPs, armed with screen shots of, for example, the KaZaA window showing the files on the user's hard-drive. The courts obliged and ordered the ISPs to deliver the personal details of the incriminated users. Then the bills were in the post ... landing on the mats of the unfortunate downloaders over the last few days.

    There is an epidemic of misuse of the word 'downloader'. They are looking for people who are posting files. If you have no files shared, you are not seen and the only way you would be caught 'downloading' is if you were 'entrapped', by being offered downloads from the Kopyright Kops, if you will. Then they would record your name as you are downloading.

    I generally respect the register, but the article is poorly written. This does not have to do with downloading, it has to do with offering your stuff up on the P2P networks for others to download.

    Chris...

    --
    It does not matter what you do, it's wrong.
  201. Pirates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone know why this is the word of choice to describe so called theft of 1's and 0's? I mean who coined the phrase piracy when it comes to computer "theft", man its hard to even write that word.

  202. sheeeeeeeeit..... by BurKaZoiD · · Score: 1

    As Whoopi Goldberg said, "You want a quarter?!? Kiss my ass! Find me in New York for this f*cking quarter!"

  203. No one has said it so I will by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Something is rotten in the state of Denmark...

    Bows... (applause)

  204. Arrrrrrrrrrgh, Yer Honor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does anyone else think it would be extremely funny, if all all 14,000 defendents showed up in court dressed as pirates?

    But yer Honor, I be a Pirate! Arrgh.

  205. Percentage by jeepliberty · · Score: 1
    ...you get a fraction of what you'd make on an indie

    "It's usually better to have 1% of the watermelon than 99% of the grape." --Economics 101

  206. Copyright obsolete in 20 years? by Zoolander · · Score: 1

    I read a quote by David Bowie where he said that he was convinced that copyright as a concept would be gone in the future. I think he's right. And I think the record/movie industry knows that, deep in their little corporate hearts. In a way, the file sharing programs give power back to the consumer, although they also force the artists to work a little harder. If everyone can download your music a day after it is released, you have to get your ass out there and *perform* like they did in the old days! You can't just sit down in your chair and wait for the royalties to come marching in to your bank account. Hopefully, this will make it easier for people who are artists for the love of the art, not for the love of money. I still remember Lars Ulrich talking about why he was so pissed off with Napster. During the whole interview, he referred to Metallica's music as a 'product', not once as a work or something he had put his soul into. What he objected to was that he wanted to get paid for his 'product'. Go sell cars, for Christ's sake! I think filesharing programs will help musicians who people like because they write _good music_, and not because some marketing director has gotten it played on the radio so much that you finally think you like it... But of course, you will have to be a good musician, and be willing to give concerts, if you want to make money... :-)

    --
    Meep.
  207. Good idea by Rader · · Score: 2

    This is exactly what Aimster did.

    But they got shut down anyway. Can't remember the exact reason, but take your pick!

  208. Thanks for the warning... by nanojath · · Score: 2
    I don't know if you can sell it as blackmail... but it's certainly nothing like a legal transaction... I think they could, depending on the vagaries of Danish law, be countersued for mail fraud, which is exactly what I'd do, if I was a vile P2P using copyright violator, which I'm not...


    If I were one of these people, I would be saying "thanks for the warning!" Since a screenshot of a list of titles is legally meaningless, it's time to delete illegal files from your hard drive, get together with all those other recipients of bills, and sue the living daylights out of Das Gruppen for attempting to extort money under false pretences.


    Unfortunately these yogurt heads are probably too disorganized to get it together (despite being capable of tracking down a copy of Titanic in Danish on KaZaa...

    --

    It Is the Nature of Information to Transgress Artificial Boundaries

  209. Who is the moron who moderated that a troll?! by Snaller · · Score: 2

    Just because you don't agree with the facts doesn't give you the right to try and supress it! Idiot.

    What I wrote is correct. Stealing is when you deprive someone of something. If you steal a sodapop from a store, they have lost that item. They have payed for it, now they can't get the money back because you took it. When you copy something you don't have the right to copy, nobody loose anything. They MAY be deprived of the money would have payed IF you bought it. That's the difference. But there are a lot of people who still need to understand that if we have idiots who will moderate it as a troll.

    --
    If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
  210. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  211. Re:Hypocrisy? How bout some rational thought? by HiThere · · Score: 2

    Another interesting question is: "How did they collect this information without violating the law?"

    I admit that I didn't read the article, but since I also don't know the laws of the relevant jurisdiction, that's a bit irrelevant. (I assume that this is Germany, since that's the place that seems friendliest to this kind of vigilanteism.)

    It seems to me that I recall the EUC being reported as having very strict laws regarding privacy, and electronic snooping, and transmission of data about individuals. Still, I suppose it depends critically on the exact phrasing.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  212. Are you sure they aren't Swedish? by ickypoo · · Score: 1
    Zee duneesh untee-purecy oorguneeseshun Antipiratgruppen hes beelled eppruxeemetely 150 p2p users un emuoont ooff up tu $14,000 iech fur shereeng cupyreeghted metereeel.

    Bork bork bork!

  213. No it is not fun. by Per+Abrahamsen · · Score: 2

    It is not fun watching my country dissolve into a police state, and it is getting a lot worse now than Denmark (thanks to the EU) is adopting the DMCA almost litteraly, which mean even "common sense" usage like playing a "protected CD" you paid for under Linux is going to be illegal.

    Oh, and selling Region 1 DVD's will soon be illegal as well. We can still import them privately, but many small shops selling imported R1 DVD's are going down. It is even going to be illegal to resell American comic books, but at least the national comic book publishers are not planning to enforce that part of the law.

    1. Re:No it is not fun. by Omnifarious · · Score: 2

      I know it's not fun. I was being sarcastic.

      Copyright, as it currently exists, is largely a form of corporate welfare, and not the incentive to create that it was intended to be. Sadly, all people can seem to do is cling to the past, and use the yardstick of what is and isn't legal to judge behavior. I wish people would let go of the past and think about how to make sure creators are compensated when hijacking the distribution system for this purpose is no longer efficient.

  214. AntiPirat gruppen does represent the owners by Per+Abrahamsen · · Score: 2

    I'm a bit surprised this is news, as it has been going on for a couple of years. APG *is* representying a specific set of companies (or rather branche organisations), and they do not care about content not originating from one of the members.

    They are evil though, they systematically lies to the public about technical matters (like claiming MP3 files are illegal), try to pressure ISP's to block them, run scary campaignis in TV spots, show no mercy to kids, claim ridiculous damages,confiscate hardware even when they have found no unautorized material on site "to search further". They did successfully lobby a change in the law so they can confiscate private property on "reasonable suspicion", something only the police could do before.

    They would fell quite at homne at Wolfram & Hart.

    We totally lack an efficient civil liberties organization to stand up aginst these guys.

  215. I have done nothing illegal, and I worry... by Per+Abrahamsen · · Score: 2

    Thanks to a recent change in law, these people can enter my house and confiscate my computer "for examination" on suspision alone. They still need a foged (kind of minor judge) to give permission, but before only the policy could do the above, now private organizations have that power.

    They also try to pressure ISP's and lawmakers to ban technologies that *can* be used for illegal purposes, like bloking mp3 files.

    And with the DMCA becomming adopted to EU law next year, I *will* be doing something illegal when I watch my own legit DVD's under Linux.

  216. Danish law by Per+Abrahamsen · · Score: 2

    Copyright violation is mostly civil law. There are a couple of areas which kind of cross between civil and criminal law, and that is one of them.

  217. They are acting as agents of the copyright holders by Per+Abrahamsen · · Score: 2

    And as such, they have the authority to sue on behalf of their clients.

    They do not care about material not copyrighted by their clients, but since their clients are branche organizations, that covers a lot of material.

  218. organized crime... by Devios · · Score: 1

    And in other news, Danish goverment agencies will be increasing their protection fees proportionally... Pay up, or the squirly auditor will officially report you...

    Does anyone else smell something?

  219. use Furthur, not Kazaa by nestler · · Score: 2

    Try distributing your music on Furthur, not Kazaa

    It is legitimate P2P where the bands
    actually want to be listed and have their
    live shows distributed for free. If your band
    is not listed, contact them, and they will add
    your band.

    You're in better company there (think
    Fugazi, not Bon Jovi).

    http://www.furthurnet.org

  220. A real example of how the Antipiratgruppen works by engpjp · · Score: 1

    This is based on a description by someone who was targetted by Antipiratgruppen and put his experience on the Internet (if anyone wants the address, email me; unfortunately, it's in Danish). I'm retelling it briefly, to give a proper foundation to the discussion here at /. The man in question came to his house one evening and was accosted by three men. They presented a warrant (NOT a search warrant in the American sense), saying that they had evidence that he had been running an eDonkey server, and demanding to get a printout of the log. The three men were representatives of Antipiratgruppen (a private organisation that has been empowered by RIAA and other copyright organizations to find and stop illegal copying of copyright protected material. This technique is based on a recent change in Danish anti-piracy law which permits search on a person's premises by non-governmental staff if they can produce evidence making it probable that illegal copying has taken place. The law demands that a non-involved "computer expert" be present and do the actual handling of computer and data. The law also makes it legal for the representatives to refuse the owner physical contact with items suspected of being used for storing and copying of such material - if it seems there is a risk that the suspected evidence disappear or be damaged. In the actual case, the owner was confused and didn't deny that he had *THREE MONTHS PREVIOUS* run an eDonkey server, but that he had not run it since, and he had no intentions of doing so again. The representatives of Antipiratgruppen insisted that he open his house and stay out of the way while they search his computer. He was informed that if he refused to do so, they would have to involve the police. He opened his house and followed them into the computer room, trying to protest his innocence. The computer expert fired up the computer and began looking for the log file. Meanwhile, the two representatives saw some copied music CDs lying next to the computer. Citing this as probable cause (or something similar in Danish legalese), they insisted on taking them with them. The owner explained that these were copies of, 1) his own CDs, 2) CDs owned by his friends (in Denmark it is legal to copy a friend's CDs, for *non-distribution* purposes; or CDs borrowed from the local library, for that matter). The representatives then insisted on confiscating his CD collection and demanded that he make a list of which CDs had been copied from which friends's collections. Meanwhile, the computer expert had, in his search for the log file, come across other files on the computer that he deemed to be copies of "other copyright protected material" (programs, games, etc). As a result, the representatives confiscated his computer. He has since been presented with a writ that he will be sued for illegal copying. The owner didn't use the basic legal rights that he has, in the situation. He has afterwards complained about the way the incident happened and claimed that he was "pressurized" into opening his door and letting them confiscate the items; however, he cannot prove this, and the legal matters are ... "legal". If you would like to know more, I will answer questions posted here. Peter J. Pedersen engpjp

  221. not usually by NevermindPhreak · · Score: 1

    theres no price difference, usually, as far as i know, for the same product. if photoshop charged 50 bucks for its software for home users, for the full version, it would be pretty hard pressed not to charge that same price for the software for businesses. i dont see how photoshop could take away enough features to justify droppijng the price 10 times smaller for a "home edition", and not have that edition be utter crap.

    1. Re:not usually by Peterus7 · · Score: 1

      Well, instead of dropping features, add new ones for the business one, (i/e half assed crap that no home user could ever want, but a business might have some very vague interest in... Just do some minor tweaks, etc, maybe a wizard, and tada...)

  222. Last Post! by alpg · · Score: 1

    The universe, they said, depended for its operation on the balance of four
    forces which they identified as charm, persuasion, uncertainty and
    bloody-mindedness.
    -- Terry Pratchett, "The Light Fantastic"

    - this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...