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3 New Defendants Named In MP3s4free.net Case

As reported in The Australian, three new respondents have been named in the mp3s4free.net link site case, including an employee of the ISP which is said to have hosted the site. The music industry says that ISP employees will be targeted in the future, but given an amnesty if they "inform the music industry."

3 of 274 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Let me get this straight.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And what law makes that illegal?

    It's the golden rule. He who has the gold, makes the rules. Historically this has only been countered by popular uprisings, public execution of tyrants and corrupt officials, and running carpetbaggers like the RIAA and their ilk out of town on a rail.

    Give lawyers power over policy in YOUR community, and this is what could happen to you!

  2. Not again... by Qweezle · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...This is just another hopelessly idiotic example of the music industry using their coercion tactics to force people into complying with their own rules, not the rules necessarily of the state, the government, nay, the music industry's rules.

    I don't even see how this was illegal:

    The website, www.mp3s4free.net, was alleged to contain MP3 audio files which infringe upon the copyrights of the record labels, but is in fact a collection of links to other websites on the Internet, and other MP3 files distributed by permission of the Copyright holders.

    All this site was doing was referring to other websites, which may have been illegalt themselves, but a links page that refers to them is not illegal!

    Hell, there are sites out there that tell you how to build bombs, sites with "art" that is really just child pornography, sites claiming to be legitimate businesses which scam people out of their money for all kinds of items, and they are going after a page of links?

    Let me repeat, a links page is not illegal. This is yet another example of the music industry throwing out ridiculous propoganda to spread the word on their "illegal music crackdown". Stupid.

  3. Is it just me, or is it extortion? by digitalvengeance · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Merriam webster's dictionary of extorting:

    To obtain from another by coercion or intimidation

    So, the industry is saying "give us information or get sued." Sounds like intimidation and coercion to me.

    --
    How many roads must a man walk down? 42.