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States Threaten P2P Companies

The Importance of writes "C|Net News reports that 46 state attorneys general are warning P2P companies of dire, unnamed consequences for continuing to exist, 'At present, P2P software has too many times been hijacked by those who use it for illegal purposes to which the vast majority of our consumers do not wish to be exposed.' Read the letter here (pdf) [PDF], or the annotated text version."

30 of 690 comments (clear)

  1. (censored) idiots... by JamesTRexx · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So I guess they think it's worse to do something illegal with P2P software than with a gun!?
    Geez, I can't even start thinking about how stupid this sort of thing is.

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    home
    1. Re:(censored) idiots... by grumpygrodyguy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "When p2p networks are outlawed, only outlaws will have p2p networks"

      Pretty much,

      "The 1998 Sonny Bono Copyright Act and other recent IP acts extend the copyright term to something like 100 years. It's appalling, and serves no purpose other than to allow big corporations to buy and sell our cultural history just like so many other commodities. Our parents generation enjoyed the proper balance between protecting innovators and the public. It's clear that our current leaders have no respect for the value of the public domain.

      We're raised on music, movies, and games only to learn that we have to pay a tithe to revisit our childhood. There's no reason we should stand for that. 5-10 years is more than sufficient time to ensure that an investor/artist is compensated. Until congress stops selling out the average american to corporations, there's no reason the average american should respect the acts of congress."

      --
      The government has a defect: it's potentially democratic. Corporations have no defect: they're pure tyrannies. -Chomsky
  2. This makes as much sense... by Keltan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...as charging gun manufacturers with murder when a gun is used to kill someone. Just because vehicles are used as "get-away cars" in bank robberies should we outlaw automobiles? How something is USED, and what something IS, are two completely different things. Guns can be used for good or evil, cars can be used for good or evil, p2p can be used for good or evil.

    1. Re:This makes as much sense... by DrFrob · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Guns are not designed to kill.

      Then what are guns designed to do?

    2. Re:This makes as much sense... by pete-classic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What could be more evil than empowering a petit woman to fend off a burly rapist?

      -Peter

    3. Re:This makes as much sense... by general_re · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I do not think you are in a position to testify to the "intent" of people who are not you. All guns are manufactured such that they can kill, but I do not believe that all guns are manufactured such that it is intended that they will kill. You ignore the proximate cause of killing - murderers - in favor of shifting the blame to some rather more remote actor that offends you more than the actual killers, apparently. You might as well label Boeing as evil based on the fact that fanatical madmen chose to fly planes into buildings - the logic is essentially the same, whereby we blame someone perceived to have facilitated evil rather than the actual perpetrators themselves.

      --
      ABSURDITY, n.: A statement or belief manifestly inconsistent with one's own opinion.
    4. Re:This makes as much sense... by j-turkey · · Score: 4, Insightful
      More anti gun bullshit. Guns are not designed to kill. People use guns to kill, just like they use knives, bats, cars, bricks and a million other things to kill. Gun manufacturers do not profit from death any more than Gerber does from selling knives.

      (Obliigatory tongue-in-cheek reposnse) You're right -- guns are not designed to kill. They're designed to fire bullets...which, in turn are designed to kill or mame. Does this mean that instead of gun control laws, we should pass bullet control laws? ;)

      Seriously though, I'm all about freedom in all sorts of ways, but you need to get your argument straight. Guns are a tool...for killing and/or maming stuff. What else are you gonna use your gun for? A hammer? Maybe you'll brandish it to help someone understand your position of power -- but it doesn't change the fact that it's designed for, and meant to kill or severely mame someone else. Bats, knives, bricks, etc -- these things have an intended purpose that they were designed for that isn't necessarily killing/maming. Bats were designed to hit baseballs. Knives were designed to cut stuff (yes, including flesh). Bricks were designed to be used in a masonry foundation. These can all be used to kill people...but killing stuff was not what these tools are intended for. Guns were designed to kill or mame -- why else would you have one?

      I'm not saying that you shouldn't have a gun -- I'm not even arguing for or against gun control...but you're kidding yourself if you think that a gun (we're talking handgun, rifle, shotgun, assault rifle, gatling cannon, etc here -- not a caulk gun) is not designed to kill (or severely mame).

      I do, however, agree with you that gun manufacturers do not "profit from death". That is a bunch of propaganda.

      --

      -Turkey

  3. Would this include... by EpsCylonB · · Score: 5, Insightful

    bittorrent ?

    from the article...

    Marty Lafferty, chief executive of the Distributed Computing Industry Association, another peer-to-peer group, said he has seen what appeared to be a draft of the current letter and that it contained substantial mischaracterizations of the technology and the file-swapping networks.

    I don't think BT is company anyway but surely they can see that p2p apps do have some legitimate uses ?.

  4. Corporate puppets by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If this quote from the letter doesn't tell you state reps are being manipulated by the entertainment industry, nothing will:

    "At present, P2P software has too many times been hijacked by those who use it for illegal purposes, to which the vast majority of our consumers do not wish to be exposed."

    So we, the citizens, are the attorney general's office's "consumers" now?? Either it's a revealing slip of the tongue from the AGs, or more likely the letter was originally drafted by the RIAA/MPAA...

    --
    "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    1. Re:Corporate puppets by SCHecklerX · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm not a consumer. I'm a %$@#! citizen.

  5. what happened to 'citizens'? by Saeger · · Score: 4, Insightful
    ...the vast majority of our consumers do not wish to be exposed.

    At what point did state governments start to unabashedly refer to its citizens as consumers? (Don't answer that.)

    --

    --
    Power to the Peaceful
    1. Re:what happened to 'citizens'? by Tenebrious1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ...the vast majority of our consumers do not wish to be exposed.
      At what point did state governments start to unabashedly refer to its citizens as consumers? (Don't answer that.)


      This is brought up by the Attorney's General... which are the advocates for consumer rights in the state. They do not speak for all the "citizens", thus "consumer" is the proper term, since not all "citizens" are "consumers".

      Anyway, reading the document, this is what I got out of it:
      "Please P2P makers, our consumers are complete idiots who don't know enough to run virus protection, to run personal firewalls, or to check MD5s. We're not allowed to tell our consumers they're fucking morons and to get a clue, since they pay for our salaries... please please please stop writing P2P software so these idiots will stop complaining about it. Since there's nothing we can do legally about your software, we're asking nicely that you voluntarily stop producing it. Thanks, the atty's generals."

      --
      -- If god wanted me to have a sig, he'd have given me a sense of humor.
  6. Double Standard by lildogie · · Score: 4, Insightful

    'At present, ___________ has too many times been hijacked by those who use it for illegal purposes to which the vast majority of our consumers do not wish to be exposed.'

    Fill in the blank with something else than 'P2P Software'. Try 'firearms,' 'painkillers,' 'penises.'

    Points up the difference between what a tool is designed for vs. what it's used for. That's a key element in whether you make it illegal.

    1. Re:Double Standard by archen · · Score: 4, Funny

      Words that work really well:

      Politicians
      Democrats
      Republicans

  7. Clueless sabre-rattling by thatguywhoiam · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Hey Attorney Generals - how about you let me decide if P2P is 'dangerous' or not?

    This letter is ridiculous. They talk about things like: the way P2P allows people to raid your files when your computer is off.. It would be really funny if it wasn't coming from one of the higher US legal forces.... which makes it kind of scary.

    I am especially amused by this whole tone of 'you P2P companies need to educate your users' while displaying only the most tenuous grasp of the Internet within the letter itself. They list P2P as an Internet 'alternative;. Riiiight.

    --
    If Jesus wants me it knows where to find me.
  8. Ridiculous statement by smooth+wombat · · Score: 5, Insightful
    'At present, P2P software has too many times been hijacked by those who use it for illegal purposes to which the vast majority of our consumers do not wish to be exposed.'

    Replace the words 'P2P software' with any of the following (feel free to add your own) to see how ridiculous that statement is:

    • cars
    • baseball bats
    • steak knives
    • telephones
    • computers
    • screwdrivers
    • intenet providers

    Let's be honest, there are a ton of illegal goings on on the various P2P clients/networks. That doesn't mean that P2P doesn't have its legitimate uses.

    It's the people they should be going after, not the service.

    --
    We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
  9. Huh??? by hadesan · · Score: 5, Insightful
    At present, {word} has too many times been hijacked by those who use it for illegal purposes to which the vast majority of our consumers do not wish to be exposed.'

    {word} suggestions:

    1. Alcohol - get people drunk to make them do stupid things
    2. Drugs - the abuse of things designed to help you
    3. Planes, Trains, Automobiles - can kill people as a result of items 1 and 2 or terrorism
    4. Microsoft OS - used to trojan peopls machines to send SPAM to everyone
    5. Islam - bastard terrorists who pervert this religion
    6. Christianity - priests and children
    You could go on and on. You could put any word in there and come up with soemthing that fits that statement. The method of making the producer of a product responsible for a user's action with that product is assinine.

    Bullets kill people. Guns only mediate.

  10. eDonkey by PktLoss · · Score: 5, Informative

    I work for MetaMachine, authors of eDonkey. I find it rather funny that we don't have a copy of this letter...

    1. Re:eDonkey by Walkiry · · Score: 4, Funny

      > I work for MetaMachine, authors of eDonkey. I find it rather funny that we don't have a copy of this letter...

      Have you checked your "Spam" mail directory?

      --
      ---- Take the Space Quiz!
  11. Thank you!! by iantri · · Score: 4, Funny
    Oh, thank you, State Attorney Generals for protecting me from an unwanted deluge of free music, movies, and software to which I do not wish to be exposed!

    After all, it isn't like you have to intentionally download P2P software, or anything, to get it, right?

  12. Politically crafted letter by fname · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I read the letter (and Corante's a little-too-flip play-by-play), and one thing is clear: any sort of threat was removed in order that they could get the signatures of as many state AGs as possible. Some of their statements are downright silly, given that Apache could be considered P2P software. OTOH, some of the P2P behaviors they reference are clearly sleezy (stealth spyware installations, default sharing of all files), and should be stopped.

    The fact that child porn is available on the P2P networks (as the AGs claim) is unfortunate, but we have existing laws to go after those creeps-- and that's what the AGs should be doing. However, none of that is a good reason to ban any of this software. The P2P companies would probably be smart to engage in some customer education, if only to cover their butts. Using a strict opt-in policy for sharing files would be nice, as would the ability to easily turn off file sharing (such as when "quitting" the program).

    Let's not kid ourselves: some of these P2P software makers are scum. But that doesn't mean the AGs should be able to go after guys producing great software like Limewire. My advice to the AGs: back off the rhetoric, find the creeps sharing child porn (which is flat-out illegal), and go after the P2P companies who actively try to deceive customers.

  13. Anyone surprised that AGs are clueless about P2P? by Ronald+Dumsfeld · · Score: 5, Funny
    You've gotta love the bit in the letter where your computer supposedly gets on the Internet and fileshares with the power off...
    Furthermore, P2p file-sharing technology can allow its users to access the files of others, even when the computer is "off" if the computer itself is connected to the Internet via broadband.
    Cretins.

    Now, what I really want to see is the letter(s) the RIAA and MPAA sent to the AGs to prompt this action.
    --
    Where's the Kaboom?
    There's supposed to be an Earth-shattering Kaboom.
  14. Major problems with that quote. by bludstone · · Score: 4, Insightful

    'At present, P2P software has too many times been hijacked by those who use it for illegal purposes to which the vast majority of our consumers do not wish to be exposed.'

    1) p2p has not been "hijacked," its being used to share things that are popular.
    2) We are not "your consumers," we are "citizens." I had hoped that at least state attourny generals would get this. I guess I was wrong.
    3) We are not being unwillingly exposed to anything. You have to voulentarily search for things.
    4) The reason p2p is so popular is not because the people dont wish to be exposed to it, but because THE PEOPLE LIKE IT. Why wont they just ADMIT IT?!
    5) Copyright infringement is a civil crime, not a criminal one. The gvt has no case in trying someone under criminal law for copyright infringement.

    I am both angered and annoyed.

    Remember, these are people that think free access to every bit of music ever made in human history to every single person is a BAD THING. Grar. Maybe I wouldnt be so annoyed if the public domain still existed. Well, since they decided to eliminate it, the people found another way to FORCE it to exist.

    --

    no .sig
  15. And in other news by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    All 50 States' AG Warn Automakers: Your products are too dangerous!

    We are writing to encourage your companies to take concrete and meaningful steps to address the serious risks posed to the consumers of our States by your company's personal transportation products("PtP"). By addressing such problems today as the use of these PtPs as getaway vehicles for bank robberies, perform drive-by shootings, not to mention the 40,000+ fatalities, hundreds of thousands of crippling injuries, and untold billions in lost wages and productivity, PtPs may one day realize their potential as a means for facilitating a wide range of transportation, recreation, sporting, and educational activities. At present, PtPs have too many times been hijacked by those who use it for illegal purposes to which the vast majority of our consumers do not wish to be exposed.

    If you can't or won't fix your products voluntarily, we will.

  16. Tell them no. by garcia · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "At present, P2P software has too many times been hijacked by those who use it for illegal purposes, to which the vast majority of our consumers do not wish to be exposed."

    Well, supposedly the majority of P2P is used for "illegal" purposes. It's then easy to extrapolate from there to say that the vast majority does wish to be exposed to "illegal" offerings.

    Although there is little evidence that child pornography or other criminal activities unrelated to copyright issues are any more prevalent on peer-to-peer networks than elsewhere on the Internet, entertainment companies and some policymakers have increasingly pointed to these issues as reason to impose new regulations on the networks and technology.

    Yes, that is called FUD. What they fail to mention is that this is a vicious attack. The "we need to protect our children" bullshit. It apparently works for FoxNews why not laws?

    In Washington, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, is sponsoring a bill that would hold file-sharing companies liable for the illegal actions of their users, a measure that could push the existing commercial networks out of business.

    I want to hold Orrin responsible for wasting Utah's tax dollars on fucking horseshit. There are much more important evils in Utah to deal with than P2P disrupting the conservative way of life out there.

    The letter specifically asks that file-sharing companies stop encrypting network transmissions in ways that make it difficult for law enforcement to investigate and enforce the law.

    Fuck them. I ask specifically that they keep their snooping eyes out of my business. Are they going to start asking that SSH tunnels be regulated because it may harbor criminals? We should all be required to run plaintext everything so that our information is out there for all eyes to see.

    The EFF needs to write a letter back that simply says, "In the best interests of our children we have to say, 'No.'" It might be too simple for them to understand without all that legal mumbo-jumbo but it would certainly be easier than fighting with them over what is obviously a bunch of uneducated nonsense.

  17. Analogy by chill · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Okay, how about this. Since file sharing companies would be liable for their users actions under Sen. Hatch's proposed law, how about extending that to other markets.

    Roads come to mind. I want the owners of the roads held liable everytime they are used for criminal purposes. If someone drives drugs from Miami up I-95, I think the owners of I-95 should be liable! The same goes for roads used during robbery get-a-ways and the like.

    Networks are INFRASTRUCTURE, like the road system. They are not enclosed locations like retail stores or private businesses or buildings.

    Where's a cluebat when you need one.

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
  18. Wow ... by gstoddart · · Score: 4, Funny
    Hey homey, want to deal with that bloke whoes been banging your girl?


    Wow ... homey and bloke appearing in the sentence.
    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  19. The crux of the problem... by gillbates · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From the article:

    We view with equal alarm reports that at least some P2P file-sharing services are adding encryption features to those services.... Encryption only reinforces the perception that P2P technology is being used primarily for illegal ends. Accordingly, we would ask you to refrain from making design changes to your software that prevent law enforcement in our States from investigating and enforcing the law.

    I find the notion that encryption implies criminal activity particularly troublesome, especially considering:

    1. Millions of workers every day are able to work from home thanks to VPN. Without encryption, the possibility of divulging sensitive information would keep these workers in their cubicles, rather than caring for children or staying home sick.
    2. Industrial espionage is contingent on the absence of encrypted communications. On more than one occasion, the lack of encryption in communication facilities has inadvertently disclosed trade secrets. In at least one instance, the entire source tree for a popular software product was divulged.
    3. Without encryption, the proceedings of supposedly "secret" court proceedings - those involving children, or sexual abuse - may be inadvertently disclosed to associates of the accused, enabling revenge on the victims.
    4. Without encryption, e-commerce would cease to exist - who would send their credit card info over the internet unencrypted?
    5. Without encryption, political dissidents in terrorist controlled countries could not organize a resistance movement for the sake of furthering democracy. Saddam Hussein successfully thwarted overthrow for more than 10 years partly because he effectively outlawed encryption.
    6. More often than not, criminals and terrorists do not use encryption - the 9/11 hijackers didn't, nor did Timothy McVeigh.
    7. A recent FBI report concluded that during the last 5 years, not one case was stymied by an inability to decrypt communications between suspects. In fact, of all federal cases, less than 4% involved the use of encryption, and even then it didn't help the suspects.

    The problem with the "only criminals use encryption..." mantra is that it just isn't true. Encryption is used far more often for legal, productive activities than illegal ones.

    --
    The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
  20. "Consumers" by mrscott · · Score: 4, Informative

    It was interesting to find this letter on Slashdot since I worked for the National Association of Attorneys General up until April of this year as the IT Director.

    As for your concern about the word "consumer", you are correct in your assumption that the AGs consider you their consumer. However, the word consumer in this sense is defined as "citizens that are under our jurisdiction", not as "our customer".

  21. P2P leaves the political coercers powerless by Morgaine · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How something is USED, and what something IS, are two completely different things.

    You're using logic. :-) You should know that logic is irrelevant here when it comes to politicians trying to justify something. They use rhetoric for effect, not to conveny logical reasoning. (And AG's are politicians, possibly the most dangerous kind owing to their long-term power and elevated status.)

    When you're a politician, you're in the power game, the power to regulate and to dictate what others do. You're a coercer, in every bone in your body.

    Now consider P2P networks. They bypass every possible point of control, totally undermining the ability of coercers to impose their will. The idea that P2P can be allowed to exist is utter anathema to them. And they can see that it could get much worse, with P2P traffic becoming practically invisible in addition to being effectively anonymous. This is beyond the pale. They have not worked their way up the tree of political power for 30-40 years only to be undermined like this.

    If you can imagine a bunch of people totally freaking out, you've got the right picture. Don't expect logic.

    --
    "The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra