EFF Releases Copyright Guide for P2P Developers
An anonymous reader writes "Now that the courts have ruled that P2P services are legal, the EFF has released a legal guide for those wishing to start such a service, but are unfamiliar with the parameters that will keep the copyright cartel off their back."
It strikes me that they may have missed what I think may be the most important bit of advice: keep your assets offshore, and if your system needs web presence or indexing servers, keep them offshore in countries where the laws are not likely to change.
Sure, the courts have been ruling that P2P software is legal, but there's a good chance that will change before the end of the decade. There's just too much money in the hands of Big Entertainment for it not to.
www.kitchengeek.com -- Nosh for
VCR, DVR, MP3 Players all had substantial new useful non-infringing uses. They had uses that could not be done with other technology at the time. I have yet to see any useful uses for p2p file sharing. The web, email, IM, and online music stores all provide a better way to distribute content than p2p. The best reason that has been given to distribute legitimate content on p2p networks is specifically to demonstrate non-infringing use for the purpose of Betamax. P2P has yet to have any legitimate use that is definitively substantial.