Legal Victory for P2P in France
nietsch writes "The Register is reporting that a french Kazaa user that had been sued by the SCPP (the french equivalent of the RIAA) has been acquitted by the courts in his county. 'The Judges decided that these acts of downloading and uploading qualified as private copying' Ars Technica has more coverage on the subject, or you can read it in english from the organization that lead the defense."
France has always been notoriously pro-consumer. So much so that it drives businesses away. In droves.
They are so pro-consumer, who would ever consider even starting a business there?
Yay socialism.
(I feel moderator rage building...It's OK. Ive got karma to burn.)
You hacky sperm wagons cant think of an original french joke?
Come on... Brainstorm guys... for the children!
We need new french jokes like... Did you hear the French sold arms to Saddam? They worked perfectly... When America invaded... they dug a hole into the ground for him to hide.
Weeeeeeooooowooowoowow I'm FUNNY... Look at me Daddy... No not that way.. you dirty old man... wooooooooooooeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
In Nazi Germany, the French invade you!
I'd shoot myself, if i werent half french.
I'll be at Chuckle Cunts on the 8th headlining with Jimmy Norton. It's his birthday you know.
"I'm too cheap to pay 99 cents for a song, if (as with iTMS) that song is crippled with DRM, stripped of 90 percent of its data, comes with no physical media or artwork, and yet is treated as a single physical copy rather than a media service (e.g. no option to download again if file is corrupt, deleted or destroyed).
I got an iTunes card for Christmas a couple of years ago, and I tried using it to download an album. Five of the 11 song files were corrupt and unplayable, but Apple would not refund my money or authorize a new download."
translation: I have a right to steal something if the the producer doesn't offer it to me in a manner I want.
Vote for Pedro