Slashdot Mirror


British Student Faces Extradition To US Over Copyright

An anonymous reader writes "A 23-year-old British computer student faces possible extradition to the U.S. for linking to copyrighted content on his website. The student, Richard O'Dwyer, was accused of copyright infringement after setting up the website TV Shack, which had links to thousands of films and tv shows, but did not directly host them."

73 of 340 comments (clear)

  1. Jurisdiction by Robadob · · Score: 4, Informative

    Do they have any jurisdiction over this? It wasn't even hosted in the US.

    1. Re:Jurisdiction by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 5, Informative

      The US doesn't give two shits about jurisdiction, they care about sticking it to the kid.

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    2. Re:Jurisdiction by Hatta · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Being the greatest, best country God has ever given man kind, US law is God's law, which recognizes no jurisdiction.

      This is how American Exceptionalists really think.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    3. Re:Jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Do they have any jurisdiction over this? It wasn't even hosted in the US.

      Well, since both countries are signatories to the Berne Convention ... technically, by treaty the US is legally entitled to ask for the extradition.

      Of course, if you were living in a country which said that linking didn't actually constitute copyright infringement, then the response would be "go away". If your country rules that linking is the same as infringement ... well, then you get extradited. So, depending on precedent in the UK, that's what will likely happen.

      I think this pretty much demonstrates how copyright has become the big bogeyman that circumvents any sanity in law any more. It's become somewhat out of control, and something people are treating as the most important thing going.

    4. Re:Jurisdiction by Nick+Ives · · Score: 5, Informative

      Back when Tony Blair was in power he signed an extradition treaty with the US which means that if a DA files charges against someone, they can be extradited from the UK. Our Parliament ratified the treaty without inserting a reciprocal clause in the legislation making it dependant on your congress honouring the treaty.

      Obviously your congress decided that having US citizens extradited just because a prosecutor in the UK fancied it them was mental, so they didn't ratify that clause. That leaves us with the current imbalance where your criminal justice system can essentially pull anyone out of the UK for any reason.

      --
      Nick
    5. Re:Jurisdiction by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Getting authorities to act sanely entails that they understand a *tiny* bit about how these systems work. They don't. By the admission of many legislators they are getting all their information from lobbyists... which means almost all their information has bias problems.

      We've come a long way from the "creme rising to the top" and such in government. It's purely face-men listening totally to corporate interests. And anyone with true unbiased knowledge are simply "the other" now and their input is completely thrown away.

      He could get a judge that isn't on the take and actually cares about the facts and the best outcome is that it becomes a VERY EXPENSIVE fiasco... what is one more very expensive fiasco, eh?

    6. Re:Jurisdiction by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I'm an American and I find this situation as well as almost every governmental figure from the last 8 years pathetic. Even the ones that were mostly good, like my Senator Richard Lugar, have been shit since the Newt Gingrich congress when everything officially went apeshit with partisan hate (ending in the most unnecessary impeachment trial in history). But even worse than the politicians are the general public who keep electing these idiot facemen time after time. We're in major trouble, kids!

    7. Re:Jurisdiction by Score+Whore · · Score: 5, Informative

      There is no "three strikes" law at the federal level in the US. There are multiple "three strikes" state level laws. But there are no state level copyright laws. So your post is kind of bs.

    8. Re:Jurisdiction by rs79 · · Score: 5, Informative

      The US controls every domain name on the planet. Don't kid yourselves.

      For a "siezed" website, it seems to be pretty up: http://tvshack.bz/movies/M (beware of popups)

      I had no idea this site existed. Hello Streisand effect!

      --
      Need Mercedes parts ?
    9. Re:Jurisdiction by chrb · · Score: 4, Informative

      Obviously your congress decided that having US citizens extradited just because a prosecutor in the UK fancied it them was mental, so they didn't ratify that clause.

      No. The U.S. Senate ratified the treaty in 2006 - see Extradition Act 2003 (US ratification 2006).

    10. Re:Jurisdiction by retchdog · · Score: 2

      that's for violent felonies. the context of "three strikes" above was for three strikes copyright laws as in france.

      although afaic any law based on a sports analogy should be shitcanned immediately.

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    11. Re:Jurisdiction by Dunbal · · Score: 3, Insightful

      the Berne convention is an international treaty

      Signed in the 19th century when copyright infringement was a civil matter, not a criminal one.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    12. Re:Jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I keep trying to explain this, especially in relation to Julian Assange.

      You don't get a free pass to commit crimes against a nation's people or corporations or government just because you're not a citizen and not in that country when you do it.

      So you think the editors of the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten should be extradited to an Arab country so that they can be beheaded for posting cartoons of Muhammad?

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jyllands-Posten_Muhammad_cartoons_controversy

    13. Re:Jurisdiction by Nick+Ives · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Right, but that doesn't redress the imbalance around the fact that the treaty allows for the USA to remove people from the UK for things actions that occur in the UK but are illegal under US law.

      To highlight how crazy this is, there's a case of a somone involved in a bribery scandal being extradited even though the alleged crimes occurred entirely between the UK and Nigeria, just because he worked for a firm owned by Haliburton!

      Of course it's right that such crimes should be investigated, but things like that are illegal in the UK too. If our criminal justice system doesn't see fit to prosecute, why pull them out to the USA to do it?

      Having said that, our police and prosecutors are clearly and obviously corrupt at the highest levels (evidenced by the fact that our Tory government employed a former newspaper editor from News International who has been implicated in a phone hacking scandal, and his former boss even accidentally admitted to parliament that her paper regularly bribes police officers for information) so maybe you're doing us a favour. This is about the principal though!

      --
      Nick
    14. Re:Jurisdiction by Nick+Ives · · Score: 2

      Actually, subject was dropped in '82. It's still around in the form of British subjects without citizenship or citizen of Eire who applied to become subjects in '48.

      --
      Nick
    15. Re:Jurisdiction by Nick+Ives · · Score: 2

      OK. That's actually pretty good news, but the treaty as negotiated is still imbalanced as I've commented above.

      Still, I guess I learned that now our prosecutors can pull people out of your country too! Our news didn't report that, you guys seeing sense and honouring your negotiated obligations doesn't sell papers you see.

      In any case, the treaty we have with the USA isn't the worst of our extradition arrangements. In the European Union we have these things called European Arrest Warrants which mean national police forces can pull anyone out of any country. One guy was extradited to Poland for refusing to pay for his pudding in a cafe!

      --
      Nick
    16. Re:Jurisdiction by Muros · · Score: 2

      Of course, if you were living in a country which said that linking didn't actually constitute copyright infringement, then the response would be "go away". If your country rules that linking is the same as infringement ... well, then you get extradited.

      What the hell is that even supposed to mean? Linking is providing a pointer to some data. Are journalists going to be held to this standard as well, or is it only for things that happen to be on a computer system?

    17. Re:Jurisdiction by paulo.casanova · · Score: 2

      No but you cannot be convicted of a crime which is not a crime in the place you commit it... the US seem to disregard that fact all the time. Especially when copyright is involved!

    18. Re:Jurisdiction by Dahamma · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Crimes" against a nation's people? For *linking* to copyrighted content!?

      Since (according to the Berne convention) copyrights are automatic, that means pretty much every website on the Internet is copyrighted. Which means every hyperlink to a page that you don't own is potential copyright infringement. I think it would be safe to say that under this definition, almost every website on the planet is now guilty of a crime.

    19. Re:Jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Thats ok,

      I called the Saudi Arabian crime stoppers and let them know that your mother, sisters, and daughters have all consistently failed to wear veils, or burqas. They also insist upon driving. I suspect they shall be extradited post haste.

      Do you see why you fail yet? Because some of us have been trying to explain this to your stupid thick headed ass for quite a while now.

      Do you know why it will never happen? Because Saudi Arabian laws don't apply here. Now lets follow that through logically... Do you think American laws apply elsewhere?

      Oh BTW I'm an American, and veteran. My opinion? Julian Assuange should be freed, Bradley Manning should be freed, and the charges against this college kid should be dropped. The way my government is currently acting at times makes me physically sick.

    20. Re:Jurisdiction by QuasiSteve · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think they understand how these systems work just fine. The problem is that 'we, the people' like to think that the technical workings of things offers ways around the intent of laws in addition to getting around the letter of them.

      e.g. if I get 1,000 individuals to upload 1,000 movies to 1,000 individual sites which don't have any particular public presence, then those 1,000 individuals are technically the ones breaking the laws.
      The people behind those 1,000 sites may also be breaking the law (depending on (nation) state and internationally applicable conventions, they may be in direct violation of a copyright law or at least in violation of a copyright 'safe harbor' clause a la the DMCA).
      Any of the, say, 1,000,000 who directly download from those locations - by having received one or more of those locations - may also be breaking the law (depending on the (nation) state in question).

      But finding those 1,000 individuals takes a lot of time, and costs a fair amount of money, and there's no guarantee that even one of them is found.
      Shutting down 1,000 sites takes a lot of time and costs a fair amount of money, and there's no guarantee that even one of them is actually shut down.
      Finding and suing the 1,000,000 downloaders takes even more time, costs even more money, and there's no guarantee that even one of them is actually found/sued.

      Not to mention the great public backlash against actions taken against downloaders; not so much when it's against uploaders, oddly enough.

      But now imagine that those 1,000,000 downloaders got those 1,000 addresses from 1 site. One single site. Now they've got an easy target. Now they've got the site that, while not responsible for the uploads, not hosting them, and not exactly putting a gun to people's head and saying THOU SHALT DOWNLOADETH, can certainly be successfully argued to be facilitating copyright infringement in a significant way.

      The facilitating argument is usually what's used in these cases, at least around Europe. Not sure how that is in the U.S., but I wouldn't be at all surprised if the same were to apply there.

    21. Re:Jurisdiction by SkunkPussy · · Score: 2

      ye I think the presumption should be that people are tried at home, because I don't really see how you can mount a great defence when you are a) away from your friends/family/normal support networks and b) tried in a country whose laws are all completely new to you. essentially non-essential extradition throws a fair trial to the wind.

      --
      SURELY NOT!!!!!
    22. Re:Jurisdiction by Ecgtheow · · Score: 2
    23. Re:Jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, its still one sided, you see it works like this,

      UK citizen wanted by an American prosecutor, can be extradited under mere suspicion

      US citizen wanted by a British prosecutor, can only be extradited when evidence is shown that a crime has been committed.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extradition_Act_2003

      Sounds one sided to me..

    24. Re:Jurisdiction by lennier · · Score: 5, Funny

      The US controls domains with other country TLDs?

      They use Aircraft Carrier Deployment Protocol for that.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    25. Re:Jurisdiction by lennier · · Score: 2

      I think this pretty much demonstrates how copyright has become the big bogeyman that circumvents any sanity in law any more. It's become somewhat out of control, and something people are treating as the most important thing going.

      Due to outsourcing of physical manufacturing, intellectual property is about all the USA has left to export. "Designed by Apple in California; made in China." So from an economic perspective, copyright is the most important thing going for the information-sellers of the world.

      It's not a very good thing at all from the point of view of civil liberties, but liberty costs money and you are not the paying customer.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    26. Re:Jurisdiction by Nursie · · Score: 2

      "The real WTF is US has jurisdiction in the UK and the other way around?"

      Hey, it's just the latest facet of the Global Free Market (TM), which is the latest thing in corporate and celebrity law.

      Want cheap labour? Take production overseas!
      Want to maintain your profit margin? Have laws draw up to outlaw parallel imports!

      This is just the latest thing, freedom to choose jurisdiction.
      Someone says something bad you don't like? Take it to the UK libel courts!
      Got a copyright related gripe? Have 'em hauled to the US!

    27. Re:Jurisdiction by julesh · · Score: 2

      Well, since both countries are signatories to the Berne Convention [wikipedia.org] ... technically, by treaty the US is legally entitled to ask for the extradition.

      Could you point out to me where in the Berne Convention extradition to the country of origin is mentioned as a remedy. In fact, it's quite clear in the opposite direction: violations are to be prosecuted in the territory where the infringement took place, in this case (if any infringement did take place) that is the UK.

    28. Re:Jurisdiction by squizzar · · Score: 2

      I used to live somewhere where there was a lot of drug dealing. So if I told you where that was do I get arrested for 'facilitating' the drug trade? What about if I put up a website with a list of areas known for dealing? Taking down a site like this does look like the simple solution, but at the end of the day it's all for show. Just like drugs if you bust the guys on the streets there are plenty more to take their place, the only solution to stopping it is to prevent the supply (or, for both sides of this analogy, to accept that people are going to do it, so find a way to legalize and take tax/profit from it). After all the demand is still out there, and so is the product. Someone will take on the job of putting the two together.

    29. Re:Jurisdiction by Hognoxious · · Score: 2

      Funny that, it says "British citizen" on my passport.

      Let me guess, you've never been there, couldn't point to it on a map, and you're probably fat too.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    30. Re:Jurisdiction by mcvos · · Score: 2

      The US doesn't give two shits about jurisdiction

      But the UK should. Is this even a criminal case in the UK? I doubt they can extradite him for a civil matter. And if it is a crime in the UK, and he committed the act in the UK, he should be tried there. The only reason for extradition is if the crime was committed in another country.

    31. Re:Jurisdiction by malkavian · · Score: 2

      I'm happy with either "Subject" (I happen to like the Monarchy) or a "Citizen". But yes, this extradition crap does bug the hell out of me. It was all set up by our previous Labour Government who really didn't give a rat's ass about privacy, rights (unless they were politically gainful to Labour) or anything like that. I've seen the biggest "Big Brother" intrusions and breakdown of personal rights I've come across in 40 years during their time.
      I'm hoping that the new lot will have the balls to shut that side down, but it takes quite a few years.. So not holding my breath for the near future..
      Can imagine you'd find it funny.. I would from the outside (it's one of those "It's so crazy someone must be making it up" stories)..

    32. Re:Jurisdiction by rohan972 · · Score: 2

      US law should apply to citizens of the US and visitors to the US. There is no reason a citizen of another country who is not in the US should be expected to act in the interest of the US, or keep US secrets.

      We (Australia) shouldn't have rolled over when you kept David Hicks for five years without trial. We should extract Julian Assange from any country that agrees to send him to the US by any means necessary.

      It won't happen but we should have our own nuclear weapons so we could break our military ties with the US.

    33. Re:Jurisdiction by jeremyp · · Score: 2

      The Uk doesn't extradite people if there is any danger of the death penalty being applied. Of course, that doesn't stop the Americans saying "hey yes, we promise to only do him for the 10 year crime" and then changing their minds when they have got their hands on him.

      --
      All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
  2. Let me get this right by MonsterTrimble · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So this guy is being extradited because he has a website which links to copyrighted content only? When did the rules change, because somebody should be talking to Google & Microsoft....

    --
    I call it 'The Aristocrats'
    1. Re:Let me get this right by Unkyjar · · Score: 2

      Since when does a law in America have sway over someone who ISN'T AN AMERICAN?!

      Since always. Otherwise foreign folks would have gone on killing sprees in America long ago.

      I think you're looking more for "Since when does a law in American have sway over someone who isn't American or in the United States or its Territories?"

      And to that question I'd probably say this type of stupid enforcement of law is the result of the buzzword "Globalization".

    2. Re:Let me get this right by Bogtha · · Score: 5, Informative

      When did the rules change

      On the 17th of August, 2000, when 2600 was barred from linking to DeCSS under the terms of the DMCA.

      Given the peculiar characteristics of computer programs for circumventing encryption and other access control measures, the DMCA as applied to posting and linking here does not contravene the First Amendment.

      (Emphasis mine.)

      --
      Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
  3. YouTube, Google, Facebook by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I got access to all copyrighted content via youtube, google and facebook, I wonder why thoses company(CEO) are not in jail, if this "crime" can send you in jail for 5 years.

    1. Re:YouTube, Google, Facebook by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 2

      They have better lobbyists than this guy. Duh.

    2. Re:YouTube, Google, Facebook by 91degrees · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Well, youtube, Google and Facebook do not exist for the sole purpose of activities that infringe copyright. They also take measures to ensure that the infringing material is blocked or that the copyright holders are recompensed for it.

      TV shack exists purely to allow people access to copyright information without the copyright holder's permission.

    3. Re:YouTube, Google, Facebook by hedwards · · Score: 2

      If you're going to be that literal, he had a website, it wasn't hosting any of those files. The DMCA takedown notices apply to services which are hosting files, not links. There were no files for him to take down.

      And that's ignoring the fact that the DMCA doesn't apply outside the US, courts don't have legal jurisdiction over an alleged crime which happened over seas.

  4. Linking == Copyright Violation? by ZipK · · Score: 2

    If this Slashdot article points to an Inquirer article that points to a website that points to videos, isn't Slashdot some fraction as guilty as the website owner? What is the decay rate for guiltiness-per-level-of-indirection?

    1. Re:Linking == Copyright Violation? by DaHat · · Score: 2

      Kids today... not knowing the implications of the MPAA v 2600 case over the DeCSS source code.

      God I feel old... and I only turn 31 next month :(

    2. Re:Linking == Copyright Violation? by blair1q · · Score: 2

      Fair use of fair use of fair use of fair use of pirated content.

  5. Re:Pointless by milkmage · · Score: 5, Informative

    READ THE FUCKING ARTICLE.
    ICE is the twunt... yes that ICE.

    The website was seized by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement. O'Dywer was arrested on May 23, brought to Wandsworth prison and then released on a £3,000 bail paid by his aunt.

    I assume the US wants him extradited so he can face prosecution HERE.

  6. How many links is the limit for infringement? by Rijnzael · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I like using rlslog.net to conveniently find torrents. They host no copyrighted content whatsoever, only link to sites which link to torrents which in a sense link to a swarm of people who have parts of the file of interest.

    I imagine that, just following random links on the internet from nearly any given site, I could eventually get to the site I mentioned above. How many links is enough degrees of separation? Surely if liability is introduced simply by linking to a website, you are liable for anything sites you link to also link to. I wonder how many government sites link to Google as their site search provider? Google can get you anywhere, so surely the government would in those cases be liable for linking to Google which links to torrent sites. And that's why this idea is completely absurd.

    And how the hell is what this kid did worthy of extradition, or even a felony in the US? Our copyright policy is so ridiculous.

    1. Re:How many links is the limit for infringement? by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 5, Informative

      More specifically, Tommy Chong was jailed for selling bongs to Pennsylvania cops who repeatedly tried to purchase them even though Chong Glass refused each time because it is illegal in Pennsylvania. After placing a large order under a false name for pickup (where it was legal), the cops refused to pick up the material and had them ship it to get payment.

      All of this circus was done for political reasons by Mary Beth Buchanan with a wink and a nod from John Ashcroft.

    2. Re:How many links is the limit for infringement? by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I think what these arguments are missing, which is what is often missing, is the area of intent. For example, Slashdot links to all sorts of "illegal" material -- but the site is a news site, not a site that is dedicated to indexing copyright infringed works.

      What this guy could have done was make his site a discussion site with TV schedules etc. that just happened to also have an area showing examples of where this content was available online. If these links were not the primary goal of the site, but only a result of other user's activity on the site (and not ad supported), he likely wouldn't be under the extradition cloud.

      US courts don't really care that much about what crimes you facilitate; they care about what crimes you premeditatively facilitate. They also care if someone cries foul and appears to have a case, yet you ignore them and don't take reasonable steps to make things better.

  7. Re:September 12 by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

    Unfortunately, I don't think there's many decent countries that don't have extradition treaties with the USA. He could move to Zimbabwe, of course, but who the hell would want to live there? It'd be better to be in a crappy American prison than there.

    There are countries, however, that are much stricter on who they'll extradite to the US, and for what crimes. Switzerland, I believe, is a good example of this. If they don't consider it a serious crime, they won't extradite. So they'll send you to America if you're a murderer or similar, but not if you're just a tax evader.

    This kid should probably try to get asylum there, or in Sweden. The UK seems to be the USA's little bitch any time the US wants to extradite someone for something that's not even a crime in the UK.

  8. Re:Land of the free - paradox? by Grishnakh · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Ever read "1984"? Remember how the war department was the "Ministry of Peace", the propaganda department was the "Ministry of Truth", etc.? The USA's claim "land of the free" is the same. It's just propaganda, and it never was true. At least back in the old days, it was only the slaves and Indians who weren't free, but these days it's everyone who isn't super-rich and politically connected.

  9. Re:Land of the free - paradox? by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

    What's more disturbing is how all these other countries willingly act as its lapdog and follow its orders. Maybe if the UK and other places would grow a spine, everyone else could just sit back and laugh when the USA does stupid and ridiculous stuff like this.

    I bet China won't be honoring any extradition requests for "crimes" like this.

  10. Importing criminals by siga · · Score: 3, Informative

    I guess US does not have enough citizens in jails , so they need to import now . http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incarceration_in_the_United_States

  11. Government=Cream? by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 3, Funny

    We've come a long way from the "creme rising to the top" and such in government.

    Are you familiar with the septic tank paradigm for government (and politics in general)?
    The biggest shits always rise to the top...

    --
    Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
    1. Re:Government=Cream? by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 3, Funny

      Creme is always rich and thick.

  12. Re:Pointless by mwvdlee · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The US wants him extradited so they can prosecute him for alleged crimes in the UK?
    I didn't know the US jurisdiction stretched that far over their borders.

    --
    Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
  13. Re:Pointless by zill · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Soviet prisoner #1: So how long is your sentence?
    Soviet prisoner #2: 10 years.
    Soviet prisoner #1: What did you do?
    Soviet prisoner #2: Nothing.
    Soviet prisoner #1: You liar! "Nothing" gets you 20 years under the PATRIOT ACT.

  14. Re:Pointless by paulo.casanova · · Score: 5, Informative

    C'mon, the US never really cared about jurisdiction in the first place... Dmitry Sklyarov anyone?

  15. Damnit America by Stregano · · Score: 2

    Deal with your problems and stop trying to deal with other countries problems. You guys have poverty and unemployment rates through the roof, but you are wasting federal resources to try and get some young kid over there to prosecute him. Just an example, last night I was bored and found an Obama interview where he was asked about making Medical Marijuana a Federal Law so that the Feds can stop doing what they do. He said he supported it, but had much bigger issues to use federal resources on. Apparently one of those bigger issues is shipping kids here from the UK who pirate stuff. Seriously America, let us handle our own people breaking laws. We have it taken care of. You don't need to ship our boy over there to punish him when we can do that just fine.

    --
    The world is how you make it
  16. Re:Land of the free - paradox? by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 2

    The super rich and politically connected must have mod points today as you have been modded -1 Doubleplusungood

  17. and russian pies get deported freely by cheekyboy · · Score: 2

    So link to tv shows and go to jail. become an agent undercover spy for russian govt in the usa, and you dont even go to jail, but get deported.

    Nice morals USA.

    All russian spies can breath a sigh of relief. For they will never go to jail.

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    1. Re:and russian pies get deported freely by eiapoce · · Score: 2

      Extradition doesn't mean jail. [...]

      Won't know until the case has been tried. Nice jumping to conclusions.

      Extradition in civilized countries is for already known criminals... and it means loss of freedom, so fuck the innocent until proven guilty principle. I hope people with a limited grasp of basic human rights like you get extradited to China or Iran. Those are the places that generally apply as much human rights to their people as the USA reserve for those infringing copyrights. Fortunately there you won't even have to pay a arm and leg for the lawyers!

  18. OMFG, what BS by lexsird · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is a blaring indictment of how corporations run things. This copyright crap is just about corporate strings controlling our government. Where is the rage?

    I can remember back in the day when the Internet first started how when it was first used for making money how angry the users were against it. It was suppose to be a landscape of pure thought, ideas to be shared for the edification of us all. Bzzzt. That didn't work out. Now its been raped by corporations, if some kid puts up a website that they think they can squeeze a dime out of they burn him. What is sickening is how our pathetic lapdog piece of shit politicians hand over the keys of power to them. We then have a massive industry of enforcement and punishment. We have so many fucking people in jail now its fucking insane.

    Lets dissect all these fucking laws of ours that put people in jail to protect corporate interests. Next we need to consider that our retarded crooked cunt of a Supreme Court has decided in their fucked in the head reasoning that corporations are now "people" and have rights. Holy fucking shit people! How far does a cock have to jam up our asses before we realize how raped we are? How come they aren't paying taxes like a normal person then? Oh, that is right, they buy politicians to give us a tax code that stacks taller than a person.

    The one big lesson that we have collectively forgotten like a bunch of retards is this: When it happens to the least of us, it happens to all of us. When we let these fuckers in charge get away with fucking ONE OF US, then ALL of our liberties are in jeopardy. If you don't consider ANY violation of ANYONE'S liberties a violation of your OWN liberty, then you just fuck off and let it happen. They come for you eventually too, and there is nobody left to stand and fight them with you. Besides you don't deserve anyone helping you because you were a cowardly cunt who let it happen to others.

    I hope the British people fucking riot over this, but they will not. They are a bunch of lemming pussies too. Who am I to talk? We are proving to be the biggest bunch of retarded pussies in history. I shit you all not, if we don't get a grasp of our government and rip it away from corporations, we will be viewed by future historians as infinitely worse than the fucktards in the era of Germany that let the Nazis rise to power.

    Why get so excited over some punk kid getting treated like a high crimes criminal? Sweet Jesus, people, this could be YOU. This could be ME! I don't have the means to fight this kind of shit? Do you? How far will they keep taking control over us? Oh fuck it, what can I expect of the Facebook generation? Stop the fucking planet, I want off.

    --
    Take the Red Pill.
  19. Re:Pointless by MysteriousPreacher · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The UK signed up to an Interestingly one-sided extradition treaty which is best summed up as follows:

    US: We want on of your citizens for x crimes
    UK: Do you have the kind of evidence we would require in order to press charges?
    US: No
    UK: He'll be on the 2:30 to O'Hare

    --
    -- Using the preview button since 2005
  20. Re:Pointless by lothos · · Score: 4, Informative

    TVShack wasn't just seized once, it was seized TWICE.

    tvshack.net was the original domain, which switched to tvshack.cc after it was seized. They then put up a video of the song "Fuck the police" on the homepage. They were seized a second time.

    http://www.domaincensorship.com/2010/11/tvshack-cc-seized-again/

  21. Re:Pointless by seeker_1us · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not to mention the fact that he didn't violate any copyright. Links do not make copies.

  22. Re:Land of the free - paradox? by sqrt(2) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That's a terrible solution. I don't want a militarized border a few miles South of me. I'd rather we remove the economic incentive to smuggle drugs into the US by making them legal to produce and distribute here in a safe, affordable, and regulated manner. If they are going to be sold and used anyway (and they are, you can't stop it), it might as well be done safely and in the open where it can be monitored and regulated--and taxed appropriately.

    Anything else is jingoistic madness, usually with a dash of racism.

    --
    If you build it, nerds will come. Soylentnews.org
  23. thats not how it works completely by dutchwhizzman · · Score: 2

    The reason why is one part. The other part is that the UK trusts the US legal system so much, that they will extradite anyone that is supposed to get a "fair trial", without looking at what the charges are. This means that anyone that may or may not be charged in the UK and gets to wait for his trial in freedom, will get jailed with Bubba in the US, possibly waiting for over a year before being trialed and/or convicted. Even for something that will get you no more than a fine in the UK, even if you're innocent, you could spend a year in a US jail. Why do you think there are so many plea bargains made in the US? You do less jail time if you plea, even if you're innocent and that will be found at the trial.

    --
    I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
  24. Re:Pointless by Opportunist · · Score: 2

    The scary part is that the soviet version punchline goes "Liar! For nothing you only get 5 years".

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  25. Re:Pointless by rtb61 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This one sounds like the US has no real interest at all in the case, they are just trying to lower the bar for extradition cases, with the aim of targeting other people. This guy is just seems to be a victim of a political game, with the intention of making it easier to extradite other people currently in the UK for the crime of handling intellectual property that the US does not want them to.

    So will the British government and the British people just role over and become another third world country when it comes to providing the citizens justice against politically motivated chargers by the US government.

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  26. Re:While we're at it... by billcopc · · Score: 2

    You're bang on the money, and this is what the industry doesn't get. As a different example, I've spent more money on Steam in the past year, than I had on boxed games in the ten years prior. Why ? Because they give me what I want, how I want it, where I want it.

    I can count on one hand the number of hours I spend watching TV shows every week, the wife maybe twice as many. Our cable TV bill was close to $300 a month. So, 5 bucks an hour for TV shows seems a bit much, but this is how the cableco designed it, as each show is on a different channel, in a different bundle, and it actually worked out cheaper to get the "everything" package than to cherry-pick the proper bundles. We decided this was not worth the money, so we canceled it. Now I just download those same shows off the net and pay nothing. Actually, even when we had cable, I still downloaded a lot of the shows because it was easier and more convenient than programming the DVR, and there is nothing more irritating than a super loud tampon ad jammed right after a tense scene.

    Torrent sites and Usenet are great, but they're inconvenient. If the media industry could figure out a way to deliver the content at high download speeds, easily automated, and no DRM, I would happily pay maybe a dollar per hour of programming. Yeah, a dollar. If it's only streamed then 50 cents per hour. It has to be better than torrents, which means streaming + downloading (no time-restricted DRM bullshit), subscription so I don't have to go searching for new episodes every week, all past episodes available indefinitely, no ads, no fakes, no nonsense. For the estimated 60 hours we watch, that's $60 per month. For the time I spend hunting out torrents, checking release sites, and administering my seedbox, $60 would be money well spent. Those who are too cheap to pay the buck can and will continue to seek out torrents, but some of us have better things to do.

    To look at it from the distributor's side, I'll take an example show that I watch: Conan. Four nights a week, one hour shows. That's 16 hours per month (roughly). Times 1.3 million viewers, would bring in 1.3 million dollars per episode. Assuming his ratings don't improve, it's still well over $200 million per year. Even if they split this 50/50 with the distribution company, I'd still hazard a guess that it's significantly more than they're currently earning. Not too bad for a geeky late night talk show, don't you think ? Guys like Letterman and *cringe* Leno bring in three to four times as many viewers. If that's not profitable, someone needs to shoot the accountants.

    --
    -Billco, Fnarg.com
  27. Re:Pointless by MysteriousPreacher · · Score: 2

    It was due to Tony Blair's belief that the special transatlantic friendship required the UK to act like a girl who drops anything and comes running when her boyfriend wants a fuck, in the belief that being completely servile to a disinterested bully will one-day lead to a marriage proposal. Same pattern of thought during the second gulf war. Give America what it wants in the hope of maintaining this special relationship and giving the UK influence over America's actions. Blair would have skull fucked a puppy if he believed it'd lead to Bush walking him down the aisle at some dingy Vegas chapel.

    --
    -- Using the preview button since 2005
  28. Re:Pointless by Joce640k · · Score: 2

    Prosecution for annoying the people who pay for US Senator's lunches. Haven't you been paying attention?

    --
    No sig today...