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India Threatens 3-Year Jail Sentences For Viewing Blocked Torrents (intoday.in)

"It is official now. The punishment for rape is actually less..." writes an anonymous Slashdot reader, who adds that "Some users think that this is all the fault of Bollywood/Hollywood movie studios. They are abusing power, court and money..." India Today reports: The Indian government, with the help of internet service providers, and presumably under directives of court, has banned thousands of websites and URLs in the last five odd years. But until now if you somehow visited these "blocked URLs" all was fine. However, now if you try to visit such URLs and view the information, you may get a three-year jail sentence as well as invite a fine...

This is just for viewing a torrent file, or downloading a file from a host that may have been banned in India, or even for viewing an image on a file host like Imagebam. You don't have to download a torrent file, and then the actual videos or other files, which might have copyright. Just accessing information under a blocked URL will land you in jail and leave your bank account poorer.

While it's not clear how this will be enforced, visiting a blocked URL in India now leads to a warning that "Viewing, downloading, exhibiting or duplicating an illicit copy of the contents under this URL is punishable as an offence under the laws of India, including but not limited to under Sections 63, 63-A, 65 and 65-A of the Copyright Act, 1957 which prescribe imprisonment for 3 years and also fine of up to Rs. 3,00,000..."

6 of 96 comments (clear)

  1. Technical solution by OpenSourced · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Better use emule to share, with Kad network if all emule servers are down. You don't have URLs to block there.

    I know that the issue here is the outrageous punishment of the law, but the situation here is asymmetrical in that the content creators have all the financial incentive to fight legally, and the content sharers very little of it. However, the asymmetry is reversed on the technical side, so that's where you can play your cards.

    --
    Rome taught me patience and assiduous application to detail. Virtues which temper the boldness of great, general views.
  2. War on Access by Howitzer86 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Ludicrous. I wonder who will have the honor of being the first country to exact the death penalty for file sharing.

    Accessing files by working around the state protected gate keeper? DEATH!
    Accessing streams rather than hunting down the tape in a bargain bin somewhere because you can't get it otherwise anymore? DEATH.
    Visiting sites otherwise banned by the government because it contains information they don't want you to know or share? DEATH.
    Running a site banned by accident? Byzantine appeals process... followed by DEATH.

    Imagine the pressure. Here's your first computer kiddo. Don't press this big red button though. If you do, they'll come and murder the whole family.

    1. Re:War on Access by tbuskey · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Ludicrous. I wonder who will have the honor of being the first country to exact the death penalty for file sharing.

      Accessing files by working around the state protected gate keeper? DEATH!

      Larry Niven wrote The Jigsaw Man about escalating penaties for crimes.

    2. Re:War on Access by diga33 · · Score: 4, Informative

      You know what they say: download a Michael Jackson song, get 10 years in jail, kill Michael Jackson get 4.

  3. Actual Theft by Howitzer86 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It's probably less risky to steal an actual DVD at this point. Hell, target the guys at the market selling the bootlegs. They won't call the cops.

  4. Alarmism by jma05 · · Score: 4, Informative

    All this is pointless hyperventilating by people who understand little about India.
    India is one the LEAST punitive countries in the world. It does not believe that putting people in the prison is a solution for anything – even for things most of us would agree that people should be put into prison for.
    India’s incarceration rate is 33 (one of the lowest in the world) per 100,000
    US incarceration rate is 698 (highest incarceration rate in the world, if you ignore Seychelles) per 100,000
    Have you ever heard of anyone put in prison in India for downloading a file? The law has been around since 1957. I am not even sure if for-profit bootleggers who sell media in India have been in prison for more than a few weeks. This is just some tech-ignorant government bureaucrat getting carried away. If a 0.01% of Indians tweet about it, the warning will be edited to something realistic. This has been the pattern about most India alarmist articles on Slashdot.