You have a point; records can be falsified. But you always have to have some faith in the evidence. If the DNA lab says that the victim's blood was found on your clothing, you can't just cry out "the records were falsified" without good reason to believe so.
In this case, there's no reason a company like MediaSentry (even being the dicks that they are) would bully a poor woman arbitrarily. The focus of the lawyer was (rightly) to show that the MediaSentry records were not tampered with in bad faith, but were grossly inaccurate.
If you don't trust any evidence, there can be no justice.
You have a point; records can be falsified. But you always have to have some faith in the evidence. If the DNA lab says that the victim's blood was found on your clothing, you can't just cry out "the records were falsified" without good reason to believe so.
In this case, there's no reason a company like MediaSentry (even being the dicks that they are) would bully a poor woman arbitrarily. The focus of the lawyer was (rightly) to show that the MediaSentry records were not tampered with in bad faith, but were grossly inaccurate.
If you don't trust any evidence, there can be no justice.
1) Why do you have HD-DVDs in the first place 2) No, it's on MS .NET (just when you think "hey, maybe this guy isn't an asshole...")
I knew this was too good to last anyway. Although it's weird that they would pull this and neglect to deal with the sites that it links to.
because TorrentSpy was never any good in the first place. Good riddance.
What do you know, it didn't actually work for Wal-Mart. Next stop, viral marketing!