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The Electronic Frontier Foundation reports that both organizations--along with a few others--want to take the file-monitoring process a huge step further by infiltrating consumer PCs and deleting the infringing content off their hard drives. How? Through "anti-infringement" spyware developed and enforced by the government......
.......
"There are several technologies and methods that can be used by network administrators and providers...these include [consumer] tools for managing copyright infringement from the home (based on tools used to protect consumers from viruses and malware)," reads a caption in a joint comment (pdf) filed by the MPAA and RIAA.
The joint comment goes on to suggest other means of copyright enforcement including a mandatory scan on all internet connections to interdict transfers of illegal content, physical searches at all borders of personal media players, laptops, and USB sticks. There's even an indication that the parties want to enforce international bullying to force other countries to put similar policies in place.
But there's more. The comment said that the copyright holders want the FBI and Department of Homeland Security
to fork over agents--at the taxpayer's expense--so that they can guard the media prior to distribution.
[MORE AT LINK]
Has the RIAA/MPAA gone nuts enough yet?
Except downloading music is not a stolen item, it is copied data. There is a differenceFair enough, as long as they receive no legal protection for error.
If I were going to argue against privacy laws, I would say it would be like repossession of any stolen item.
Except downloading music is not a stolen item, it is copied data. There is a difference
Except downloading music is not a stolen item, it is copied data. There is a difference
Just because its not an original doesn't mean its not stolen. If it is defined as property, which this is, then taking a copy without owner's consent of sale is theft.
Of course, thoughts are worthless. Ideas are worthless. If they aren't a "thing" then, well, it's not a "thing." [/sarcasm]
Just because its not an original doesn't mean its not stolen.
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