20,000 sued for alleged illegal movie downloading
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The following comments relate to this news article:
article published on 1 April, 2010
The Hollywood Reporter is saying today that over 20,000 individuals have been sued for alleged illegal downloading of movies by the under-the-radar US Copyright Group, a firm based in the nation's capital.
Making the suits different from those in the past is that these suits are over small independent films, for example the films "Steam Experiment," "Far Cry," "Uncross the Stars," "Gray ... [ read the full article ]
Please read the original article before posting your comments.
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Junior Member
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1. April 2010 @ 23:26 |
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isn't that the same software that group of cronies lawers in the UK used and wrongfully threaten a bunch of people of sharing gay porn.
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llongtheD
Suspended due to non-functional email address
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3. April 2010 @ 19:49 |
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The only viewer ship these films would have probably had were through the torrents. Another crooked firm conducting shady business practices through corporate passed laws.
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 3. April 2010 @ 19:52
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simonf444
Newbie
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9. April 2010 @ 21:27 |
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Downloading or uploading, i.e. continuing to share the movies after they had the whole thing, aka seeding???
I would love to know, because AFAIK noone has ever been sued for downloading before......
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simonf444
Newbie
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11. April 2010 @ 22:56 |
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OK, I guess I'll talk to myself. All other references to the original THR article seem to include the idea from above that "The software captures IP addresses when a user begins downloading". I would LOVE to hear this explained in more detail!
The user is downloading, not uploading.
The user hasn't completed downloading.
To me, this is like buying a pirate video from some guy off the street, and being sued at a point before I've actually received the video into my hands: I don't have the item 100% in my possession, I am not selling it or making any profit, and since I don't own the movie (not 100% of it yet anyway), I can't watch it and see the 'No unauthorized reproduction etc. etc.' message at the end of it, so what crime can I be accused of????
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Member
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12. April 2010 @ 02:24 |
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Yeah. We need more info please.
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simonf444
Newbie
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12. April 2010 @ 09:01 |
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...oh, and I've been to USCG's website and - guess what - they don't explain it either. Anyone? Anyone? Bueller?
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Member
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12. April 2010 @ 14:58 |
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Bueller? Bueller? Has anyone seen Bueller?
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simonf444
Newbie
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12. April 2010 @ 15:13 |
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OK, AfterDawnies, just in case you hadn't realised, this is a shout out to you. You've posted a news story that makes about as much sense as a chocolate fireguard and we're asking you to step in and use your technical expertise to shed some light.
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Member
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12. April 2010 @ 18:32 |
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Originally posted by Stynkfysh: Originally posted by simonf444: Downloading or uploading, i.e. continuing to share the movies after they had the whole thing, aka seeding???
I would love to know, because AFAIK noone has ever been sued for downloading before......
Funny you should say that... I have noticed that throughout the history of the lawsuits the headlines and article have frequently emphasized that the downloaders are being sued but really it is the sharers/uploaders. I believe that many of the articles are viral-intended press releases from the entertainment companies to scare downloaders.
Yep.
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dufas
Member
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13. April 2010 @ 11:26 |
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simonf444
Newbie
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16. April 2010 @ 11:15 |
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TechDirt link actually has the original documentation from this case and downloaders ARE being sued and treated as uploaders on the (IMHO spurious) understanding of how BitTorrent works. To me, this makes this a landmark development in the world of downloading, on a par with the first lawsuits against Napster users many years ago.
So why is this story still buried in a few news sites and not drawing more attention? Is everyone asleep? or too busy watching pirated movies?
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 16. April 2010 @ 11:17
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slimjim27
Newbie
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16. October 2010 @ 11:56 |
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I got this letter in the mail from cable vision now my girls aunt is flipping out saying there gonna terminate the cable and she has to write a letter of explanation...... wtf. no one seems to give me the right info, can i still download movies and say f*ck you to the cable company.
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NeroMaj
Newbie
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5. November 2010 @ 14:06 |
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There is a lot of talk about people downloading and sharing through P2P networks or torrent downloaders (seeding/leeching) etc...Has there ever been a case of somebody being sued for downloading movies from sites like MegaUpload, FileDump, etc...?
As far as I can tell, the only way for these people to track, catch, sue, fine, etc..is to track them through the actual file sharing networks (P2P & Torrents) and that a direct download saved to the hard drive is almost never talked about.
If this is the case, is it because its almost impossible to track heavy offenders that download direct and don't share or because the settlements for these would be way lower due to the nature of infringement(i.e. Thousands of dollars for downloading and sharing a movie, but they could really only argue the cost of a DVD for just downloading it)
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NeroMaj
Newbie
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5. November 2010 @ 14:10 |
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Originally posted by slimjim27: I got this letter in the mail from cable vision now my girls aunt is flipping out saying there gonna terminate the cable and she has to write a letter of explanation...... wtf. no one seems to give me the right info, can i still download movies and say f*ck you to the cable company.
I receieved similar letters when I had a roommate that was downloading tagged torrents that originated with Pirate Bay. Just don't download torrents or use P2P networks to download movies because these are regularly tracked.
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