On Tue, 2012-02-28 at 18:21 +1100, Scott Ferguson wrote: > On 28/02/12 15:34, Ralf Mardorf wrote: > > On Tue, 2012-02-28 at 05:24 +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote: > >> On Tue, 2012-02-28 at 11:16 +1100, Scott Ferguson wrote: > >>> Lot's of, um, people searching for free lunches means lots of people > >>> falling into traps. > >> > >> +1 > >> > >> An advice to the OP and everybody who download videos for free by > >> torrent. > >> > >> In my hometown Oberhausen Rheinland Germany the judges don't care about, > >> if somebody else did "download" [1] videos and music for free via your > >> protected account. If somebody was able to hack your protection it's > >> your fault. > >> > >> There are no legal free downloads available for licensed videos and > >> music. The German GEMA for example sues kindergartens for singing > >> children songs in public. If you sing a song in public or if you upload > >> a video by torrent, while downloading it, take care that the music and > >> video are for free, e.g. that they're under a license like the creative > >> commons. > >> > >> Regards, > >> Ralf > >> > >> [1] Happens to a clueless person I know. I suspect regarding to the > >> "download" this person is mistaken. I guess the person had to pay much > >> money, because somebody else did upload, when doing a download. > > > > PS: I wonder how (in)secure it is to fake an IP with the torrent client. > > :-D > > How are you going to get packets back when you're spoofing your address?
Good point. Another way to go would doing the download / upload by a tor network. > > I wonder what lawyers do, to ask for the IP of somebody uploading at a > > specific time from a specific address. Is the way they do spy legal? > > Depends on where you are - here, Australia, it's down to the ISP (until > the latest round of secret talks are finished. > https://plus.google.com/111963192282128912359/posts/EXHxf53EmEF > > A number of major Australian ISPs *will* hand over your IP address > without hesitation and *are* recording all those details already. (cough > those that sell pay per view videos cough) > Additionally, many use "bittorrent" as an excuse to throttle your > connection. The IP in Germany only is given by a judicial decision. How do the lawyers argument to get a judicial decision? > > > > > > NOTE: the default movie/net television channels in Miro are all Creative > Commons licensed (Rumblefish can go f*iretr*uck themselves). > -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/1330417406.2352.0.camel@oz.(null)