Can we move this to the chat list?

-S

Zafar Kazmi <zafar at kaygees.com> writes:

> At 08:56 PM 2/27/2001, you wrote:
> >Oskar Sandberg wrote:
> > >
> > > On Tue, Feb 27, 2001 at 04:04:41PM -0800, hal at finney.org wrote:
> > > <>
> > > > The writing's on the wall here, folks.  Ultimately I am afraid that
> > > > Freenet will not be legally runnable in the U.S. without a blocking
> > > > mechanism.  I wouldn't rush to put it in unless or until people start
> > > > getting legal notices, but eventually the issue will have to be dealt
> > > > with.  Either Freenet accepts that the U.S. market is off limits, or it
> > > > provides a means to block certain data.  Neither is an attractive 
> > > > choice.
> > >
> > > Running a Napster client that shares MP3z is very clearly illegal in most
> > > every country. Yet a lot of people are doing it, and nobody has lifted a
> > > finger on them...
> 
> I am not a lawyer but I feel there is a difference between napster and
> freenet. Napster's purpose in life is to enable the sharing of music -
> copy righted material by default.  Freenet is an emerging/enabling
> technology of distributed file sharing. it is www anonymous. Legally I
> think that Freenet does not fall in the same category because it can
> be used for a lot of legitimate purposes. Illegitimate use is the
> responsibility of users and not the creators. There is a lot of
> illegal stuff on www, no one has argued about shutting down www. I
> think Freenet falls in the same category.
> 
> 
> my 2 cents...
> 
> Zafar
> 
> 
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