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#136 | |
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Guilt in a civil case is on the balance of probabilities. If evidence can be produced to show that a downloaded file was sent to a particular IP address, and the ISP shows that that IP address was assigned to Mr. Smith at the time that the time was downloaded, then a reasonable person would conclude that either Mr. Smith or someone in his household did indeed, on the balance of probabilities, download that file. I really do not see how this can be denied. |
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#137 | |
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If this level of evidence was as reliable as a registration number in a speed camera photo, I think I might agree with you. It just isn't. And there is no real reason for the rightsholders (or the third parties they contract to) to take meticulous care over gathering the data, versus just sending out more letters. What is the cost to them if they send a letter to the wrong person? And what ability does the (innocent) householder in that situation have to contest the evidence? There is no independent verification that the IP address did download anything, so no way for them to rebut the claim. In this process the rightsholders would simply be asserting something to be true, with no way of it being verified. Last edited by murraypaul; 03-28-2011 at 10:29 AM. |
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#138 | |
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This is the standard of evidence provided (PDF). http://torrentfreak.com.nyud.net:808...93506062-1.pdf Did you know that Logistep, the company that provides this evidence is actually banned from operating within its own country? |
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#139 |
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That was the whole point of the law, to remove the need for any evidence. They already knew a screenshot showing an IP address didn't prove anything. If our MPs didn't think an IP address meant a website full of pirate software I'm sure they would have picked up on this small point during the discussion stage.
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#140 | |
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#141 |
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A file on a computer, or some trace of there being one at the time of the aleged crime. There would also be lots of CDR/DVDRs around their house.
With Jammie Thomas there was also evidence of the username she used on the filesharing network being used elsewhere and linked with her name and email address. On some you have to pay, so then there would be a Paypal trail to follow. |
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#142 | |
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I hope you'll forgive me for saying that I regard the first approach as rather less "invasive". |
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#143 | |
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#144 | |
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It is either when your internet access gets disabled or when you are sued, with the process being legitimised by the new legislation. |
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#145 |
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BPI's law? What are you referring to?
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#146 | |
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The ability to tag people "lawbreakers" should not be handed over to corporations. (Will they be shutting down access to YouTube? To Google, which people use to find copyrighted materials to download?) If there's copyright infringement going on (which I'm not questioning), there are venues to prosecute or sue about it. If those aren't sufficient to protect the victims, improve them. We don't grant assault victims the right to handcuff people who they think might assault them in the future--not even if they've assaulted that person in the past. Shutting down someone's internet access should require a court order, which should require legally-submitted evidence at the level that's required for a search warrant. If the courts can't handle that level of activity--that says the "crime" has become so common that most people aren't interested in stopping it. When the majority of the public isn't interested in enforcement, it's time to reconsider the laws. Doesn't mean throw them out. In the US, civil rights laws often go against the will of the majority. But it's definitely worth considering who and what the laws protect, considering how much money has to be spent enforcing them. |
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#147 |
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#148 |
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I still don't see why the UK entertainment industry can't pay for enforcing this law out of the extra £12billion per year they will be making when unauthorised downloads are eliminated.
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#149 |
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Why not... leaving your house unlocked may not be wise but it doesn't make someone walking in and stealing the contents less of a crime nor the houseowner the criminal...
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#150 | |
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Or should they just revoke your driver's license and insist that no car be registered at your household because of it? After all, that would teach you not to leave a car where someone could take it. |
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