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#91 | |
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1. Keep it at all times, unloaded, (other than when it's being used or cleaned) in an approved locked steel cabinet, which must be bolted to a structural wall of the house. 2. Keep any ammunition in a separate, locked, bolted, etc etc etc. If someone breaks into your house, finds a gun that is NOT in the mandated locked, secure storage, and steals it, then YOU will go to prison for a good many years. British law does not look kindly on people who own guns and do not look after them. Your property. Your responsibility. Yes, even if a criminal breaks in and steals it it's your responsibility, because the whole purpose of the laws which dicate the circumstances under which someone is allowed to keep a gun at home are designed precisely with that situation in mind. Now, if your gun IS kept locked up in the approved manner, and a serious criminal breaks in to your house and uses an oxy-acetylene torch to cut it from your locked safe, you won't be punished, because you've taken the necessary precuations that the law deems to be necessary to look after it. Now, I'm not suggesting that an internet connection is as dangerous as a gun, but I am suggesting that, having taken the decision to acquire it, you have a responsibility to look after it and take the necessary safety precautions to ensure that it can't easily be abused. If a dedicated criminal steals your service despite you taking reasonable safety precautions then no, that's not your fault, but if you've left your system wide open to abuse then you have to take responsibility for that. |
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#92 | |
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![]() ![]() The only alternative (IMO) is to legally shut down the offending sites..(Pirates Bay ect. ect.) Although Direct TV has been very successful in getting civil damages for illegally taking a signal that is beamed at your house... |
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#93 | |
Banned
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The possibilities are endless. That takes special equipment to decode that signal, not something your average Direct TV user would have. (I am asking my husband this, he is the IT expert) Last edited by Annari; 05-04-2012 at 03:59 PM. |
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#94 |
Gangnam style!
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What Harry T is defending is making copyright an absolute liability offence. See:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_liability In these cases, the Crown does not have to show a guilty mind (an accident or inadvertant breach still allows a guilty verdict). But the penalty is important; a small fine, no loss of liberty, no criminal record etc. is required. In short, the burden of proof is much lower, but so is the liability. So, in Harry T's scenario, is a small fine ok for a serious pirate or other abuser of internet resources? If not, then the burden of proof must be much greater. |
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#95 | |
Gangnam style!
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#96 |
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Agreed. I was using the gun analogy as an example of being held to account for taking sensible security precautions to protect your own property from abuse.
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#97 |
Gangnam style!
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If you think that you should be made to take responsibility for your internet connection, like with a firearm, do you think there should be licensing and registration, presumably predicated upon successful completion of training and periodic re-examination (like other licenses)?
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#98 | |
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#99 | |
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Wouldn't disproving such a claim involve the same kinds of forensic investigative work you didn't think was reasonable to expect? It seems to me that that's just as an easy of a loophole as the one you've previously disagreed with. Or should the burden of proof still fall on the accused, with them having to prove that someone hacked their connection? Something I'm sure very few people know how to do. |
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#100 |
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That's a very good question, and I'll need to give it some careful thought before answering. It's bed-time, so I'll answer you in the morning.
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#101 |
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I don't know if someone has made the comment in the seven pages of this thread, but I'm not happy with Harry T's likening the use of - and responsibility for - a router with that of a car. With a car you have one steering wheel, and only one person can drive it at a time. With a router ten or twenty people can drive it at the same time, including some who may not even be in the house.
Blaming the owner of the IP connection for what goes over that connection is a simple case of saying that you're guilty until proven innocent. |
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#102 |
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And another thing. Here in Sweden you have housing associations which provide internet access the way they provide water, electricity, central heating and television. I think you might find there is a big outcry from them if courts start to make them pay for illicit downloads.
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#103 | |
Basculocolpic
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The only way to obtain that would be to re-establish the telephone monopoly of times past. One model router, with its specific IP address, registered to Mrs. So-and-so. That is not a society in which I would feel comfortable. |
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#104 | |
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#105 | |
Not scared!
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