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This is a great win for the RIAA/MPAA. But if you really think this will bring back the adult industry from the fathomless depths you are sadly deluded.
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The day ISPs can choose what data can move over their networks is the same day we lose our ability to speak freely over the entire internet.
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Wikepedia gets it right -- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Co...rade_Agreement
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I don't know how these laws will work, that depends on the enforcement. But I'm sure if they first shut down the obvious domains and servers, it will have major effect. Then take it from there... I think a tax funded free broadband and free digital public "libraries" for everyone, is the right solution. Something controlled, like the classic libraries. Doesn't that sound good? |
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I have probably 150+ VCR tapes from years ago where I recorded various movies back in the day. I remember much of my entire childhood having copied music tapes. So whats the difference? I live in Music City and I've had this conversation/argument more times than you can imagine with music executives, artists, agents, etc. For years I tried getting some well connected industry people to embrace the internet and even gave the solution to do it. But they were stuck in the same old mentality or hating it and directing all their money and energy in hunting down college students who downloaded their music and putting them on "show trials" fining them ridiculous amounts of money. It's stupid and it's not going to solve anything. |
Lol @ anyone who believes this is about protecting copyright, stopping pirates etc....
This is about control, about silencing those opposed to the system, about stopping the alternative media,.... |
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As I pointed out not one cent of your income taxes goes to fund the federal government. What does fund them? Running up the credit card (national debt) turning everyone into economic slaves. No I don't want to pay more out to anyone unless I CHOOSE to do so. I pay for what I use. I pay monthly for my son to download his music. I pay for various subscription I feel are worth it for me and my business. I have to figure out how to make a living and I don't expect the government or anyone else for that matter to figure out how I can. I don't need them making laws in my favor to do so. I do need laws that will hamper my business just to make other special interest parties means of earning easier. What I described is what they want to do. They want to turn the internet into a subscription based environment like your TV. If you have this idea in your head that it's going to be easy for the average person to get in on this little scheme you are sadly mistaken. Before you jump on board with something like this why don't you try to setup your own radio station or television station. Have a look at all of the regulations, stipulations, costs and hoops one has to jump through. All of it will stifle the innovation and only make the same old companies richer. This plan is for big corporations not for little guy. They want you on big corp payrolls not working for yourself. They want to scale it down to where they have control and if they don't like what you are doing they can and will shut you down. With this treaty that's not just your local government that's EVERY government can and will shut you down. |
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Don't get me wrong. I do not want a fully government controlled internet. However, the time is now "I told you so" - and if fingers are to be pointed, I know where to point them. |
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On that same note. One "corporation" whom everyone thought they could trust turned out to have been robbing us all for years. |
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So my idea of a controlled digital library, is not about controlling the flow of information, but to control the flow of money. The right people should get paid, and funding can only be administrated by someone chosen by the people. Additionally, give a minimum free broadband for everyone. Rest is free market - a voluntary model.. This will ensure economy for everyone, no matter what they choose - but piracy can never be part of that equilibrium. Quote:
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Here's a good "royalty free" book I suggest you and everyone else for that matter read.
"Listen, Little Man!" reflects the inner turmoil of a scientist and physician who had observed the little man for many years and seen, first with astonishment, then with horror, what he does to himself; how he suffers, rebels, honors his enemies and murders his friends; how, wherever he acquires power "in the name of the people," he misuses it and transforms it into something more cruel than the tyranny he had previously suffered at the hands of upperclass sadists. " http://www.listenlittleman.com/ |
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I don't agree with what you say but I'll die for your right to say it Voltaire |
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If you compare this model with socialism, then I think you misunderstand the concept. The purpose is not to control information, but to ensure free and broad information. But since we are also talking about peoples livinghood, there must be someone to administrate the flow of money, and no one better than the ones chosen by the people can do that. That's true democracy. Quote:
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http://www.listenlittleman.com/ |
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The only people bankrupting me is the government. They've already spent more "for me" this year than I will likely profit. Oh but I don't need to worry about that they put that on the credit card... Honestly my whole point in this entire conversation is to try and get you to realize that we can't just keep on adding more and more "laws." Where does it all end? |
As I've said several times before we already have over 1 million laws here in the US. We have 4% of the population and more than the entire World behind bars. Over 60% of which are there from non-violent offenses of "policy breaking." So now we are going to add an entire new level of "laws" on top of those? Why don't we all just lock everyone up and take turns playing "corrections officer."
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looks like i was right again, law got gutted, and it both ways i predicted funny thing with all that EU and mexico still refuse to sign, so it could get even more watered down. |
This is bad.
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This is a disaster in the making.
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"There's many a slip 'twixt the cup and the lip"
:2 cents: |
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but why would you even consider taking that with you 'on the road' (just back them up and delete them before you go) or taking those pic's while travelling and know that you may be searched (take them if you must, e-mail or upload them to yourself, delete them) heh, guess I just can't envision myself getting 'caught' with something like that anyways.... sucks that ACTA got watered down, but in reality I suppose I knew it would. . |
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when this was first being bantered about gfy robbie was pointing to the law and saying the days of pirates was a commin. another example of me being right and robbie being wrong. |
Even if there's a failure to come to a an agreement between world parties, each country is going to be taking a harsher stance on piracy, and the USA has always had the most to gain.
I remember Undernet IRC back in the early 90's, that place was public pedo heaven. Nowadays it's not. Things will change. |
they discuss this already almost two years, nothing change a lot of countries again this idea.
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The ACTA has nothing to do with stopping piracy and everything to do with taking control of the internet. It is the final free frontier for media, and that is something that needs to be terminated in the eyes of the controllers. Close up the loopholes in the DMCA, take a zero tolerance approach against those who distribute pirated material and force them to be vigilant in the prevention of it's distribution. Fine anyone caught doing so heavily. I have no arguments against piracy on the net needing to be taken care of, however the ACTA is something entirely different and attacks the rights of each and every user online who is living in a nation under the watch of ACTA. If the act was a simple attack on piracy without other ramifications what's the issue with making the entire thing publicly available for review?
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govts need money, if they can catch 1 Million Pirates a week holding some pirated stuff at the airports and fine just 1000 each ...
its 1,000,000,000 DOLLARS ...is that One Billion?? huh 1000 is not much of a fine. i think lots of people can take it.... thats a crazy revenue idea indeed to pay the national debt off 52 Billion a year ...a on 10 year plan .. 520B ... not bad ... Europe govts need money too .. lets do it... i am sure all the politicans' family each can pay 1k many times a year. very very few can say their machine is clean if this law does pass, I hope this is well explained to ALL ... Should go study digital law asap, i can tons of money coming if this passes |
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Also, for those that ever thought this was going to close down dmca loopholes... The USA wanted the rest of acta countries to adopt dmca, not abandon it... |
Democrats will check my phone for illegal music, sweet
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use content that you own on your site, or content you actually really do have the rights to use - then no worries - government, individuals, and corporations (large or small) can't touch you speak your free thoughts, in your own free words, typed by your own free hands - then no worries - your free speech is free to be free :1orglaugh I do, and always will, support any international agreements that seeks to curb (even criminalize) digital piracy, digital theft, copyright infringement, digital counterfeiting, 'ooops, was that your content?, you'll have to DMCA me :1orglaugh ', 'sharing' with your 500 million internet friends....etc I would also support any international push to rid the internet of all 'free' porn. (LOL - think of the kids!!!!) and get back to making some real money in porn. and have bands be lavishly rich and have the resources to produce amazing new things - and have their production companies spending 100X more on promotion and concert tours and stage shows too :thumbsup and have the Movie industry so bloated with cash that every new movie has a production budget of a Billion dollars. maybe thats just me... . |
Ok, the ACTA's in the open now... But only recently. The negotiations have been going on for years now behind closed doors. It was a big secret who was invited and why. The reason: "If the negotiations would have been public, the crop's participating wouldn't have been able to speak freely without suffering damage to their public image". That alone should tell you something about what happened there behind closed doors... btw: that's a literal quote from EU commissioner Karel De Gucht.
So you think you'll be safe if you just use your own content? Think again, ACTA's about a lot more than that. It's also about patents, software patents etc... the kind where some corporation patents "a software system that enables a person to buy access to digital content" or "a system that allows a person to add an item to a shopping cart with one click".... |
8char...
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I'm amazed some people are for ACTA... it's a piece of control freak that will only manage to protect the big guys. Do you honestly think would know if the sex amateur videos or images on your computer are yours or not. They will know if Adobe Photoshop is... or Microsoft Windows 7, at best.
Anyway, virtual offshore HD is the future. If big brother scan my stuff at the border, they will find nothing else than an Operating System. |
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yeah, I fully agree that hosts and ISP's should shoulder some of the responsibility there has to be some give and take built in - there has to be appeals processes - there has to be special needs dispensations... but there also has to be a ban-hammer for the frequent abusers - and those who flagrantly profit from others productions and DMCA is useless but if the hosting companies and the ISP's were sending the warnings and cutting accounts - the impact would be huge. as far as content being taken down and sites blocked or shut down with just a single notice of infringement - well, no system works that way - and I don't believe that this one would either. Fraudulent reports of infringement can be dealt with through criminal fines in extreme cases or civil suits in other cases. don't break, circumvent, or stretch the law - and you have nothing to worry about. |
As the temperature starts cooling down, soup is back on the menu!
http://missingfiles.kitchenparade.co...400-747481.JPG |
this smells like Sarko (french president) has a good hand in it -
read up on HADOPI The law itself isn't the problem - the way it is executed is. Quote:
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what a fucking mess :helpme
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Looks kookie...
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