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plausible deniability
People should keep stuff like this in mind when they go after the RIAA and MPAA's enforcement activity. Just because the digital era makes something technologically easy to do and almost impossible to shut down, doesn't mean that behavior should be legalized. One could just as easily attack the reports of lost business and consumer productivity due to adware and spyware, as Mike and others have attacked the RIAA's studies on lost profits due to file sharing.
Some things are just common sense.
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Re: plausible deniability
Tell that to the grandmother sued by the RIAA even though it was obvious she was not a Britney Spears fan. This diffused responsibility only seems to hold water when it is corporations and their associates. Who knows of a web site tracking what companies are using these slimeball marketers? Thanks to the magic of Firefox, I have not been infected with a single piece of this crap, so I really do not know who is currently using these companies...
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