Well Google is running into the same problems, bending over backwards but its still never enough. The only difference is having what is essentially an infinite bank account that the MPAA has to think twice before going the legal route, hence their recent attempts to bribe AG's and politicians to do their bidding.
Well they don't even have to conceal the fact that they're just doing the MPAA's bidding, because clearly they didn't speak to anyone else on the matter that you know, might be less biased than the MPAA (of all else).
Blackouts in NHL have little to do with ticket sales but everything to do with the local TV stations covering it. They'd rather you buy Cable TV to watch those games.
Leafs tickets sell out every single time due to all the scalpers and suits, yet local games are always blacked out due to Sportsnet or TSN covering those games. Why pay $160+/yr for that garbage.
In Canada both Shomi(Rogers) and CraveTV(Bell) are both failing spectacularly. Given the ridiculous amounts they paid to US studios for exclusive rights in Canada I wouldn't be surprised if both these incumbent telecom giants are launching proceedings against Netflix for not "doing enough" to block access to their content.
The US doesn't win them all... however Canada still got screwed as the US is absolutely under no obligation to abide by any judgements made against them.
The problem was if he had made any mistake in running the site or said stuff off the record (and were spied on) that could indicate that he maybe once or twice "willfully" infringed (easy to do without thought) on the odd occasion it would have been translated by the DoJ into that he based the entire site's existence on infringement and they would have tossed the whole criminal copyright bullshit on him to send him away for a few years.
My guess is there was no Skype logs or existing emails to seize that could be used against him.
It's BS like this as to why government's should just take a back seat and force them to sort out their own self-inflicted "piracy" problems themselves. The problem is there's way too much political bribery going on.
States should be allowed to vote to force federal agencies to do specific things, such as wearing body cameras on all federal police-type officers. There is absolutely no reason why they should be exempt, its more about what are they hiding.
I'm well aware that violence seems to sell well in America, however that isn't anything to be proud of, given it sells very well in real life included, not just on a TV screen alone.
Games don't dipict cold blooded senseless murder as often as the latest Hollywood-sourced garbage on TV. Despite not believing in the latest blame game by politicians, I'm totally sick and tired of American gun culture and related murders being overly portrayed on American TV shows. Its to the point where I lost all interest in TV, now I just wish my SO would do the same. Any new TV show can't seem to NOT have senseless killings for no good reasons using guns.
Its a problem when the majority of Juries are morons when it comes to anything that might require some technical knowledge. Infact, the Jury screening process probably weeds out people with half a clue regarding information security...
Everyone I know still uses older uTorrent versions due to all the adware crap that they added to the newer ones. Even if the RIAA got their way it simply wouldn't matter anyway.
It would be extremely embarrassing for the entire industry if such security vulnerabilities indeed exist, but rather than work with the guy they would rather muzzle him. What happens when the wrong person figures it out as a best kept secret?
If you can't test commands to see if you are controlling such a vulnerable system, your words are as good as hot air. Also any captain/first officer should have caught on about such a supposed glitch in the matrix (engine) and reported it on record. It appears the FBI has nothing on him but his past notes on this subject and is taking things out of context.
Also, how would you research on real aircraft legitimately? What special position would you have to be in to spend hours researching vulnerabilities on production aircraft? One job thats extremely hard to get given all the clearances required. Despite that, the FAA should be hiring this guy rather than allowing the FBI to attempt to destroy him.
It'll be business as usual after the merger, and Comcast will just say "sue me" while laughing at you when they become even more anticompetitive than they already are, after their inevitable rate hikes of course.
Some games are just not the same without the original music, the soundtrack of Crazy Taxi was a good example, the re-releases are just not the same. You probably remember jamming it to the offspring at its most enjoyable moments.
This is why licensing should apply for a game's entire title rather than a finite term. This would include all future patches and ports to consoles/devices. Games are not really compatible with the existing time limited licensing scheme.
On the post: Kickass Torrents Gets The Megaupload Treatment: Site Seized, Owner Arrested And Charged With Criminal Infringement
On the post: Kickass Torrents Gets The Megaupload Treatment: Site Seized, Owner Arrested And Charged With Criminal Infringement
On the post: NHL Streaming Service Descends Into Blackout Hell; NHL Threatens Anyone Trying To Circumvent Blackouts
Leafs tickets sell out every single time due to all the scalpers and suits, yet local games are always blacked out due to Sportsnet or TSN covering those games. Why pay $160+/yr for that garbage.
On the post: UK Appeals Court Says UK Terrorism Act's Detention Clause Violates Press Freedoms
On the post: Netflix Pretends It Will Crackdown On VPNs Just Days After Admitting It's Futile To Do So
On the post: TransCanada Goes Legal On US Government Over The Rejection Of Keystone; Will It Wake Obama To The Problems Of Corporate Sovereignty?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada%E2%80%93United_States_softwood_lumber_dispute
On the post: Homeland Security Admits It Seized A Hip Hop Blog For Five Years Despite No Evidence Of Infringement; RIAA Celebrates
My guess is there was no Skype logs or existing emails to seize that could be used against him.
On the post: CBS Claims It Will Pull All Content Offline Unless It Can Be An Anti-Competitive Ass
On the post: DOJ Says Body Camera-Wearing Cops Aren't Allowed To Partner Up With Federal Agencies
On the post: Bobby Jindal Announces Violent Games/Movies To Blame For All Those Mass Shootings
On the post: Bobby Jindal Announces Violent Games/Movies To Blame For All Those Mass Shootings
On the post: Matthew Keys Found Guilty Of Criminal 'Hacking' For Sharing News Company Login
On the post: RIAA Asks BitTorrent Inc. To Block Infringing Content With A Hash Filter
On the post: FBI Investigating Chris Roberts For Hacking Flight WiFi, Taking Control Of Engines
On the post: FBI Investigating Chris Roberts For Hacking Flight WiFi, Taking Control Of Engines
Also, how would you research on real aircraft legitimately? What special position would you have to be in to spend hours researching vulnerabilities on production aircraft? One job thats extremely hard to get given all the clearances required. Despite that, the FAA should be hiring this guy rather than allowing the FBI to attempt to destroy him.
On the post: Senator Wants To Know Why The US Marshals Asset Forfeiture Division Is Blowing Money On $10,000 Tables
On the post: Comcast Still Blocking HBO Go On Third Party Devices, Never Bothers To Explain Why
On the post: Hooray For Licenses! Update Strips 17 Songs From Steam Users' Purchased Copies Of Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas
On the post: Hooray For Licenses! Update Strips 17 Songs From Steam Users' Purchased Copies Of Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas
On the post: Without Greater Transparency And Meaningful Net Neutrality Rules, The Netflix Interconnection War Will Get Much, Much Uglier
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