View Full Version : Will you stop using P2P software?
Power Penguin
August 6th, 2003, 07:32 PM
Originally posted by ATLien
Yea, Right!
He could get into serious trouble.
htownsb
August 14th, 2003, 04:28 PM
all my friends are soo scared of the riaa and I'm the only one still sharing. I'm not afraid of the riaa I got a router so my ip changes every 10 minutes, zonealarm pro firewall, and I'm registered wit www.no-ip.org so my ip changes every 5 minutes again. If fasttrack and bittorent goes down I always got emule, g1, and g2 networks.
I SHARE WINDOWS LONGHORN AND MANY OTHER POPULAR MUSIC TITLES WHICH ARE COPYRIGHTED!
random
August 14th, 2003, 07:06 PM
never cause as long as the riaa releases crappy music and overcharge for it, i wont pay
Cassavus
August 14th, 2003, 08:15 PM
No way am I stopping! The RIAA can kiss my booty!
shawners
August 14th, 2003, 08:50 PM
I feel sorry for people not living in america that will get sued by the RIAA.. think about it, they want american money.. it take more of your money and dollar to equal a single dollar bill.
I will share on MIRC, and download the new stuff from fasttrack.
FreeMuzik4Lyfe
August 14th, 2003, 09:48 PM
I have a question. I kno it seems like the RIAA are only sueing people in America..but do u think that they would sue people in other countries that live in military bases? Cuz, u kno..we're 'government property' and all that.
I AM NOT BUYING A CD FOR ONE FREEKIN SONG
Theinfamousone
August 14th, 2003, 10:16 PM
They probably could still sue you. Although I imagine that your IP would float right over their bots because it's not very local.
The bottom line is that with media being digital and so many people having broadband, it's gonna be pretty easy from now on to get music and videos.
tMoD
August 14th, 2003, 10:25 PM
I'm a newbie. I started using P2P after the RIAA began suing individual filesharers and I was fully aware of this before I begain filesharing so, no, I'm not about to stop. I just share sh1t I can get away with: non-RIAA music and PDFs. Neither indie labels nor the publishing industry have ever sued anyone for filesharing, as far as I know.