"The Case for Internet Piracy" meant to educate young file-sharers, but wrongly says they face criminal action (JAIL TIME) and not civil action (FINES) since nearly every illegal music downloading case has been initiated by the RIAA and not by authorities.Established in March of 1971, the National Center for State Courts (NCSC), is a "non-profit organization charged with improving judicial administration in the United States and around the world." To accomplish this goal, the NCSC provides a variety of services to the courts including: research studies, consulting, and educational programs. It recently decided to produce a service of "illustrated novels" called the Justice Case Files in order "to educate the public about how the courts work, how judges make decisions, and how courts are accountable to the law." Issue number 1 is titled "The Case for Internet Piracy," and it's startling to consider that the publication is intended for educational purposes since it's so blatantly biased, and pardon the pun, downright "comical From the site description:
"You shouldn't be downloading pirated music files, Henry," says Megan, our to our apparent antagonist. "I won't get busted, Megan," Henry replies."The cyber police aren't looking for us poor college students. We don't have deep pockets." Too funny for words right? The RIAA LOVES people with less than deep pockets. It makes their job that much easier because they know you're more likely to settle since you can't afford attorney's fees and fear the risk of increased financial exposure. She's even warned that she faces up to 2 years in prison in addition to a $25,000 fine. This is from the odd charge of theft versus copyright infringement and is surely a thinly veiled attempt to scare young readers into thinking they'll have to do hard time with a cellmate named Bubba if they download the latest Shwayze album. Talk about trying to scare kids straight. Notice she's charged with illegally sharing over 2,000 music files. At the rate defined by the Jammie Thomas trial, the first ever file-sharing conviction, whereby she was ordered to pay $9,250 USD per song, it would mean Megan would be liable for a startling $18,500,000 USD! Try getting that from a college freshman. I guess the NCSC and probable RIAA handlers knew that students would laugh at the million dollar-figure and not be as scared as they would be if they thought they could face hard time. Out of the tens of thousands who have been busted for illegal file-sharing virtually none have been targeted for theft by state courts. The reason is that it's pretty difficult to monitor a person downloading something illegally, to observe the actual transfer of copyrighted material. The RIAA knows this and that the state law enforcement organizations have better things to do with their time and finite resources. The RIAA is the main entity behind file-sharing lawsuits and their only recourse is civil litigation.
Moreover, the real theft here wasn't committed by the fictional Megan character at all, but rather by the NCSC for promoting file-sharing hysteria and trying to charge people $1.50 for this RIAA-fueled scare tactic.. |
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Still, it couldnt be worse than Marvel Zombies. Man, what a mess that was. I havent read a comic since I was 16 (Im 30 now) but recently downloaded this Marvel Zombies crap. How in the hell can zombies...even zombie superheroes...EAT Silver Surfer? He doesnt have any flesh for fucks sake. Hes comprised of some kind of cosmic, ultra-hard, super metal. So how did they eat him?
And why did they then gain his cosmic beam superpowers? They didnt gain Magneto's superpowers when they ate him, after all. Its fucking ridiculous.
I mean, are we supposed to ignore the MUTLIPLE inconsistincies and just downright illogical (even by Marvel Universe standards) shit that goes? After reading that crap, I realized that comics (or Marvel, at least) is firmly geared to children and younger adolescents. And really stupid adults, I guess. EATING the Silver Surfer. Totally absurd. They shouldnt have even been able to kill him (as hes more or less invinsible), nevermind eat him (would be like eating the hardest rock in the universe). I hope somebody got fired over that shit.
Anyways, if that comic book isn't some inside joke, then I'd say the RIAA are farther behind the times than most of us had thought.