The RIAA would like you to think it is illegal!
Actually, copying the test answers off a student you sit near would be more like the situation. You only 'hurt' yourself.
Now, if the person is handing out the answers, then that person is 'wrong'.
But, none of those examples, almost exactly the same as music downloads, are 'stealing'! You weren't going to go out and BUY that $20 CD of music, were you? So, you aren't stealing the profits from someone!
Anyway, the RIAA tries to enforce fines of $150,000 per song that you serve to others, using any software in the USA hosted servers.
So Limewire and others, after the Grokster lawsuit was won by the RIAA, in a genuine travesty of fair justice, were forced by the RIAA thug lawyers to put in back door tracking software that can find you.
The developers moved offshore to intelligent countries that host their new software that actually protects personal freedom and consumer rights.
So, here is what you do. You need a hardware firewall, like a Linksys router/firewall, between the cable modem and your computers. No hardware firewall, then you can expect a search warrant and a subpoena, and you or your parents, can eventually settle for like, $5,000.00 plus court costs.
If you have an older computer then you can install two network cards, and http://ipcop.org which is a really solid firewall, that runs headless.
Then, you go to http://frostwire.com and grab a super file peer to peer system, like used instead of bit torrent for all the files that are Open Source, like http://pclinuxos.com
2007-01-30 10:07:54
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Downloading anything that's still under copyright without paying for it and without permission of the copyright holder is illegal, no matter what software you use. And the RIAA has filed thousands of lawsuits against thousands of people for doing this, so as long as you have about $10,000 in savings to pay the court costs and fines and cover yourself, then you'll probably be okay taking the chance.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright_infringement
2007-01-30 10:46:17
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answer #2
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answered by Rose D 7
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Yes, but the best way to fly below the radar of the RIAA is to not be the one hosting all the stolen music. When you download something move it immediately to another folder that you have not authorized your P2P client to "share" from. Also, when you are finished downloading stuff close the client completely, most of them by default minimize to the system tray when you close them. Make sure you close it and preferably change the options of your P2P client to exit on close or shutdown on close, so you don't forget and end up hosting a bunch of illegal tunes.
2007-01-30 10:07:30
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answer #3
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answered by marktron_3000 2
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such as you i dont be attentive to correct to the Ares Lite... yet with limewire no longer only did a get a pair of viruses inspite of the incontrovertible fact that it took up way too lots room on my computing gadget and that i hated that it grew to become into consistently working while i grew to become into on the cyber web it bogged my puter down whilst quickly as I wasnt making use of it.
2016-09-28 05:03:52
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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if you arent paying, its stealing and therefore illegal.
there are a lot of sites you can pay for just for their upgraded access, but it just guarentees that the content you download is the actual thing. unless you pay per download you are getting things that are in essence stolen.
sorry!
2007-01-30 09:43:31
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answer #5
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answered by stella 3
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yes but everyone does it!
2007-01-30 09:42:16
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answer #6
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answered by NFFC 6
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