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"Courtesy"
Weeks after Dunlap Grubb Weaver had presumably received the names and other customer information from Verizon, the law firm contacted Harrison directly, last week.
Dunlap informed Harrison in a letter that he was accused of violating copyright law for sharing "Far Cry" on March 13, 2010. Dunlap included the IP address that belonged to Harrison at the time (redacted here), and the P2P client he allegedly used (aeTorrent). Dunlap told him the letter was a "courtesy."
The photo shows the top half of the letter's first page.
May 31, 2010 9:19 PM PDT
Photo by: Jon Harrison
| Caption by: Greg Sandoval
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