Comments on: U of Tennessee blocked P2P sites before RIAA law
RIAA didn't need a law to persuade Tennessee, the home of country music, to block P2P sites back in August.
RIAA didn't need a law to persuade Tennessee, the home of country music, to block P2P sites back in August.
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There aren't very many.
Now, let's get this An institution of Higher Learning has purposely blocked access to the largest free on-line repository of electronic books, in order to appease Hanna Montana and Brittany Spears music publishers. Makes tons of sense to me.
P2P networks are heavily used by games (either for game updates like WoW or mod distribution from average joe). But is the campus internet is offered at no expense of the student then pretty much anything can be blocked.
The only reason to block stuff like that is if the campus network is substandard.
1. Why is Cnet forcing me to re-log in for every single post I make today? This is getting annoying - any decent programmer can figure out how to keep a login for more than a few minutes.
2. What's more important, knowledge or RIAA profits? We know the answer from UofT now, don't we.
- by jim barin November 23, 2008 2:10 AM PST
- Let us not forget in the headlong rush to create bans for this and bans for that and bans for the other, that the Nazis started to ban things they did not like, burning books lead eventually to 50 million dying before the Nazis were beaten.
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(13 Comments)Banning music file sharing is not in the same league - but the principle is the same.
The music industry has ripped off buyers for decades, a CD with music costs only cents to make, and has sold for anything up to $12-$15, with sales in the hundreds of millions since the start of the 80's. It is no small wonder that the music industry can afford to hire high priced lawyers and hound music sharers. truly, for every pirate ripping off music, there is a music industry pirate hoping to rip off the consumer.