GJ51 wrote:So, let me get this right, as I am not a Constitutional expert, your contention is that you have a Constituional protection that ensures that you can not be forced to reveal a password, but if we don't save all of our reciepts for any music with no DRM in our library we are considered guilty until proven innocent?
No wonder I'm so confused.
I'm saying that a jury or judge can convict you if it is beyond a reasonable doubt. That is ALL they require. If you have a hundred thousand individual music files and you can't provide even one receipt for any of them, is it likely you could be convicted? I think so. It doesn't seem too much of a stretch to me. Even the time stamps on the files (when you originally saved the file to the hard drive) would be incriminating because you would have to say that you just bought it last week and you forgot where you bought it from -- along with 99,999 other files.
Pishtim wrote:Wow you are so full of it. First of all this isn't a slashdot article, it's a forum, and, it's a dozen people (each with different backgrounds)telling you you won't get sued just for having a ton of songs (sorry if I didn't want to take the time to post 12 links where they're all going to tell you the same thing...).
We're talking about reasonable doubt at this point. Is it likely you have 100,000 mp3's without any proof of purchase? Not even a credit card receipt? Not an account history you could share from Amazon or iTunes? Nothing? Can a jury find your judgment beyond a reasonable doubt? Again, yes.
Pishtim wrote:Sounds pretty rock solid to me
That doesn't surprise me when I think about your last replies, which never attempted to consider an alternative.
Pishtim wrote:Now remember, this is the WHOLE reason you're encrypting your music and I'm showing how retarded it is. You think you have to keep every receipt for every song or CD you ever acquired?
Yes, my family (aside from myself) is able to provide proof of all their online purchases.
Pishtim wrote:You think you have to have an original CD of all the music you own?
You don't have to own a CD to own an MP3
Pishtim wrote:Find me ANY precedent what-so-ever to justify your fears.
Again, if the criminal justice system has a reasonable suspicion that you did not acquire these files lawfully, then that means there must have been distribution, even if it was only on the receiving end. That is enough to convict you. There are many cases where people's laptops and phones have been searched and charges filed because of the copyrighted contents of those devices. Even just the act of circumventing a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected is a violation of copyright. You would have a very hard time getting anyone to believe that you purchased 100K songs legally, all with no DRM attached, AND without a shred of evidence to back up your claim. If they found this music library, it would be
evidence of reproduction. This is all that is needed in a civil suit.
Pishtim wrote:Encrypting your music because you're afraid of getting sued is the most obtuse thing I've heard in a while.
Hiding your ill gotten, illegal files is obtuse? Are you sure you know what that word means?
Again, you're still being disrespectful, childish and idiotic. Sorry, but I'm going to have to start disregarding your replies unless you can clean it up.