The Net is “inherently fairly anarchic’
p2pnet news view Freedom | P2P:- Under the ‘truer words were never spoken’ heading, this Reader’s Write comes in p2pnet’s isoHUNT sues record labels’ CRIA post »»»
… the internet is inherently fairly anarchic.
There’s no point where you can control the whole network.
If you don’t like what’s going on on the general internet, you just encrypt, shift technologies, or build parallel Darknets.
Or as Mahatma Ghandi once put it, “First they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you.
“Then you win.”
Are you receiving, cartels? Over ………………….
“Canadian BitTorrent and P2P search engine isoHunt has become the first such site to go from defense to attack in the online file-sharing wars,” p2pnet posted on Saturday, going on:
“In a landmark case, it’s suing Canadian RIAA clone the CRIA (Canadian Recording Industry Association of America), asking a court in British Columbia to make the first ruling on whether or not BitTorrent search engines should be held liable for .torrent files that might link to copyrighted data.”
JN
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September 8th, 2008 at 12:17 pm
Anarchy isn’t fair. Order is fair. Hierarchy is fair.
September 8th, 2008 at 1:03 pm
Im sorry
Sites such as Download.com link(sic)HOST to copyrighted data? Everytime you visit google you download googles copyrighted logo
Hypocracy at work.
September 8th, 2008 at 1:53 pm
“Order is fair. Hierarchy is fair.”
It depend on who is maitaining the order and who is in the hierarchy.
With all the parasites arround these days, what you call “Order is not order and hierarchy is not even close to be fair. So come the law of the strongest. The good news is that all these out of shape fogies corporate parasites and politics with no fighting skill are going to lose BIG TIME!
September 8th, 2008 at 11:59 pm
You do realize the United States can just pull the plug on the global DNS system at any time, right? They were going to take it down after the 9/11 attacks but decided not to for whatever reason.
September 9th, 2008 at 11:47 am
Brings me back to the days when getting some data served onto the Internet was a small miracle in itself.