![]() The studio then notices artist X showing up all over the filesharing systems, and yes people, they use them too, but they see this and freak. Thats just common practice.īut new artist X is a breakout on Itunes and is selling tracks like crazy, yay. ![]() Limewire and Itunes and Rhapsody and god knows how many others thus share one central location for simplicity. When every they install new software, they modify it to use that file as the default for all activity. Most people have a centralized file on their computers where they put all downloads and rips, for ease of finding later the needed files. Most who rip are doing for their own use as the boards statements support. The rippers are very few and far between. But did you know that the RIAA has never once won a case, not once. The RIAA, the recording companys law group, assumes thats how files get online and have been chasing people down and suing them for damages and making a huge stink about it. No not we, if you downloaded it from me, you did nothing wrong anymore than before but I have broken copyright law, so they say. If I, on the other hand, created that file, by say ripping a cd to my computer then we have a problem. ![]() If I got my file from another person online and sent it to you, no problem. Simple, right? Well, there is no law being broke in that transaction. With one of these, if I have a file on my computer and you want it, it is sent to you, and if I want one from you I can have it sent to me. Sites such as Limewire, Morpheus and Bearshare to name a few offer true p2p services, Peer to Peer service, file sharing, for the uninitiated. I just want to clear up some confusion I see here on the boards about the legality of free download sites.
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