The Globe and Mail- In a pivotal courtroom battle over unauthorized downloading in Canada, a Federal Court has handed down a major ruling – one that has all sides claiming victory.
Canadian Internet service provider TekSavvy Solutions Inc. has been ordered to hand over a list of names and addresses of its customers suspected of illegally downloading movies, in a landmark Federal Court decision.
Signing up for the new Twitter Blue has caused problems for some folks. The Shortcut details the roadblocks you may hit trying to sign up and how to get around them.
Good thing I signed up at launch so people know I'm the real evilcackle
Huge loss for those who don't know where else to spend their surplus $8 a month
study abroad is the chance to find yourself while acquiring a comprehension of an alternate culture. Being in another spot without help from anyone else can overpower on occasion.
Websites are harvesting our data even before we
Regulations are beginning to require users to verify their identification online.
democracy lol
That is beyond terrible!
Uh oh, sound like Voltage are trying to turn TekSavvy into a warden for their own purposes. They want a pick of the crop so-to-speak so they can troll at leisure. This can't be any good.
Time for Anonymous to get to work..
This might make some citizens migrate south to avoid prosecution.
If I was one of those names, and they came knocking, fine I'll sell all my movies second hand for cheap, then never buy any again. See how Hollywood likes big groups of people turning down movies all together, instead of buying the few good ones and downloading the endless crap ones....
I don't download movies, but I think this whole "pirates ruin everything" stuff is total bs. Make better movies, they sell. Look at Avengers.....
There´s ways to handle this.
Only in 'Anada
The worst part is when people fall right into they're hands. Instead, If a movie is crappy, tell everyone & anyone to avoid it, even the pirated versions. Don't fall into their troll infused trap.
I can't help but wonder how things would have turned out if studios embraced the bit-torrent protocol as a public form of distribution.