Copyright laws

I am a supporter of copyright laws, because I was trained as a librarian and I respected intellectual property rights. However, when it comes to the internet, and the price of software, I have been known to download an illegal copy of some software. After all, I’m no longer working so I can’t get hold of these bits of software and don’t have the money to spend on them.

I haven’t had call to download illegal music. I just copy from my own CDs to my MP3 player. Certainly others with access to this computer have done so however.

I do download movies but don’t consider them copyright infringements because mostly they are TV series and I just want to see them before they are available to me on free TV in Australia.

My main problem with these bittorrent sites now is that I have managed to pick up some malware along the line which appeared to set in motion uploads and downloads from one of those sites. Hence my broadband allocation was used. My computer security software did not pick this up. I found it by downloading malwarebytes anti-malware program. I recommend this software. Some of the advertised malware removal bits of software are malware in themselves.

There is a reason to avoid downloading from file sharing sites now though. There is a Digital Millennium Copyright Act in the US and in Australia it is called Copyright Amendment (Digital Agenda) Act.

What will this mean?

You can be identified and you can lose your broadband connection and you could face prosecution. In Australia there is going to be testing of peer to peer technology.

One thought on “Copyright laws

  1. I’ve heard about the Copyright Amendment (Digital Agenda) Act. Just like the Australian government’s proposed internet censorship plans, I doubt it will be very effective. Because of the way torrent sites work, I doubt they’ll be able to identify individuals as the file sharing is dispersed among multiple users. The government seems to have a very poor understanding of the web as a medium. Personally, I think the responsibility should lie with content providers; if they put content on the web, the onus should be on them to protect it, else they should make it freely available.

    If the government is reading this; I never download anything illegally, scouts honour.

    Liam Alexanders last blog post..Top tweeple to follow on twitter

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