HellasVagabond
New Member
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2007
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- Athens , GREECE
System Name | SECONDARY RIG / PRIMARY RIG / THIRD RIG |
---|---|
Processor | i920@3.6GHz / i920@4GHz / AMD Phenom II 955 |
Motherboard | Gigabyte EX58-UD4P / Gigabyte EX58-UD7 / ASRock 890GX3 |
Cooling | CoolIT Domino ALC / Thermalright Silver Arrow / Thermalright VenomousX |
Memory | 12GB DDR3 @ 1800MHZ / 6GB DDR3 @ 2250MHZ / 4GB DDR3 @ 1600MHZ |
Video Card(s) | XFX ATI RADEON 5970 / GAINWARD NVIDIA GTX 580 / 2xGEFORCE GTX295 |
Storage | 1550GB / 6TB SAS - SSD / 160GB SSD |
Display(s) | NEC 26WUXi2 / NEC 3090WQXi / SONY 55A2000 (1080P 55inch) |
Case | COOLER MASTER HAF 932 / COOLER MASTER ATCS 840 / ANTEC DARKFLEET DF85 |
Audio Device(s) | Soundblaster X-Fi Xtreme Music / SoundBlaster X-Fi Fatal1ty Pro / Realtek Onboard |
Power Supply | CWT 1200W / Enermax Revolution 85+ 1250W / Ikonik Vulcan 1200W |
Software | Windows 7 x64 / Windows 7 x64 / Windows 7 x64 |
While subpoenas and ex parte discovery have worked well for the RIAA in its legal fight against suspected file-sharers, the music industry in Europe looks to be facing a tougher battle. Today, an advocate general for the European Court of Justice, the highest court in the EU, released an opinion saying that ISPs are not required to disclose information that could identify subscribers in civil copyright infringement cases. The court in most cases shall stick with the advocate general's opinion although there is a slim to none chance that they may not. The originsal case involved Promusicae, a Spanish music industry association a lot like RIAA, and Spanish ISP Telefonica.
Promusicae managed to trace users of Telefonica who were sharing their music over KaZaA and then took Telefonica to court in order to force them to hand over the names and ip addresses of those who according to them were sharing their music in KaZaA. Telefonica refused to comply, saying that the law only required the ISP to turn over the information in criminal cases, not civil ones.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site
Promusicae managed to trace users of Telefonica who were sharing their music over KaZaA and then took Telefonica to court in order to force them to hand over the names and ip addresses of those who according to them were sharing their music in KaZaA. Telefonica refused to comply, saying that the law only required the ISP to turn over the information in criminal cases, not civil ones.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site