arstechnica.com — Hours after a federal judge threatened Oklahoma State University with a contempt order, the school finally complied with the judge's November 2007 order to cough up the names of students. A familiar name involved in the case means that RIAA still faces a roadblock in its attempt to send out prelitigation settlement letters to the 11 OSU students.
Feb 13, 2008 View in Crawl 4
onipsemajFeb 14, 2008
Ha ha - RIAA is DENIED!
theneptuneFeb 14, 2008
Edit: I want to add that they admit to bandwidth throttling, and even tell you why / how to get around it. It's all on the IT site.Registering as a server with the NAT site that listed under the IT home fixes the throttling, but for some reason I have to cancel registration and re-register everytime I reconnect to the wifi because I guess it doesn't recognize me and doesn't assign me my "server" ip.
niceguy4186Feb 14, 2008
I don't know about OSU, but at my college (about an hour south) we paid 4 bucks a quarter for unlimited legal help :)
rlloyddiggitFeb 14, 2008
If I was a musician I wouldn't mind people downloading my music for free. If I want to make money from my music, then I would go on tour. I believe you get more money out of the tickets you sell.
wolfenraiderFeb 14, 2008
About time someone somewhere needs to step up and sue their school...
Closed AccountMar 14, 2008
Legal help is not the same thing as retaining a lawyer to represent you.