arstechnica.com — A University of Tennessee student asks to have an RIAA subpoena seeking his name, addresses, phone number, e-mail address, and MAC address quashed. His argument: the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act bars the school from releasing the data without his or his parents' permission.
Aug 23, 2007 View in Crawl 4
actorboyAug 24, 2007
Sure, everyone who ever made a record is lighting cigars with hundred dollar bills. You're deluding yourself if you think that's true.
frsrblchAug 24, 2007
Horray for Canada, I can download with impunity!
error601Aug 24, 2007
A couple ad hominems plus a semantic subject change. I guess people that can't earn enough to actually buy the music aren't very bright.
lightspeed2Aug 24, 2007
atomic, that was the worst argument ever. a little more tangible, wow.... you obviously dont understand what a copyright is.
mushroombrewAug 25, 2007
I just don't like the fact that they're running around prescribing vigilante justice through the guise of the real legal system. Cowboys in business suits.