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i saw a article about a 92 year old man who fought in ww2 nd he sends pirated movies and g]ames to solders in iraq. he got immunity froim the law cause he doesnt ask for money and its for the solders. wat if they asked for japanese ero games? lol this site to the rescue

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i saw a article about a 92 year old man who fought in ww2 nd he sends pirated movies and g]ames to solders in iraq. he got immunity froim the law cause he doesnt ask for money and its for the solders. wat if they asked for japanese ero games? lol this site to the rescue

So if I'm a soldier then I'm allowed to download all the stuff I want and it's totally legal? Great! Where do I have to sign? :rolleyes:

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In the US, Congress is prohibited from passing retroactive laws by clause 3 of Article I, Section 9 of the United States Constitution; States by clause 1 of Article I, Section 10. In 1798, it was decided that these restrictions do not apply to civilian cases. In fact, retroactive laws have been primarily passed to target people who could be labeled as sex offendors. Currently, the consensus is that possession of Japanese illustrated pornographic material cannot be considered a sex offense, because depictions of sexual abuse, pedophilia, etc, are fictional and do not harm anyone. But the rulings could change at a whim.

 

The Six Strikes thing sounds imposing, but it's really harmless. It's set up to scare rather than to actually take action against anyone. The worst they can do is slow your internet down to a crawl.

 

Internet Service Providers retain logs of your activity. This previously was only for 5-18 months, but it is now federally required that ISPs keep your data for 5 years. They have full access to your information if they have any excuse to get you. If you are obsessed with your privacy, you are basically screwed. All your downloads, legal or otherwise, are automatically logged, and will be considered. If you're American, the rules are different in South America, Europe, and Asia, so if you're planning on moving, consider local internet laws.

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  • 1 month later...

This website is completely legal according to EU law.

 

No, you won't get any "strikes" for downloading from here. To get a "strike" copyright holder needs to identify you, and they are simply not part of downloading process here ( unlike for example torrents, where anyone can connect to tracker to obtain IP adress of people who download ) - copyright holder would need to obtain your IP adress first, and given the fact that file hosters are not obliged to submit that kind of data without court order, and it's impossible to obtain one, as the act of downloading is completely legal here :cool:

Main principle is the same as EU police being unable to take down neo-nazi webpages hosted in USA, as they are protected by first amendment there.

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