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Welcome to Gnutella Forums. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us. Once registered but before posting, members need to read the Forum Rules (click here) and LimeWire/FrostWire users should include System details - help us to help you (click on blue link) in their posts if their problem relates to using the program. Thank you |
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| hi, i have had alot of friends tell me about this limewire, and they have said its safe and its free and stuff. so i tryed it, i downloaded the free version 2 days ago, and it works great. ive downloaded like 11 songs to my mp3 player. but then this guy told me if they trace my computer, they will charge me 3,000$ per song!? i must know in what ways this is illegal/legal i am but a kid of 14 and do not wish to brake the law/ be in dept for the rest of my life and im scared to death please explain if what im doing is illegal and going to get me into serious trouble if so i shall uninstall it immediatly. All ive done with it/plan to ever do is search certain songs, download them and save them in my windows media, and then sync them to my mp3 player is this illegal, please explain im just freaking scared to death. thanks blake |
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| Very hard to say actually. Depending on the country you live in, something like this may happen. The chances are extremely slim, but they are there. There have been a few lawsuits/cases and one of them ended up with the defendant having to pay over $9.000 per song for 24 songs (about $220.000). By the way this was for downloads kept in the share folder on Kazaa file sharing program, and the defendant had way more than 24 songs in the share folder. This is in the US of course. Where else would the government let the record industry dictate what is illegal or not. Also they didn't even have proof that anyone had even downloaded from her. Yes, her. A single mother of two that had enough trouble getting ends to meet even before this. TG Daily - Single mother loses big in music piracy case |
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