Cable giants step up piracy battle by interrogating Montreal software developer

Started by Lazybones, August 02, 2017, 09:43:46 AM

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Lazybones

http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/tvaddons-piracy-rogers-bell-videotron-court-1.4231340

There are a few concerning details about how Canadian law allows some things.

The Judges reaction to exceeding the search warrant however was re-assuring.

Mr. Analog

By Grabthar's Hammer

Darren Dirt

Commenting is now closed for this story.

The damn article was posted yesterday. Is it normal to lock comments so quickly CBC? Or did you not like 1200+ participants unless they all parroted the "correct" POV?
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Darren Dirt

regardless of who the culpable party may ultimately be determined in this legal tangle, the very idea that by using something called an "Anton Pillar order" (?), a group of techies, a bailiff, and a a hostile lawyer can walk into a man's home without notice, and force him to answer questions for the better part of a day while his home is being searched strikes me as being contrary to all we should be able to expect from that entity we vaguely understand as "justice."

BINGO.

Issue isn't copyright etc but ACCUSEDrights. Which apparently got MemoryHoled or F451'd or something. ISIS converts get more reasonable treatment. Shows you who is really in power - hint not "elected representatives". #FascismOnDisplay
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Strive for progress. Not perfection.
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