So you have a crystal ball and it tells you they will judge the other way.
The difference is in our position, not our process in reaching a
conclusion.  Perhaps out of pessimism you've chosen the side of big business
as the winner.  I'm not saying EFF will win the case, I'm advocating who I
think should win with what facts we know now.



On Sun, Nov 30, 2008 at 1:58 PM, Tom Piwowar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> >Actually that's you.  The iTunes database file isn't part of the DMCA...at
> >least that's the argument put forth.  The difference is you are on the
> side
> >of the guys in suits with the big stick beating us all up.  Big surprise
> the
> >guys with the clubs are Apple and you agree with them.
>
> The argument you cite is the one that EFF says they are going to make to
> the judge. Maybe you think you have a crystal ball that tells you how the
> judge will rule, but until there is a definitive ruling in the real world
> the topic is out of bounds. Most people do not skirt the law, especially
> in areas that are known to be litigation prone.
>
>


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