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I don't know how we let things get to this state in our country when it comes to wireless access. The more you *bow* to the government and let them change your behavior even when what you're doing is not illegal, the more power you give them. Remember, they sue you becuase your IP address is being used, but if they don't find any corroborating evidence on your computer that you've violated copyright then they have nothing. IANAL, but to the best of my legal knowledge you have almost no liability over someone else using your wireless *despite* what the RIAA says. I think they're friendly and good-neighborly and i think this attitude screws that all to hell. I *like* people who leave their wireless routers open. So yeah, this kind of stuff really scares me. No charges were ever pressed, but it cost me $7,000 in lawyer fees (I wasn't fucking around and hired a lawyer as soon as they started asking questions). It took us almost 11 months and tons of paperwork to get our stuff back, even after proving there was no way in hell we were home w hen the supposed infraction occured. They confinscated all of my computer equipment, my cat5s, my cds, my wife's home videos, my camera, and my hub. Pistols in the face, flashlights, the whole nine yards. The department of Emmigration and Internal Customs busted in 3 months later while my wife (gf then) and I were asleep.
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Well, all said and done, apparently someone accessed an IRC server/channel that was distributing CP. We had four, so friends could come over and lan. On occasion they would use our computers as well. On any given weekend we would have 10+ people in our house, on our internet. We would host daily lan parties, weekend beerfests, and other general mischief. When I was 17-20 my brother and I owned a house together. District Judge Roger Hunt in Nevada agreed with a magistrate judge that the hyperlink-sting operation constituted sufficient probable cause to justify giving the FBI its search warrant." While it might seem that merely clicking on a link wouldn't be enough to justify a search warrant, courts have ruled otherwise. mail, video gear, camera equipment, checkbooks, bank statements, and credit card statements. The search warrants authorized FBI agents to seize and remove any "computer-related" equipment, utility bills, telephone bills, any "addressed correspondence" sent through the U.S. "With the logs revealing those allegedly incriminating IP addresses in hand, the FBI sent administrative subpoenas to the relevant Internet service provider to learn the identity of the person whose name was on the account-and then obtained search warrants for dawn raids. The article contains a fairly detailed description of how the operation progressed, and it raises questions about the legality and reliability of getting people to click "unlawful" hyperlinks. Mytrip brings us a story from about an FBI operation in which agents posted hyperlinks which advertised child pornography, recorded the IP addresses of people who clicked the links, and then tracked them down and raided their homes.