View Full Version : List of songs.
http://kevz-songz.2ya.com
thats a current list of all the songs on my computer. usually when people message me for a good song to dl, i send them there. its like 3,500 songs or so. thats only the ones on my HD.
PoOtShwAn
08-16-2003, 10:42 PM
cool man...your one of the few people I've seen with Swollen Members on your playlist...not many people know about them, and they kick ass...
utahjazz85
08-16-2003, 10:58 PM
How should I download music now that the RIAA is busting people on Kazaa?
Realged13
08-17-2003, 02:42 PM
I just use Kazaa Lite, and then just scan for viruses.
pugamsish
08-19-2003, 10:11 AM
I use Kazaa 2, I have never had 1 problem.
well here, since im the Guru at file downloading...and u can trust me i am..lol.
1.you are an idiot if u are still using Regular Kazaa.
2.if ur not using kazaa lite, your an idiot.
3. kazaa lite mask's ur ip, and has made it so people cant view all ur files like with previous kazaa versions.
4. with k-lite, ur free from RIAA, i can gaurentee that.
utahjazz85
08-20-2003, 08:39 PM
Who will I trust?
A teenager from yahoo or computer geeks with jobs? Hmmm?
http://www.fatwallet.com/forums/messageview.cfm?catid=28&threadid=210180
KANE_6969
08-20-2003, 11:39 PM
is that your coupon forum?
utahjazz85
08-20-2003, 11:52 PM
Click the ****ing link dumbass.
KANE_6969
08-21-2003, 01:08 AM
i did boring convo of old kazaa news and how they tryign to stop music zzZZzzZZ
Forsaken
09-10-2003, 04:33 AM
Girl, 12, Settles Piracy Suit for $2,000
Tue Sep 9,11:51 PM ET
By TED BRIDIS, AP Technology Writer
WASHINGTON - A 12-year-old girl in New York who was among the first to be sued by the record industry for sharing music over the Internet is off the hook after her mother agreed Tuesday to pay $2,000 to settle the lawsuit, apologizing and admitting that her daughter's actions violated U.S. copyright laws.
In a new lawsuit Tuesday, a California attorney sued the recording industry, claiming its offer of amnesty for file-swappers in that state was misleading.
The hurried settlement involving Brianna LaHara, an honors student, was the first announced one day after the Recording Industry Association of America (news - web sites) filed 261 such lawsuits across the country. Lawyers for the RIAA said Brianna's mother, Sylvia Torres, contacted them early Tuesday to negotiate.
"We understand now that file-sharing the music was illegal," Torres said in a statement distributed by the recording industry. "You can be sure Brianna won't be doing it anymore."
Brianna added: "I am sorry for what I have done. I love music and don't want to hurt the artists I love."
The case against Brianna was a potential minefield for the music industry from a public relations standpoint. The family lives in a city housing project on New York's Upper West Side, and they said they mistakenly believed they were entitled to download music over the Internet because they had paid $29.99 for software that gives them access to online file-sharing services.
The RIAA said this week it already had negotiated $3,000 settlements with fewer than 10 Internet users who learned they might be sued after the RIAA sent copyright subpoenas to their Internet providers. But lawyers negotiated those settlements before the latest round of lawsuits, and the RIAA had said any further settlements would cost defendants more than $3,000.
Even in the hours before the settlement was announced, Brianna was emerging as an example of what critics said was overzealous enforcement by the powerful music industry.
The top lawyer for Verizon Communications Inc., William Barr, charged earlier Tuesday during a Senate hearing that music lawyers had resorted to a "campaign against 12-year-old girls" rather than trying to help consumers turn to legal sources for songs online. Verizon's Internet subsidiary is engaged in a protracted legal fight against the RIAA over copyright subpoenas sent Verizon customers.
Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., also alluded to Brianna's case.
"Are you headed to junior high schools to round up the usual suspects?" Durbin asked RIAA President Cary Sherman during a Senate Judiciary hearing.
Durbin said he appreciated the piracy threat to the recording industry, but added, "I think you have a tough public relations campaign to go after the offenders without appearing heavy-handed in the process."
Sherman responded that most people don't shoplift because they fear they'll be arrested.
"We're trying to let people know they may get caught, therefore they should not engage in this behavior," Sherman said. "Yes, there are going to be some kids caught in this, but you'd be surprised at how many adults are engaged in this activity."
It was unclear how Brianna's name — rather than her mother's — came to be listed as a defendant in this case. The recording industry said it named as the defendant in each lawsuit the person who paid for the household Internet account, but children typically aren't listed as account holders.
The RIAA said it did not investigate each individual's background before filing its lawsuits.
In the suit against the RIAA, attorney Ira P. Rothken of San Rafael, Calif., accuses the music trade group of "unfair, misleading and fraudulent business practices" for promoting an amnesty program aimed at music file-shares. The RIAA's "Clean Slate" program would allow file-sharers who step forward and pledge not to download files illegally to avoid being sued. Rothken did not immediately return a call for comment late Tuesday.
r1chard_cran1um
09-10-2003, 08:31 AM
I'm still waiting on my lawsuit
I have about 1000 songs dl'd
Forsaken
09-11-2003, 01:15 PM
Conjure One featuring Sinead O'Connor - Tears From The Moon(Hybrid's Twisted on The Terrace Mix)
It doesn't get any better than that for vocal trance!!
Stop! Stop haunting me!
Forsaken
09-24-2003, 09:30 PM
Music Industry May Have Sued Wrong Person
1 hour, 49 minutes ago Add Entertainment - AP to My Yahoo!
By JUSTIN POPE, AP Business Writer
BOSTON - In a possible case of mistaken identity, the recording industry has withdrawn a lawsuit against a 66-year-old sculptor who claims never to have even downloaded song-sharing software, let alone used it.
Sarah Seabury Ward, of Newbury, Mass., and her husband use their computer to e-mail with children and grandchildren, said Electronic Frontier Foundation attorney Cindy Cohn, who has worked with the family. They use a Macintosh (news - web sites), which cannot even run the Kazaa file-sharing service they are accused of using illegally.
Nonetheless, Ward was one of 261 defendants sued by the recording industry this month for illegal Internet file-sharing. Ward was accused of illegally sharing more than 2,000 songs, including rapper Trick Daddy's "I'm a Thug."
An attorney for the Recording Industry Association of America (news - web sites) withdrew the case Friday, calling the move a "gesture of good faith" but writing in a letter to Ward's attorney that the organization would continue to look into the matter and reserved the right to refile.
RIAA spokeswoman Amy Weiss said Wednesday the group believes the computer address — known as an Internet protocol (IP) address — provided by Comcast Corp., Ward's Internet service provider, is correct and the organization still believes it has the right account.
Cohn said she expects more cases like this to emerge, given the difficulties of tying IP addresses to particular individuals. She said Internet service providers like Comcast don't have enough IP addresses for each user, so they shuffle them around, and it is difficult to track which addresses were assigned to a particular account.
"This is what happens when you sweep away all the due process protections and all the privacy protections," Cohn said. "Those are the kinds of things that would stop this before it gets to the stage where you sue some nice old lady who did nothing wrong."
Comcast spokeswoman Sarah Eder declined to comment specifically on Ward's case, but said the company has helped the recording industry to match IP addresses with users' names, but only in cases where Comcast is legally bound to do so.
Ward's husband and attorney declined to comment.
Weiss said this was the only case the RIAA had withdrawn, but Cohn said her group was investigating several others that may involve mistaken identity. Cohn said more than half of the defendants who have contacted her group claim another member of their household was doing the file-sharing.
The RIAA certainly is willing to go directly after the offending family member, as in the case of Brianna LaHara, a 12-year-old honors student from New York who was named as one of the 261 defendants. Her mother settled the case for $2,000 and an apology from Brianna
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