A landmark ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court is expected to put a financial pinch on file-swapping companies, but a number of them may escape the grim reaper, say financial experts and attorneys.That assessment came quickly Monday after the Supreme Court handed a major victory to record labels and movie studios, which had filed lawsuits against peer-to-peer file-swapping companies such as Grokster for allegedly allowing copyright infringements to occur on their networks.
even if you're renting you've got more rights than if you're using windows.
This isn't a blow to p2p at all. It's a blow to the scum sucking companies who market spyware laced p2p apps.
How is it bad? Companies make software with the sole intention to use it for illegal purposes, and you get mad when legislation is passed to stop it? If anything, this will be enough to get file sharing out of the public eye so that it will be something worthwhile again. No more kazaa-esque networks of kiddies sharing complete crap.
I think it really comes down to how they presented themselves. They fucked up, and now we all suffer. Like I said though, if anything this will "hopefully" take file sharing off the radar for a while, and those that aren't idiots about it can get back to really moving the technology forward.
SMOKING DAMAGES YOUR UNBORN BABY