-TonyBradley

I may be wrong but I disagree. I have the right to what is beamed on the airwaves in my house.
That is an interesting point. So you are calling the airwaves public doamin then, correct? If this holds true to your comment. Then technicaly, If my neighbor "beams" their wireless info into my house. Me obtaining their info isn't wrong? Me using the logins and passwords that they sent into my house are mine to use as I please. So me "login into" their wireless network isn't wrong. I am just using something I "found in the air". You can sit in front of dillions listening to the radio and wardrive, you'd be surprised how many unencrypted transactions are done. For clarification purposes, IMO you can't say that one airwave is okay to intercept but then turn around and say another isn't acceptable. Not accusing you of this, but it seems as if there is alot of contridiction here.

The RIAA wants to stir up all kinds of ****, yet they still haven't even attempted to offer an alternate to these p2p. Something like itunes for example.

2 cents