Tennessee bill broadens scope of 'theft,' wide enough to include web-based subscription services?
6/3/2011

This week, Tennessee signed a bill that made waves across the web, with many sites claiming that sharing your log-in credentials for social welfare such as Netflix could soon land you in the slammer. The actual story isn't that simple. The bill basically adds onto laws pertaining to the theft of 'services' in the legal sense by suit more things that can be defined under the title. For instance, the first list act cable services, to keep folks from jacking free HBO -- now, stealing "entertainment pay television services" can make you a felon as well.
Tennessee has always been a hotspot for the recording industry, so there's almost no quiz about what this bill was meant to fight; during a senate hearing for the bill, the RIAA itself explained that online music welfare could be pirated via password sharing. It also added, though, that users who share passwords "en-masse" are the focus, rather than particular cases like it had pursued in the past.
However, this bill covers more than online relief and could even extend to materialistic media such as magazines, another example insecure to this type of theft. Furthermore, while sharing passwords to these "entertainment services" may be illegal after its enactment on July 1st, that's not what this charter is technically about; the RIAA would still need to prove that password sharing equates to theft in a court of law. You can check the links down below for more details.
Tennessee bill broadens scope of 'theft,' wide enough to include web-based pay television services? by origin appeared on Engadget on Fri, 03 Jun 2011 09:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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