Pfff vind ik een beetje te ver gaan... kijken wat er op mp3 spelers staat bij de douane en boetes uitdelen als er wat illegaal gedownloads erop staan.
Ze kunnen beter wat anders gaan doen dacht ik



sorry ik snap het niet hoe ze dit willen doen.. als het blijkt dat je muziek erop heb staan mogen ze dan je huis binnen om te bewijzen dat je de origineel CD ergens heb staan. Mis je je vlucht dan ook niet?
Dit komt van een australisch website af (de website van de grootste krant in Melbourne)maar... er staat
bron: http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,24089337-661,00.html
Ze kunnen beter wat anders gaan doen dacht ik
MUSIC fans might soon have their iPods searched by Customs officers at airport checks - and face jail if pirated music is found on them.
The push for the unprecedented searches of travellers’ laptops and MP3 players has been revealed in a leaked discussion paper relating to a treaty being negotiated by the Federal Government.
It suggests criminal sanctions for infringements on a commercial scale.
That meant innocent pop and rock fans with huge song libraries could unwittingly be hit with jail for commercial piracy, according to Internet Industry Association chief executive Peter Coroneos.
"It talks about (sanctions for) commercial infringements – does that mean one, 10, 20 or 1000 songs?
"It could be that people get sent to jail for being in possession of commercial-scale quantities of copied music.’’
Foreign Minister Stephen Smith’s office has confirmed the Government was a part of negotiations for the international agreement, but Australia had not signed nor agreed to any aspect.
Choice spokesman Christopher Zinn said: "Searching into people’s iPods is out of order.
"We don’t need to suffer draconian regimes to protect intellectual property.
"US music labels are keen for their government to sign up other countries to the zero-tolerance stance."
The push for the unprecedented searches of travellers’ laptops and MP3 players has been revealed in a leaked discussion paper relating to a treaty being negotiated by the Federal Government.
It suggests criminal sanctions for infringements on a commercial scale.
That meant innocent pop and rock fans with huge song libraries could unwittingly be hit with jail for commercial piracy, according to Internet Industry Association chief executive Peter Coroneos.
"It talks about (sanctions for) commercial infringements – does that mean one, 10, 20 or 1000 songs?
"It could be that people get sent to jail for being in possession of commercial-scale quantities of copied music.’’
Foreign Minister Stephen Smith’s office has confirmed the Government was a part of negotiations for the international agreement, but Australia had not signed nor agreed to any aspect.
Choice spokesman Christopher Zinn said: "Searching into people’s iPods is out of order.
"We don’t need to suffer draconian regimes to protect intellectual property.
"US music labels are keen for their government to sign up other countries to the zero-tolerance stance."
the international agreement
dus pas opbron: http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,24089337-661,00.html
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