i don't agree with you at all. i think that if millions of people woke up in the morning, started buying guns and shooting kids in playgrounds by the 100's of 1000's, we would have to look at how to stop people from acquiring guns to begin with. the gun doesn't cause murder, but that wouldn't change the fact that they would be at the core of the problem and a key focal point in successfully addressing the issue
you continually make this weak argument about "legit use" of torrent sites and refuse to accept the obvious... that they are the principle tool of mass copyright infringement and theft.
i can use your logic and say nuclear weapons don't kill people, so who cares who has them.. they are just inanimate objects. that kind of moronic, circular reasoning can go on forever. that doesn't change the fact that torrents are at the core of copyright infringement. whether or not you feel (or the law does) that there is a legitimate use for torrents, that doesn't negate the fact that their principle use is theft of music, movies and software.
your problem is that you want to defend torrents and since you know you can't really do that while admitting they are used for widespread theft, you have to keep deflecting the conversation away to VCR's or cassettes or other mediums. that has nothing to do with a persons rights to the content they created and the terms of the license they've given for you to use it.
each time you talk about vcr's, its a quiet admission that you know your argument and position is weak and mostly indefensible.
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