you mean "because they could just use youtube-dl to download it?" I think that's why we are arguing that ytdl is a tool with legal and moral purposes and should remain accessible.
What if this tool remains public in a different part of the world? Are you going to wall off from the rest of the world so you can no longer see the tool and pretend it doesn't exist?
chordalkeyboard|5 years ago
echelon|5 years ago
I think we can tell what the RIAA thinks about that.
JAlexoid|5 years ago
Being public doesn't mean publicly owned. It means publicly accessible... Like your local shopping mall.
unknown|5 years ago
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cheeze|5 years ago
If we have to play by those rules, LEO should too. Boo hoo if it's harder.
bonoboTP|5 years ago
They haven't shown anything. They made a claim. We'll know what rules we have to play by if it comes to a court ruling.
efreak|5 years ago
feanaro|5 years ago