Copy of the ODU game?

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Anyone record the game and is willing to make a copy of it? I'm sure I'm not the only one who would love to watch the game over and over. :D
 
I have it on my DVR, come over and watch it if you want. Bring chips and beer. Not sure if I could make a copy of it from there though. I do have the Oklahoma game on VHS if anyone wants to fire up a couple of VCR's and copy that.
 
I have it on DVD but I'm all out of double layer discs. It is over 5 GB transcoded. The original mpeg was over 17 GB before I edited it :shock:
 
RRR said:
*bump*

So Ram it Home do you need us to get you more discs?
unless you have permission from the NCAA to copy and reuse this material, im pretty sure its ILLEGAL

:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
 
I don't think so. It is for personal use, not for profit of any kind, not being rebroadcast, not being used to promote any particular idea or venture.
 
RustyShackleford said:
I don't think so. It is for personal use, not for profit of any kind, not being rebroadcast, not being used to promote any particular idea or venture.


correct, when you try to start selling copies of it, thats when you can get into real trouble
 
That's what people in jail for downloading music said.

BAFanVCU said:
RustyShackleford said:
I don't think so. It is for personal use, not for profit of any kind, not being rebroadcast, not being used to promote any particular idea or venture.


correct, when you try to start selling copies of it, thats when you can get into real trouble
 
so many myths about copyright, so little time

giving away vs. selling doesn't make a difference when it comes to being found liable (in other words, guilty)... the only thing that argument might get you is lower damages you'd have to pay ...also, making a physical copy yourself vs. making it available for copying by others (e.g. making it a torrent) isn't really all that different in the eyes of the law


It's OT, but as an FYI, recently a new breed of copyright lawyers have emerged that work like bounty hunters... they relentlessly search around online, looking for instances of copyright infringement, and when they find it, they go to the copyright owner and work out a deal to sue for a cut ... it's covered many forms of infringment... newspaper/magazine articles, music files, or movie files (they especially love to find porn copiers, because they know a settlement pay-off is more likely to avoid embarrassment). Direct links and hotlinks tend to be their easiest pickings, but they could easily stoop to trolling online fora for leads as well.
 
artRAMinMN said:
so many myths about copyright, so little time

giving away vs. selling doesn't make a difference when it comes to being found liable (in other words, guilty)... the only thing that argument might get you is lower damages you'd have to pay ...also, making a physical copy yourself vs. making it available for copying by others (e.g. making it a torrent) isn't really all that different in the eyes of the law


It's OT, but as an FYI, recently a new breed of copyright lawyers have emerged that work like bounty hunters... they relentlessly search around online, looking for instances of copyright infringement, and when they find it, they go to the copyright owner and work out a deal to sue for a cut ... it's covered many forms of infringment... newspaper/magazine articles, music files, or movie files (they especially love to find porn copiers, because they know a settlement pay-off is more likely to avoid embarrassment). Direct links and hotlinks tend to be their easiest pickings, but they could easily stoop to trolling online fora for leads as well.

Basically, we all need to go over to Ram it Home's and have a watch party for the ODU game on his DVR.
 
Pavarotti said:
artRAMinMN said:
so many myths about copyright, so little time

giving away vs. selling doesn't make a difference when it comes to being found liable (in other words, guilty)... the only thing that argument might get you is lower damages you'd have to pay ...also, making a physical copy yourself vs. making it available for copying by others (e.g. making it a torrent) isn't really all that different in the eyes of the law


It's OT, but as an FYI, recently a new breed of copyright lawyers have emerged that work like bounty hunters... they relentlessly search around online, looking for instances of copyright infringement, and when they find it, they go to the copyright owner and work out a deal to sue for a cut ... it's covered many forms of infringment... newspaper/magazine articles, music files, or movie files (they especially love to find porn copiers, because they know a settlement pay-off is more likely to avoid embarrassment). Direct links and hotlinks tend to be their easiest pickings, but they could easily stoop to trolling online fora for leads as well.

Basically, we all need to go over to Ram it Home's and have a watch party for the ODU game on his DVR.

and/or, purely hypothetically of course, at least not talk about it in a public, archived, cached, searchable way with a naive belief that one's web-anonymity is not easily overcome
 
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