Federal Agents Raid Homes for Modchips 537
Lunatrik writes "Invoking the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998, Federal Custom's Agents have raided over 30 homes and businesses looking to confiscate so-called 'mod chips', or other devices that allow the playback of pirated video games. This raises an important question: Are legitimate backup copies of a piece of software you own illegal under the DMCA?"
We've been over this (Score:5, Informative)
Of course Not (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:Of course Not (Score:4, Insightful)
But now you are impacting another part of a manufacturer's business model: planned obsolescence [wikipedia.org].
If the original CD does not wear out, then the manufacturer can only make money off of you one time on the original sale.
So obviously fair use copying is just another form of piracy!
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welp; (Score:5, Funny)
Seriously. Persecution of the hackers only makes them stronger.
Not really a legitimate question... (Score:5, Insightful)
If you could make a perfect 1-to-1 copy of a DVD, and have it run, that would still be legal. But since that doesn't work, because commercially available DVD are neutered, you have to crack the encryption - which is what is illegal.
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Re:Not really a legitimate question... (Score:5, Interesting)
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I didn't think the DVD Jon stuff was so retarded just because it was a chance to show the MPAA/DVDCCA and the judicial officials of the world that CSS is not an effective encryption s
WTF? (Score:5, Insightful)
Money Laundering (Score:5, Funny)
Perhaps because people with mod chips are so engrossed in playing their pirate games that they don't empty their pockets thoroughly before dumping their clothes in the wash.
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Illegal aliens work in the country for cheap. For dirt cheap. They don't care about minimum wage or labour laws. And if, where should they go? Court? They also get the "jobs" nobody else would want, because it's risky or so crappy paid that even the burger flipping crowd sneers at them. And if a company doesn't have to give you gloves or goggles when you're cleaning that fluorine tank, they safe a lot. Should that immigrant get sick because of it, well, dump him, next is a
Re:WTF? (Score:5, Interesting)
This sounds very much like.... (Score:3, Insightful)
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Er, no. The "entire nation" can still buy legal games, and the fair-use folks don't have political pull.
The only way to influence the game companies is a boycott that addicted consumers will never support.
Homeland Security (Score:5, Insightful)
But oh wait... comparing them to the Commissariat of Homeland Security (KGB), Bureau of Security (UB) or Securitate, I should be thankful they're not participating in mass murders... yet.
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It's been brought under the DHS umbrella. From their website: " Created in March 2003, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is the largest investigative branch of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). "
Nice try, but no cigar for you.
Katamari Damacy - legitimate use (Score:4, Insightful)
Since the original Katamari Damacy isn't available at all in the UK, I had to import it from Japan and use a PS2 modchip to play it. The follow-up game was released in Europe months after appearing in US/Japan, so I also imported that one.
The fact that I could do this at all shows that there is no technical reason for the region coding in this game - it's purely an illegal tactic to control market prices.
Rich.
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Because what this allows is cross financing. If you already have a stranglehold on a market where you can gouge whatever you want because your competitors don't dare to hunt on your turf, you can take the revenue from there to make the products dirt cheap in another market where you're battling for sales. And of cour
"Legitimate" (Score:3, Informative)
The mod chips themselves are a pretty violation under the DMCA:
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So why are photo copiers still legal? And CD-burners? Why is a mod-chip different from those other two?
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The sincerity of this intent could be demonstrated if the modchips were _not_ interoperable and/or refused to make copies of copies (AFAIK, not fair use).
Manufacturers
The Real Question.... (Score:4, Insightful)
I believe the more important question is: what's happening to our liberties?...
If we're not losing them in the name of fighting terrorism, then it's in the name of copyright laws. Between Hollywood and the middle east, liberty is bleeding.
Re:The Real Question.... (Score:5, Funny)
Don't worry. As a physician I am qualified to tell you that all bleeding stops eventually. One way or another.
Let me axe you something (Score:5, Funny)
Don't you mean, begs the question?
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Games Producers Want The Best Of Both Worlds (Score:5, Interesting)
When you buy any kind of software they charge you mainly for the licence to use the software and to get support/etc. However when you lose the media or it breaks, they want to charge you to replace the media.
So which is it? Charging us for the media or charging us for the licence? One or the other.
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The real issue is that consumers need a bill of rights, if they had a self-funded corporate like entity to protect their interests lots of these attempts at private tyranny would be mitigated.
The first thing is, a government body has to start treating consumers as co-owners and investors of the products they buy (i.e. invest in), this way corpora
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Another thing I love about Steam is the generosity of distribution model. You can download any paid-for product as
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You clearly do not understand the economics of piracy.
Higher game costs would lead to greater piracy and diminished game sales, because they would still be easily duplicated, the desire to play them would still be there, however fewer people would justify spending a larger portion of their disposable income to purchase them legally. Especially at a time whe
False Positives? (Score:4, Interesting)
Content provider guarentee (Score:2, Insightful)
It is put up or shut up time for the content industry.
Spam/Flood (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe after a few hundred thousand calls they'd lay off. Shouldn't the FBI be doing more important things anyway? Like say, busting drug rings, killin' gangsters, thwarting terrorists, and making sure that all those school teachers don't have any child molestation charges?
I don't see how busting people for having mod chips is going to help society beyond MAYBE a few video game purchases. Most of them probably got the mod chips in the first place to back up what they have or to avoid paying $59.99 for a piece of shit game full of bugs..I sure as hell wouldn't buy any more games for that generation if I couldn't make backups like I had done with all of my old ones, and I wouldn't start buying the games knowing that half of them will turn out to suck despite the hype/previews anyway.
Busting a drug ring can save many lives, buttloads of money, and make society safer. Standing on top of a pile of cash/drugs/criminals and having your picture taken is a lot more glorious than busting some 19 year old in college because he pirated Madden '08.
This seems strange... (Score:3, Insightful)
I can see this if they are going after "producers"; ie people who are marketing the chips, and such especially if it's intent it to circumvent copyright protections.
But that is a big issue. Some of these manufacturers want these software mediums protected such that if it becomes non usable then you have to send it in and get it replaced. This too is an ok platform until the manufacturer begins to determine how long they will do that, and at what cost. Then what happens to a product after it's lifespan has ceased? No more replacements or updates???
"Sir; your product was discontinued last year and we have not yet seen your software disk returned to us. Send your disks back in to us now or face the penalty of the DCMA!"
Just a thought.
"Backups", really? (Score:2)
I think actual backups ought to be legal, but it seems to me that the well's been poisoned.
it isn't complicated, folks... (Score:3, Insightful)
False question. You don't own the software. You have purchased a license to use, nothing more.
I'm much against IP and such, but it is not helpful, at all, to rely upon this very weak, false, argument. You do not own the software!
If you can't figure out the distinction, let me give you an analogy. Pretend you are a stripper. Someone pays you $40 to give them a lap dance. Do they own you while you are giving them the lap dance? Or are they simply borrowing your time?
Now, replace "borrowing your time" with "license to use in a particular manner" and you have your answer. If you owned the software, you could change the license. Who owns World of Warcraft? Not you...Blizzard does. You merely have a license to use, in a particular way. I can't fathom why that is such a difficult concept for so many people.
Justifiable Reason (Score:3, Insightful)
But the rough value of what I was able to find and secure through the years is easily $1,000. I added them up. I think I cried a little. Because they were all, ALL of them, irrevocably scratched.
I have children. Children don't do well with shiny plastic. We had trouble keeping the SNES games working, but at least I could order screwdriver bits from Hong Kong, open the cases and brush the food out with vinegar, a toothbrush and some compressed air. The Nintendo 64 was equally difficult to keep operational. When the industry unanimously went to DVDs with the Gamecube, the XBOX and the PS1, I knew we were doomed. But we settled on the XBOX because of Halo.
Five years later, two XBOXes, four power supplies, twenty controllers, four DVD enablers/remotes, four years of XBM with sample DVDs (most missing), and over $1,000 in games, I did it.
I broke the law.
After installing mod chips, I managed to copy some, not all, but some of our dying games up to a Samba share on our network. I spent another $40 on a DMCA device known as a grinder along with some cotton polishing wheels and plastic polish and managed to restore a few more DVD discs to readability. I also destroyed one permanently learning how to do this slowly and carefully enough. We now have about 23 titles "saved" and usable, and at least another 30 waiting for me to attempt to restore them.
Could we go to blockbuster, rent a game, save it and play it forever? Sure, but we don't. Just like I don't run around committing murder with my kitchen knives on a daily basis. We need to teach the industry that capability != intent. You'd think they would figure this out. When our XBOX wasn't working and I was staring at all our destroyed video games, we STOPPED BUYING GAMES.
Now that I have a modded xbox that can make a permanent recording of the games I legally acquire and pay for, I don't mind buying games.
This sort of rationale is why we still play Halo 2 on our modded xboxes. This is why we no longer have an xbox-live subscription (we'd be banned). This is why we have not purchased an XBOX 360. I am very concerned that the next gen consoles will drain my money away through easily scratched polycarbonate game media. It's almost as if they designed them to disintegrate upon contact with children.
I hope someone in the industry is listening. I need a console that allows me to install software, then put the media in a safe place. Without this feature, my kids cannot play for long (some games only lasted one day) and we don't purchase as many games as we otherwise might.
Re:Bogus question. (Score:5, Insightful)
The DMCA has done much to close that hole in the game-seller's net.
Re:Bogus question. (Score:5, Interesting)
If they did raid my and drag me into court, I would ask my legal counsel why small portable computers with good battery life is non-existant, while gaming consoles with much more features are. Something is wrong with the market in my opinion. Should it be illegal for me to have the technical possibility of running a rogue game? Should they give me 20 years in FPMITA Prison for it?
Re:Bogus question. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Bogus question. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Bogus question. (Score:5, Insightful)
Scope to determine terms is not and should not be unlimited. Once something is sold, it's not theirs any more. That is right at the heart of "selling". If they didn't want people to tinker, they shouldn't have offered the device for sale. It's not our responsibility to shoulder the cost of a crummy choice of business model and it's unjust for the law to try and push it onto us.
Punish restrictive practices through the market, not by breaking the law
Bullshit. They're writing the laws. Obedience to unjust law is a fool's game. While copyright and patent exist, a free market doesn't.
Re:Bogus question. (Score:4, Insightful)
The firmware/software are licensed to use. You dont actually get ownership.
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Yes, I do own THAT specific copy of the code. What I don't have is the copyright on that code. However as far as I know, mod chips don't contain copies of the machine's firmware. On to the real point:
First, what law specifies that sellers may create arbitrary, leg
Re:Bogus question. (Score:5, Insightful)
Say what? Are you saying "It Is A Violation Of Federal Law To Use This Product Inconsistant With Its Labeling?" Is it also against the law to combine vinegar and baking soda in the kitchen? Is it against the law to use a screwdriver as a hammer? This government is really starting to annoy me if its telling me I can only do what was labeled on the original package.
Re:Bogus question. (Score:5, Insightful)
The grandparent isn't pirating games. He's using his own personal private property as he sees fit and under no ethical theory that I can think of does it cost Nintendo anything. If contract law can be twisted to preclude such things then I say it is our sacred duty to violate it at every opportunity.
Re:Bogus question. (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes. Call me old-fashioned, but I like to actually own the copy that I bought and that includes the ability to modify it. There are already laws in place by society (such as Copyright) which limit what I can do with that copy in terms of distribution. If additional conditions are required (such as NDAs) then these agreements must be established before the time of purchase. Shrink-wrap licenses or EULAs should not be acceptable nor enforceable.
I guess you would also mean that a EULA should be unenforceable, and thus abolish copyright when it comes to allowing you to make copies of digital products?
What does EULA have to do with Copyright? Works, digital or otherwise, are just as protected by copyright without EULAs as they are with them.
If I invent product X, who are you, or the government to dictate the terms under which I profit from my invention?
It is in the best interest of society that knowledge not be held hostage in the silos of their so-called inventors. This is precisely the original reason for copyright
If you don't like it, go invent your own product and stick a big "mod chip friendly" sticker on it.
I'm feeding a Troll aren't I?
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Your post is dripping with contempt for the people who actually make stuff. 'so-called inventors' is a great example. Who did invent
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I'm a Computer Engineer. I design (proprietary) hardware. In my spare time, I'm a Software Engineer. I design (open-source) software. I am perfectly well aware of how difficult the design process is from both sides of the equation, and have no contempt what so ever for the hard-working individuals who work night and day so us geeks can have new toys to play with.
Who did invent the mention
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I did not read contempt in any pos
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The game company has the potential to lose but Nintendo has nothing to lose by allowing mods. I still have to buy the console before I put the chip in to it. They shouldn't care what I do with it after I buy it from them, sure they can come up with a way to make it so I can't use a burned disc online to try to make sure I'm not pirating a game. It would end up like PC games, I ca
Re:Bogus question. (Score:5, Interesting)
Perspective? Why should a blank device with NO COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL have a license agreement? Should a movie projector have one? A pair of glasses? Why should my Nintendo that I want to put MY OWN DAMNED SOFTWARE on it have a license agreement? I don't want it for the games, I want it for the ARM microprocessors and displays, not for the any included software. The first thing I did was wipe off all that crap software off it, because I didn't agree with it. Is that good? Or did the manufacturer squeeze in some FEDERAL LAW that says my door is going to come down one day because I didn't subscribe to their business model?
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I agree with your sentiment, but your Nintendo DOES have copyrighted software on it, even without a disk in the drive.
In any event, I'm not sure that actually having mod chips is a criminal act, though the DMCA may have made it so under many conditions. And if you're merely violating a EULA, that's generally a civil mat
Re:Bogus question. (Score:5, Interesting)
No sir! I now have an open source custom bootloader flashed on it. The first instructions the ARM processors run the uploaded program I installed. Lots of good people in the DSLinux community understood the basic hardware and enjoyed making a complete system from scratch. The ARM7 and ARM9 processors are well documented and so is the hardware on the DS. I don't see why it would be a FEDERAL offense for someone to write their own software. Maybe a judge somewhere will listen one day without taking money.
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Neither does the Wii, the DS, nor any other console that I've bought. When I turned on my DS, I never had to click through a questionable document that pretended to be a contract between me and Nintendo.
Slashdot is not the place to argue if a sticker on a box counts as a contract, though. If a company wants to license a product so that it is only used in certain ways, then the contract should be negotiated, up front, before the purchase. Aft
Re:Bogus question. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Bogus question. (Score:5, Insightful)
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With the law clearly infringing upon an owner's right to perform non-infringing activities with his own property illustrates that the law itself is a bad law.
It's a rarely identified fact that when a case is being heard in court, it's not just the defendant that is on trial, it is also the law itself that is on trial. A verdict of "not guilty because the law is bad" often sets interesting precedents and serves to help correct bad law. It's a part of th
Re:Bogus question. (Score:5, Insightful)
If GE sold a coffee maker that magically permitted only GE-brand coffee filters, no one would give you a moral lecture for using a workaround and using non-GE filters. It's your coffee maker. If GM sold cars that accepted only GM-designed bolts, no one would lecture you for using an adapter or changing out the bolt thingy so you could use whatever bolts you wanted.
It would never occur to anyone to be so damned stupid as to think that GE or GM or any other company has a moral claim to dictate how you use the product you already paid for--unless it's a video game console, or otherwise involves a computer or, God forbid, the internet. These are apparently magical, and are not subject to the same common-sense, well-known principles by which we have conducted business since, well, forever.
Re:Bogus question. (Score:4, Informative)
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Should the FBI raid my house?
Well nothing in TFA suggests you are in any danger of this happening. Unless you are involved in the sale or distribution of the devices. But feel free to get worried about it.
I would ask my legal counsel why small portable computers with good battery life is non-existant, while gaming consoles with much more features are. Something is wrong with the market in my opinion.
You think the court and your legal counsel would care about your opinion of the gaming console market?
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No, but the DHS will be visiting you shortly...
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There are reasons to use a modchip beyond playing pirated games. There is always the possibility of playing third party games (where do you think new companies come from?), using the hardware for something other than a gaming console (myth tv/cheap handheld/etc), or just tinkering with it. The label on the back of the system says the warranty will be voided by playing with the insides, as it should be, but that is not the same t
You are defending outright fraud (Score:3, Interesting)
If game console manufacturers business model depends on limiting your freedom
Re:Bogus question. (Score:4, Interesting)
I bought a Nintendo Wii on launch day when I was living in Japan, and bought 4 or 5 games for it while I was living there. I just returned to the USA about a week ago, and now I want to buy more games, but I can't, thanks to region locking. The only options I have are 1.) Buy another Wii (not really an option, as I've sunk money into the Virtual Console games), or 2.) Install a modchip. The games I want to play on my Wii are indeed published by an official publisher, just from a different region.
Does this mean I should be raided / arrested / tried in court?
I realize that a lot of people who use modchips are only out to copy everything in sight, but hasn't this kind of thing been covered in the past (Sony Corp. of America v. Universal City Studios, Inc.)?
Bogus question indeed, sirs.
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which is yet another reason why the DMCA needs to be ripped into little pieces, then ripped into littler pieces, and then burned and the ashes cast into the wind.
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Your backup is "legal" since you bought the game and made a copy only for yourself, but you need something "illegal" (ie. the mod-chip) to play it.
Could the use of a Mod-chip only for legitimate backup be legal ? If so how do you tell if it's a legitimate backup ?
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Anyway, isn't it the means to circumvent the DMCA they're going after and not the backups.
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If you have a receipt or any other way to prove the purchase of the original I think you should be OK. If you show up in court with a DVD-R with a game and the original DVD with tooth-marks it should be clear to any judge what your intention is when making back up copies of the media. As for the DMCA attempting to block this, it's the lawmakers of the USA that should be held responsible.
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The copy protection is: no non-original games.
And seeing as how you don't own the game, but only a license to play the game, it doesn't matter anyway.
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Either a copy is legitimate or it isn't.
One million and one stories floating around and our friendly glue-sniffing
The feds ran a similar bust back in 2001 or 02, as I recall*. They are tied to coincide with Federal budget announcements and chest-beating by whatever politician needs the publicity at the moment. Give it a few days and the other shoe will drop - you'll see.
I recall because I'd purchased a mod chip, off the internet, from one of t
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What about imports? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm in Europe which is mostly PAL, and which also didn't get half of the PS1 games available in the USA in NTSC.
So here's the deal: half the game I owned were US imports. None burned/"backed-up", all original CDs, with manual and box and everything. Sony got my money for every single one of them. Money which they otherwise wouldn't have gotten at all, since they never released those games down here. Yeah, that's the kind of an evil pirate I am: I went and gave Sony some money against their will.
Sony also always acted as if imports are piracy. Again, we're not talking about burned CDs, we're talking units sold. Apparently the fact that I bought some games from them, which they otherwise wouldn't have sold me, counted as piracy to them. Apparently it's soooo much of a similarity between an inconvenience like "yeah, but it screws up our marketting data of how much units were sold in each territory" (which is all that game imports ever did) and pirating that game.
Where I'm getting at is: it's not as simple as "modchips == piracy." There are perfectly non-piracy uses of modchips. One is mentioned in the summary (you'll ideally want your little kid to play with a copy, not to scratch the $60 disc) and another one I just gave you now.
Plus, there's the whole moral issue of criminalizing people for owning a tool, as opposed to actually committing the infraction. If you still don't see the problem, think this: if you're a guy, chances are you have all the equipment you'd ever need to be a rapist. It doesn't mean you're automatically one. How about looking for people who actually committed a crime, instead of those who would technically have the means.
And it seems to me that that's the whole problem here: the summary mentions raiding for mod-chips, not for burned DVDs.
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Where is the rock you have been living under, are there any good ones near by that I can move too? Cause something tells me its a hell of a lot more pleasant under there.
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Talk about no clue (Score:4, Insightful)
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The DMCA goes hand in hand with Fair Use [wikipedia.org] principles which have time and again been upheld by the US Supreme Court. It criminalizes tools necessary to implement freedoms upheld by previous USSC decisions. The law goes so far as to not only make telling anyone that a Sharpie can beat Sony's copy protection, but make the magic marker its self illegal. It makes the ability to gain a backup copy illegal, and thus in the great 4th grade tradition: 'You have no clue!'
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Re:No Clue (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:No Clue (Score:5, Insightful)
You are correct. You may own as many backups as you would like as part of 'Fair Use' which the DMCA explicitly states it is not meant to interfier with, and the MPAA & RIAA lawyers argued in front of congress as being acceptable fair use. However, the DMCA does make creating, selling, distributing, and importing the tools to make backups illegal. Additionally, mod chips, which would allow you to use your legal backup - made with illegal tools - are also illegal. So, you are perfectly within your rights to own a backup, so long as you don't posses the tools to make it or the tools to actually use it.
So, while the DMCA explicitly states that your fair use rights are not to be hindered by the DMCA, it simultaniously blocks your ability to impliment those rights by outlawing the tools required to do so.
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"Illicit devices like the ones targeted today are created with one purpose in mind, subverting copyright protections," Julie L. Myers, assistant secretary of Homeland Security for ICE, said in a release.
---[snip]---
Aren't they already?
I am not American, so I don't fully understand the concept of the "Homeland Security" police. But they seem to cover everything lobbyists can throw their money at?
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Jesus... what the hell is going on in your neighborhood?!