| ▲ | lvspiff 4 hours ago | |||||||
I had a relative who setup a kinda "blockbuster" type service recording things and offering them out for rental. It really took off for VHS when he got HBO and recorded movies and then rented those. It wasnt a very lucrative hustle but it was an instance of what they didnt want to have happen | ||||||||
| ▲ | frenchtoast8 3 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Absolutely this happened, but would you say that was the primary use case of the recording capabilities? I'm trying to understand how a judge would say that the only practical use of backups were copyright infringement, since that is completely contrary to both my experiences and what I believe to be common sense. If the answer to my confusion is that this actually was the major use case and my experiences were rare, then that's fine. Otherwise, I can't help believe this is yet another case in recent history where judges are completely backwards on technological understanding, or maybe even under influence from copyright holders. | ||||||||
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