• wildncrazyguy138@fedia.io
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    8 hours ago

    Being a US citizen permanently living in a foreign country, paying taxes to that country and not paying US taxes.

    • floo@retrolemmy.com
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      3 hours ago

      In the United States, this is perfectly legal. It’s also how it is perfectly legal to borrow DVDs from your local library and rip those, too.

      • ch00f@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        It criminalizes production and dissemination of technology, devices, or services intended to circumvent measures that control access to copyrighted works (commonly known as digital rights management or DRM).

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_Millennium_Copyright_Act

        DVDs have copy protection.

        It’s also how it is perfectly legal to borrow DVDs from your local library and rip those, too.

        You got a source on that? I don’t think that falls under fair use.

        However, the owner of the copy of the book will not be able to make new copies of the book because the first-sale doctrine does not limit the restrictions allowed by the copyright owner’s reproduction right.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First-sale_doctrine

        • floo@retrolemmy.com
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          2 hours ago

          That’s right, I forgot. It’s legal to make a backup of the DVD, but it is illegal to bypass the DRM.

          But there’s some legal loophole where unless they actually witness you ripping the disc, they can’t prove that you bypassed the DRM, so they can’t really do much about that. So, it’s not exactly “legal” so much as it is “not illegal”.

    • stoy@lemmy.zip
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      10 hours ago

      That absolutely depends on local laws.

      Here in Sweden that is absolutely 100% legal, it is called privatkopiering, private copying, we even pay a fee on storage media and phones to compensate for the potential loss of revenue that an artist may suffer from us doing it.

      You may even share the copy within your family, but no further.

      • ch00f@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        In the US, because of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, it is illegal to defeat any sort of digital copy protection. That’s why it’s ok to rip CDs to your iPod, but you can’t rip DVDs to your computer.

  • HEXN3T@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    13 hours ago

    Using substances in the privacy of my own home and not bothering a single living individual. A fascist orange is okay, though.

    • superkret@feddit.orgOP
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      13 hours ago

      Especially collecting rain water on your own property.
      “Fun” fact: In a lot of communities, the right to all rain water was sold to a private corporation, so collecting it privately is theft.

      • tal@lemmy.today
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        13 hours ago

        I don’t know if you’re in the US, but if so, it’s probably not that anyone purchased those rights, but rather that under, as I recall, Western US water right conventions, where land is more arid, if someone is a pre-existing user of water, you can’t go upstream from them and block off water from flowing to them (which people would probably tend to do, otherwise).

        kagis

        Yeah. Apparently the legal term is “prior-appropriation water rights”.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prior-appropriation_water_rights

        In the American legal system, prior appropriation water rights is the doctrine that the first person to take a quantity of water from a water source for “beneficial use” (agricultural, industrial or household) has the right to continue to use that quantity of water for that purpose.[1][2] Subsequent users can take the remaining water for their own use if they do not impinge on the rights of previous users. The doctrine is sometimes summarized, “first in time, first in right”.

        Prior appropriation rights do not constitute a full ownership right in the water, merely the right to withdraw it, and can be abrogated if not used for an extended period of time.

        Origin

        Water is very scarce in the West and so must be allocated sparingly, based on the productivity of its use. The prior appropriation doctrine developed in the Western United States from Spanish (and later Mexican) civil law and differs from the riparian water rights that apply in the rest of the United States. The appropriation doctrine originated in Gold-Rush–era California, when miners sought to acquire water for mining operations. In the 1855 case of Irwin v. Phillips, Matthew Irwin diverted a stream for his mining operation. Shortly afterward, Robert Phillips started a mining operation downstream and eventually tried to divert the water back to its original streambed. The case was taken to the California Supreme Court, which ruled for Irwin.[3]

        EDIT: Oh, though they do say that the rights can be sold, so maybe someone did purchase them.

    • sga@lemmings.world
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      6 hours ago

      i hope you stay wrong. Nothing against you, but you are the absol that has brought the bad news