Federal law (Title 17, United States Code, Sections 501 and 506) provides severe civil and criminal penalties for the unauthorized reproduction, distribution, rental, or digital transmission of copyrighted sound recordings. Criminal penalties can be as high as five years in prison or $250,000 in fines.
seanfear about 1 year ago
finally, something to cheer Jason for.
mourdac Premium Member about 1 year ago
Just waiting for a knock at the door after the record companies sic the police on Jason music for stealing that music.
SquidGamerGal about 1 year ago
Wow… Is Justin Timberlake really that terrible?
dflak about 1 year ago
Pirating music hurts the artists. It hurts the record companies even more. Very little “trickles down” to the talent.
NeedaChuckle Premium Member about 1 year ago
Or RIAA will show up at your door to sue you big time.
Kroykali about 1 year ago
Jason will still end up with 50,000 copies of an artist he hates. Seems he often doesn’t think through his schemes.
Gen.Flashman about 1 year ago
Federal law (Title 17, United States Code, Sections 501 and 506) provides severe civil and criminal penalties for the unauthorized reproduction, distribution, rental, or digital transmission of copyrighted sound recordings. Criminal penalties can be as high as five years in prison or $250,000 in fines.
jbarnes about 1 year ago
The media can’t tell how many CDs you burn, just how many downloads you make. Besides, you don’t have enough allowance to buy 50,000 burnable CDs.
minty_Joe about 1 year ago
“Don’t Download This Song” by Weird Al Yankovic pretty much speaks for itself.
mindjob about 1 year ago
He’s just trying to lessen the competition for his favorite: Back Street Boys
T... about 1 year ago
50,000 disks? Think about it, oh, I wondered why the garage was full of cartons of disks…
Gonzojr about 1 year ago
I´m on to help Jason.
sirjackum about 1 year ago
I’d rather have to listen to Justin Timberlake than Justin Beiber.
Mopman about 1 year ago
Burning them onto CDs makes no sense. The downloading is the illegal part, no need to actually burn them onto CDs.
Otis Rufus Driftwood about 1 year ago
It was worth a try.