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Crime & Punishment

 
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Space Neocons Succesfully Scams 100billion from an Incursion Bear

First post
Author
Lady Areola Fappington
#21 - 2015-06-22 23:38:59 UTC
Akron Mileghere wrote:
Kurisa Ongrard wrote:
What do you mean? The recordings are still up and can be listened to. My dearest space friends, there is nothing wrong with posting recordings of other players.



in most of the united states it's illegal to record someone without their knowledge, or at the very least its illegal to record things as a thing part listening in on two people's converstations. I can see CCPs stance... breaking the law is a EULA violation I think.



Actually, you're incorrect in that statement. The vast majority of the United States is "one party consent". This means only one party (the recording party) needs to consent for a recording to be legal.

The only states in the US with all-party consent are California, Connecticut, Florida, Hawaii (in general a one-party state, but requires two-party consent if the recording device is installed in a private place), Illinois (debated), Maryland, Massachusetts, Montana (requires notification only), New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, and Washington.

Even then, this is strictly for two-party telephone conversations. It gets even more muddled when you're looking at multi-party VoIP style setups.

7.2 CAN I AVOID PVP COMPLETELY? No; there are no systems or locations in New Eden where PvP may be completely avoided. --Eve New Player Guide

Alana Charen-Teng
Garoun Investment Bank
Gallente Federation
#22 - 2015-06-23 02:23:48 UTC
Lady Areola Fappington wrote:
Akron Mileghere wrote:
Kurisa Ongrard wrote:
What do you mean? The recordings are still up and can be listened to. My dearest space friends, there is nothing wrong with posting recordings of other players.



in most of the united states it's illegal to record someone without their knowledge, or at the very least its illegal to record things as a thing part listening in on two people's converstations. I can see CCPs stance... breaking the law is a EULA violation I think.



Actually, you're incorrect in that statement. The vast majority of the United States is "one party consent". This means only one party (the recording party) needs to consent for a recording to be legal.

The only states in the US with all-party consent are California, Connecticut, Florida, Hawaii (in general a one-party state, but requires two-party consent if the recording device is installed in a private place), Illinois (debated), Maryland, Massachusetts, Montana (requires notification only), New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, and Washington.

Even then, this is strictly for two-party telephone conversations. It gets even more muddled when you're looking at multi-party VoIP style setups.


Bam. Space lawyered!
Domino Vyse
FeedingMachine
War and Wormhole
#23 - 2015-06-23 05:30:40 UTC
Has anyone checked TS's ToS? Maybe you consent to being recorded by installing the software? :3
Mythen
Federal Navy Academy
Gallente Federation
#24 - 2015-06-24 02:34:22 UTC
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