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    • Agreed, let them default. Keep everything in writing, if they ring to discuss the accounts over the phone, simply say 'everything in writing please', and hang up. They'll soon get the message. Get all of your paperwork in order too, if you haven't got any, or are missing relevant documents, then you can SAR the original creditor, which is free and they have 30 days to supply the info. Keep a diary of events too. sit back and relax, YOU'RE in control, not them.
    • thought you said you had an sjpn? dx  
    • dont go near them bunch of scammers! ive removed ref. dx  
    • I used to post regularly in order to provide factual information (rather than advice) but got fed up with banging my head against a brick wall in so many cases when posters insisted black was white and I was writing rubbish. I have never posted anything which was untrue or indeed biased in any way.  I have never given 'advice' but have sought to correct erroneous statements which were unhelpful. The only username I have ever used is blf1uk. I have never gone under any other username and have no connection to 'bailiff advice'.  I am not a High Court Enforcement Officer but obtained my first 'bailiff' certificate in 1982. I'm not sure what records you have accessed but I was certainly not born in 1977 - at that time I was serving in the Armed Forces in Hereford, Germany (4th Division HQ) and my wife gave birth to our eldest.   Going back to the original point, the fact is that employees of an Approved Enforcement Agency contracted by the Ministry of Justice can and do execute warrants of arrest (with and without bail), warrants of detention and warrants of commitment. In many cases, the employee is also an enforcement agent [but not acting as one]. Here is a fact.  I recently submitted an FOI request to HMCTS and they advised me (for example) that in 2022/23 Jacobs (the AEA for Wales) was issued with 4,750 financial arrest warrants (without bail) and 473 'breach' warrants.  A breach warrant is a community penalty breach warrant (CPBW) whereby the defendant has breached the terms of either their release from prison or the terms of an order [such as community service].  While the defendant may pay the sum [fine] due to avoid arrest on a financial arrest warrant, a breach warrant always results in their transportation to either a police station [for holding] or directly to the magistrates' court to go before the bench as is the case on financial arrest warrants without bail when they don't pay.  Wales has the lowest number of arrest warrants issued of the seven regions with South East exceeding 50,000.  Overall, the figure for arrest warrants issued to the three AEAs exceeds 200,000.  Many of these were previously dealt with directly by HMCTS using their employed Civilian Enforcement Officers but they were subject to TUPE in 2019 and either left the service or transferred to the three AEAs. In England, a local authority may take committal proceedings against an individual who has not paid their council tax and the court will issue a committal summons.  If the person does not attend the committal hearing, the court will issue a warrant of arrest usually with bail but occasionally without bail (certainly without bail if when bailed on their own recognizance the defendant still fails to appear).   A warrant of arrest to bring the debtor before the court is issued under regulation 48(5) of The Council Tax (Administration and Enforcement) Regulations 1992 and can be executed by "any person to whom it is directed or by any constable....." (Reg 48(6).  These, although much [much] lower in number compared to HMCTS, are also dealt with by the enforcement agencies contracted by the local authorities. Feel free to do your own research using FOI enquiries!  
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ACS:Law copyright file sharing claims, Gallant Macmillan - and probably some others along the way...


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We are far too preoccupied with the thought of who will win X Factor for example, to even bother worrying about things like this.

That is the way the government/authorities in this country hope it remains.

 

You're right about that!

 

We are sleepwalking all the way to sh*t city and few seem to know or care for that matter.

 

David

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If they are accusing you of having the ip number that downloaded these files, but they are not accusing you of storing it on your hard drive : ie :

"“We do not claim that your computer was used to commit the infringing act (although we do not exclude this possibility), nor do we claim that you downloaded our client’s work. Our claim is that your Internet connection was used to make our client’s work available via one or more P2P networks. The file may not, therefore, be on your computer.”

 

How can they accuse you of making this file available for download to others.

"or the purpose of making it available via P2P" .
Surely the claim stops in some ether region of the file existing somewhere along your broadband line , and thus not in a storage area that would be required to make it available for sharing ?

 

Or indeed, not in a format to even be used to for your own convenience.

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According to that logic the 'infringement' is being a member of a P2P site because you have access to the file, not that you've downloaded or passed it on? If that's the case they might as well sue everyone with an internet connection because the file is in the public domain. :rolleyes:

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I just do not see how they can claim you are using this file personally or sharing it, if the claim only extends to the file being on a internet connection for a period of time . How can you share a file that is on your telephone line somewhere? That is the extent to what you are being accused of , having the connection, not the storage. Would that then make any claim that requires storage of the information redundant , as the claim only extends to the bytes on the telephone line , which is as far as they can prove ?

 

To suggest you are using it/ sharing it , is some kind of subtle backward inference of something that goes beyond what they are claiming or can prove, ie that it is on your computer hard drive . They should have to prove how these bytes of info on your telephone line can be shared with others without the use of assumption of guilt of any items not within their claim, ie your computer hard drive.

Edited by Drexl Spivey
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This whole [problem] has been ill thought out by Crossley quite frankly.

The only thing they have on their side at the moment is threats & fear, so that someone will just pay up etc...

The sooner the whole population is not fearful anymore, then people like Crossley will be defeated.

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If I play Devil's advocate, I believe they are claiming you are allowing a potential breach of copyright by being negligent in your use of your internet connection, by potentially allowing the file to be downloaded via your IP. Further, they are claiming that such behaviour is damaging to their clients rights, as you are, potentially, an accomplice to a copyright infringment.

 

Of course, putting that particular hat to one side, for a moment, the statement that I've just made (which I'm yet to see as a particulars of claim against someone, BTW) has far to many "potentially" type words to actually hold any water.

 

If I'm right in my assumptions, I actually think that they **may** have a case against those that **have** downloaded this file and negligently, or otherwise, allowed it to be shared via their IP. Of course, proving it is another matter - and, further, proving that it was you that did it is neigh on impossible.

 

Again, if I'm right, (and I recall my law correctly from when I studied negligence) they can only prove negligence by an act - in other words, I don't think you can be negligent by omission. (by not doing an act - securing your IP address, in this instance)

 

Bearing in mind that they aren't, apparently, coming after people for breaching copyright. They claim that their clients have suffered financial loss as a result of a breach of copyright, laying it at your door, and that you should pay them damages as a result. Of course, as with any damages that are that specific, they need to prove the path of "causation", which is a legal term showing that your behaviour, (or, presumably, non-behaviour in their terms - back to omissions again) resulted and caused the damage. IMHO, even if they can successfully bring a claim, deal with the technical aspects of unsecured IP addresses and convince a Judge that you are the party that should pay, they will not be able to establish sufficient causation to actually be allowed to recover sufficient damages to make this worth their while.

 

This post is probably very confusing to the majority of you reading it, but this is my understanding of the legal situation that they intend to bring about by these threats of complaints. TBH, parts of their claim are very confusing to me, even with the (very limited) legal understanding that I have.

 

Perhaps I have just uncovered their MO, though. They don't, it seems, have a legal leg to stand one, so are, again, hoping that people will pay up without a fight, meaning none of these challenges have to be surmounted. Oh, then there's those that ignore the claim and have Judgment by Default entered. The result will probably be the same.

 

The only way to deal with this, then, is to deny all allegations that are unfounded and include some detail about the legal reasoning I've provided here about the technical issues and the lack of causation resulting in damages in a defence, should a claim come your way.

 

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That all is still an inference of guilt beyond what they are claiming for . They are not claiming it was on your hard drive , how can they thus proceed to claim you have listened to it, shared it , copied it . It all ends on the telephone line , nothing is claimed beyond that, save by inference. Why cannot it be defended where their claim is , the connection . Why are computers involved at all, unless they want to try and prove it is your computer that saved the data.

Edited by Drexl Spivey
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"“We do not claim that your computer was used to commit the infringing act (although we do not exclude this possibility), nor do we claim that you downloaded our client’s work. Our claim is that your Internet connection was used to make our client’s work available via one or more P2P networks. The file may not, therefore, be on your computer.”

 

They are making a leap between what they are claiming for , the internet connection , and all these other subsequent accusations that require a medium that they are not claiming for , there is a fallacy there , no ?

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"“We do not claim that your computer was used to commit the infringing act (although we do not exclude this possibility), nor do we claim that you downloaded our client’s work. Our claim is that your Internet connection was used to make our client’s work available via one or more P2P networks. The file may not, therefore, be on your computer.”

 

Yes, but the key words being highlighted here - they can't prove that your computer did it, but they claim they can prove a computer did and that your IP address was used.

 

We're saying the same thing, just in different ways.

 

You're saying you didn't download it to your computer.

 

I (and they) are saying that a computer did, but not necessarily yours.

 

This just proves they don't know what you did/didn't do, so how can they claim against you? (See my earlier posts for relevant points to highlight if they do)

 

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OK. So they would submit a 'may have' as their case , to be judged as a likely probability to then further determine the 'may have' of having shared the data' , as another likely probability to find the party guilty . Sorry , I did not realize 'may have's' were what courts worked on with claims, only bona fide assertions and they decided the likely probability of it's authenticity. Learn something new everyday. Didn't realize the question of probability could arise from the claimant before the court had a chance to decide.

Edited by Drexl Spivey
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No, I think you're on the right track, there, DS.

 

They think they have a case, but only a Judge can decide if they actually have.

 

FWIW, I don't think they do. For the reasons you've outlined, there.

 

It all seems a very clever play on words and threats, hopefully that most won't fall for, IMHO.

 

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So , the 'may have ' just brings us back to spurious claims , and only the outstanding proof of connection remains . And that proves nothing . So why allow them to forage into the spurious , let them make their case on the actual points they have proof of .

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So , the 'may have ' just brings us back to spurious claims , and only the outstanding proof of connection remains . And that proves nothing . So why allow them to forage into the spurious , let them make their case on the actual points they have proof of .

 

So IF the information they have is accurate, (and there is some doubt in this), they could 'prove' your IP was used and that's it.

 

Which then comes back to possible:

 

Unauthorised use of your connection either physically or hijacking your wireless connection.

 

ID spoofing which is not, (so I am told difficult) and appears relatively commonplace.

 

David

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In addition, from here

 

Updated: Anti-Piracy Outfit and Lawyers May Operate Illegally | TorrentFreak

 

“No one working for DigiProtect has a fixed salary. If we make money, everybody makes money. If we don’t, nobody does. This means the lawyers, sales people and customers. It’s all about how much money can be recouped and then sharing it,” he added, crucially.

And here lies the problem. According to lawyer Christian Solmecke of Wilde & Beuger law firm in Germany, the law requires such an operation to have an RVG agreement, which is part of the mechanism to regulate attorney’s fees. Since no-one can say how much the lawyers get paid, this causes difficulty.

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:confused:

 

It must be on your PC if you downloaded it - that's the only way you could have shared it, which is their claim

 

:confused:

 

Well..no..it may actually be stored on another PC in your home or in fact another PC that you have access too. (i.e your work PC, a remote storage site, etc), the list is endless, thats why they are just saying that you have at some point shared the file via a P2P program, of course this doesnt take into account that the Logistep IP snooping program is faulty, that the IP info from your ISP is incorrect, that someone hi-jacked your connection, that someone used IP spoofing software or that someone using your connection was responsible (family member, flatmate, friend, etc). Proving it was you would be nigh on impossible.

 

Andy

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