BitTorrent? and imeem?

TreverM

New member
I dont think you can. If you want to download music just find a torrent site and down load from there, like torrentz.com, make sure you have good anti-virus soft ware if you down load anything.
 

Jorge

Member
As far as downloads are concerned, Limewire can practically provide a lot of files as requested. But a person should be careful with the filename extensions since some files may not be similar to what they are actually looking for. Worse, it may even be harmful to the user's workstation anywhere.

As for Bittorrent, this has been another PSP client that has offered a complete package where a person merely has to search the web for hosting torrent files where complete music albums, movies, software applications and other needed files as e-books can be located here as well. While Limewire offers the same genres for download, Bittorrent offers a broader one since it covers full albums in music and safer screening. But Bittorrent has been known to conduct a closer screening procedure for its torrent files and has been more religious in maintaining security since some mischievous files are still bound to sneak past them.
 

Afroman1

New member
Warning: while P2P file sharing technology is completely legal, many of the files traded through P2P are copyrighted. Unless you live in Canada where citizens are shielded from P2P copyright lawsuits, then downloading P2P files may put you at risk for a civil lawsuit in any other country. These lawsuits usually take the form of class-action suits, filed against groups of users who are logged as blatantly copying and distributing copyrighted materials. Recently, the MPAA and RIAA, along with the governments of England and Australia, took several thousand users to court, demanding that they pay thousands of dollars in copyright infringement penalties.
 

Afroman1

New member
Warning: while P2P file sharing technology is completely legal, many of the files traded through P2P are copyrighted. Unless you live in Canada where citizens are shielded from P2P copyright lawsuits, then downloading P2P files may put you at risk for a civil lawsuit in any other country. These lawsuits usually take the form of class-action suits, filed against groups of users who are logged as blatantly copying and distributing copyrighted materials. Recently, the MPAA and RIAA, along with the governments of England and Australia, took several thousand users to court, demanding that they pay thousands of dollars in copyright infringement penalties.
 
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