Better read this several times. ANYTHING that's licensed and streamed appears to be a copyright infringement. I think the Feds will quash this soon.

It looks great on the surface, and I hope it survives.

Am I breaking the law?
The answer is an enthusiastic NO. The beauty of the ShadowBox™ is that rather than downloading content off of the internet, you are simply streaming and can not be held legally liable for copyright infringement in any way since you never have any appreciable amount of copyrighted content in your possession at any one point in time. Here is what James Gibson, director of the Intellectual Property Institute at the University of Richmond law school has to say about the issue: “When the user downloads even part of a file — called pseudo-streaming — it counts as a copy of copyrighted material, which is illegal. And when the user streams content as a public performance — namely, when it’s shown to a substantial number of people outside the normal family circle and its close acquaintances — it also constitutes a copyright violation. Outside of these cases, accessing unlicensed streamed content is generally legal.” – Jim Gibson


Their disclaimer says you're on your own regarding copyrighted materials downloads...in effect, they're illegal, and they know it. I wouldn't expect it be be around long.

Disclaimer

No copyrighted content or media is installed on our devices. All content viewed on these devices is hosted on third party servers with which we have no affiliation. We do not endorse or promote illegal activity tied to streaming or downloading copyrighted works. The end user shall be solely responsible for media accessed through any service or app installed on our devices or referenced on our website. All guides and videos are for educational purposes only.

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Last edited by luv2safari; 01/18/20.

Hunt with Class and Classics

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Acquit v. t. To render a judgment in a murder case in San Francisco... EQUAL, adj. As bad as something else. Ambrose Bierce “The Devil's Dictionary”