Then how about Spain?

http://yro.slashdot.org/story/11/12/22/0235235/spanish-court-rules-in-favor-of-p2p-engineer

All it takes is one country, anywhere in the world.  And one person in
that country with time on their hands.

Any Spanish P2P engineers ready to take advantage of this opportunity
to use all of the latest and greatest P2P techniques to rebuild how
content works on the internet forever?  And to do it without fear of
legal persecution?

-david

On Sun, Dec 4, 2011 at 9:54 PM, Alex Pankratov <a...@swapped.cc> wrote:
>> -----Original Message-----
>> Subject: [p2p-hackers] Switzerland a new haven for P2P development?
>>
>> You might have seen the news that the Swiss parliament has
>> concluded file sharing should remain legal:
>>
>> http://www.itwire.com/your-it-news/entertainment/51555-swiss-g
>> ovt-decides-to-keep-file-sharing-legal
>
> According to [1] while the downloading is legal, the uploading
> is not. It doesn't leave much chance for the p2p if it's true.
>
> [1] http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3304004
>
> Alex
>
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> p2p-hackers@lists.zooko.com
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