
mjr
ADD -- blessing and curse
David M said:That would look pretty fishy. Like I said, if it looked fishy the judge is going to see through it. But you do make a great point. That is why I advise sending it certified so the weight of the envelope is on there. Like I said 99.9% of the time certified envelope with a date stamp is going to work fine. You have to remember that this envelope is going to be your evidence, should you need it, so you want to do the best job you can to preserve the best evidence that you can.
I have no idea who created that website, snope.com but I can almost guarantee you it was not an attorney in the music industry. I don't believe something just because someone posts on a website.
You can't go wrong by registering. All I am saying is that you do not have to. I know that I will never convince you in a million years that you are wrong. I am just providing information for others.
Snopes is a website based on analyzing and researching urband legends. They're very reputable.
It's also easy to fake sending it certified. All you've gotta do is put an empty CD in a jewel case in the manilla envelope, close the clasp, and there you go!
I don't believe everything posted on a websites also, but I've found snopes.com as well as truthorfiction.com to be reliable sources on what's true and what's not.
Anyway, I'm not taking any chances. Ever heard the money story behind "The Lion Sleeps Tonight"?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lion_Sleeps_Tonight
BTW...I don't think it'd take you a million years to convince me I'm wrong. I don't think "wrong" is the correct word, though. Show me case law. Show me a case where this happened, what the circumstances were, and what the result was. Easy.
Technically, I can't play a song that isn't mine in my own living room.
I also technically can't buy a CD, invite some friends over, and listen to it as a group.
I can't even technically sing "Happy Birthday" to someone on their birthday...
I could get sued for doing all three of those things.
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