[citation][nom]uRINe jJJEHE[/nom]HOORAY FOR PIRACY!!! HOORAY FOR MORONS LIKE ALL OF YOU WHO ACTUALLY BUY SOFTWARE SO THAT THE SMART PEOPLE DON'T HAVE TO!!!!!!!!! HOOOOORAAAY!!!!! NEGATE THIS COMMENT IF YOU'RE A MORON!!!!!!!!!!!! HOOOOOOOOOORAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!! YEAH I TURNED INTO A MARINE SO WHAT! MUAHAHAHAHAHA I HATE YOU MICRSOFOT AND APPLE.[/citation]
Now why dont you go join operation human shield and eat a bullet so the rest of us intelligent folk can go on being useful in society.
Listen people, enough with the semantics. The pirate bay tried taunting authorities and look where it got them. We all know these movies on the LG set are pirate copies downloaded via torrent. Dont draw the ire of powerful interests by mocking them and playing games trying to claim the movies might be legit copies.
The implications of this discovery could be potentially quite large if you think about it. Whomever was responsible for gathering screen caps of the LG software likely wasnt doing so from their living room at home. These shots were most likely taken IN HOUSE, at an actual LG facility, meaning the movies exist IN HOUSE, at an actual LG facility. This means LG has pirate copies of these movies floating around their network, which begs to question; what else do they have?
Good thing they are not a U.S. headquartered company, although this could still get messy if the MPAA really wants to make it so, as they are fully capable.