this post was submitted on 06 Sep 2024
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Not sure how this is a crime... breach of TOS, sure, but a crime?
What law is being broken here?
If his fake bands are being paid for bot clicks, that's a problem for the platforms to figure out. They need to examine their TOS.
It’s fraud by false representation the U.K. Fraud is basically whenever you misuse a system for undue profit. The terms are very broad. “You know it when you see it” kind of thing.
So, in the u.k., it's just one of those "we keep this handy to hurt the uppity poors" laws?
Probably the opposite actually. Almost all white collar crime falls in under fraud. The crimes of the desperate, the poor or the wicked usually fall into a few, clear categories around harming others physically.
He stepped onto the rich people's turf. We plebs are supposed to stay in our thatch huts beyond their line of sight.
Straight to jail.
Try to overthrow the US government? You can still be president. Break a companies arbitrary TOS? Police are at your door to take you away for a long time.
Show me where in the article it says he was arrested for a TOS violation.
That just shows which of these two roles hold a higher regard in US judicial system.
Rent free...
I cannot imagine how stupid someone would have to be to actually think what you just said means anything of consequence and I'm possibly one of the stupidest blokes on Lemmy.
It might be because I'm drunk, but Trump-posting from "lemmy.packitsolutions.net" is genuinely hilarious. It's giving Four Seasons Total Landscaping.
Well, of course. A president attempting to overthrow the government is a huge deal, you fetid fucking moron.
But nuthin hayuh-pinned! It wuz aint teefuh! Reeuhnt freeee..
lemmy.packitsolutions.net
Interesting instance.
Its theft, which is against the law to do against a company or person. Its similar to trading in empty boxes at GameStop or sending back boxes full of rocks to amazon.
Although most people seem to just pick a side based on whether they think that company should exist or not.
There are far too many loopholes for me not to hate companies be they small or large.
In Australia, "family trusts" are a sure way to write off a good chunk of your expenses (groceries, fuel and so on) while paying yourself a wage. If you really want you can cook the books taking cash sales for yourself too.
Don't forget about "taking" whatever you want from the company, and writing that off as a loss.
Maybe I should hate people, but in a vacuum people are reasonable, logical and honorable. But once we introduce a "well maybe" or an "but what if I were to purchase fast food and disguise it as my own cooking?" my view of people becomes skewed.
I guess, I wanted to vent about how fucked everything seems to be and that I feel powerless to do anything about it. GameStop as a company probably deserve the rocks in boxes, Amazon deserve them too, all because people are running those companies.
I'm not above greed, but I'd like to think / feel that I put out more than I take and it seems quite uncommon in our modern society.
Gaining money from someone else by lying and/or deception. The legal term for that is fraud-- in this case, wire fraud.
The law of "don't take money from the rich and powerful; only they take ~~their~~ your money".
I'm not a lawyer but this sounds like a pretty textbook definition of fraudulent business practice to me.
Not curious enough to actually read the article, eh?
One may argue about money laundering but it's pretty clearly fraud.
That's just a generic indictment. And it's allegedly. How do you perform wire fraud if a corporation legally paid you for a service?
Yeah I read another article on this and it's very unclear what was illegal. If I had to guess they're getting him on the technicalities of the process rather than on the actual streaming.
Edit: so I looked it up and realized wire fraud is "electronic" fraud, not bank wiring - Online definition
Which given the way the guy did it definitely seems to meet that definition.
I would assume it is Fraud