The maximum is five years, although the vast majority of punishment is in the form of fees.
for your sentence time in jail for breaking the copyright law, you may get 89 years!
Well if i was you i would use greenposi0n and the risk of jailbreaking if you download something thats illeagle u can go jail for a long time
You do not go to jail for breaking any amendment. The constitution and its amendments authorize congress to pass specific laws. You go to jail for breaking one of those laws.
It really depends on what you are downloading. If it is child pornography, or something of the like, you are breaking much more than copyright laws. The jail time can, and should, be considerable. If you are downloading things such as copyrighted music or audiobooks, you are not likely to face jail time, but the fines can be in the ballpark of $50,000 per violation.
No, copyrighting a work is your right, as long as you are the creator.You can, however, go to jail for copyright infringement, although most punishment is meted out in fines.
Under US laws, a criminal copyright infringement could get you up to 6 years in prison for a first offense and 10 years for any subsequent offense, but you could also be charged with 1,000 simultaneous offenses, meaning (in theory) 6,000 years for your first offense.
you would be in jail for about 3-4 weeks if you bully
if a juvenial 5 years with a fine of 250,000 without bail
The person breaking the law would receive a fine (in the US, $750-$30,000), or in extreme cases, jail time (in the US, up to 5 years; in the UK, up to 10 years). The person infringed upon would suffer loss of income, which might be negligible to a large company, but can have a huge negative impact on individuals. In the long term, this loss of income can mean creators can no longer afford to create for a living, which leads to less choice for the consumer.
3 strikes=25-life
Plagiarism is not a criminal act. It is a civil violation and could subject one to copyright violation and fines. It would also result in loss of reputation and could cause job loss.
Copyright would not protect anything that long--the creator would need to live until 2935. They can, however, claim copyright on the phrase, and even without registering it, it could be protected for as long as it's in use.