In the US, $250,000 and five years in prison; however most fines stay below $30,000.
Normally the maximum fine is £5,000 and/or six months in prison; a conviction in the Crown court can carry ten years in prison and unlimited fines.
Upon conviction in the magistrates court the maximum term of incarceration in the UK for copyright infringement is 6 months and/or a "level five" fine of £5,000.Upon conviction in the Crown court the maximum term of incarceration in the UK for physical copyright infringement is 10 years and/or an "unlimited" fine.
The maximum fine for copyright infringement is $150,000.00 per incidence.
Under current US copyright law the maximum "standard" fine for "willful and deliberate" copyright infringement can be as high as $150,000.00 USD.
The maximum fine is 5000 pounds, but most cases settle long before court for a fine closer to real damages.
Copyright law was amended with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) and there are now provisions for criminal prosecution of "willful and deliberate" infringements with a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison.
How about just asking him out? What can he maximum say? No? Fine. But you won't be breaking your head any longer.
Under current US copyright law the factors necessary to make an infringement a criminal felony are set forth in Title 18 of the U.S. Code.If someone, without permission, has made, in any 180-day period, ten or more copies of one or more copyrighted works with a total retail value of $2,500 the the standard for felony criminal copyright infringement has been metOnce that has happened a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and maximum fime of $250,0000.00 per infringement can be imposed.
I'm assuming you mean are you breaking copyrights by doing so. One is not breaking copyrights if one were to record a TV show for later viewing. As long as you do not attempt to sell it you are fine.
Under current US law the maximum fine is $150,000.00 USD per incidence and although criminal prosecutions are rare there are provisions for a prison term of 10 years for "willful and deliberate" copyright infringement
The maximum fine is $5000, plus 6 months in prison. Most rightsholders prefer to settle out of court, typically for real damages.
The maximum fine is $50,000, but most cases are settled long before they reach court, for an amount much closer to real damages.