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Old July 17th 03, 11:13 PM
Robert
 
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"Keith" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 13:42:37 -0400, "Robert" wrote:

Bwahahahaha!!! When Ray Evernham keys up his little box from
Atlanta, his expectation of privacy is precisely ZERO. They want privacy,
they can buy it just like anybody else.


Don't worry, Nextel is going to fix it so no one can monitor unless they

pay
for it.


Hey, they can do whatever they want.

The company or corporation may not have privacy on a analog system, it
depends on the State or Federal Law,


Most places you can _listen_ all you want.

but they still have the powerful tool of
copyright and those that violate that copyright, such as broadcasting it

on the
Internet, are subject to criminal and/or civil liability.


But that ain't Nextel holding the copyright, it's NASCAR and the
teams, unless NASCAR's made some sort of blanket deal with Nextel.

Here in Oregon the State law clearly states monitoring such transmissions

is a
crime.


What "such transmissions"?




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