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Tuesday,
January 15, 2002
File
sharing increases risk of Hepatitis B, HIV says RIAA
In a stunning report released by the RIAA and The Johns Hopkins
University School of Public Health today, studies have found a higher
than usual occurrence of Hepatitis B and the HIV virus in intravenous
music piraters who share files.

It is an addiction
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The RIAA says that it will setup exchange programs within the next
few months to help combat this epidemic. Internet users who share
files are told to bring their hard-drives, CDs and zip disks to
the nearest program to seek treatment.
"File-sharers who share more than 1 gigabyte of mp3s daily
are considered high risk and are urged to discontinue at once and
to immediately call the RIAA or their local police...er, hospital
and check themselves in immediately.
"This finding lends clear support to advocates of file-exchange
programs as well as to the distribution of viruses that can be used
to disinfect files, "said RIAA spokesman Doug Currie. "Users
may lose many of their copyrighted mp3s in the process, but we are
saving lives," explained Mr. Currie.
- Jehovah Rock
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