Will Homeland Security Domain Seizures Lead To Exodus From US Controlled Domains?

from the driving-business-abroad dept

With Homeland Security’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) group now seizing domain names of perfectly legitimate foreign companies, one of the “defenses” of this action is that what those sites do may violate US laws (the lack of an actual court deciding this is conveniently overlooked, but we’ll let that slide for now) and thus since the domains are managed by US-based registrars, it’s technically property in the US, and thus open to seizure. That, of course, is a case of focusing on the technicality of the situation, rather than the reality of the situation. With Rojadirecta, it’s pretty clear that the site was used almost entirely by people in Spain, not in the US. That the .org domain is managed by a US company seems like a weak dodge by US officials at the urging of industry.

But, of course, there are serious questions about the wider impact of this decision. Back in October, we highlighted how Libya had begun seizing .ly domains, because they felt that the content on those domains violated Sharia Law.

When the US is following in the footsteps of Libya for foreign censorship, there’s a serious problem.

Of course, after the seizure of the .ly domains, many people started to move away from those domains (including presidential hopeful Mitt Romney, who dumped his Mitt.ly domain). It will be interesting to see if more companies (especially foreign ones) start moving away from .com and .org for just this reason. When the US government suddenly decides that it can simply take your domain name with no warning, no due process, no adversarial hearing and no regards to whether or not the site is actually legal in the country it’s targeting, that seems like a pretty clear warning sign that it’s time to find a safer domain home. If I were a US domain register or registrar, I’d be pretty pissed off at Homeland Security for promoting the fact that the US government has no problem censoring websites it doesn’t like. It’s only going to serve to drive people away, and perhaps open up a huge opportunity for a new TLD to become a standard from a country that really believes in due process and free speech.

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Comments on “Will Homeland Security Domain Seizures Lead To Exodus From US Controlled Domains?”

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137 Comments
The Infamous Joe (profile) says:

Anti-bodies.

The internet interprets censorship as damage and routes around it. Every time some misguided government attempts to place undo control on the internet, thousands of people respond by making that form of control irrelevant.

It’s just like when a hacker points out a major flaw with someone’s software by publishing the flaw to the world. It is a weakness and needed to be fixed.

Thank you, **AA, we’ll get right on that.

Josh in CharlotteNC (profile) says:

Anti-bodies.

The internet interprets censorship as damage and routes around it. Every time some misguided government attempts to place undo control on the internet, thousands of people respond by making that form of control irrelevant.

I agree in general. But as we’ve seen with Egypt, there are limits to what it can route around. I think we can all imagine that if a dictator was willing, they’d be able to completely censor the Internet.

microface (profile) says:

5 of my clients have moved their websites off shore

I have 5 companies for whom I write software and maintain websites for various purposes. All sell items imported from various countries, using the open trade, or fair trade model. All these websites import form Africa, the Far East etc. They all expressed fear and loathing over the USA government moves, and have requested me to arrange to move them to the .to, .me or some other off shore registry away from ICANN. The move is already happening, there is no if, but how many will run in fear. I agree with the famous quote “I love my country, but fear my government”

The Infamous Joe (profile) says:

You have this backward

Yes, we get it. You support this form of censorship. This entire post was not about whether it was right or wrong, it is about the consequences of the (foolish) actions of the US.

Short term, companies will, at least, pick up a few non-US controlled TLDs and at worst, ditching the ICANN controlled one altogether.

Long term, we have to move away from centralized TLDs, so that this tomfoolery is no longer possible.

PS- You have no idea what “property” means, do you?

CensoredBloggah (profile) says:

What is "Safe" though?

The problem is nothing seems to be safe as far as I can tell.
.com and .net are ran by Verisign which is a US Based company and we know how they got the domains from the music blogs. .tv is ran through DotTV also through Verisign. Afilias which oversee’s .org .info .me .in .mobi is not a US company it is based in Ireland, but it has an office in the US. .fm is BRS Media which is a US Based company.

Then attempting to purchase other domains like .co the registries are very limited so even if I go to purchase a domain with say MelbourneIT they also have a US office. I purchased a domain through a German registrar and ended up at Enom.

Exactly where are we supposed to run to? Everything we’ve found has an office somewhere in the US and apparently that is all the US needs. GoDaddy did not give up the .org domain they were not notified so it once again came from the top level registry only this time its Afilias.

Anonymous Coward says:

5 of my clients have moved their websites off shore

Oh how dramatic sounding.

There isn’t going to be any mass exodus of legal sites because nobody gives a sh*t about this except pirates and their apologists.

The pirate sites will all move their domains, which is exactiy what gov wants. There is a plan behind all of this, but you’re all too blind to see it.

ASTROBOI says:

While I agree that the US govt. actions are deplorable, I have second thoughts about the streaming sites that have been tampered with. I checked out one of the “new” .eu sites and was not impressed. I block just about everything…call it paranoia…but to see CNN live I had to temporarily allow script after script and then finally got a request to download a special player. Yeah, sure. The much discussed Spanish site also required a lot of permitting and the only window I got to open was a “demo”. I don’t know what it was for. Even though I selected English the page was entirely in Spanish. Clicking play in the demo locked up Firefox. I can only assume these sites work only if the viewer is very trusting and blocks nothing. And while most of them are probably ok, I don’t see this experience being worth the risk. And watching the endless cookies being laid on me from all our favorite ad servers suggests that the real beef is that these sites serve up tv shows and such and then lace them with crap ads of all kinds, some maybe toxic. Why anybody would watch a movie in this manner stumps me. If you really love sports and can get the site to work, it might be worth the effort. Yes, seizing domains is unacceptable behavior on the governments part but some of these streaming sites seem so flaky that I’m not sure who the bigger creep is.

Hephaestus (profile) says:

Anti-bodies.

“I agree in general. But as we’ve seen with Egypt, there are limits to what it can route around. I think we can all imagine that if a dictator was willing, they’d be able to completely censor the Internet.”

In case you handn’t heard Egypt turned on its internet again. Even with it down the protests kept getting larger. The huge problem is you either live with communication or you don’t. As a government if you shut down communications it puts you at a great disadvantage, your people can’t communicate either. In the case of egypt the communications didn’t cause the protest, the oppressive government and economy did.

Anonymous Coward says:

What is "Safe" though?

Your own country.

After all, they can do much worse to you than just seizing your domain name, so the fact that they can seize your domain name does not matter a lot.

Sites of questionable legality (let’s avoid a pages-long discussion on their legality in this thread) are instead hedging their bets and registering their domain name in dozens of countries at the same time.

xenomancer (profile) says:

5 of my clients have moved their websites off shore

Is the “plan” to corner all of these “pirates and their apologists” into a single TLD (.blowmeMAFIAA, .copytheft, or .butcopyrightinfringement anyone?) and then sue them out of existence? Is this really the sleazy death rattle you think the cancerous dinosaurs at the MAFIAA ought to be employing on their way out?

“There is a plan behind all of this, but you’re all too blind to see it.”

Perhaps you should take off your horse blinders, they went out of style in the 20’s.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Here was your “bet”:

If torrent-finder is cleared of all charges, I’ll donate $500 to a charity of your choice.

If they aren’t, you donate $500 to MusiCares.

How can Mike lose when no charges have been brought against torrent-finder?

Your willful stupidity is a constant reminder that people with sub-human intelligence shouldn’t be allowed on The Interwebs.

Gwiz (profile) says:

Re:

Masnick- when are you going to man up and admit you lost your bet with me? You’re not going to try and weasel out of your donation of $500 to MusiCares, are you?

Anonymous – when are you going to man up and admit you lost your bet to Mike? You’re not going to try and weasel out of your donation of $500 to EFF, are you?

Oh wait..neither can be proven yet….because it has not been proven that the seizures were legal or illegal in a court of law.

Gwiz (profile) says:

Re:

AJ, I know you tend to argue about “the letter of the law” and I would like to pose a question to you.

Put aside the “letter of the law” part for a moment and think in terms of “the spirit of the law” – Do you feel that these seizures are within the spirit of the law? IE: Do you feel that punishment prior to trial (which effectively has happened in these cases) is the correct path that the US Government should take?

The Infamous Joe (profile) says:

Re:

From another post:

So I would make the same bet if we can bet over whether or not the seizure of one of the blogs will be deemed legal. If the seizure itself is challenged and at a final level it’s deemed legal (i.e., Supreme Court, or at whatever court level this case ends), I’ll gladly donate $500 to MusiCares, which is a good charity.

However, if it’s deemed that the seizures were not in accordance with the law, then you donate $500 to the EFF.

Has any of that happened?

Gabriel Tane (profile) says:

5 of my clients have moved their websites off shore

“The pirate sites will all move their domains, which is exactiy what gov wants.”

Wait-wait-wait… let me make sure I have this right. The US government, who you claim is on the side of Copyright and against piracy, has a plan to move pirates out of the country…

and therefore completely out of their jurisdiction, thus making them immune from any action whatsoever by the US Government?

Great plan.

Gabriel Tane (profile) says:

Re:

I have a different question… Joe, you are by far the loudest crier of “FUD FUD FUD!!!” I’ve seen… well, anywhere. My question is this: why does you opinion on this article’s (or any article’s) status as FUD outweigh anyone else?

I look at this article as a genuine question of consequence for actions taken… I don’t feel that it’s trying to whip up any support for one cause or another by throwing out outlandish claims that are not supported by evidence. So if you feel it’s FUD (which is your opinion and you’re welcome to it), why do you feel the need to come in here and sling the word around? What is accomplished?

If anything, I’d say the fact that you come here and scream “FUD” any time this blog (which is an expression of one person’s opinion anyway) poses a hypothetical (yet relevant to the subject of the blog) question… well, you’re the one creating FUD by trying to discredit Mike.

“You can’t trust TechDirt! Look at all that false info! LIES I SAY!!! Look at Masnick trying to garner support for [whichever agend you feel he supports]!”

Sounds like FUD to me.

Anonymous Coward says:

Many people have found that moving to offshore registries isn’t really going to help. If you site is hosted in country A and registered in country B, you have in fact subjected yourself to at least two jurisdictions instead of one. Worse yet, if you are based in the US and trying to play this sort of game, you are screwed because the US laws still apply to you.

At the end of the day, if the beneficial owners live and work in the US, they cannot avoid US law. Seizing the websites is the exposed part for companies outside of the US, which is why they are doing it this way. If you are in the US and move to a .me or whatever domain, then they will just move against your company or you personally.

You can only truly avoid the issue by moving out of the US, which most people will not do.

Good luck in trying to find another way to hide your questionable activities, as this one failed.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Yea FUD is everywhere. But only because these seizures haven’t been challenged yet. I believe ICE will continue to get away with it only for so long. These aren’t real investigations at all and they’ll soon be found out for working a little too closely with the MPAA/RIAA. This is all just a dog and pony show for big media.

Displaying external links, whether the owner or their visitors posted them, is no proof at all of willful copyright infringement. External links aren’t even 1st degree copyright infringement. If it is then why don’t we just shut down Google, Facebook and Twitter without warning them too?

Hephaestus (profile) says:

5 of my clients have moved their websites off shore

“Wait-wait-wait… let me make sure I have this right. The US government, who you claim is on the side of Copyright and against piracy, has a plan to move pirates out of the country…”

Truthfully this is alot like the Index Librorum Prohibitorum (the catholic list of banned books). It just broadcasts to the world things people should not be looking at. Confiscating the domain names is ineffectual because the sites remain.

Okay, I now get their plan!!! They are trying to drive so many people to these sites that their servers crash.

What A Brilliant Plan!!!

average_joe says:

Re:

AJ, I know you tend to argue about “the letter of the law” and I would like to pose a question to you.

Put aside the “letter of the law” part for a moment and think in terms of “the spirit of the law” – Do you feel that these seizures are within the spirit of the law? IE: Do you feel that punishment prior to trial (which effectively has happened in these cases) is the correct path that the US Government should take?

Search and seizure warrants are executed every single day before an adversary trial has taken place. What makes these seizures so special? Is it the fact that the target is piracy? It’s kind of scary how much you guys get all riled up when the government goes after pirates. The spirit of the law is that people shouldn’t violate other people’s rights. Where’s the concern for the actual victims? I see none from the bulk of techdirt commentators, and absolutely none from techdirt itself. That’s scary to me.

The Infamous Joe (profile) says:

Re:

At the end of the day, if the beneficial owners live and work in the US, they cannot avoid US law.

One of the sites in question was found legal by Spanish courts, hosted in Spain, used almost exclusively by Spanish people. They *did* have a .com address, though.

It is useful to keep in the back of your mind, when discussing the internet, that the world is much bigger than the US. (Disclaimer: I’m an American.)

Gwiz (profile) says:

Re:

Search and seizure warrants are executed every single day before an adversary trial has taken place.

That’s “letter of law” stuff, AJ. You didn’t answer my question. I’m not asking if these type of things happen all the time – I know they do. I am asking you, personally, do you feel that they are morally correct?

What makes these seizures so special?

Nothing. But i still feel that seizures of any property prior to trial is in direct conflict of Constitutional rights. Just because it happens does not make it less so in my mind.

Where’s the concern for the actual victims?

Where’s the proof that any damages to the victims has actually occurred? Lost sales do not equal damages.

average_joe says:

Re:

Isn’t the phrase “letter of the law” a form of following the herd? It says that no critical thinking is required– someone else must have already done that when the law was enacted– and we should follow blindly what the law says?

I follow the ideals that I agree with. Doesn’t everyone?

I try and analyze things from all sides, especially the ones I don’t agree with. Being a good lawyer means being able to argue all sides. If I wanted to have people pat me on the back and tell me I’m right, I’d go to some other board. People that post opposing views on techdirt are shunned and called names, and that’s too bad. It’s a real middle school mentality around here. I appreciate those who do challenge me though.

Jason says:

Re:

The gist of the rest is pretty simple:
1. Gabe (can I call you “Gabe,” Gabe?) gives his definition of FUD, and notes the lack of FUD in this article based that definition.

2. He then infers your definition of FUD (actually giving you some credit for relevancy in the process – I would have left the burden of proof on your shoulders, but he seems nicer than me) and

3. then he points out that by what seems to be your definition of FUD, you are guilty of the same.

Now that the sense has been clarified, feel free to actually comment with something other than baseless derrogation.

average_joe says:

Re:

That’s “letter of law” stuff, AJ. You didn’t answer my question. I’m not asking if these type of things happen all the time – I know they do. I am asking you, personally, do you feel that they are morally correct?

Should property that is purportedly used for crime be seized from the criminals? Sure.

Nothing. But i still feel that seizures of any property prior to trial is in direct conflict of Constitutional rights. Just because it happens does not make it less so in my mind.

You may feel that seizure of property conflicts with people’s constitutional rights, but such seizures have existed since the day the Constitution was signed.

Where’s the proof that any damages to the victims has actually occurred? Lost sales do not equal damages.

You don’t think violating someone’s rights is a harm? I’m glad you’re not in charge.

Anonymous Coward says:

Anti-bodies.

Multiple projects, some of them involving people who measure their network experience in decades, have already begun to look at how shutdowns like Egypt’s can successfully be bypassed in the future. It’ll take time, of course, but any country trying this stunt a few years from now will find that it’s far more difficult.

The Infamous Joe (profile) says:

Re:

I try and analyze things from all sides, especially the ones I don’t agree with.

Then let’s see it. Argue the defense of a legal Spanish site having it’s domain stolen by ICE at the behest of the NFL for the Super Bowl. Explain to me how that has *any* function other than to cast doubt on the reliability of any ICANN domain?

Being a good lawyer means being able to argue all sides.

Odd, I’ve ever seen you argue any other side but the one you usually argue. Oh, wait, that does make sense, after all.

People that post opposing views on techdirt are shunned and called names, and that’s too bad.

Please don’t make me dig through all your old posts and point out name calling you’ve done. Selective memory, much? Not to mention, calling something FUD when it isn’t is as much name calling as anything else. When you live in a glass house you shouldn’t throw black kettles. Or something like that.

jilocasin (profile) says:

Actually I think this is a _new_ round of seizures....

Actually I think this is a _new_ round of seizures. The first round was late last year. I haven’t checked if any of the sites were fighting it, though I think when the government actually let the domain owners know (several months later) that at least one of the blogger sites was fighting it.

Most of the sites simply reopened under non-US controlled domains. I you were a foreign company with a .com web address that was seized illegally by the U.S. government, what would you do?

1. Hire expensive lawyers, fly to the United States, get embroiled in a lengthy, potentially very expensive law suit.

2. Shake your head, and reopen your web site on a domain that the US gov. can’t seize within hours or perhaps the very next day.

Hmmmmm…..

I don’t think that either option requires them to believe that they were guilty of anything or to concede that the seizures were anything like legal.

Jason says:

Re:

I call bullshit. Plenty of people have credited you for sound and salient, though opposing points, a relatively recent one was on the appropriate length of time for copyright as regards the film industry. I chimed in on one myself.

Nobody here is shunning you for an opposing view. They’re calling you out for a hypocritically baseless claim. Support your claim or bear it.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Streaming NFL, NBA, NHL and MLB games without permission is a violation of both US and WIPO law.

It doesn’t matter what some Spanish kangaroo court says.

And Joe is right, you all have gotten so used to thinking it’s okay to rip stuff off that you don’t even consider what’s legal and who the victims are.

Massively douchey and pathetic.

Gwiz (profile) says:

Re:

Should property that is purportedly used for crime be seized from the criminals? Sure.

Ok AJ. Fair enough. I will disagree with you on this. I feel that property should only be seized prior to trial ONLY to preserve evidence. After conviction in a court of law is also OK in my mind. The problem I have with seizures prior to a trial is the vast slippery slope of potential abuse which is what we are possibly seeing with the domain name seizures and what we have seen with police departments using seizures as fund raisers in the 80’s war on drugs.

You may feel that seizure of property conflicts with people’s constitutional rights, but such seizures have existed since the day the Constitution was signed.

Once again, because it happens and has happened doesn’t change my mind.

You don’t think violating someone’s rights is a harm? I’m glad you’re not in charge.

Ouch. You got me on that one. I do think violating someone’s rights is harmful. You said damages and my mind went to monetary damages.

The Infamous Joe (profile) says:

Re:

Streaming NFL, NBA, NHL and MLB games without permission is a violation of both US and WIPO law.

It should be pointed out that the site in question was found legal in Spain because it doesn’t actually host anything, it just makes it easier to find what you’re looking for. You know, like Google.

It doesn’t matter what some Spanish kangaroo court says.

So, US laws should apply *over* Spanish laws in Spain? You should take a moment to think because you type such foolish things.

Anonymous Coward says:

The idea of countries in the age of the Internet is also outdated. No country or entity should control the accesibility of INFORMATION, let alone content. It won’t be a country’s TLD that eventually hosts x or y content, it’ll be the service with the most accesibility, period.

The problem with countries is they have these silly religions and moral and social structures that is incompatible with information that may harm, so fuck the countries and let’s move on to decentralized nodes of information.

It’s inevitable.

average_joe says:

Re:

I just realized something….you are calling someone a “criminal” before they have been convicted of anything. That’s not how it is supposed to work…you should know all about “innocent until proven guilty”.

I do. Property can be seized when there is probable cause that it is being used for crime. It is not necessary that the crime be proven first. In these seizures, a judge agreed that there was probable cause and then signed the warrant. When I say “criminals” I should be saying “purported criminals.” You’re right.

Sonja (profile) says:

What if?

I am not going to get into the pirate debate right now. What I want to know is where will all this stop? People jump on the pirate bandwagon now. But what if the pirates are gone. What if all this is used to stifle free speech in future ie. We dont like sites by people of a certain race/color/religeous/political view etc? And with no way to question or protect myself? I am not an american citizen but have a .com domain, so what will my options be if it gets taken down? Only throwing lots of money at the problem which I dont have? Registering another domain? But then if everything is controlled by the US, whats the point?

Mike Masnick (profile) says:

Re:

Actually it has. Since the seizures were never challenged, the original decision by the US District Court, who issued the warrants, stands. They’re the first, and apparently last, court to be involved.

This is also untrue. The sites in question were only recently (finally) contacted by the government, and still have a period of time to respond. The claim that they have missed their opportunity to respond is simply false.

Jason says:

Re:

“Because the owners knew they were guilty and their lawyers told them the seizures were legal.”

I demur. Even if that’s true (which in the case of the hip hop blogs it’s clearly not), even so you agreed to the bet with that condition in it. You even clarified it further that it should be based on the final appeal.

If you just believe your arguments were right and simply want to rub someone’s nose in it, well that’s kind of annoying and definitely lame, but vaguely understandable, I suppose.

But if you think you’ve won the bet by default somehow, you’re full of it. The bet’s only on if a court in some way makes a definitive ruling on one of the Thanksgiving seizures. Then if it goes your way – you win. If it goes Mike’s way – he wins.

Apparently, though some folks think there’s still some legal process going on.

Jason says:

Re:

You don’t see the irony or you feel you’re above the fray?

How about:
-your regular use of ad hom attacks while decrying the same from others
-rebutting with a pithy one-liner while trying to make the same seem childish and petty
-I-wasn’t-gonna-take-it-this-far-and-now-I’m-getting-bored-but-what-the-hell-it’s-cold-outside

That last one’s more about me.

Hephaestus (profile) says:

Re:

” so fuck the countries and let’s move on to decentralized nodes of information.”

Its already here, and better stuff is being developed. Its just not that popular yet. Give ICE a couple more months of this and the usage will start going up. Expect calls to see this software outlawed when it goes mainstream.

One thing I saw demo’d recently was an encrypted distributed webserver. Neat stuff, the only way to publish pages was to have the private key. Each client acts as a server web server. Load redistribution. The “DNS” was based on the public key which each page held as a tag. It was really rough around the edges but cool none the less.

Chronno S. Trigger (profile) says:

Re:

If we start talking about the letter of the law we see that the domains should not be seized. Property that is seized is done so to prevent destruction of said property. A domain name cannot be destroyed thus it should not be taken.

So by the letter of the law and the spirit of the law, domain names should not be seized without due process.

Jay says:

Re:

Do you really, really, REALLY want me to go through the articles where you identified yourself?

PLUS where you argue with Mike while calling him absurd names?

Please don’t go back to that person. I would rather ask if you could debate normally than degrade yourself by trying to pull a Ronald Riley visage where you constantly call people names because your argument is weak.

But it’s entirely up to you.

Thomas (profile) says:

When..

has legality ever stopped the government from doing whatever it damn well pleases. Homeland Security has been changed to just an enforcement group for the Entertainment industry. Such things as terrorists trying to kill American citizens is no longer their priority.

Due process and judicial procedures and constitutional protections have just become a joke to the U.S. government.

Thomas (profile) says:

When..

has legality ever stopped the government from doing whatever it damn well pleases. Homeland Security has been changed to just an enforcement group for the Entertainment industry. Such things as terrorists trying to kill American citizens is no longer their priority.

Due process and judicial procedures and constitutional protections have just become a joke to the U.S. government.

chris (profile) says:

5 of my clients have moved their websites off shore

Please explain to me the Master Plan, because I can’t fathom how this helps America at all.

it probably has to do with some sort of “great firewall of china” scheme or some sort of blocklist to prevent access to certain domains, both of which are easily circumvented.

i say let them keep doing it. this does nothing to prevent piracy and everything to make the content industries and the american government appear corrupt. the more frustration and distrust these actions foster, the less this will be about getting free music and the more it will be about building the tools for dissent.

Karl (profile) says:

Re:

If the Federal District Court’s ruling stands

Which ruling are you referring to?

No court has ever “ruled” that these sites are infringing. A judge signed off on seizure warrants. That’s not a ruling.

ICE hasn’t actually brought criminal charges against any of the site operators. How is a court supposed to rule before the defendants are even charged?

Not an electronic Rodent says:

Re:

You can only truly avoid the issue by moving out of the US, which most people will not do.

Uhh….. I know you don’t get out of the country much but there’s a whole bunch of us already out here *waves* and there’s more of us than you already so we don’t need any more thanks. I know.. suprising isn’t it that things exist outside the borders of the US? Although by observation even the presence of large parts of the US seem to be a revelation to you too…..

Mike Masnick (profile) says:

Re:

Sorry, but this bet doesn’t have to go to yet another court to be over. If the Federal District Court’s ruling stands, Masnick owes MusiCares $500.

1. That’s not what we agreed to. We agreed to concluding this only after the case reached the highest level it would reach — which you agreed to, claiming that at the district court level, we might get a “bad ruling” such as the Viacom/YouTube ruling (which, in your opinion, was bad).

2. There has been no district court ruling yet to “stand.”

You seem very confused. Why are you trying to change the terms of what we agreed upon? Ever since we’ve made that deal, you seem to feel the need to keep trying to get me to pay up now. It’s almost as if you’re afraid of what will really happen once this goes to court.

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