I am carrying some pirated stuff in my laptop and external hard disk, like, e-books and softwares etc. Many research papers downloaded from my university node (off course they are not illegal).
What about the chances to check all the stuff at airport?
How can I prove that the papers are downloaded legally?
I think it's very unlikely that it will be checked. I have never had anything like that checked when travelling. Security often wants you to turn on the laptop to see that it's a laptop and not a bomb but that's about it.
I am carrying some pirated stuff in my laptop and external hard disk, like, e-books and softwares etc. Many research papers downloaded from my university node (off course they are not illegal).
What about the chances to check all the stuff at airport?
How can I prove that the papers are downloaded legally?
I agree. Get Gmail or something and email them to yourself. That way you are safe. It would be a great tragedy if you very unlucky enough to get selected for a random spot check and got denied landing because you were violating copyright laws.
tgchi13 said:
If it's important to you to get your PR, dumb the pirated stuff.
I think I should use alternatives to minimize the risk...
Query is still valid, "HOW Can they conclude the stuff is PIRATED Softwares / eBooks?" Upto my understanding They can inquire relevant Co./Org. for the key/License in case of software BUT it's really a time consuming job to spend on each/random immigrant in Queue.
No clue to check download source of each eBook.....
They can do it whenever they want. You don't have many rights at the border. It's not like when you're in the country and the police has to have probable cause or your permission to search you. At the border they can search what they want, when they want it, for whatever reason they want (or no reason at all).
Fortunately I don't think they investigate computers very often. They are more concerned with just verifying it's not a hidden bomb or anything.
Suin said:
they never checked my computer. I think they can only do it when they are sure that your stuff is realy a matter of concern.
well.... not everyone can afford spending thousands for original software. some of it even can be available for downloading on-line for free, from other sources.
They can do it whenever they want. You don't have many rights at the border. It's not like when you're in the country and the police has to have probable cause or your permission to search you. At the border they can search what they want, when they want it, for whatever reason they want (or no reason at all).
Fortunately I don't think they investigate computers very often. They are more concerned with just verifying it's not a hidden bomb or anything.
yes, that was actually happening to me on arriving to the US. they made a spot check, and my stuff was always checked. ones I was taking my own dvd library with me - all the copies, they saw them but didn't ask anything at all. and never checked my laptop either.
yes, that was actually happening to me on arriving to the US. they made a spot check, and my stuff was always checked. ones I was taking my own dvd library with me - all the copies, they saw them but didn't ask anything at all. and never checked my laptop either.
CRTC and piracy laws in Canada have changed. But anything you legally downloading free-of-cost does not qualify as pirated. O'd not take the chance, beside which the applications could be reloaded at a later date, it's not like you are paying twice for the programs