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How File Sharing Costs You

File sharing seems to be a great way to get any music or video you want without paying for it. But whether you know it or not you already are paying for it. File sharing across the Internet takes up bandwidth on our connection to the Internet, so we have to pay for a connection that is about twice the size that we would need without file sharing. That eats up a little tuition.

When a file sharing application gets out of control and requires that we find out what went wrong on the network, that takes away time that we could otherwise use to improve network services. When we get a notification from a media company that someone on campus is sharing a file out to the Internet, we spend time finding whose computer the file was shared from. When we find out, we temporarily suspend the network connection for that computer to make sure that the sharing stops. We do this to protect campus network participants from being sued by media companies. The Dean of Students, VP of Academic Affairs, or the staff member’s supervisor talks with the person involved to make sure he or she knows the college's policy on file sharing. And finally we require a form to be filled out to make sure that file sharing has stopped. All this causes us to lose otherwise productive time and subtracts from the quality of services provided by the staff involved.

Occasionally when some new twist on file sharing occurs, we meet with Deans and Vice Presidents and sometimes lawyers to ensure that we are following both the law of the land and the spirit of life on campus. Again this subtracts from their time in trying to make the college function as smoothly as it can. Although you might not notice it now or even while you are at Davidson, it is the fine grit that slowly wears away the gears that run the college. When your parents see another bump in tuition or when you graduate and are asked to give to the college, remember that you are paying a little bit of that for something that you thought was free.

Because we respond quickly to requests by media companies to stop sharing their content, we believe that the likelihood that any individual on campus will be sued is very low. If it ever happens though, that individual will, in effect, foot the entire bill for everyone’s dine and dash habits.

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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on September 30, 2006 9:40 AM.

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