One of my co-workers received an e-mail from Rogers telling him that he was violating their terms of service through his use of BitTorrent to share a video game. The e-mail contained a copy of a letter from the Entertainment Software Association (ESA) addressed to Rogers.
The letter basically said that one of Rogers' customers was violating an ESA member's intellectual property rights, and requested that Rogers
"notify the account holder of the infringing material, remove or disable access to the infringing material, and take action against the account holder under your abuse policy/terms of service."
eeeh.
as a rabid bittorrenter, i'm wondering how long it will be until the RIAA starts sending letters like this to Oink folk