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Do you know that on an ordinary Tuesday,
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an average person commits at least three
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Do you want to know if you are one of
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them? Let's get into the video.
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Let's follow Arjun, a normal guy. He's
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not a criminal. He does not even honk in
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traffic. But today, we going to see the
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invisible legal trip wires that are
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hidden in his everyday life. Arjun wakes
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up, opens his laptop, logs into his OTT
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account, but not his account, his
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cousins. Is that harmless? Not always.
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Sharing login credentials without the
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permission of the service provider can
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breach the platform's terms. And under
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India's IT and contract law,
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unauthorized access can be treated as a
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breach, even if it's just family. Next
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day, Arjun downloads a pro version of an
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app for free from a random website. It
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works perfectly, except it's illegal.
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Using cracked software involves
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copyright, so even distributing or
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knowingly using it falls under digital
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piracy. One click equals to one
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violation. Next, Arjun friend calls. He
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says, "Bro, can you send the OTP that
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you just got? It's for a free voucher."
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Arjun reads it. seems harmless, but it's
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not. Here's the truth. Sharing OTP,
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which is meant for someone else, can
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count as facilitating unauthorized
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access to an account or a financial
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service. OTP aren't just numbers.
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They're digital signatures. Later, Arjun
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orders something online and updates the
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delivery location to a nearby place
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because it arrives faster. If the
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updated address isn't his or he uses a
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different location for his benefit, it
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can count as misrepresentation.
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Small lie, big technical problem. In the
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evening, Arjun streams a song from a
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sketchy website. No ads, no
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subscription. Sounds perfect. Except
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streaming pirated content, even if not
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downloaded, still involves accessing
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copyrighted content unlawfully. Here's
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the twist. Are you a criminal for doing
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all of this? Absolutely not. These are
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just technical offenses that violates
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terms of service, digital rules, and
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copyright laws. You won't see a
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policeman outside your door, but every
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action creates a digital footprint and a
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potential record of non-compliance. So,
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the real question isn't, are you a
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criminal? The question is, are you being
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responsible in a world where everything
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you touch leaves a digital race? Because
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if your small habits aren't smart
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enough, you are an accidental rule
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breaker. Tell me in the comments if you
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fall under this category and keep
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watching Just Be Logic.