TY - JOUR AU1 - Denehy, Janice AB - Editorial In September 2003, the recording industry filed nebulizers, and pulse oximeters for their schools; sam- lawsuits against 261 individuals who had downloaded ples of toothbrushes, deodorant, and feminine hy- shared music files on the Web. This move signaled to giene products for their students; posters for bulletin users that the industry was serious in its efforts to halt boards; Individualized Healthcare Plans (IHPs) for stu- illegal sharing of copyrighted music files. Many were dents with special needs, articles for newsletters; and shocked to find themselves sued. Some stopped down- letters to parents, to mention a few. While some loading files, while others said they would continue school nurses are willing to share their IHPs, letters, to download music over the Internet rather than pur- and other resources, it seems as though, thanks to chase CDs for $12–18 apiece. The most telling reaction ready access to electronic communication, we have to this crackdown was that many people didn’t see come to expect many of these resources to be available anything wrong with downloading music files from to us at any time and for free. others for free, despite the fact that the music industry An example of how one TI - There Is No Free Lunch JF - The Journal of School Nursing DO - 10.1177/10598405040200010101 DA - 2004-02-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/sage/there-is-no-free-lunch-K27TkRPbsd SP - 1 EP - 2 VL - 20 IS - 1 DP - DeepDyve ER -