On Wed, Jan 23, 2008 at 04:21:32 -0600, Jimmy Bradley <bmobile40@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > many pc's, and I've filled up many a hard drive on them. I just don't > see how you can damage some one's machine by saving files to their hard > drive, unless the files are infected with viruses or some other > malicious code, and that was just not the case here. All some one would > have to do to undo what I've done is to simply delete the files. No that isn't true. If the machine runs out of space in the middle of doing a task things get can screwed up in ways that require a lot of effort to recover from. Ideally all applications would fail gracefully when disk space runs out, but that isn't how things are in the real world. > Plus, being how the file transfer took place through my router, and not > my isp, and the fact that they have their hard drive wide open to > anyone, I don't see how it would be traceable. That's also a bad assumption. Its possible his system is logging information about the network he was connecting to, such as mac addresses. If you have let your hardware use the default mac addresses, then those addresses from your hardware could be matched against the logs. Since the network would very likely be from someone close by it isn't inconceivable that you could be suspected and have a subpoena served requiring you to provide the mac addresses from your hardware.