Crime Scene, peer-to-peer real-time.

With the gendarmes of the music industry on the one hand and the daily practice for millions of people on the other hand, the peer-to-peer is realized in every where in the time of the transfer, minutes in which the data are duplicated during transmission, and materialize a new copy to another hard disk. This time frame is the symbol of an act (criminal according to the lobby of the disc and the free circulation of knowledge according to almost everyone else) who perpetrates continuously and that in this same time it is fully accomplished. Crime Scene , made ​​by Mogens Jacobsen (author of Bridge and who has participated in The Classic II Exhibition ) tries to isolate this defining moment, with a simple installation that devoid of special effects, raises two computers networked together by the end of the tape used by bounding law enforcement to protect the public areas where there is any sign of crime. The two pc show in the command line interface of the respective processes of choice, selection and transfer of files, intended to continue indefinitely. The abstraction of this process brings to the surface the mechanisms of a technology inherent to the communication of data, which have the sole fault in the work to be protected by copyright. This public performance and continues to a 'crime', then, it actually makes the viewers eye-witnesses, but no one intervenes to stop what continues to happen, in fact endorsing what has already become a practice socially legitimized.