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The Origin Humble Bundle managed to rack in $10M in a week And that's exactly what many 'pirates' will do when they play a game that blows, they'll quit after investing an hour of their time. Quote:
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VPN is the best and most ideal, as there is a good reputation that stands behind what they offer (PrivateInternetAccess, for example), and all of the data tunneled through a VPN is encrypted and not logged (PIA, for example). Honestly, in this day and age, particularly with the NSA scandal, if you are a frequent or an occasional downloader, there is absolutely no reason why you shouldn't be using a VPN for peace of mind. It's only $40/year. You have no one else to blame but yourself if you get busted. |
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They can definitely try to sue you, but having an unprotected wifi is not illegal. As long as you destroy all evidence of illegally downloaded materials, they can't do jack. Then you countersue them for defamation. |
The armchair lawyering in this thread is staggeringly ignorant. |
Came across this a while ago and thought itd be a good share here Pirates buy more music than legal downloaders, study shows | TechHive |
I don't get it............ pirates pay for stuff so they can sell it to thousands for profit? So they are legal downloaders, then. Just kidding......... interesting. How do they find this stuff? thousands of phone interviews - wow! Get honest answers from dishonest people. ............nuff said |
Yall worrying about the WRONG thing. Just wait til 3D printing becomes cheaper to your average pirate.. There's already tons of 3D files on the web to print with a click of a button. BRB downloading a gun. |
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If it took them this long to even be able to force a tiny internet provider to give them addresses and names, think about how hard it would be to force the big telecoms to give up information and THEN get warrants for search AND seizure of computers and hard drives. Heck this 90 year old child porn addict is smarter than you and was almost able to get away with it if he didn't reveal anything himself. Prosecutor: Man tried to destroy hard drive after police search | PV Times |
That's not what I'm referring to. The comment that prompted me to say that, however, is: Quote:
Also, the worst part... "countersue them for defamation". No, just no. |
lol piracy is like the war on drugs. patent laws and intellectual property laws are archaic and need to be revamped to fit current human patterns of behaviour. if youre against pirating because of monetary reasons, you're just on the opposite side of the same "immoral" scale. one side is "stealing" and the other side is "greed". if youre against piracy because YOU "made" it and and it's YOURS to choose what to do with... well, you're just an egotistical asshat. we'll steal it from you and not even use it, just to break your ego down. nothing is yours. cuz i'll take it from you whether you like it or not. what's yours is ours. what's ours is yours. feel free to do the same to us. the offer is there. if you don't take it, well too bad. cuz you're playing our game. no amount of punishment will deter us. no amount of punishment will reform us. i speak for the majority of the majority. come at us bro. we're waiting. |
Are they specifically targeting uploaders or BitTorrent users? Vs. downloading from a file hosting site? Posted via RS Mobile |
Good thing the terabytes of porn that has crossed my computer screen has all been streamed.:jerkit: |
but what if people use a proxy and picked your ip... your going to be SOL and F@CKED... |
Side story: I caught Bad Boys II on the Encore movie channel a few nights ago. As I am watching it I noticed that the subtitles for the Spanish language were in Russian or something. My first thought; did the Encore channel just download this movie from the PB and broadcast it on their channel? Haha. I'm thinking WTF, I'm paying large for this channel package and all their doing is dl'ing shit for free and airing it? We've all dl'd a movie and realized the subtitles were not in English. I know I'm probably way off base but just thought it was funny considering this recent thread. |
IMO why wouldn't ISP's simply delete their records now and protect their customers? is there some law that prevents ISPs from NOT keeping records? All that really matters to them is if their customer is staying under his bandwidth cap. "Come to Shaw, where you can download whatever you want" they would get my business. |
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Netflix aint quick enough for me to stop |
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I have yet to see anything come from all these reports of Canadians being tracked down. It seems like we pass legislation regarding copyright, but nobody really cares at the end of the day. Shaw is busy screwing you out of money with its cable bundles, they don't have the time to help Hollywood sue you. |
my co workers 2 buddies just got an email from Shaw, courtesy of Warner Bros., about downloading a movie. I guess they are pretty serious about this. |
I used to get emails like that when I used my isps email service. Posted via RS Mobile |
The main things I pirate are shows you simply can't get here/can't get anymore (edit: this includes not being available in certain formats, why the hell make an HD show and then only release DVD and not Blu-Ray?), things I've already purchased in other formats (I'm not buying Indiana Jones 4 times FFS) and shit that doesn't work when you buy it legally. I've acquired several games legally (purchased, bundled with hardware etc) that don't work for shit with the legitimate setup, so I ended up pirating them and using cracks just to get it to work. Quote:
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I always used to get those warnings from TELUS in emails. I just disregarded them and kept downloading as usual. They were all empty threats, I wasn't worried one bit. All I download nowadays now are TV shows that I missed. I catch the rest on Netflix. I'm anxious to see who gets the caught first as and put as an example. (if they even do). TekSavvy is a small company, a lawsuit against them can easily force them out of business. Whereas Telus and Shaw have huge legal teams who know the system in and out and can possibly find loopholes, they would be less likely to sell out their customers because they have their reputation to look out for. |
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Most VPN's don't keep logs, so does it even matter? |
VPN Virtual Private Networks create an encrypted ‘tunnel’ between your computer and the host server, with the internet traffic going in and out of the host server. Your ISP or government can only see that you have connected to the VPN server and nothing else – your activities, IP addresses you have visited etc. are all completely hidden from them behind a minimum of 128-bit encryption. However, the VPN server can see what you get up to on-line, which is why we feel it vital that a good VPN provider to keeps no logs. Anything less and its users’ activities may be compromised (thus making the precaution of using a VPN in the first place redundant!). Although setting up VPN does usually involve downloading and installing a VPN client, or otherwise configuring your computer or mobile device, the computing skills needed are minimal, and most providers supply detailed step-by-step setup guides in any case. One good thing is that once set up, all your internet activity, no matter which program you use, is now safely routed through the VPN. The only notable negatives to VPN are that it is comparatively pricey, and the encryption process taxes the servers so that when in heavy use internet access through them can slow down noticeably. https://www.bestvpn.com/blog/4085/pr...he-difference/ Using a VPN is pretty much fool proof for any internet searching or downloading. The only way you could probably get outted is if you're planning some sort national security issue and the government is monitoring you. |
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