torrentfreak.com — Last week a Danish court ordered the ISP ?Tele2? to block its customers access to The Pirate Bay. The decision heated the debate on ISPs Internet filtering, and it now turns out that filtering traffic to The Pirate Bay is actually illegal according to European law.
Feb 13, 2008 View in Crawl 4
djbon2112Feb 13, 2008
It doesn't work that way. The government-created telecom monopolies make sure that you can't simply change to a different provider when the one you have starts f**king you over.
banmasterFeb 13, 2008
But ONLY because of pressure from the USA, a country that is already rotten to its core.
gunrunFeb 13, 2008
What about "ppls" liberties to not have their product used for free, when their livelihoods depend on it?
jellygraphFeb 13, 2008
lol
staticx57Feb 13, 2008
Absolutely irrelevant, keep pretending that the EU is this perfect little place. I mean corruption only happens in the United States.
amricFeb 14, 2008
Coming soon?Gees, the US are already in the censorship swamp my friend... Bogged down deep.
mikesd34Feb 14, 2008
I disagree, those lists are maintained in DNS, Comcast only has to keep up with that, and that's easy.
Closed AccountFeb 14, 2008
Any chance you could explain exactly what 'liberties' are at stake by blocking access to a site that's sole purpose is to allow the unlawful distribution of copyrighted materials?