arstechnica.com — California computer science researchers have determined that "naive" P2P users who don't rely on blocklists will inevitably end up connecting to "fake users" who may track their download behavior. Feeling lucky?
Oct 11, 2007 View in Crawl 4
disfnordOct 11, 2007
They don't need proof you shared anything. All that matters is that it was "made available", just look at the recent Duluth case.
disfnordOct 11, 2007
They don't even need to connect to you with torrents. The tracker will still list you as a seeder whether you block them or not.
Closed AccountOct 12, 2007
Yeah but Netflix does just movies. for 4.70 you can have everything, music, games and videos. Just type any game, film or album into google followed by rapidshare.com. If it doesn't come up with anything then you prove me wrong.
tercOct 12, 2007
Hey guys, I stopped wearing condoms when I found out that they can break.I mean, what's the point if they don't ALWAYS work, right?Besides, some girls wouldn't hop in bed with me if I wore one.
xpspx324Oct 19, 2007
I am using Limewire, am I screwing myself?
markparkerNov 5, 2007
so does anyone want to summarize this into something meaningful?
craftycornerDec 2, 2007
I have block list enabled to K-Torrent and A-Mule. A block list is as necessary as wearing pants when leaving the house...duh.