arstechnica.com — A new UK survey finds that only one-third of P2P file-sharers would change their behavior after receiving a warning letter alone. If ISP disconnection remains on the table, that number jumps to 80 percent.
Jun 10, 2009 View in Crawl 4
jsmith39Jun 11, 2009
fail
myztryJun 11, 2009
An ISP would be foolish to give out private information in Australia as their are some harsh penalties for breaches of privacy legislation.Anyway, I received a foreign notice last week. My sons much have downloaded the objectionable file from one of the computers feeding of the wireless network. I have a static IP address, and that could in theory provide a pseudo identity - except I went to the ISP management interface, and changed it. Five minutes later I'm running on a new static IP. You get 30 free IP changes before a $20? fee applies.It's an inconvenience but - meh - whatever...
lemonfruittreeJun 11, 2009
Peer guardian does not work
Closed AccountJun 11, 2009
Is that why millions of teenagers go out and pay money to see s**tty movies like Wolverine or Terminator 4 yet oscar-winners like No Country for Old Men barely pull people into the box office?People pay for junk and download quality actually.
Closed AccountJun 11, 2009
F**K YOU RIAA!
Closed AccountJun 11, 2009
I repudiate these stern letters, however sedulous they are. Not that I would care if I got disconnected from Telus anyway.