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23 Comments
- LANjackal, on 06/10/2009, -0/+15I've received a warning email before. Turns out the file they fingered was an erroneous ID. Still sharing and downloading :)
- RiotHeart, on 06/11/2009, -3/+11Doesn't effect me when I use other peoples connections
- hotbert73, on 06/11/2009, -0/+7yea, it's been pretty crappy out there lately...
- Ocyris, on 06/11/2009, -1/+7>>If ISP disconnection remains on the table, that number jumps to 80 percent.
At least until they find out how to encrypt their traffic - borez, on 06/11/2009, -1/+7No recent music, no recent films, no R5's, no screeners... No ISP trouble.
- Zippo, on 06/11/2009, -0/+6P2P will never go away. It's here to stay.
- alconebay, on 06/11/2009, -1/+7http://www.yourdictionary.com/grammar-rules/affect ...
- Topher06, on 06/11/2009, -0/+3I think there is ample proof that if you make quality products people will pay for them and you can make a good profit. Hollywood and other content producers have created a market where they release poor quality crap and expect to make a lot of profit on it just because it exists. File sharing and piracy will never go away, its here to stay so the industry has to get over it, but what needs to go is that idea that offering countless thousands of ***** movies, music and games are expected to be profitable only if people didn't steal them.
- lemonfruittree, on 06/11/2009, -0/+2Peer guardian does not work
- latrosicarius, on 06/11/2009, -0/+2Jailing drunk drivers not enough to stop people driving drunk
would be a better analogy - jsmith39, on 06/11/2009, -0/+2fail
- sexybobo, on 06/11/2009, -1/+3No one is aware of the legality of it there have been no court cases over leaching your neighbors wifi except people doing it to spread child porn.
Until there is legal precedent one way or the other we can continue leaching with no worries since the chances of you being the case that sets the precedent is next to nill - latrosicarius, on 06/11/2009, -0/+2I just got a letter from my ISP b/c MGM reported my IP to them as torrenting a TV show episode.
I'm stopping :(
(Even though I own that season already on DVD, it was a 720p version) - chadsmith729, on 06/11/2009, -0/+1***** YOU RIAA!
- jsmith39, on 06/12/2009, -0/+1I'm saying your analogy is erroneous.
- inactive, on 06/11/2009, -1/+2That's true, download some vintage 1970s Nazi S&M exploitation flick and no one from the beast will ever know. Download this week's True Blood episode and you will receive a "kind" letter in the mail.
- dstz, on 06/11/2009, -0/+1You're saying there is no legitimate use of peer-to-peer? as a content provider i can tell that yes there is, for example publicizing digital works without bearing bandwidth costs.
- Myztry, on 06/11/2009, -1/+1An 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... - kalikao, on 06/11/2009, -0/+0I repudiate these stern letters, however sedulous they are. Not that I would care if I got disconnected from Telus anyway.
- inactive, on 06/11/2009, -1/+1Is that why millions of teenagers go out and pay money to see ***** 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. - MyTakes, on 06/11/2009, -3/+2If you're sharing from a neighbor's connection, hopefully you're aware of the legality of that where you live.
- meridian, on 06/11/2009, -1/+0Just enable encryption on your torrent application and get peerguardian2.
- dstz, on 06/11/2009, -4/+3"Stern letters from ISPs not enough to stop P2P use after all"
Next up: jailing drunk drivers not enough to stop people using their cars.



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