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Court Rules IP Address Alone Insufficient To Identify Pirate
Anti-piracy groups and lawyers across Europe are unmovable - they say that since they logged a copyright infringement from a particular IP address, the bill payer is responsible. Now a court in Rome has decided that on the contrary, an IP address does not identify an infringer, only a particular connection.
http://torrentfreak.com/court-rules-...ringer-090615/ about fucking time, the court willingness to say just because your ip address was used you guilty of a copyright infringement was totally fucked up It was bullshit to expect people to buy 20k military grade wireless routers to be safe from being procecuted for copyright infringment when a hacker uses one of those script kiddie tools to hack the wireless password. |
If that makes it to the US a LOT of spammers are going to walk.
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Does that mean I don't have to use my neighbors wireless network anymore?
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Can be avoid very easy.
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please explain. |
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I just checked and almost all my neighbors have an open wifi with no password protection. When I was in LA my neighbor had a wifi signal that was stronger than mine when I was in my living room and my stupid laptop would always try to connect to it (because he had the same SSID as the router at a clients office "linksys"). I used to get fed up and just log into his router (yes, he didnt even set a password besides "admin") and turn off his wifi. then about a day later i would see it turn back on and finally i never saw it again, but ironically that same day one started to pop up with "netgear" :1orglaugh:1orglaugh |
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most 128/256 bit encrypted passwords can be brute force obtained with free scripting tools so even setting up security on a standard wireless router is not enough to protect you from liablity. Which is totally fucked up. What was funny is that the RIAA has been trying to get laws passed that basically make you liable to the same extent as if you were the actual downloader just because you paid for the internet connection. And many people try and argue that the way it should be because it is too difficult to catch the downloaders if you didn't. Amazingly enough if you proposed that the kiddie porn laws should be changed so that everyone behind the same gateway ip should be jailed to make it easier to catch pedos they would cry bloody murder. |
Tonight there will be a piracy party.
Tonight they're gonna timeshift back to 1999. |
Awesome news.
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Gideon seems to take such glee when any news that seems to support or encourage unauthorized downloading is announced, lol. I agree in one sense- it makes a stronger case when you can prove the identity of the persons re-publishing your work without authorization using multiple pieces of evidence. I enjoyed reading the story at http://wp-board.com of how that one photographer caught some of the people illegally using his content using detective work, an attorney and the rules of law.
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But if you tried that stuff against a canadian the end result would be 10k fine for each piece of evidence collected. And that would be a fine you would have to pay BEFORE you started the case against a canadian. |
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Just letting you know in case you visit a Taliban country. |
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what is really sad is that is not far from the truth. |
Gideon I'd like to see who is running around someones neighborhood with a wireless sniffer in a mobile van with the ability to hack into a WPA protected wireless system so they can upload stolen porn. Not saying that people can't do it. But a kid with a free brute force script? No way. You're going straight past the believable and directly to the improbable as you always do in your arguments. Remember...the rest of us are living in the real world. :)
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if you know what the router is (which most people tell you because they leave the it as the name of the wireless connection) you can hack 128 bit encryption in 190 seconds oh and btw the dead guy who's family was sued by the RIAA lived in an apartment building. no van need, just someone on a close by floor. btw i live in a house, with a big backyard and i can access to my neighbours wireless . his network id shows up on my list too. again no van needed. i love how you try and argue it impossible by choosing a completely irrelevant unlikely situation and pretend it is the ONLY way it could happen. |
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and you don't need any elaborate "wireless sniffer", any laptop can do, and the antenna that sticky mentions can cover a pretty wide range, many blocks in all directions with a signal booster |
What do you think about BlackIce?
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I thought the eye patch and parrot always gives it away.
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Why would you rely on an IP address when you should be looking for the eye patch and parrot instead? *rimshot* wakka wakka wakka!
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But the fact that you are saying that a 12 year old kid would steal an army communications vehicle, rewire it to find wireless, then pick up his classmates from school, create a grid of every major city and then systematically drive up and down every road looking for a wireless connection and then crack into wpa wireless all the while uploading porn and stealing govt. secrets just blows my mind. Where the fuck do you come up with these crazy ass ideas anyway? |
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The Internet should be worth trillions, unfortunately it's only worth billions. Because of theft. Until piracy is solved the Internet is held back. Which also effects Gideon's income unless he profits from piracy. |
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Right now I'm in my living room... quiet suburban area... and my laptop can pick up 12 wireless networks. If I add a 7db omni-directional antenna ($45), I can pick up 30. If I add a 12db directional antenna ($70) and move around a bit, I can detect 70+ networks... So i'd say a 12 year old kid doesn't even need a special military van... |
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It's an Italian court lol that says nothing
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that everyone else examples, me own i live in a house in the london ontario, the forest city, with tons of trees between properties and i can still pickup the wireless signals of my neighbours with my laptop sitting in the middle of my house (with all the walls, trees, area of lawn etc acting as interference). no one but you is taking about driving around in a military truck but you. That the point i was making you ignore all the reasonable ways this happens and jump to the unreasonable one to try and make your bogus point. |
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That wasn't serious dude. :) |
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if you look at the number of people who have lost their homes, paid out 1,000 in fines based solely on that flimsy level of evidence it make me sick. I have never supported copyright infringment, i however don't support taking away fair use, or procecuting people who are intermediaries for a technology that can be both used for a legitimate fair use purpose and an infringing one as well (like the vcr, and bit torrent) like i have said for the last 2 years leave the seeders alone leave the tracker alone leave the leachers who have a fair use right to the content alone go after the leachers who don't have a fair use right to the content. |
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It's easier to hack into the router's admin area and change it to your liking. |
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nothing in that ruling support unauthorized downloading, if you have proof that a person actually downloaded the content without authorization you can still convict them. All this stops is the unilateral assumption that just because you paid for the connection you have to be guilty of the infringement. |
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sooo... just how would you propose that the 'law' do exactly that? it still comes down to, the owner of the website should be responsible and TURN IN ALL the people who upload/post illegal content - and NOT make their sites so that the "leecher(s) who don't have a fair use right to the content" also don't have ACCESS to that content or have upload rights. regardless of our spirited debates over time - I agree with some of what you have to say - but until you come up with some way of stopping it from being the 'perfect crime' I shall continue to ask you .... what the hell is to be done when almost everyone is "innocent" - and the guilty can't be touched because they are protected by 'privacy' someone has to be guilty - and there has to be enforcable methodologies for detection and prosecution. so lay out a couple ideas on how you think that that could be accomplished. |
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Thank God that was not how it works or the biggest money making opp for this industry would not have happened. That being said i have already pointed out 43 times that setting up a private tracker does exactly that it issolates all the innocent on your system and the guilty on the public system. You might not be able to convict them for copyright infringement, but you can sue them for breach of contract. And since you are fully providing for the fair use right to use swarm as a backup/timeshifting/recovery device, there is no fair use to hide behind for that breach. if you don't want to setup what amounts to a completely free solution (subsidized by advertising just like the public trackers) then you should be looking to monetize the distribution instead of trying to prevent it (like what happened with the vcr). |
Court Rules IP Address Alone Insufficient To Identify Pirate
... ... ... ... Common sense however, still dictates that's perfectly sufficient to identify a douchebag |
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I agree with the private tracker solution but... there is a crime happening - there needs to be a way for the cops to charge someone telling everyone that the only recourse they have is a 'civil suit' just doesn't cut it. Saying that I have to identify the theives, find a way to contact them, politely ask them to stop (DMCA), do a follow up, start the whole 5 year process of lawyer/court to try and sue some 15 year old in moms basement - they are fuckin stealing a product - cops need a way to enforce. Theres a million websites and theives out there - no one has the bankroll to 'civil suit' them all. if someone steals my car - I call the cops. But you say that if someone steals my digital product, then its up to me to be the cop. again I ask - what legal rights do I have to get someones ass busted by the law? (and I'll keep rephrasing this question til you address it) |
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But that is the point the private tracker solves the problem completely, sueing for the economic damage of the breach of contract and ignoring the copyright issue completely solves the problem. So why do you need to change the law, and take way peoples right (like the right to be presumed innocent until PROVEN guilty). monetizing is the better solution to praying that some politician can be suckered into writing a law that stomps all over people rights to provide you with the protection you want but don't need (because you can already solve the problem with a private tracker). |
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also, paper trails |
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