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Thread: I fought the law and the LAW WON

  1. #16

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    yea unforunately it doesnt work like that..
    The real problem, if you're downloading illegal media, is the company from whom you're stealing. They (or lawyers or companies on their behalf) actually go online and seek out torrents of their material, whether it be movies, music, TV shows, or anything else, and will download the torrent themselves. From there, they can see a lot of information about the other users connected—including their IP address. You can even check this for yourself at home. Start downloading a torrent and click on the "More Info" section of your torrent client. You'll see the IP address of everyone you're downloading from and uploading to, plain as day.

    Once they find your IP address (which they can do just by clicking "more info" in their torrent client), they'll find out who your ISPP is and then send them a letter. Your ISP then, in turn, will forward you a notice that you've been caught pirating media. Usually the first offense is just a proverbial slap on the wrist, though if you're a repeat offender it could mean having your internet service terminated. If you're very unlucky it could even mean paying a lot of money in a settlement.


    However if you want to continue downloading stuff you could get a vpn tunnel for varying prices depending on use.. privateinternetaccess seems to be a more reliable one...

    but you didnt hear any of this from me XD

  2. #17

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    HBO and certain big studio companies like Paramount and Universal and stuff are really the only ones who worry about this stuff. But it's all completely automated from my understanding. There's just a bot watching the latest releases or most protected properties. And HBO is notorious about watching all their old stuff. There's way too much traffic for Game of Thrones for them to even try to worry about. But they still leave it up for their older stuff

    All that happened was you downloaded a tagged torrent and everyone's IP got a C&D automatically sent to their ISP with their info, ISP knows it was you and passes the message along. I highly doubt your ISP cares how much data you're using, I highly doubt your computer has been compromised. They just saw your IP doing something on their end, not yours. You have nothing to worry about

    I know you're gunshy at the moment, but honestly you could go right back to pirating things if you wanted. Just stay away from HBO and new released movies and games and you'd be alright. But maybe take it as a life lesson and rethink things a bit. I got one once when I went for a movie I'd never heard of but sounded interesting and had no idea it had JUST released that weekend. I downloaded it WAY too soon, and got a C&D the next week

    Anymore I only download older things if I need to



  3. #18
    cyka blyat escobert's Avatar
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    You could look into getting a VPN. That's what we've been doing since getting a CAD order. And I also started giving my roommates massive amounts of trout for how much bandwidth they hog up. I was using 120GB a month by myself and had never received a letter since I don't download very much in the way of torrents and as soon as they moved in it went to over 700GB a month and a letter quickly followed.

  4. #19

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jinx View Post
    This was over three months ago! I'm definitely pirating again.
    Oh, damn thread resurrections lol Glad everything worked out



  5. #20
    i n v i s i b l e Tech Admin o_O's Avatar
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    Were you torrenting a really large amount of stuff? In New Zealand, the ISPs don't really care about copyright infringement. They care about large numbers of customers with massive bandwidth users, choking out the exchanges and making network traffic congested and slow for everyone else. Torrenting places a heavy strain on the network infrastructure, so this can be a real issue around peak times.

    Unless the company's getting pressured by the film/music industry or government or something, I'd guess it's not even about the copyright infringement, but rather the volume of data you're using.

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