• 'Six strikes' piracy crackdown begins
    9 replies, posted
[url]http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-21591696#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa[/url]
How are they planning on doing this detection? I don't think deep search would be considered legal as its basically a privacy breach.
[QUOTE=JohnnyOnFlame;39725765]How are they planning on doing this detection? I don't think deep search would be considered legal as its basically a privacy breach.[/QUOTE] Copyright holders go into BitTorrent networks and grab a list of ip's and verify the content is theirs. They then report it to the ISP who then sends out the warnings.
Oh boy.
Is there an ISP list? Because I'm getting more and more annoyed by how intrusive ISPs are getting by stalking our internet usage
[QUOTE=Map in a box;39727780]Is there an ISP list? Because I'm getting more and more annoyed by how intrusive ISPs are getting by stalking our internet usage[/QUOTE] It's basically every major ISP in the entire USA.
This bugs me and I don't even pirate stuff. I wonder how many false-positives will be given out with this system...
so space engine and linux are now illegal?? [editline]27th February 2013[/editline] or do they actually check whats torrented
[QUOTE=Muthenfrucheir;39729350]so space engine and linux are now illegal?? [editline]27th February 2013[/editline] or do they actually check whats torrented[/QUOTE] They only check torrents that contain content they own.
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