Guys Guys, I got this, chill. Hold my beer while I end piracy, it'll be a thing of the past by this time next year, and in 10 years kids will ask what it was and why we waited so long to fix it.
We'll have to tell them it's because I'm a lazy noobish coder and did every step the wrong way 100 times before I got it right. Fucking learning curves, and here I never even learned straight lines.
16 Replies - 1422 Views - Last Post: 21 October 2012 - 05:52 PM
#17
Re: MarkMonitor: Coming on line.
Posted 21 October 2012 - 05:52 PM
I've gotten notices like this from my ISP. A lot of questions were raised in the household, as we have a ton of people on the Internet, and by a ton I mean about 4 Xbox's, 3 desktops, and 8 laptops. So nobody wanted to admit to it because you could easily place the blame on another.
Anyways, after doing research from many other "pirates" that got these notices, you'll find that they only monitor you for a little bit after the notice to see if you're continuing the pirating. After that, you can continue. We chose not to.
I believe this is more of a scare tactic. With so many consumers pirating these days, you can't feasibly monitor every single one. Like it says, it only goes for the average consumer. The average consumer would be someone who doesn't use a good client, proxies, VPNs, etc. I really don't think this will help at all. There simply isn't a way to stop the P2P sharing of music, movies, games, and the like. There's too many people, and too little enforcers.
Anyways, after doing research from many other "pirates" that got these notices, you'll find that they only monitor you for a little bit after the notice to see if you're continuing the pirating. After that, you can continue. We chose not to.
I believe this is more of a scare tactic. With so many consumers pirating these days, you can't feasibly monitor every single one. Like it says, it only goes for the average consumer. The average consumer would be someone who doesn't use a good client, proxies, VPNs, etc. I really don't think this will help at all. There simply isn't a way to stop the P2P sharing of music, movies, games, and the like. There's too many people, and too little enforcers.

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