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9 votes
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Reddit’s /r/Piracy is deleting almost ten years of history to avoid ban
33 votes -
Science’s Pirate Queen
13 votes -
Nintendo makes it clear that piracy is the only way to preserve video game history
29 votes -
A nostalgic look back at digital music piracy in the 2000s
7 votes -
What are y'all's favorite (private?) trackers?
promise im probably not a fed
31 votes -
Nintendo awarded $12 million judgment against ROM site operators
24 votes -
Denuvo: Four years later
14 votes -
What happens when telecom companies search your home for piracy
18 votes -
The rise of Netflix competitors has pushed consumers back toward piracy
39 votes -
Discussion: Internet Piracy: ISPs tracking every your move
Sorry for the minor clickbait title Let's talk about ISPs in USA. In my personal opinion, they do so much "bad" things to their clients, as opposed to, most noticeably, Europe (I guess it's...
Sorry for the minor clickbait title
Let's talk about ISPs in USA. In my personal opinion, they do so much "bad" things to their clients, as opposed to, most noticeably, Europe (I guess it's because, (at least in my country, IDK about another European states) much bigger competition, even in village with 500 people, there are about 3-4 ISPs, but there are even more of them in bigger cities). They throttle websites (even before they destroyed Net Neutrality), they track that you use your network too much and throttle you because of it ("they may send you a warning for excessive internet usage and throttle your bandwidth for awhile.").
Now, they track that you download/upload too much and/or pirate movies and can throttle your account, downgrade your account, or completely refuse to provide you any service.
Why? Why are they allowed to do this? Why they can track users and throttle them just because they download too much (I've read article about it, downloading too much, ISPs slowing down internet for few hours, link soon) or they suspect you of pirating. How they dare intercept your packets, read them and throttle you because of this? Why is it wildly accepted as completely normal behaviour?
And I could continue on things like them publicly buying votes to remove Net Neutrality from the way, and so on.
I honestly do not know why so much people are OK with this. Could we start a discussion on this?
Throttling because of piracy sources: 1 2 3 4
Pre-NetNeutrality-End websites throttling: 1 229 votes -
Nobody gets sued for illegally downloading movies? Think again, Canada
28 votes -
An ISP based in Texas has complained to a judge that the music industry to trying to turn internet providers into the "copyright police"
16 votes -
Nintendo's war on ROMs threatens to destroy gaming history
8 votes -
What is Tildes' policy on piracy?
Decided to drop down here and quickly ask what is Tildes' policy on piracy. Namely, should we be openly discussing, linking, directing users towards pirated content? Is it something that's...
Decided to drop down here and quickly ask what is Tildes' policy on piracy. Namely, should we be openly discussing, linking, directing users towards pirated content? Is it something that's strictly forbidden?
Apologies if I'm missing something, but if there isn't a statement on this already then what do you guys think the policy should be?
18 votes -
Reddit user explains the "Strong anti-piracy measures implemented by Nintendo for online."
34 votes -
Today I finally beat being a digital pirate despite having to jump a big hurdle
The book Code Complete changed me as a programmer and as a person. It is the best book I have ever read and if you're a programmer I highly recommend you read it. The book was so good that after...
The book Code Complete changed me as a programmer and as a person. It is the best book I have ever read and if you're a programmer I highly recommend you read it.
The book was so good that after having read the pirated version of it I just had to give the author its money's worth. The problem was that almost nobody sells a PDF version of the book - Amazon sells it as a Kindle book, but I prefer PDFs (can use my chioce of software to read it). After searching for a short week I finally found a seller that sells a PDF version. I have never been so happy to find a legal PDF version of a book. Having been a pirate in my teens I'm proud of having gone to such lengths to the right thing. That's all. Just wanted to share this with you.
TL;DR: Instead of pirating a book because I didn't find a legal PDF version spent time searching for a seller and bought it legally.
25 votes -
This is how internet regulation can go really wrong
4 votes