Author Topic: Copyright Alert System - is this a loving joke?  (Read 3917 times)

The only people we have to play are the pirates. I can guarentee you guys that several people on here are pirates.

I use Midcontinent, a comcast wannabe, however they don't really care about torrents and stuff.




Quote from: website
Cablevision
Dammit...

They try to make me watch a video
 *Turns off monitor and walks away for a few minutes

« Last Edit: February 23, 2013, 03:52:26 PM by Rainzx¹ »

This is bullstuff. Land of the free?

AND THE HOME OF THE BRAVE.

Dammit...

They try to make me watch a video
 *Turns off monitor and walks away for a few minutes


I don't think that they are allowed to force you to watch any videos. And you might be able to block them.

Guys, read. This only applies to when you upload copyrighted stuff.

I don't think that they are allowed to force you to watch any videos. And you might be able to block them.
I think they will force you to a website and redirect you if you try to load something else
Until your done watching the video at least

they havent even thought this through. I could just access a neighbours open wi-fi and upload illegal files and get their internet bottlenecked. Great idea guys

brb going to mcdonalds to upload movies kidding, of course

Guys, read. This only applies to when you upload copyrighted stuff.

I think it's both, upload and download.


But this;

Code: [Select]
Of course, there are plenty of ways for people to prevent being monitored by copyright holders. BitTorrent proxies and VPN services are the most likely option here. These services replace a user’s home IP-address with one provided by the proxy service, making it impossible for tracking companies to identify who is doing the file-sharing.

Also, those who download through Usenet, cyberlockers or other non-P2P services can not be monitored by the copyright alert system at all.
From http://torrentfreak.com/six-strikes-anti-piracy-scheme-starts-monday-130223/

they havent even thought this through. I could just access a neighbours open wi-fi and upload illegal files and get their internet bottlenecked. Great idea guys

brb going to mcdonalds to upload movies kidding, of course
I was thinking the same thing


I wonder if this would apply to my youtube videos
I never have copyrighted material in them

But they always say I do and a few days later take off the copyright notice


How can we watch an educational video when it needs to buffer every five seconds?
« Last Edit: February 23, 2013, 04:04:10 PM by Rainzx¹ »

What the forget is this bull stuff?

"Tamper" my internet speeds and make me watch an educational video?

Only your own faults for pirating things.