Author Topic: Internet service providers to act against online piracy by reducing bandwidth  (Read 4440 times)

Offline Kyrdua

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I'm not sure if i understand what you're trying to say here.
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ooh, now i see your point. though that probably is a particularly weak argument given most websites are meant to be downloaded an distributed "for free".

If films are distributed for free they probably won't give a damn if it gets pirated because they won't lose the money they're not even getting. with that said, they have a good reason to be pissed off but i believe that's exaggerated. with all the DRM crap they put in paid stuff, it makes the pirated copies more appealing.
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Offline Bob2004

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I was reading SwissVPN's general terms and conditions and it really seems like they don't try to protect their clients at all.


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I'm not sure how relevant that particular document you've linked is. Monzoon Networks are a company who mainly provide Data centre hosting to companies, and those T&Cs are just general ones which apply to all their customers (SwissVPN is just run through a server in their data centre). They also provide wireless hotspot services in Switzerland, which seems to be what those T&Cs were originally written for.

On their main website, they say they don't collect any personal information from their network, and since the only information they have on you is your email address and Paypal details (since that's all they ask for), even if in the worst case scenario an anti-piracy company tried to make them hand over your details, they don't really have anything anyway. And Switzerland is pretty good for data protection, so it's unlikely any anti-piracy companies would be able to make them hand anything over even if they tried.

Besides, all that document says is that they take no responsibility for data passed through their network, and that they'll terminate your access if you're caught doing anything illegal. It's probably only there to cover their back in case someone tries to sue them because of something that was done using their services. It definitely doesn't say anything about not protecting their client's personal information; after all, their whole SwissVPN business depends on keeping user's details private. If they released them without putting up a fight, their reputation would be ruined.

Offline Freedom Kira

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ooh, now i see your point. though that probably is a particularly weak argument given most websites are meant to be downloaded an distributed "for free".

If films are distributed for free they probably won't give a damn if it gets pirated because they won't lose the money they're not even getting. with that said, they have a good reason to be pissed off but i believe that's exaggerated. with all the DRM crap they put in paid stuff, it makes the pirated copies more appealing.

Nah, the point was the word "copyright" that they keep using. Films aren't any more special than what a random person decides to write in his blog - everything is copyrighted. It's just that people who make films want to make money off of it, and the blogger doesn't. But that doesn't mean that the blogger's productions aren't copyrighted.

If you ask me, I can't think of a better word, aside from maybe "licensed." "Copyright" would be a word that's overused in that respect.

Offline tomoya-kun

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My ISP doesn't throttle torrents or monitor me as far as I know, I download hundreds of gigs of stuff each month.


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Offline eNomineZerum

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I will have to see is Suddenlink cuts my connection back. I have a 10Mb down with 1Mb up. uTorrent shows my downloads can sustain 1.2MB down and 120kB up. Anyway, I have been hitting the net pretty hard for the past few days since I have been on vacation and have yet to see my speeds drop. I can't wait to see my total monthly usage because Suddenlink believes that 43 Gigabytes is the amount that I should use, I can account for 20+ on Xbox Live and Youtube alone.

Offline temuchin

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for a while i have been using seed-boxes and downloading from there via SFTP.

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Offline Proin Drakenzol

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So ISPs are flat out stating that they're either violating your privacy or reducing service on base suspicion without any sort of evidence.

So either way they'll be violating something.

I smell a lawsuit in the making.

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Offline tomoya-kun

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I will have to see is Suddenlink cuts my connection back. I have a 10Mb down with 1Mb up. uTorrent shows my downloads can sustain 1.2MB down and 120kB up. Anyway, I have been hitting the net pretty hard for the past few days since I have been on vacation and have yet to see my speeds drop. I can't wait to see my total monthly usage because Suddenlink believes that 43 Gigabytes is the amount that I should use, I can account for 20+ on Xbox Live and Youtube alone.

43 is your cap?


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Offline Tegh

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So ISPs are flat out stating that they're either violating your privacy or reducing service on base suspicion without any sort of evidence.

So either way they'll be violating something.

I smell a lawsuit in the making.

Unfortunately brudda, it'd be hard to sue them.  Not that they shouldn't be, they should, but the government is retarded when it comes to the magical internet!  Companies can employ dirty tricks to almost do whatever they want at the moment, and the only people that should have a "problem" with them are the bad guys AKA p2p users... All the company will do upon a grievance is point at the fake smoking gun, and discredit the person arguing because they must have done something wrong to begin with.

That's why we should build our own internet instead, with blackjack and hookers!  In fact screw the internet!
Huh?

Offline Proin Drakenzol

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So ISPs are flat out stating that they're either violating your privacy or reducing service on base suspicion without any sort of evidence.

So either way they'll be violating something.

I smell a lawsuit in the making.

Unfortunately brudda, it'd be hard to sue them.  Not that they shouldn't be, they should, but the government is retarded when it comes to the magical internet!  Companies can employ dirty tricks to almost do whatever they want at the moment, and the only people that should have a "problem" with them are the bad guys AKA p2p users... All the company will do upon a grievance is point at the fake smoking gun, and discredit the person arguing because they must have done something wrong to begin with.

That's why we should build our own internet instead, with blackjack and hookers!  In fact screw the internet!

^5

The linear nature of your Euclidean geometry both confounds and befuddles me.

Online Tiffanys

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I was reading SwissVPN's general terms and conditions and it really seems like they don't try to protect their clients at all.


(click to show/hide)

I'm not sure how relevant that particular document you've linked is. Monzoon Networks are a company who mainly provide Data centre hosting to companies, and those T&Cs are just general ones which apply to all their customers (SwissVPN is just run through a server in their data centre). They also provide wireless hotspot services in Switzerland, which seems to be what those T&Cs were originally written for.

On their main website, they say they don't collect any personal information from their network, and since the only information they have on you is your email address and Paypal details (since that's all they ask for), even if in the worst case scenario an anti-piracy company tried to make them hand over your details, they don't really have anything anyway. And Switzerland is pretty good for data protection, so it's unlikely any anti-piracy companies would be able to make them hand anything over even if they tried.

Besides, all that document says is that they take no responsibility for data passed through their network, and that they'll terminate your access if you're caught doing anything illegal. It's probably only there to cover their back in case someone tries to sue them because of something that was done using their services. It definitely doesn't say anything about not protecting their client's personal information; after all, their whole SwissVPN business depends on keeping user's details private. If they released them without putting up a fight, their reputation would be ruined.

But... wouldn't Paypal hand over your info?

Although, I do know the Swiss have the best protection of any country over their net. It's not enough to suspect someone of a crime. They have to be able to prove you would do jail time if proven guilty before they even have any merit whatsoever. A fine isn't enough.

Offline kitamesume

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sue them for extortion and state this line "they've kept billing me for higher than what i should pay and reducing the service that i`m paying for."

proof is your bill, you get a 100$ a month plan and get a bill of 140$? that 40$ is your plain proof, if they say those are additional fees then bitch slap them their paper and state this line "i want my 100$ a month plan, not some shitty 140$ a month plan."

plus if they'd declare that that 40$ is for the "per gb" bill then state this line "that 'per gb' is non-existent and unstated on your advertisement and your services, should i include another fact that you're providing the public with false advertisement?"

ohh and if you do win, ask for a lifetime free internet, if thats not possible, ask a refund for the months/years you've been paying including that shitty 40$ additional "fees".
« Last Edit: July 24, 2011, 12:10:59 PM by kitamesume »

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Offline Tegh

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sue them for extortion and state this line "they've kept billing me for higher than what i should pay and reducing the service that i`m paying for."

proof is your bill, you get a 100$ a month plan and get a bill of 140$? that 40$ is your plain proof, if they say those are additional fees then bitch slap them their paper and state this line "i want my 100$ a month plan, not some shitty 140$ a month plan."

plus if they'd declare that that 40$ is for the "per gb" bill then state this line "that 'per gb' is non-existent and unstated on your advertisement and your services, should i include another fact that you're providing the public with false advertisement?"

ohh and if you do win, ask for a lifetime free internet, if thats not possible, ask a refund for the months/years you've been paying including that shitty 40$ additional "fees".

Read some of the "Terms and Conditions" from the ISPs.  Trust me there is more then a one clause on most of them that allow them to increase rates for certain reasons.  You have to agree to those terms before using their service, even if it's the only one around, therefore...your plan wouldn't work. 

Plus the companies can afford to pay the lawyer fees to jerk your chain around for the next 4 years (because they now get even MORE money from ppl that don't know better), but a normal person can't afford the battle.  While i hate how that all works out...you're better off paying the 40 then the 50K, just saying!
Huh?

Offline kitamesume

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true true, you can only win this fight if you could prove that their service is incompetent and the advertised speed is falsified(this includes the caps where most of them says its "unlimited" but caps your speed horribly). sadly the government does not know how to handle such a case plus the evidence gathered can be considered as forged or falsified, making it hard to find a solid evidence. you`ll need to hack into their database and steal their information from there.

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Offline Meomix

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sue them for extortion and state this line "they've kept billing me for higher than what i should pay and reducing the service that i`m paying for."

proof is your bill, you get a 100$ a month plan and get a bill of 140$? that 40$ is your plain proof, if they say those are additional fees then bitch slap them their paper and state this line "i want my 100$ a month plan, not some shitty 140$ a month plan."

plus if they'd declare that that 40$ is for the "per gb" bill then state this line "that 'per gb' is non-existent and unstated on your advertisement and your services, should i include another fact that you're providing the public with false advertisement?"

ohh and if you do win, ask for a lifetime free internet, if thats not possible, ask a refund for the months/years you've been paying including that shitty 40$ additional "fees".

Read some of the "Terms and Conditions" from the ISPs.  Trust me there is more then a one clause on most of them that allow them to increase rates for certain reasons.  You have to agree to those terms before using their service, even if it's the only one around, therefore...your plan wouldn't work.  

Plus the companies can afford to pay the lawyer fees to jerk your chain around for the next 4 years (because they now get even MORE money from ppl that don't know better), but a normal person can't afford the battle.  While i hate how that all works out...you're better off paying the 40 then the 50K, just saying!

Pfft i'd rather complete the darknet than put up with that shit.
Did you know Satan was supposedly gods RIGHT HAND MAN, not his left. Blows your theory out of the water now doesn't it.

Offline Tegh

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Pfft i'd rather complete the darknet than put up with that shit.

Exactly!  It's a losing battle to fight against the established ISP, so...make your own lol.  Solution solved, until you turn out to be the same dick selling access to your network and raping uneducated users.  (Come on they are a company and out to make money, while i hate them...got to admit they are doing their job of making money well *shrug*)
Huh?

Offline BlackPages

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In times like these, I'm SO happy I live in Romania. Nobody gives a damn, last time anyone got in trouble, be it major, or minor (such as this internet cap), was a couple of years ago.

Offline tomoya-kun

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Pfft i'd rather complete the darknet than put up with that shit.

Exactly!  It's a losing battle to fight against the established ISP, so...make your own lol.  Solution solved, until you turn out to be the same dick selling access to your network and raping uneducated users.  (Come on they are a company and out to make money, while i hate them...got to admit they are doing their job of making money well *shrug*)

Or you can be nice, like my ISP is pretty nice, no complaining against torrets, they give me FASTER THAN LISTED speeds by DOUBLE.


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Offline Tegh

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Pfft i'd rather complete the darknet than put up with that shit.

Exactly!  It's a losing battle to fight against the established ISP, so...make your own lol.  Solution solved, until you turn out to be the same dick selling access to your network and raping uneducated users.  (Come on they are a company and out to make money, while i hate them...got to admit they are doing their job of making money well *shrug*)

Or you can be nice, like my ISP is pretty nice, no complaining against torrets, they give me FASTER THAN LISTED speeds by DOUBLE.

Actually it depends on your business plan there, and the number of users you have.  If you are a company (like the ones in question) you really don't care too much about "will people use my product?"  Nine times out of ten they have a monopoly on certain areas.  Making that question useless, and therefore, customer service.

Granted, if i was going to establish an ISP, I'd start off being nice like that, to encourage a switch to my service.  Probably continue that way, until i crushed the competition and had the same monopoly they used to have.  (Kinda the history of things at present...)
Huh?

Offline tomoya-kun

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Pfft i'd rather complete the darknet than put up with that shit.

Exactly!  It's a losing battle to fight against the established ISP, so...make your own lol.  Solution solved, until you turn out to be the same dick selling access to your network and raping uneducated users.  (Come on they are a company and out to make money, while i hate them...got to admit they are doing their job of making money well *shrug*)

Or you can be nice, like my ISP is pretty nice, no complaining against torrets, they give me FASTER THAN LISTED speeds by DOUBLE.

Actually it depends on your business plan there, and the number of users you have.  If you are a company (like the ones in question) you really don't care too much about "will people use my product?"  Nine times out of ten they have a monopoly on certain areas.  Making that question useless, and therefore, customer service.

Granted, if i was going to establish an ISP, I'd start off being nice like that, to encourage a switch to my service.  Probably continue that way, until i crushed the competition and had the same monopoly they used to have.  (Kinda the history of things at present...)

The ISP I use buys bandwidth off of the main ISP wholesale and sells it for a lower price than the main ISP.


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