Inside the Shadow Internet
Paladin144 writes "Wired has a report about the mysterious 'pirate networks' that obtain new movies, music & games before they are released and spread them throughout the net. It's not as simple as putting a movie on LimeWire. These people are highly organized and very paranoid about secrecy. They maintain a hidden network of top-level FTP sites that get the best files first and allow them to trickle down the pyramid and into many a slashdotter's sweaty little fingers."
you all.
You insensitive clod, I have hyperhidrosis!
my name is moses
you betta know this
That's my line.
yhttfp. yhl. if, yfi. hand! S.
(You have tried to First Post. You have lost. In fact, you fail it! "Sucka".)
In closing, I will now go play video games for several hours!
is that it's people like these that caused so many problems for our friends at Valve
If valve want to continue with this steam activation shit on an online game, they can go fuck themselves. Good on the crackers for pissing off that excuse for a deceloper.
Moses? The guy who parted the sea?
More like the guy who parted his butt cheeks and got what was coming to him!
In closing, yhttfp. yhl. if, yfi. s. See above.
I for one welcome our secret 'pirate network' over lords.
With all of the RIAA/MPAA crap going on lately, how else am I going to get my illegal copies of the 'Hamster Dance' MP3?
So that's what George W. Bush meant by "internets"... he's part of it and he let it slip out!
As far as I can tell, this story was about (or planted in support of) a P2P-distributed miniseries called "The Scene". Sponsored by Sony, this fake docudrama takes a member of one of these 0-day groups from someone who just wants to share, to someone getting paid to supply DVD pirates with video, and probably eventually to his being caught and prosecuted.
You may flame me for saying this but i really like the steam network, i personally bought Half-life 2 in retail and had some troubles getting it to work (took 4 hours).
Still i think the steam network works and is a great way to store your games and have access to them from anywhere. I do have one thing that worries me and that is when valve decides to shutdown the steam servers or remove some games, those games will then be unplayable without some sort of release from valve or some sort of crack. Also i feel sorry for those people that would like to play HL2, who dosnt have internet access, i think valve should have done something for those people.
Summary: IMO the steam network is a good idea but HL2 should be able to run without it like the original HL.
VHEMT rocks.
...especially Apple
I've been around a while and that's the first time I've ever seen that. Very interesting.
In Korea the normal internet is for old people.
How do you find out there's a _good_ copy and what its name is?