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Pirate Bay To Offer VPN For $7 a Month

Death Metal sends along an Ars Technica piece about The Pirate Bay's plans for a virtual private network service to help ensure its users' privacy. "The Pirate Bay is planning to launch a paid VPN service for users looking to cover their tracks when torrenting. The new service will be called IPREDator, named after the Swedish Intellectual Property Rights Enforcement Directive (IPRED) that will go into effect in April. IPREDator is currently in private beta and is expected to go public next week for €5 per month. ... IPREDator's website says that it won't store any traffic data, as its entire goal is to help people stay anonymous on the web. Without any data to hand over, copyright owners won't be able to find individuals to target. ... The question remains, however, if any significant portion of The Pirate Bay's users will decide to fork over 5 Euro per month solely to remain anonymous. It seems more likely that the majority either won't care, or will simply start looking for lesser-known torrent trackers to use."

461 comments

  1. pirate bay by t3chn0n3rd · · Score: 1

    7 dollars a month for VPN. Can you get it cheaper somewhere else?

    1. Re:pirate bay by Qzukk · · Score: 5, Funny

      I'm sure there's a torrent somewhere...

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    2. Re:pirate bay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't they already start a VPN service called Relakks?

    3. Re:pirate bay by bluesatin · · Score: 1

      For people too lazy to google: https://www.relakks.com/

      I remember some news story saying the Piratebay guys started this up, but as per usual it was probably complete rubish.

    4. Re:pirate bay by leamanc · · Score: 4, Informative

      Hotspot Shield is free with ads.

      --
      :q!
    5. Re:pirate bay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been using Relakks & SwissVPN for a while now.

      The Relakks service isnt too bad. I've had a few days when its been unavailable & a while when it would disconnect very frequently but speeds aren't too bad (upto 600k/sec to a 24Mb DSL & 30Mb Cable service).

      SwissVPN is faster (upto 1.2Mb/sec) with fewer disconnects.

    6. Re:pirate bay by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      The folks at demonoid claim this will slow down your torrent downloads. Surely there must be a better solution. They suggest "stop downloading" which I find rather ironic considering their chosen trade. ;-) I guess you just need to be smarter - stop downloading movies less than a year old, as those are the warez most likely to be tracked by RIAA/MPAA.

      OFFTOPIC question -

      I just received my "2nd Notice of Copyright Infringement" for Burn After Reading and Evan Almighty. Does anyone know if Verizon DSL has a three-strike rule that might result in my suspension? If so I'm going to stop downloading movies completely (since today's movies are largely crap).

      L8r

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    7. Re:pirate bay by leamanc · · Score: 1

      I have used Hotspot Shield and didn't notice any slowdown in my torrenting speeds. YMMV, though.

      I don't know about a three-strike rule with Verizon, but I would start using something like PeerGuard or a VPN right away, unless you are really going to give up dl'ing torrents.

      --
      :q!
    8. Re:pirate bay by Mister+Whirly · · Score: 1

      Cox is the only provider that is willing to admit that they have a 3 strike rule, that I know of. Other providers may have secret 3 strike lists, but they aren't admitting it for the most part. Comcast has promised to work with the RIAA/MPAA in shutting down "habitual offenders", but they are the only ones I know of with a formal agreement.
      According to Wired, Verizon does not have a 3 strike rule.

      --
      "But this one goes to 11!"
    9. Re:pirate bay by Shark · · Score: 3, Informative

      For being on the receiving end of *AA complaints (Local ISP), I can tell you that they don't care how old the movie is.

      --
      Mind the frickin' laser...
    10. Re:pirate bay by homesnatch · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm sure someone will come out with a license code generator so you can get this free...

    11. Re:pirate bay by VinylRecords · · Score: 1

      Even if you can get it cheaper...this money goes to help The Pirate Bay keep operating costs up. And it's only $7 so it's not breaking the bank for me at least unlike rent in NYC.

      Also my DVR box is toast and I've been getting LOST from TPB for the last few weeks. I figure giving them a small donation of money for bandwidth is something I would do anyways and I now I get a VPN feature as well.

    12. Re:pirate bay by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      No the ISP doesn't care, but the MAFIAA are less likely to be tracking older movies or tv shows, so you won't get caught in the first place.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    13. Re:pirate bay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, Hotspot Shield turns over IP and user info in the event someone makes a copyright complaint.

      "We may disclose User information if required to do so by law, or in the good-faith belief that such action is necessary to comply with state and federal laws (such as U.S. Copyright law) or respond to a court order, judicial or other government subpoena, or warrant."

      You're welcome. :)

    14. Re:pirate bay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes but the people who run hotspot shield would hand over the users data if the courts request unlike the pirate bay where no records of activity are kept.

  2. Hmmmmm. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1, Insightful

    How do you maintain that you're not expressly in the business of circumventing copyright law (as they did in the recent trial) when you offer a paid service that really has no other function?

    Seems like a risky strategy.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    1. Re:Hmmmmm. by tritonman · · Score: 2, Funny

      those wacky europeans do not yet understand how capitalism works.

    2. Re:Hmmmmm. by Reason58 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How do you maintain that you're not expressly in the business of circumventing copyright law (as they did in the recent trial) when you offer a paid service that really has no other function?

      Your statement is akin to saying that you must be guilty of something, since you refuse to let law enforcement search through your house whenever they feel like it.

    3. Re:Hmmmmm. by MBGMorden · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'd expect it's like how bongs and other drug paraphernalia is legal in most areas while any logical use for the items is not. Running a business centered around providing your customers with all the tools necessary to break the law (even when it's obvious that this is your intention) isn't illegal so long as you yourself are not breaking any law.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    4. Re:Hmmmmm. by Yamamato · · Score: 1

      Yep, and Tor is only for child pornographers trying to circumvent being caught.

    5. Re:Hmmmmm. by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      There are many other functions of encryption besides copyright violation and child porn. Some may wish to encrypt just on general principle, many advocating encrypting all your emails, including "meet me at the local bar after work and I'll buy you a beer and we'll discuss the topic."

    6. Re:Hmmmmm. by Laglorden · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It has the function of maintaining your privacy. This is valuble for some people, not because they are breaking the law but because other people, corporations and governments have no business knowing who you are talking/mailing/communicating with in 99,99% of all cases.

    7. Re:Hmmmmm. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually, no, it's nothing like that.

      It's like being accused of being a drug dealer because people buy drugs off your site, and, in response, you offer a method for people to make private transactions.

      If you say, "hey, look, I just provide a service, I'm not telling people how to use it" then you might be able to get away with being effectively a middleman in an illegal transaction.

      But if your response is to provide a way of hiding those illegal transactions from law enforcement, you're much more likely to be nailed as an accomplice, especially when you're making money specifically off those hidden transactions.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    8. Re:Hmmmmm. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'd expect it's like how bongs and other drug paraphernalia is legal in most areas while any logical use for the items is not.

      First, define drug paraphernalia.
      Second, rolling paper, water bongs, etc. can be used with tobacco. By selling such items for use with tobacco, said items are not considered "drug paraphernalia" until they are used with marijuana. Thus, there is, in fact, a legal, logical use for such items.

      A chef's knife is not a deadly weapon until it is used as such. Until it is used as such it is a kitchen tool.
      A screwdriver or pry bar are not burglary tools until they are used to commit a burglary. Until they are, they are just tools.
       

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    9. Re:Hmmmmm. by MadnessASAP · · Score: 1

      I would suspect it's because the service is put their with the intention that you will use torrent through it and thus their bandwith costs are going to be significantly higher.

      --
      I may agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to face the consequences of saying it.
    10. Re:Hmmmmm. by wastedlife · · Score: 1

      Tell that to the old Napster.

      --
      Said, "It's just like dice but it's got more sides And it tells me who lives and who dies"
    11. Re:Hmmmmm. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 0

      Encryption is fine. Encryption + TPB is shady, since the vast majority of traffic from the site is illegal in most countries.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    12. Re:Hmmmmm. by Sloppy · · Score: 4, Informative

      It's like being accused of being a drug dealer because people buy drugs off your site, and, in response, you offer a method for people to make private transactions.

      While it's a sure thing that such a thing would be used for people buying drugs, seriously, I would expect this to also widen that drugdealer's market to include more than just drug buyers. A useful tool is a useful tool.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    13. Re:Hmmmmm. by merchant_x · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You seem to be operating under the assumption that the only purpose for offering/using a VPN is to engage in copyright infringement.

    14. Re:Hmmmmm. by CannonballHead · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Let's assume, for the purpose of this post, that something someone is torrenting is illegal.

      TPB is coming out with a paid service to keep you from being caught.

      Let's assume you are, I don't know... doing illegal drugs. It doesn't matter if you think it should or shouldn't be illegal to do them, it's illegal in your hypothetical situation that I put you in ;) I come out with a paid "service" (say, a very dark alley that is guarded) to help keep you from being caught in your illegal [drug using] activities.

      I'm pretty sure that's, at the very last, something to do with aiding/abetting and is usually considered illegal. Just because all you did was "drive the getaway car" doesn't mean you're not an accomplice.

    15. Re:Hmmmmm. by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How do you maintain that you're not expressly in the business of circumventing copyright law (as they did in the recent trial) when you offer a paid service that really has no other function?

      Other function: Downloading materials which are necessary to promote freedom but which could be considered seditious or even treasonous. Understanding the substantial non-infringing use for encryption? YOU FAIL IT! Next you must advocate the banning of halloween masks, since no one would ever want to mask their identity except for nefarious purposes, or you only prove that you don't understand the issue - since they are both the same thing. There is no freedom without anonymity.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    16. Re:Hmmmmm. by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      So the use of a VPN has no other function than IP infringement?

      Please have them sue IBM,Comcast,AT&T,AIG,and every other large company fort then please.

      They are advertising it as a way to be online anonymously NOT for IP infringement. you know like if you are writing about how wacked out the Talaban leaders are and dont want to be beheaded, or surfing fish porn that is illegal in Scandinavia, etc....

       

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    17. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because all you did was "drive the getaway car" doesn't mean you're not an accomplice.

      Yes, but if you're just the person who sold the car, you can hardly be help responsible.

    18. Re:Hmmmmm. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      What's the use of it? Slow down your downloads for an extra 7 bucks a month? Sounds like a waste to me, unless you're downloading something that could get you in trouble.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    19. Re:Hmmmmm. by bernywork · · Score: 1

      Umm, Australia is looking at web filters, people under oppressive governments, ability to use it to remotely test hosted services.

      Freedom of speach and other technical reasons are pretty good reasons to invest in a VPN.

      --
      Curiosity was framed; ignorance killed the cat. -- Author unknown
    20. Re:Hmmmmm. by mdm-adph · · Score: 1

      Doesn't seem too unusual in a post 9/11 world -- what's your point?

      --
      It is by my will alone my thoughts acquire motion; it is by the juice of the coffee bean that the thoughts acquire speed
    21. Re:Hmmmmm. by Gonarat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'd expect it's like how bongs and other drug paraphernalia is legal in most areas while any logical use for the items is not. Running a business centered around providing your customers with all the tools necessary to break the law (even when it's obvious that this is your intention) isn't illegal so long as you yourself are not breaking any law.

      Tell that to Tommy Chong. He may disagree with you on that one...

      Not that I agree with what happened to him (I think it is despicable), but that's the U.S. Government for you.

      Hopefully TPB will be okay because the VPN can be used to bypass censorship on the net (or least can be advertised as being as such) -- if you happen to have your Torrents running through it, oh well, shit happens...also they are not in the USA...

      --
      Beware of Sleestak
    22. Re:Hmmmmm. by PIBM · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, the traffic from TPB site is not illegal in most country I would say. There is no parts of the transfer of any copyrighted material going through TPB so far ..

    23. Re:Hmmmmm. by Propaganda13 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Dammit, I knew my company was up to something. Always making me use vpn to log into work. I'm reporting them for copyright infringement.

    24. Re:Hmmmmm. by bluesatin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Bear in mind the "You shouldn't be hiding anything if you're innocent" mindset leads to a lot of privacy invasions.

    25. Re:Hmmmmm. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      That's the whole point! They maintain that they're doing nothing wrong and have nothing illegal on their site...But they're offering a VPN connection so that the people who use it to download Linux distros can do it without evil gov't spying? Come on.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    26. Re:Hmmmmm. by Bj�rn · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Rather interestingly one the founders of the Pirate Bay, Gottfrid Svartholm Warg, registered a site for selling the drug GBL. GBL is converted by the body into GHB, sometimes referred to as "the date rape drug". Svartholm also registered a site for selling the drug Fenazepam. When asked about this he replied (roughly translated): "We register domains for customers who don't wish to be visible and we protect their anonymity".

      --
      Never express yourself more clearly than you are able to think. --Niels Bohr
    27. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously, who the fuck actually uses water bongs with tobacco?

    28. Re:Hmmmmm. by fredklein · · Score: 1

      Thus, there is, in fact, a legal, logical use for such items.

      And there are no legal, logical uses for a VPN??

    29. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am looking for a similar service just so my own government doesn't see what I am browsing. Why should they have a right to know?

      A guy http://extradition.org.uk/ is being extradited from the UK to the US for selling chemicals that are perfectly legal to sell in the UK, allegedly as part of a Meth ring in the states.

    30. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Imagine that, a hosting company (which PRQ is) that registers domains for their customers!!! Some of the customers them might even do immoral things... Shocking!

    31. Re:Hmmmmm. by QRDeNameland · · Score: 3, Funny

      Just because all you did was "drive the getaway car" doesn't mean you're not an accomplice.

      About time someone's analogy included a car...

      --
      Momentarily, the need for the construction of new light will no longer exist.
    32. Re:Hmmmmm. by dargaud · · Score: 2, Informative

      Seriously, who the fuck actually uses water bongs with tobacco?

      I once smoked tobacco through a traditional narghile and it is actually enjoyable: there's no smoke so it doesn't feel like you are trying to breathe through a forest fire, tar and most cancer crap stays in water and the nicotine kick is powerful (but I'm not a smoker). Apparently a lot of people use those for tobacco (which needs to be of a special kind for best enjoyment).

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    33. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This has plenty of other function, the most relevant of which is "I don't want people watching me".

      It's the same way people complain that they don't want public surveillance cameras put up. The authority's response is always "If you're not doing anything wrong, then it shouldn't bother you". Well maybe that's true, but people are still bothered by it. Offering this type of service is just a way to offer a little resistance to (excuse the cliche) Big Brother.

    34. Re:Hmmmmm. by nine-times · · Score: 5, Informative

      I wouldn't even argue this issue, but instead reject the premise out of hand, since it is not "a paid service that really has no other function". There are other functions for VPN other than copyright infringement

      First, assuming you trust TPB (which is your choice) there are security benefits to encrypting traffic through their VPN. It means that if you're on an untrusted Internet connection, you can encrypt your otherwise unencrypted traffic through this tunnel. So if I hop onto a WiFi network without being sure whether the person running that network is trying to capture my traffic for some reason, the VPN blocks that.

      Of course, on the other side of the issue, you have to trust TPB to not be spying on you, and what happens when that traffic leave TBP is a different issue.

      Further, there are lots of reasons to want to anonymize Internet traffic. Only a subset of those reasons are illegal, and only a subset of those are illegal copyright infringement. But still, there are legal reasons to what to be anonymous. For example, political or industrial whistleblowers who want to avoid retaliation. Or, on the slightly less noble (though still legal) side of things, there's not wanting your ISP to have a record of your porn-viewing habits.

      Regardless, I don't think TPB would claim to have no part of circumventing copyright law anyway. Maybe I'm wrong, but I thought their argument was just that they weren't the ones violating copyright, but were only providing an open forum (so to speak) that was sometimes used for copyright violations. There are actually trackers for legal torrents on TPB too. You could definitely argue that offering a place for users to exchange torrents and a service to anonymize traffic are as morally/legally neutral as the Internet itself, and that what users choose to do with those services is a different matter.

    35. Re:Hmmmmm. by Laglorden · · Score: 1

      Oh, please stop using strange analogies, it's not helping, it's only confusing the issue.

      Doing illegal drugs is not file sharing.
      A "dark guarded alley" is not VPN.

      You even managed to squeeze in som kind of car analogy there :)

    36. Re:Hmmmmm. by Sloppy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What's the use of it?

      Anything for which you want to frustrate 3rd party traffic analysis. For example, you can send me an encrypted email whose contents other people can't read, but your ISP (or someone pressuring them) can see that you connected to my SMTP server.

      Encryption obscures the "what" from 3rd parties, but sometimes you want to obscure the "who". A VPN service is one way to make things more complicated. Now the person spying on you just knows you conversed with TPB. If they weren't already watching me, then they don't know who TPB relayed to.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    37. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your analogy fails completely because the sort of file sharing we are talking about is hardly ever a criminal offence; it is a civil matter.
      'Aiding and abetting' only applies to criminal matters.

    38. Re:Hmmmmm. by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      Since when is a VPN gateway anything like a torrent tracker?

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
    39. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like a waste to me, unless you're downloading something that could get you in trouble.

      Oh no, not something that could get you in trouble!

      Some things that "could get you in trouble" need protection. Whistleblowing and political dissent come to mind.

    40. Re:Hmmmmm. by Colonel+Korn · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Seriously, what is the sole purpose of Pirate Bay?

      Share Linux distros or share copyrighted material?

      You can yell "can be used for legal purposes" or "cannot be proven" or whatnot until your face is blue, but will not change the truth.

      It turns out there's no "sole purpose" of TPB. 80% of their torrents are legal, but probably the majority of traffic is not. To some people the most important purpose of TPB is to force a showdown that might help to change unjust laws.

      --
      "I zero-index my hamsters" - Willtor (147206)
    41. Re:Hmmmmm. by billcopc · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The difference is TPB is not an American company. They're not bound by American laws and money. What has permitted TPB to exist in the first place is their country's relaxed copyright laws (vs the U.S.).

      They've also been operating the world's largest public tracker for YEARS, longer than anyone else. They are largely responsible for the success of BitTorrent as a protocol, by making it freely accessible to anyone and everyone without discrimination. It doesn't matter whether you're a kid in a basement, or a big business or artist joining the movement, TPB is there and you can make use of its service.

      Say what you will about the copyright issue, there's no hiding the fact that a large portion of their site is used for software piracy, but it is leading people to ponder and discuss these issues, which is more than any MAFIAA drone has ever accomplished with greedy lawsuits and gag orders.

      There is no question at all that copyright infringement is a crime, and TPB's founders don't argue that point at all. What they're fighting is the current implementation of copyright law, which they consider over-reaching and extortive. It is their highly-effective form of civil disobedience, and they've extended an invitation to the entire BitTorrent community to join the cause.

      The fact that they can stand trial and actually put up a good fight, should be at least partial proof that what they are doing has some legitimacy. If you really want to fight piracy, go beat up the guy selling DVDRs on the street corner... that guy's just in it for himself.

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
    42. Re:Hmmmmm. by aztracker1 · · Score: 1

      No it's akin to suing a mall in a seedy neighborhood because drug dealers have transactions there, and then renting anyone a private room to do their transactions.

      --
      Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
    43. Re:Hmmmmm. by tecnico.hitos · · Score: 1

      It's like being accused of being a drug dealer because people buy drugs off your site, and, in response, you offer a method for people to make private transactions.

      If you mean "buying from their site" in eBay-like way this is an accurate comparison, otherwise it is misleading, since the users are the actual responsibles for the "drug sales".

      --
      The good, the evil and the vacuum tubes.
    44. Re:Hmmmmm. by jank1887 · · Score: 1

      didn't the old Napster actually host copyrighted material? or was that mp3.com?

    45. Re:Hmmmmm. by DMalic · · Score: 1

      Are you serious!? The ability to transfer large amounts of data anonymously is critical. Look at the wiki sites that are being harassed simply for posting instances of censorship (wikileaks). Sure, it's not that difficult to spread those, but what about bigger files like movies of detainee abuse, chinese abuse of the tibetan monks?

    46. Re:Hmmmmm. by jank1887 · · Score: 1

      the point is that you won't be able to tell one way or the other.

    47. Re:Hmmmmm. by DMalic · · Score: 1

      The sole purpose of the pirate bay for me personally is so that businesses and individuals can leverage the power of peer to peer networking in order to cost cost-effectively transfer game updates and other products which are either not protected by copyright or licensed appropriately to me. How's that?

    48. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Actually , none of the traffic of that site is illegal : TPB doesn't send you copyrighted material , it merely links to it , like google does.

      So by your logic , i shouldn't be allowed to visit google using a VPN.

    49. Re:Hmmmmm. by DMalic · · Score: 1

      The point was badly phrased. Rather, there is no common legitimate use for these products, unlike the Pirate Bay, which does have common legitimate uses (even if they are overshadowed by illegitimate uses.)

    50. Re:Hmmmmm. by iiiears · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The Pirate Bay is a search engine for files hosted using a specific protocol. The bittorrent protocol is the most innovative use of cooperative distributed storage. Not new it has been around for about a decade. Bandwidth efficient? no. The ISP each of us purchases services from hate it.

        The bittorrent protocol offers the individual the otherwise impossible opportunity to "publish" works larger than a web page and reach a wide audience. Encryption is just another advancement along the way towards greater control for creators of content. You read that right.
        In time there will be a very similar protocol that provides for encrypted key servers to enable the content we have purchased from small in (business terms) content creators. It should sound very familiar. Encrypting content and purchasing keys isn't in any way innovative. The problems inherent in encryption won't be solved by anyone but some questions will find answers.
      Certainly the Bittorrent protocol or one like it is worth safeguarding.

      The questions asked in this trial will find easy answers.
        Obviously ownership of copyrights is easily solvable but, other seemingly intractable questions remain.

        Freedom of information in search engines.

        Freedom to use and definition of, non standard internet protocols including encrypted protocols.

        Jurisdiction and definitions of free trade across borders.
      After all is said and done which government will receive tax money from creators and purchasers of content. Taxes are inevitable.

        What organization will define copyrights.

        How can encryption be both secure and open to examination by individuals and governments.

        These questions will put individual internet users at a disadvantage and vex lawmakers, judges and mathematicians for decades.

        Technology often provides more questions even in mundane uses than answers.

      --
      15TW = 15,000 Nuclear Reactors. (Approx. one accident a month.)
    51. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can i get a citation on the 80% figure?

    52. Re:Hmmmmm. by wastedlife · · Score: 1

      I believe you are thinking of mp3.com. Napster was found liable of the following:

      (1) That its users were directly infringing the plaintiff's copyright; (2) That Napster was liable for contributory infringement of the plaintiff's copyright; and (3) That Napster was liable for vicarious infringement of the plaintiff's copyright.

      From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Napster#Legal_challenges

      --
      Said, "It's just like dice but it's got more sides And it tells me who lives and who dies"
    53. Re:Hmmmmm. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Name some legal, logical uses for a VPN connection to Pirate Bay, with current, valid examples.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    54. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      80 percent of facts you see on the 'Net are just an echo of something you already read on the 'Net?

    55. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do your own homework on this. Just think about what you asked for: something that cannot exists as it varies hour by hour wildly. So:

      (1) Visit the pirate bay. Do some browsing (NOT searches). Start to count the torrents you find that are in violation of copyright against those that are not.
      (2) Report back to us: The number of violations, the number of non-violations and also the total torrents you counted. Graphs would be nice.
      (3) ...
      (4) PROFIT!

    56. Re:Hmmmmm. by Chyeld · · Score: 4, Informative

      It's from the trial. One of the TPB admins did a survey of a portion of the torrents they had and went through and categorized which he considered legitimate traffic and which wasn't. 80% were legitimate.

    57. Re:Hmmmmm. by guruevi · · Score: 1

      Wrong (as all the other ones here). It's not illegal to do certain drugs in certain countries (Netherlands, Venezuela). It's the same as providing a party house in those countries and then people proceed to do drugs there, then you get sued in the US as a non-US-citizen for having a business on non-US soil where people do things that are illegal according to US law.

      It's the same as any dance club or bar anywhere in the world (whether it's in the US or not). Certain activities people do in those clubs are well known (whether it be doing drugs, drunkenness, fornication - which is still a criminal offence in the US and elsewhere). However you can't sue the owner of the establishment because people paid an entrance fee and then proceed to do stuff they shouldn't be doing according to the law. The owner may know about it, even the police and everybody in the neighborhood knows what goes on there. It's not forbidden to have a business that thrives on it.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    58. Re:Hmmmmm. by MBGMorden · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Exactly - and so a VPN connection to Pirate Bay is just an encrypted network connection until someone transfers something copyrighted.

      You can't have it both ways. The simple truth is that the vast majority of the uses you quoted for the drug-related items aren't the norm. I don't say that to say that they should be illegal - quite the contrary. I say that they should be (and currently are) legal and nobody much cares because they, like the VPN's here, are simply the result of a populace getting as close to breaking the law as they legally can because they don't see the purpose of the actual law (ie, marajuana, or filesharing of copyrighted content being illegal) as being just.

      Or more simply, tools generally aren't illegal - doing something illegal with those tools is. A VPN is a tool, and so until they can prove that I'm using it to do something illegal then I'm innocent on paper, which is all that most people care about.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    59. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure if we really put our heads together we can come up with some kind of legal use of a VPN to the PirateBay that doesn't involve the exchange of copyrighted material. However, the OP has a point - they named the service IPREDator after all. Kind of hard to argue that the point isn't to make it harder for the folks tasked with intellectual property rights enforcement, isn't it?

    60. Re:Hmmmmm. by A.+B3ttik · · Score: 1

      Uhhhhhh.... no.

      I don't know of anyone who could take a Bong Hit of tobacco without throwing up.

      Just about the only legal use is as a Paper Weight, and it's not really a logical one.

    61. Re:Hmmmmm. by daoine_sidhe · · Score: 1

      Except that the "getaway car" in this case is more like a Greyhound that happens to have stops in seedy neighborhoods...it also goes just about anywhere else you want to go.

    62. Re:Hmmmmm. by sjames · · Score: 1

      It's also useful for private anonymous web browsing and such, potentially useful to bypass netfilters implemented by various oppressive regimes throughout the world.

      It probably is somewhat risky since said oppressive regimes really hate when people render their actions moot and police everywhere really hate people who make their jobs harder, even if they do so by supporting natural rights.

    63. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, actually it is exactly like that... Here's why:

      You can do legal things in public, or in private. Just like you can do illegal things in public, or in private. The problem is governments are exceeding their boundaries, and forcing away your anonymity under the guise of providing public benefit. The government, nor anyone else imho, has the right to remove your privacy. If you choose to do illegal things in private, oh well! That's the price of true freedom in the USA. Governments should keep busting criminals that commit crimes utilizing public methods. Governments should not strip away our privacy as a step in determining whom to bust.

      I'm sorry but I'll never register here and I'll always remain Anonymous Coward to people unable to access /. server logs. I'm sorry that if you invade my home I will end your life as a defense mechanism to such invasion. I'm sorry you seem to have a fascist agenda to know every detail about me (others) and mine (theirs).

      The most disturbing part of your posts however, is that you have taken the stance of, "attempting to protect your true identity and maintain personal privacy for any reason; makes you guilty of committing a crime." You do so in a non-shallant way that really implies anyone that disagrees with you MUST be a criminal. If I was a mod I would have definitely gone with -1 flamebait.

      PS) If you really stand by the ideals you seem to be presenting here, I dare you to go ahead and post your full real name, address, telephone number, and social security numbers, so I and others here can put your life under our microscopes. Otherwise, by your logic, you're a criminal hiding behind an email@ and an IP.

    64. Re:Hmmmmm. by sabt-pestnu · · Score: 1

      Using this service is likely to promote "presumption of guilt". In countries that profess that they don't do that, there'll be some other pretext used to allow them leeway to snoop.

    65. Re:Hmmmmm. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      rather, there is no common legitimate use for these products,

      Smoking tobacco is not a common, legitimate use of those products? You are really going to say that? Really?

      unlike the Pirate Bay, which does have common legitimate uses

      List them and site examples currently on Pirate Bay.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    66. Re:Hmmmmm. by billius · · Score: 2, Informative

      I hate to sound like a broken record, but there is no copyrighted material on pirate bay. The site contains torrent trackers, not the files themselves. If Pirate Bay were just a giant server full of pirated mp3s and movies, it would have been taken down a long time ago. Hence the drug dealer analogy doesn't work at all, since maintaining a site about *where to get drugs* isn't illegal.

    67. Re:Hmmmmm. by commodore64_love · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >>>It's like being accused of being a drug dealer because people buy drugs off your site, and, in response, you offer a method for people to make private transactions.

      Well to stretch an analogy to near breaking point..... Piratebay doesn't sell drugs. They just provide the address(es) for the corner where you can obtain them, which is not illegal. Neither is it illegal to sell users a trenchcoat and hat to help hide their identity.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    68. Re:Hmmmmm. by wastedlife · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Excellent point, thanks. The scary thing is that Sweden seems to be looking to make copyright enforcement more strict as a result of all of this.

      --
      Said, "It's just like dice but it's got more sides And it tells me who lives and who dies"
    69. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think perhaps your hypothetical situation could use a taxi driver.

    70. Re:Hmmmmm. by speculatrix · · Score: 1

      dammit, I use a VPN for accessing work and I've never been offered any of the drugs that they must be dealing in!

    71. Re:Hmmmmm. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Crack pipes are always considered drug paraphernalia because there is no legitimate use for a crack pipe. What is the legitimate use of a VPN connection to the Pirate Bay? Please provide examples current on Pirate Bay.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    72. Re:Hmmmmm. by dontmakemethink · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Does your company facilitate copyright infringement? It's not called the Shareware Bay y'know. By offering VPN they are no longer passive facilitators, but active ones. They've even named the service as a parody of an IP protection directive, expressing their clear intent, as if "Pirate Bay" wasn't enough of an outright confession.

      And it doesn't have to be a flagrant violation of criminal code, if it's close enough the BSA, RIAA, and MPIAA will simply throw enough money into a civil suit to make it unprofitable and deter anyone else from offering torrents and VPN. That's why the RIAA makes so many contradictory statements in different lawsuits, they're just saying whatever $10M in legal will buy them to scare people away from piracy that's cost them $10B over the last 10 years.

      Even if they're certain they're not breaking any law, it'll still cost PB >$200k in legal to defend against an IP infringement claim of that magnitude, and even if they win and are awarded legal costs, that's a pretty big loan they're forced to give their lawyers for about two years. No question, the MAFIAA will go after you with complete knowledge that they have no case whatsoever. Torrents + VPN == an arguable case + a precedent the MAFIAA cannot afford to go unchallenged.

      PB can't win this one though, won't surprise me if they get shut down entirely. If they hadn't been so flagrant about it, maybe, but it's pretty much like a gun shop called "Cop Killer's Paradise" in a city with the highest fatal shootings of officers. They not only facilitate illegal activity that is clearly abundant, they promote it.

      --

      War as we knew it was obsolete
      Nothing could beat complete denial
      - Emily Haines
    73. Re:Hmmmmm. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      A bong is just a water pipe, just like a hookah.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    74. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no question at all that copyright infringement is a crime

      What?

      The opposite is true: there is no question at all IF copyright infringement is a crime, because the factual answer to that question is NO. It's illegal, yes, but not a crime anywhere (yet), not even in the USA.

      A crime is by necessity illegal, but the converse is not true.

    75. Re:Hmmmmm. by somersault · · Score: 1, Informative

      Not really. It would be more like being accused of being a drug dealer because you run a messageboard where people happen to be able to meet drug dealers. If the messageboard was called thecrackhouse.com or something then it does make it harder to try and defend it with a straight face of course.

      Personally I have used The Pirate Bay a few times, though in recent years (since I now have a job) I've started buying all the music that I had downloaded/been-sent as a student, so these days I just download stuff that I have legally paid for but the CD is copyright protected/defective etc. I've also downloaded a few ISOs of software which I have legal keys to but lost the original CDs. That's probably still copyright violation, but I don't think it's "wrong". In a few years hopefully all publishers will be using Steam-like distribution so sites like The Pirate Bay won't be necessary. Of course a lot of people will still be tight-fisted bastards and not bother paying for stuff, but others will move to the legitimate versions when they are just as convenient as torrenting. Amazon's MP3 store gives me quick and cheap access to DRM free MP3s of most of the music I want these days..

      --
      which is totally what she said
    76. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So thousands of companies that already offer VPN services are doing something illegal? Or do prosecutors/politicians/you just assume that the VPN customers of TPB are doing something illegal. I f so, does this assumption alone makes TPB's VPN offer illegal?

    77. Re:Hmmmmm. by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      It's not illegal to do certain drugs in certain countries (Netherlands, Venezuela).

      I know that. That's why I said suppose it IS illegal. And besides, it's illegal in the US. I'm not saying it's "world wide illegal" as though there were some world government deciding that recreational drug usage is illegal.

      I could have chosen something else, but drug usage is a very similar one since so many people think it should be legal (in the US), as with file sharing.

      As for the suing owner of establishment, I don't know that you can't do that if you actually know that the owner was aware of the activity and did not report it, and in fact, tried to hide it. Especially if he explicitly said "Hey, if you pay my $10 a month, I'll actively try to keep you from getting caught!"

    78. Re:Hmmmmm. by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      Oh. So I guess if it's just a civil offense, I can actively try to protect you from the law, and it's fine?

      I know the whole file sharing legality thing is debated, so it's on a strange premise to begin with. I would say, though, that certainly some file sharing is illegal. It's hard to say that to free software/open source people, but at some point there does have to be some ramifications for redistributing software that you don't have the licensed right to redistribute. And at some point, it's "illegal" if you do something that you are not licensed to do...

    79. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You seem to be operating under the assumption that the only purpose for offering/using a VPN is to engage in copyright infringement.

      You seem to be operating on the assumption that offering a VPN to a site specializing in copyright infringement, where the VPN has its logging turned off specifically so that so that copyright infringers cannot be tracked by police, and advertising this service to be used by copyright infringers, has nothing to do with copyright infringement.

    80. Re:Hmmmmm. by hplus · · Score: 1

      In my locale salvia is legal, and bong smoking is by far the best way to smoke it.

    81. Re:Hmmmmm. by westlake · · Score: 1

      You seem to be operating under the assumption that the only purpose for offering/using a VPN is to engage in copyright infringement.P? When the service is being offered by Pirate Bay certain assumptions are both reasonable - and inevitable.

    82. Re:Hmmmmm. by cliffski · · Score: 1

      when its offered by a site called 'thepiratebay' the worlds biggest torrent tracker whose top 100 downloaded files are all torrents of copyrighted material...
      well lets just say the odds are pretty much in favour of it being used that way.

      Why does everyone here cling to some slim flimsy belief that what thepiratebay does is anything other than wilful, cynical wholesale copyright infringement?

      --
      DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
    83. Re:Hmmmmm. by LandDolphin · · Score: 2, Funny

      I have, and there great!

      --
      Spelling and Grammar errors have been added to this post for your enjoyment
    84. Re:Hmmmmm. by Bj�rn · · Score: 1

      Why was this moderated flamebait? It's true. Here is a link to an article on DN.se, the larges daily newspaper in Sweden. And here is another one. The text is in Swedish though, so you might need to use google to translate.

      --
      Never express yourself more clearly than you are able to think. --Niels Bohr
    85. Re:Hmmmmm. by dubbreak · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ..as if "Pirate Bay" wasn't enough of an outright confession.

      So if I name my blog "I like to steal things" I'm obviously a thief? A name is not a confession.

      If sharing files, even ones "protected" under copyright is considered legal in their country (some countries have pretty liberal interpretations of "fair use" and "fair dealing"), then the name is tongue and cheek not a confession of guilt.

      --
      "If you are going through hell, keep going." - Winston Churchill
    86. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      F U MODS

    87. Re:Hmmmmm. by KatAngel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "I once smoked tobacco ... there's no smoke..."

      Can you explain how that works? Smoking without smoke?

    88. Re:Hmmmmm. by Tuoqui · · Score: 1

      Of course, on the other side of the issue, you have to trust TPB to not be spying on you, and what happens when that traffic leave TBP is a different issue.

      I'm more keen on trusting TPB than the government. After all some guys who have gotten away with what they have while people with seemingly infinitely deep pockets fail at getting them prosecuted. They know their shit and they know that unless they're legally obligated to keep log files and customer data beyond login name/password (IE. This account is paid for, so remove the card from the database linking them to the account). Even if that is the case they'll just move the servers to a jurisdiction where it isn't required.

      --
      09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
      +2 Troll is Slashdot's way of saying groupthink is confused
    89. Re:Hmmmmm. by Sleepy · · Score: 1

      Bingo.

      The argument the grandparent is making could be (or has been applied to) technologies such as the mp3 format, gnutella, bittorrent, HTML search engines (remember Lycos MP3?).

      What if someone made a file-sharing program that instead of Bittorrent as the engine, it used common "free email services" or "free dynamic DNS"? Would these components be responsible for what ultimately is done by the Uploader or Downloader? I hope not.

      The way to go after violations is to go after either the PROVIDER or the CONSUMER of the transaction.

      The classic Western method is to go after the provider (dealers, hookers, etc.) and not the consumers (who typically get off, especially if they apologize and profess renewed faith in Jesus.

      Pirate Bay is neither provider nor the consumer.

      In order to MAKE Pirate Bay the criminal party, you would have to set precedent that lets authorities decide what technology is legitimate or not, so they can target "unauthorized VPN use". From there we'll have that law some have wanted, where only authorities can use encrypted email, or however they decide to arbitrarily apply their new powers.

      You don't burn down the forest just to catch some bandits.

    90. Re:Hmmmmm. by merchant_x · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm at a public internet cafe or any public internet access point (i.e airport, hotel, etc) and don't know what kind of snooping an unscrupulous proprietor maybe up to, a VPN connection to Pirate Bay will protect me from those shenanigans. Or I just want to keep my browsing habits private from my local ISP as I don't feel it any of their business as to what sites I spend my time at. The point being that I would use a Pirate Bay VPN for the same reasons I would use any other VPN.

      If you are asking for some one to justify using the Pirate Bay's VPN specifically, I really don't see why anyone would have to do that. But just to humor you, their service price seems pretty fair and their stated privacy policies seem to be exactly what some one looking for VPN service would want them to be.

    91. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be fair, Hookah's are rarely used with the plain old tobacco we smoke in cigarettes. It's usually a flavored variety. I mostly encountered apple flavored stuff, but there were other fruit flavors. It also tends not be shredded as fine the rolling tobacco used over here.

      As a smoker I can honestly say that water bongs are preferable in many ways over either cigarettes or joints. Its a much cooler smoke which makes a big difference on the throat, and as you say the water does a not bad job of filtering some of the nasty stuff. It also provides a considerably larger 'hit' of the respective active ingredient.

      All that said, they are less popular than they might be due to a high maintenance factor. Any choke-point for the smoke becomes clogged with tar very quickly, as does the burning piece with various kinds of plant matter. The water needs to changed regularly and the water chamber can require scraping after significant use. By far the largest disadvantage is of course accidental spillage, both by 'clumsy' smokers and curious cats :/ There's not an animal alive that produce any smell as bad as bong water drying on deep carpet.

    92. Re:Hmmmmm. by ZarathustraDK · · Score: 1

      Apparently those wacky AC's don't know those wacky europeans are on Slashdot.

      --
      If you quote this signature there'll be 72 copies of Windows ME waiting for you in Heaven.
    93. Re:Hmmmmm. by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      http://thepiratebay.org/torrent/4476718/ubuntu-8.10-desktop-i386.iso

      Fully legal torrent on The Pirate Bay. A VPN connection would serve simply to conceal my activities which can include torrents such as the one linked above (of which there are many more examples). This is as legitimate a use a curtains covering the windows of my house even if I'm doing nothing wrong inside.

      And I'm sure you're be quick with "but nobody is going to use it that way", which isn't the point. It's a possible legimate use, which is all that matters as to your inquiry. And even that matters not when it comes to the law, as we have never had to justify that something has a legitimate use in order for the Government to give it it's blessing and declare it legal. The pet rock would have been up shit creek without a paddle if that were the case . . .

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    94. Re:Hmmmmm. by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Well the reason I wrote the text you quoted was just to point out that there are additional issues involved without actually getting too deeply into those issues. A VPN connection from TPB may protect you from certain sorts of snooping, but there's then the question of "who watches the watchmen?" Even if TPB says they aren't logging my traffic or snooping on it, I'm not sure how you'd verify that.

      But my point was, whether your trust TPB in particular, it's irrelevant to the issue of whether VPN tunnels have uses other than copyright protection. I've used a VPN connections at public WiFi points for the express purpose of protecting myself from snooping, since even when you find an open access point at an airport or something, there's no way to be sure that it's not set up by someone hoping to collect unencrypted passwords. However, in those cases, I used a VPN server that I set up myself, so I would trust it for that purpose much more than I trust TPB.

    95. Re:Hmmmmm. by FictionPimp · · Score: 1

      I could use the pirate bay vpn service for general web browsing. I might choose to do this because I understand their stance on privacy and maybe trust them to keep my information annon.

      I may never download a torrent over it.

    96. Re:Hmmmmm. by legirons · · Score: 2, Interesting

      TPB is a good choice to offer this because their admins have proven themselves to be excellent at communications security, not because it's somehow linked to their torrent trackers.

    97. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A crack pipe isn't a crack pipe till you've smoked crack out of it.

      Similarly, a "marajuana pipe" would be drug paraphernalia as well.

    98. Re:Hmmmmm. by legirons · · Score: 1

      Hopefully TPB will be okay because the VPN can be used to bypass censorship on the net

      I must have missed the part where Australian, German, and UK governments (to name just the big three) have expressly said that censorship of the net is a good thing.

      The idea of western governments supporting a tool whose purpose is to guarantee free speech and private communications... well let's just say it never used to sound so depressingly unlikely

    99. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love it how people assume that "free culture" is the only thing the Pirate Bay care about.

      They care about peoples right to privacy just as much, or perhaps even more.

    100. Re:Hmmmmm. by Omestes · · Score: 1

      Why does everyone here cling to some slim flimsy belief that what thepiratebay does is anything other than wilful, cynical wholesale copyright infringement?

      Because I've used to do otherwise on occasion. That in itself is enough anecdotal evidence to prove that its sole purpose is not copyright infringement.

      Yes, most people use it for piracy, but that doesn't mean that it only exists for piracy. If they decided to wipe all the legit torrents and only host illegal ones, then you'd have a case.

      TPB is just a tool, like any other. It is value neutral, it all depends on how you use it. Right now a majority (not all) of people use it for piracy, but this doesn't mean anything. If a majority of people used the internet for piracy, should we shut it down? If a majority of people used CD/DVD burners for piracy, should we ban or regulate their sale?

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    101. Re:Hmmmmm. by smoker2 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Even if you are using a VPN, you are still connecting to an IP administered by TPB. That is cause for suspicion even if nobody can read the data. What excuse have you got for connecting to TPB at all ? Whether the authorities can see the torrents is irrelevant.

    102. Re:Hmmmmm. by Omestes · · Score: 1

      Have you ever tried smoking tobacco from a regular POT bong? I tried once, it was the nastiest thing I've done. Same for POT pipes, they really suck as tobacco pipes. There really isn't a logical use for them outside of drug use.

      Hookahs, and such, are legitimate, as are normal tobacco pipes, but not the type you can buy at your local headshop. There is a reason they don't sell these items at your local tobacconist.

      I'm not arguing that they should be illegal, mind. I think they should be legal, as should marijuana. (I say this as a person who doesn't use it, even) I'm just stating that there is no legal purpose for these things, don't be naive and think there is. Its a legal loophole, thats all.

      The funniest is "snuff pipes", which really have no reason to exist outside of smoking meth and crack.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    103. Re:Hmmmmm. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Your arguments are specious because this VPN is not for browsing but "for users looking to cover their tracks when torrenting". Browsing does not enter into the picture because of the stated use of the VPN.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    104. Re:Hmmmmm. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      A VPN connection would serve simply to conceal my activities which can include torrents such as the one linked above (of which there are many more examples).

      Why would you need or want to conceal such activity? The use of a VPN in such a case is not only counter-intuitive butalso counter productive. The example is disingenuous.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    105. Re:Hmmmmm. by Omestes · · Score: 1

      Crack pipes are always considered drug paraphernalia because there is no legitimate use for a crack pipe.

      Perhaps where you live, here they can sell them as "snuff pipes" in headshops.

      There is legitimate torrents on TPB, it takes about 5 seconds to find them. They have lots of public domain ebooks, linux distros, FOSS software, and (my favorite) old movies which exist prior to copyright, or never got the status. I just downloaded Metropolis from TPB last week.

      As for a VPN, perhaps I don't want people seeing my traffic? Perhaps I'm paranoid. Perhaps I'm using TPB to download ISOs of software I have licenses for, but am still scared of the legal flack from idiotic laws preventing me from getting them when the original media dies. Same with downloading songs from CDs that I own, but are unreadable thanks to DRM, scratches, or flawed "extra" features.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    106. Re:Hmmmmm. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 0, Redundant

      I could use the pirate bay vpn service for general web browsing.

      That is not the stated use of the service, to wit:

      The Pirate Bay is planning to launch a paid VPN service for users looking to cover their tracks when torrenting.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    107. Re:Hmmmmm. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      I do not smoke. However, my local "headshop" does, in fact, sell regular pipes and hookahs.

      Snuff pipes are for "snuffing" (snorting) tobacco, a practice that, while out of favor, is still practiced.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    108. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you wrote this were you thinking of the US or Swedish legal system?

    109. Re:Hmmmmm. by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      Again, why would I need or want to conceal the fact that I'm watching "Jon and Kate Plus 8" on Monday nights? I have curtains on my windows because I want privacy. Whether or not there is a legitimate need for that privacy is a decision reserved to myself, not the government.

      The same applies to TPB. There are legal things to do on there. There is now a way to hide what I do. Neither is illegal. "Why would you want to ..." is stopped instantly with "Because I do.". You, nor the government needs any further justification.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    110. Re:Hmmmmm. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      There is legitimate torrents on TPB, it takes about 5 seconds to find them. They have lots of public domain ebooks, linux distros, FOSS software, and (my favorite) old movies which exist prior to copyright, or never got the status.

      Why would one want or need to use a VPN to get such legal and legitimate items, especially when one considers the overhead of such an encrypted channel?

      I have addressed your "snuff pipe" statement in your other post.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    111. Re:Hmmmmm. by broeman · · Score: 1

      Yeah, for me personally, nothing beats apple-tobacco on a water pipe :)

      --

      (yes this can be compared with sex)
    112. Re:Hmmmmm. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      But, you already have privacy while using the Pirate Bay. So, again, why would you need or want to increase the overhead of a legitimate use when it is unnecessary?

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    113. Re:Hmmmmm. by broeman · · Score: 1

      Well, we would never know when the time comes around where a Linux distribution becomes illegal (it might even have DVD Playback (e.g. cracking) packages included). Maybe in some countries it is already happening?

      --

      (yes this can be compared with sex)
    114. Re:Hmmmmm. by Ihmhi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem is that, again, as far as Sweden's laws are concerned The Pirate Bay isn't doing anything illegal.

      Is it illegal in America? Yes. Does setting up a VPN service make them look worse? Yes. Will it actually affect TPB in any significant way? Probably not. Trying to shut down TPB is like trying to shut down Wikileaks.

      If the day ever comes that their service is illegal in Sweden, I'm sure that they'll just move it to somewhere that doesn't give a fuck and would appreciate making tens of thousands of dollars a year off of them.

      Besides, if The Pirate Bay were sued, all they'd have to do is set up a legal defense fund. They'd get the money they need in a very short time, I imagine.

    115. Re:Hmmmmm. by the-empty-string · · Score: 1

      Name some legal, logical uses for a VPN connection to Pirate Bay, with current, valid examples.

      The grandparent post listed such examples.

      Your arguments are specious because this VPN is not for browsing but "for users looking to cover their tracks when torrenting". Browsing does not enter into the picture because of the stated use of the VPN.

      No, rather your argument is non-sequitur, because no matter what Pirate Bay says it is for, the listed uses are still legal.

    116. Re:Hmmmmm. by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      You don't have privacy, and again, regardless of if it's necessary, if I want to conceal my activities (which is legal), then I'm free to do so. I don't need to provide a justification. As I said, I can do legal things on TPB. Now, if I want to I can hide what I do when I go there. Beyond that, to be blunt, you, the government, or anyone else can bite me. You don't need to see my papers, and I owe you nothing. Things aren't illegal pending approval of a legitimate use.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    117. Re:Hmmmmm. by merchant_x · · Score: 1

      Your arguments are specious because this VPN is not for browsing but "for users looking to cover their tracks when torrenting". Browsing does not enter into the picture because of the stated use of the VPN.

      that stated use is the editorial opinion of the Ars Technica reporter who wrote the article covering the VPN offering from piratebay. If you had actually gone to the provider's website you would see that the stated use of the product is:

      IPREDator is a network service that makes people online more anonymous using a VPN. it costs about 5 EUR a month and we store no traffic data.
      our service is right now in a beta stage. we hope it will be released for the public before 1st of april. sign up now to start using it as soon as we're stable.
      the network is under our control. not theirs. the pirate bay likes and knows real kopimism. and waffles.

      Rather than specious my argument is quite sincere. I think it is you that is engaging in specious arguments. You argue that a pirate bay VPN can/will be used for nothing but copyright infringement even though you have to know that is just not true.

      I argue on the other hand that while piratebay will almost certainly be used for copyright infringement by some one (just as I suspect any other VPN product will be) it will almost certainly be used for a large number of legitimate purposes.

      You are the one who is being insincere in this argument.

    118. Re:Hmmmmm. by The+2nd+.+Oracle · · Score: 1

      I know that there has been quite a few replies to this already, but I just wanted to chime in: I don't want people spying on my stuff. As soon as IPredator opens up, I'll buy an account if they're any better than Relakks (PPTP sucks ass!).
      I'll use it when using WLAN on the train, when using unsecured WLAN at the university, when I'm at my parents', when I'm at the library, whenever.

      Oh. I smoke weed as well, and I quite like having paraphernalia available; luckily I live in Europe.

    119. Re:Hmmmmm. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      Yea, but that only benefits the users of the site. All it will take to get them shut down (in Sweden) is a judge deciding that they are acting in bad faith to promote IP theft.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    120. Re:Hmmmmm. by merchant_x · · Score: 1

      Even if you are using a VPN, you are still connecting to an IP administered by TPB. That is cause for suspicion even if nobody can read the data. What excuse have you got for connecting to TPB at all ? Whether the authorities can see the torrents is irrelevant.

      Um.. I'm not sure why I would need an excuse for connecting to TPB, but I would imagine that my excuse would be that they happen to be my VPN provider. I'm pretty sure purchasing VPN service is not illegal.

    121. Re:Hmmmmm. by witherstaff · · Score: 1

      You could always try the claim that you use hotspots and don't want to be sniffed. I use openVPN everytime I'm out of the office just for that purpose.

      What I'd be more concerned about would be some law that allowed the government or big business to take over the VPN service to track you easier. It's like the facebook/CIA ties - it makes enough sense that it's hard not to be a tinfoil hat wearing conspiracy believer.

    122. Re:Hmmmmm. by cliffski · · Score: 1

      Laughable.
      If TPB is knowingly being used to faciliatet copyright infringement it should be shut down and the owners jailed. This is not rocket science.
      If your business is being used 99% to launder money for drug dealers, the fact that 1% of your trade might be legit shouldn't keep you out of jail.

      3 guys distributing linux distros does not justify tens of millions leeching copyeighted content from the rest of us.

      --
      DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
    123. Re:Hmmmmm. by Zerth · · Score: 2, Informative

      Because several ISPs will block all torrent activity, regardless of legality.

      Which makes getting new linux ISOs and updating World of Warcraft slower than torrenting them through a VPN.

    124. Re:Hmmmmm. by DMalic · · Score: 1

      http://thepiratebay.org/torrent/4747468/Nine_Inch_Nails_-_Another_Version_of_the_Truth_%5B320kb_MP3%5D http://thepiratebay.org/torrent/4059158/Nine_Inch_Nails_-_Ghosts_I_(2008) http://thepiratebay.org/torrent/4476718/ubuntu-8.10-desktop-i386.iso http://thepiratebay.org/torrent/4803271/Windows-7-Transformation-Pack-For-Vista I neither smoke tobacco or marijuana, so I may be wrong - however, to my understanding there is a significant amount of drug paraphernalia sold almost certainly intended for marijuana consumption. Am I wrong in this?

    125. Re:Hmmmmm. by dubbreak · · Score: 1
      One other thing I'd like to make clear that is faulty with your argument:

      PB can't win this one though, won't surprise me if they get shut down entirely. If they hadn't been so flagrant about it, maybe, but it's pretty much like a gun shop called "Cop Killer's Paradise" in a city with the highest fatal shootings of officers. They not only facilitate illegal activity that is clearly abundant, they promote it.

      I've said it before and I'll say it again:

      Illegal in the US != Illegal in other countries

      How is TPB, to paraphrase your terms, "flagrantly promoting and facilitating illegal activities" when they aren't doing anything illegal (in their country)?

      You know what I absolutely hate? Going to a movie at the theatre and having to sit through "downloading movies is illegal/theft". It's propaganda. It's not "theft" regardless of what country you are in (copyright infringement an entirely different crime), and the current precedent is that the file sharing falls under "fair dealing". Not to mention they tend to imply all downloads are illegal. I'm pretty sure Itunes movie purchases and other services aren't illegal even by their standards.

      Please don't take my post as pro copyright infringement. I'm all for paying, and even tried to get the blockbuster mediapoint as soon as I saw it on Slashdot (not available in my country of course, pity it looked like a pretty good deal). I am pro quick and convenient downloads with no DRM, and I'd even settle for drm if the price justifies it, but currently there are no good options. How can the MPAA claim they are losing sales to free downloads when they don't have comparable service in that market? It's absurd. Offer what consumers want and then cry foul if they don't adopt it, but offer them what they want first.

      --
      "If you are going through hell, keep going." - Winston Churchill
    126. Re:Hmmmmm. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      So if I name my blog "I like to steal things" I'm obviously a thief? A name is not a confession.

      If you name your blog "Advices for thiefs", and start posting things there that are mostly useful as hints for thiefs, well...

    127. Re:Hmmmmm. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Blocking torrents is well within their rights and if it is listed as being against their terms of service, then by using the VPN service to violate the terms of service, one should have one's ISP account canceled.

      Convenience does not make something right, nor does it make said thing a right. Regardless of what you want, you have to live with what you have agreed to and if you use something like this to get around that agreement, then you are just a dishonest, selfish asshole.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    128. Re:Hmmmmm. by cloakable · · Score: 4, Funny

      3 guys distributing linux distros does not justify tens of millions leeching copyrighted content from the rest of us.

      You're right. They should at least seed a bit!

      --
      No tyrant thrives when every subject says no.
    129. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I trust PB to allow my traffic to go to the Internet without snooping. I don't trust my boss.

      Would I pay $7/month for a remote VPN ?
      Sure .. I'd pay more.
      Give me a ssl-based proxy server farm with dynamic addresses and I would certainly pay more.

      Why ? Because I do child porn ? Nope, because my use of the Internet is no ones business but my and the site I talk to. Certainly not the NSA/US Govt/RIAA/ or anyone else .

      Good lord, they will have to buy trucks to carry the cash to the bank because as a 40's year old married adult with no bad habits I'll pay that before I pay my gas bill. And so will everyone else I know.

    130. Re:Hmmmmm. by Zerth · · Score: 1

      Using this transforms multiple connections of roughly equal up and down data transfer into a single connection of roughly equal up and down transfer.

      IE, if they don't block my VPN between home and work which runs at a constant 100kbps, then having a VPN to the pirate bay doing the same is in no way dishonest or selfish of me in regards to the ISP. If they block a network behavior instead of content, then I will change the behavior, not the content.

      Indeed, if they have a reason to dislike multiple connections(say, they are running out of IPs and are NATing all their customers), then this is actually a nice thing to do, as it consolidates it all into a single connection and uses less of their resources to achieve the same end result for me.

    131. Re:Hmmmmm. by Celc · · Score: 1

      That one person was Peter Sunde one of the co-founders whos methodology was asking an admin to randomly pick out torrents from the site in an amount of no statistical relevance. Then together with other admins tried to figure out how much of it was legitimate by googling them but not downlaoding them. It wasn't the most scientific method (by his own addmition during the trial) and I wouldn't go around thinking it's in any way correct. The academic in me calls bs while the pirate in me don't care if 99% of it is illegitimate.

    132. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I'm pretty sure that's, at the very last, something to do with aiding/abetting and is usually considered illegal. Just because all you did was "drive the getaway car" doesn't mean you're not an accomplice.

      The problem with that logic is that you have to do so knowingly. I'm not saying there's no way a prosecutor could make that case, just that they avoid knowing what their customers are up to.

      That said, services like this are a magnet for law enforcement. Law enforcement officers have a habit of chasing anyone who runs away from them, even though the "running" in this case is figurative.

      Expect users of their services to receive extra scrutiny. Same goes with Hushmail, etc.

    133. Re:Hmmmmm. by jonaskoelker · · Score: 1

      There is no question at all that copyright infringement is a crime

      As far as I understand it, it's (typically) a civil matter.

      The lawsuit is brought by the wronged party (i.e. an RIAA member), as opposed to (the public acting through) the state. The plaintiff wins based on a preponderance of evidence, not "beyond all reasonable doubt". There may be more differences, IANAL.

      I think the best term to use for what I think you meant is "illegal".

    134. Re:Hmmmmm. by vrmlguy · · Score: 1

      Name some legal, logical uses for a VPN connection to Pirate Bay, with current, valid examples.

      Check out http://www.blacklogic.com/, http://www.hotspotvpn.com/ and http://world-secure-channel.com/. These are three sites that offer VPN services to the public, and they list lots of current, valid reasons why someone might want such services. TPB looks like they will be undercutting all of these sites on price, which makes TPB very appealing for these legal, logical uses.

      --
      Nothing for 6-digit uids?
    135. Re:Hmmmmm. by vrmlguy · · Score: 1

      Blocking torrents is well within their rights and if it is listed as being against their terms of service, then by using the VPN service to violate the terms of service, one should have one's ISP account canceled.

      I am unaware of any ISP whose terms of service forbids the use of torrents. If you know of one, please enlighten us. I regularly uses torrents hosted by VMware to download software appliances, but on at least one occasion TPB has saved my butt when I needed to repair a large corrupted file. http://www.hackernotcracker.com/2007-02/cleverly-repair-large-corrupted-files-with-bittorrent-client-checksum-hash-scans.html

      --
      Nothing for 6-digit uids?
    136. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a paid service that really has no other function

      How pathetically ignorant.

    137. Re:Hmmmmm. by FlyingGuy · · Score: 1

      You mean aside from the part about you lying through your teeth?

      It's just fine.. <snide grin>

      --
      Hey KID! Yeah you, get the fuck off my lawn!
    138. Re:Hmmmmm. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Sounds like a waste to me, unless you're downloading something that could get you in trouble.

      Or maybe you just don't want your ISP, and Slashdot's ISP, and everyone in between, to have unfettered access to who you are and what you're doing?

      RTFA. It's not specifically about BitTorrent at all.

      In other words: It's really no more or less than a paid, likely faster version of TOR.

      Even supposing you're right, "could get you into trouble" could mean "is against the PRC, and you are in China."

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    139. Re:Hmmmmm. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      By offering VPN they are no longer passive facilitators, but active ones.

      I don't see the difference. The VPN is a general-purpose service -- it applies to all traffic, not just torrents.

      And it doesn't have to be a flagrant violation of criminal code, if it's close enough the BSA, RIAA, and MPIAA will simply throw enough money into a civil suit to make it unprofitable

      Maybe you haven't been paying attention, but they've tried that. Repeatedly. It doesn't work -- it really serves no other purpose but to humiliate people like you, who seem to believe a mere anti-copyright attitude should be enough to convict someone.

      expressing their clear intent, as if "Pirate Bay" wasn't enough of an outright confession.

      Irrelevant. As you've pointed out:

      it's pretty much like a gun shop called "Cop Killer's Paradise" in a city with the highest fatal shootings of officers.

      Probably. But you can't legally shut down the shop because it's called that.

      First and second amendments.

      Now, if they really believe guns are a problem, they could make it harder to own a gun, or try to make it illegal to sell guns in the city. But those would have to apply to all such shops, whether they're called "Cop Killer's Paradise" or "Law Enforcement Armory".

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    140. Re:Hmmmmm. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      ...well, you're still allowed to do that. If we're talking about US law, that's a first amendment right.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    141. Re:Hmmmmm. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Is "acting in bad faith" a crime?

      As I understand it, attempted copyright infringement is not a crime. Actual copyright infringement is a crime. And with this in place, it will be quite difficult to prove actual copyright infringement.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    142. Re:Hmmmmm. by jhol13 · · Score: 1

      Wrong, 100% of the _torrents_ are legal.

      But claiming 80% of the material behind the torrents to be legal is extremely silly, just look http://thepiratebay.org/recent.
      Now, of the thirty there is less than ten legal.

    143. Re:Hmmmmm. by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      What is the legitimate use of a VPN connection to the Pirate Bay?

      One legitimate use is simply preventing one's browsing habits to be logged and/or analyzed. Someone that's into geriatric amputee midget porn probably doesn't want that fetish to be widely known, even though it's perfectly legal. Another might to be able to establish a truly anonymous mail account with a webmail provider such as Yahoo. And then of course there is the old standby of maintaining anonymity when making material available that your local government or large corporation might find offensive and over which might attempt to wage a legal war of attrition.

      Going through TPB, to me at least, makes me more confident that network security will be taken seriously, and I trust them a bit more that other providers when they make the statement, "we don't keep logs". Given their history I don't imagine they'll just roll over for anyone like AT&T and Verizon did, and if they are forced to I'm quite sure they'll find a way to let people know. They'll also be price-competitive with other services, so why *not* consider them?

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    144. Re:Hmmmmm. by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      As stated by Ars Technica, NOT Pirate Bay.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    145. Re:Hmmmmm. by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      Once it's on the VPN, it's no longer a torrent, and it's not a ToS issue.

      What's your major problem with people wanting privacy? For several posts you've been stridently whining about there not being legitimate uses for a VPN, even in the face of reasoned arguments to the contrary. Do you seriously believe that people should not be allowed to anonymize their traffic, and that they're committing some grievous wrong by trying to maintain their privacy online?

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    146. Re:Hmmmmm. by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      A large part of the problem a lot of these folks seem to be having is that it's TPB offering the service, and they're assuming guilt by association. It looks to me like TPB will be offering a reasonably priced service that offers at least as much as competing VPN services, so it doesn't make business sense not to consider them.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    147. Re:Hmmmmm. by DMalic · · Score: 1

      That's the real joke.. I do occasionally (rarely) use torrents, and it's always for legal crap. I don't think I've ever actually used the piratebay, since most legal stuff isn't using them as a tracker. Someone I know got an unfortunately timed letter from their ISP just last night. That's not something I want happening to me at the moment.

    148. Re:Hmmmmm. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Yes, but we aren't talking U.S. law.

      Also, while such an activity would probably be legal in and of itself, if someone actually goes and commits a crime using that information, it might just become a different deal - at least if the information provider explicitly advertised lawbreaking as the intended use of that information. Case in point: the "Hit Man: A Technical Manual for Independent Contractors" book. Note that this is a U.S. case, and First Amendment was specifically held to not be applicable there. It seems directly applicable.

    149. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A chef's knife is not a deadly weapon until it is used as such. Until it is used as such it is a kitchen tool.
      A screwdriver or pry bar are not burglary tools until they are used to commit a burglary. Until they are, they are just tools.

      Or, of course, you enter an airport. Because there, all tools are weapons. And dangerous to you. But ceramic or plastic tools are still perfectly fine, its only the evil metal tools which are weapons.

    150. Re:Hmmmmm. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Isn't dn.se just another industry shill?

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    151. Re:Hmmmmm. by smoker2 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I see I'm flamebait am I ? Seems the kids have got mod points today.
      Consider a man who regularly visits a brothel that the police are watching. When arrested he claims he was only there because he liked the piano playing. Either grow a pair and use TPB in the open, or attempt to hide by subscribing to a service that is run by TPB and is obviously designed to obscure the type of traffic passing over it. What do you think the authorities are going to think ? Are there no other VPN services that are not run by TPB ? Why did you choose to buy service from them, especially since most of you are in the US and TPB is in Sweden ? It is not a fucking game.

      Your protestations that you are using the VPN legitimately look silly when the authorities will keep confiscating servers, and shutting down access. Surely anybody with half a brain would want a reliable service, not one subject to legal interference every 5 minutes, especially since you claim you are not using it for nefarious purposes. And don't give me any crap about downloading linux isos. I know of no linux distribution that relies on TPB as a tracker or even for publicity.

      I have nothing against TPB, but this is just stupid. Like a small child trying to hide something by swapping it from hand to hand, you are so obvious you just make things worse.

    152. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And it doesn't have to be a flagrant violation of criminal code, if it's close enough the BSA, RIAA, and MPIAA will simply throw enough money into a civil suit to make it unprofitable and deter anyone else from offering torrents and VPN. This kind of blackmail doesn't work well outside the US, I'm afraid.

    153. Re:Hmmmmm. by Bj�rn · · Score: 1

      Not in my opinion, and I'm a subscriber. Here is the Wikipedia article on the paper.

      --
      Never express yourself more clearly than you are able to think. --Niels Bohr
    154. Re:Hmmmmm. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Well, my understanding is that they have been publishing numerous "hit pieces" and obvious propaganda nonsense regarding the trial. They are clearly on the industry's side, right?

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    155. Re:Hmmmmm. by Bj�rn · · Score: 1

      In a word, no. At least I have never seen a "hit piece" and I'm a daily reader. Of cause one man's fact might appear to be propaganda by someone else. A math example involving interest rate will just appear to be math to you and me, but someone from the Arab Wold might interpret it as propaganda. There might well have been a clearly labeled opinion piece published taking sides with "the industry", but the main newspaper is just factual. Here is a recent article containing an interview with a musician who is critical of "the industry" and copyright.

      --
      Never express yourself more clearly than you are able to think. --Niels Bohr
    156. Re:Hmmmmm. by dontmakemethink · · Score: 1

      But if you were caught stealing, the name of your blog would not be ignored.

      --

      War as we knew it was obsolete
      Nothing could beat complete denial
      - Emily Haines
    157. Re:Hmmmmm. by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Sounds like a waste to me, unless you're downloading something that could get you in trouble.

      There are many things that can "get you in trouble".

      Downloading info about environmental or animal rights activism? Since green is the new red, you might make a terrorist watch-list.

      Or maybe you want to read Chuck Norris's call for the formation of "cell groups" to prepare for another campaign of terrorist "succession" from the U.S..

      Or maybe you want to blow the whistle on corrupt government but fear backlash, so need anonymous communication.

      Or maybe you want to be able to get information about medical conditions without letting your "managed care" company know.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    158. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evidently you're not getting the message! Are you stupid, or just being a dick?

    159. Re:Hmmmmm. by blahplusplus · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This all comes down to the american capitalist, hyper propertarian view of copyright which other countries are free to reject. This american centrism discussion of IP is what people are railing against.

      If we had more people like John carmack in the world, (giving away his sourcecode) and letting games fall into what is practically public domain, IP wouldn't be such a problem.

      We have too many idiots who want to use IP to privately tax creativity and innovation to death. We have orphan works that people can't touch because of IP, when's the last time anything entered public domain?

      Truth be told the sheeple are feeding the King georges of corporate world, private profit can be abused and turned into a PRIVATE tax of an unelected body of people and framed as "trade", when it's nothing but another form of totalitarianism and corporate protectionism, or simply - rule by price.

      Next is the fact that corporations are trying to stop people from owning anything, and the pirate bay is a good reaction against that despite what it's users intentions are. I'm glad they exist as a counterweight to all corporate bullshit that keeps getting passed because their are not enough intelligent people in the world to stop the army of lawyers and deep pockets in washington and other governments of the world who are bought and paid for by these shills.

    160. Re:Hmmmmm. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      I personally don't agree with that ruling, nor do I see how a reasonable person could.

      More importantly, it never made it to the supreme court -- in fact, it was settled out of court.

      For comparison, the KKK was allowed to have their own TV show. The rules are still very simple: If you don't like a message, speak out against it. If you feel a particular piece of information encourages a particular activity, speak out against that information, and take action against the activity if it's actually illegal.

      None of these require actual censorship. Nor is that book necessarily anything other than a work of fiction, meant to entertain, not to encourage you to actually follow that life.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    161. Re:Hmmmmm. by Mattsson · · Score: 1

      Using FTP or POP on a public, unencrypted WLAN.

      If you don't connect via a VPN-tunnel, everyone on that same WLAN can sniff your username and password.
      If you don't have access to a VPN of your own, you'll have to use a third-party VPN. Using one provided by Pirate Bay is as legal and logical as using any other VPN-provider.

      --
      /.Mattsson - My native language is not English, so please don't whine over linguistic errors. (That's lame anyway...)
    162. Re:Hmmmmm. by js_sebastian · · Score: 1

      Seriously, who the fuck actually uses water bongs with tobacco?

      You haven't traveled a lot, have you, for an anonymous coward? Water-pipe is widely used all over egypt, tunisia, and other parts of north africa, to smoke tobacco (often apple-scented), and is widely available in europe because of immigration from north africa. It feels a lot better because the smoke is cooled by going through the water before getting to your throat, so it doesn't make non-smokers like myself cough. You'll still get cancer, but at least the process is a bit more fun...

    163. Re:Hmmmmm. by r0tu · · Score: 1

      I dont' understand why everyone is arguing with Hmmmm when all he is obviously doing to providing sound honest opinions to try to help the pirate bay stay out of trouble. Why do people feel they HAVE to argue every stupid point while completely missing the point of the statement. "Thanks for the advice" would be nice. The ONLY arguments that really could be made would be legal specific loopholes that specifically help figure out the problem presented by Hmmmmmm... No wonder out society is so screwed.

      --
      Just put it out there, if your wrong... you learn, if your right, others learn.
    164. Re:Hmmmmm. by Mattsson · · Score: 1

      That's not really a good analogy.

      This would be more like renting out sound- and wiretap-proof rooms to anyone who wish to do business-deals, or any other activity, in privacy.
      Government agencies, suspicious spouses and corporate spies can see who goes in and out of your establishment but don't know what they do or say there, nor be sure of with whom of the other visitors they meet.

      --
      /.Mattsson - My native language is not English, so please don't whine over linguistic errors. (That's lame anyway...)
    165. Re:Hmmmmm. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      For comparison, the KKK was allowed to have their own TV show.

      Sure, but what did they say on that show? "Niggers are bad and evil in general"? Or "Let's go hang a nigger"? I bet the latter would get their ass on fire very fast even in the U.S., all the freedom of speech notwithstanding. I know for sure you have an exception in your laws already for "incitement to riot", which is also just words... it's not really different from the more general "incitement to violence".

    166. Re:Hmmmmm. by Karem+Lore · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that when they have all the rights to bend you over and shaft you, they will...

      Step 1) Gain access to full disclosure of every person. Step 2) Change laws at your discretion until every person has no right to think. Step 3) Profit...

      It is GREED for POWER...And if the last year and a bit should have taught us ANYTHING it's that GREED is BAD, ergo invasion of privacy is BAD.

      Rest my case your honour...

      --
      When all is said and done, nothing changes...
    167. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they're just saying whatever $10M in legal will buy them to scare people away from piracy that's cost them $10B over the last 10 years.

      Since the age of computers has dawned, information is set free. The copyright holders are not losing millions or billions. WE are gaining millions and billions, we are setting information free. Crap hollywood movies will go on being made, don't worry. Even this won't kill them.
      I remember when I had a C64 we all shared around games, we wouldn't have bought them all. There were utilities like TURBOCOPY which we shared around even more.
      That was in the days before ubiquitous internet. In the days of VHS. That's why the pirate bay symbol uses a Cassette tape. We used to use tape-recorders to copy games and music. That's why even if they kill the pirate bay, information is set free, it's been a long time coming, no-one can stop it now.
      No silly corporate sponsored laws can stop it. No artist can stop it. Artist will have to go back to earning their money rather than relying on recorded artifacts to earn their money for them.

    168. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you really want to fight piracy, go beat up the guy selling DVDRs on the street corner... that guy's just in it for himself.

      That poor guy is working off someone else's laurels. Let's beat him up. He's just like any other CEO of a record label. Distributing content, maybe he'll even pay the original artist for the copy he bought to produce his copies... probably not, he wouldn't be much of a CEO if he did.

    169. Re:Hmmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea right. TPB, getting shut down? Did u think what would happen to the rest of d internet

  3. Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So I understand this VPN service will "help ensure its users' privacy". But will it also ensure copyright protections or protect IP holders' rights?

    After all, they wouldn't want to be aiding and abeting a criminal operation, would they? Copyright infringement is still a crime in the western world.

    Just asking.

    1. Re:Question by mcgrew · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But will it also ensure copyright protections or protect IP holders' rights?

      No, but why should it? many of us think that the current US copyright laws are unconstitutional, despite what SCOTUS says; Stanford Professor Lawrence Lessig, for one, who argued that current copyright is unconstitutionally long in front of the Supremes. He details the reasons he lost, and what he did wrong that caused him (and us) to lose in his (copyrighted) book Free Culture, available for sale at your local bookstore, free at your local public library, or free on his web site.

      After all, they wouldn't want to be aiding and abeting a criminal operation, would they?

      I have no problem with aiding and abetting a criminal operation when I buy pot. Drug laws should also be judged unconstitutional; they needed a constitutional amendment to outlaw the dangerous drug alcohol, why would they not need the same to outlaw the relatively benign marijuana? Where in the Constitution (besides the much abused "interstate commerce clause", which could have theoretically been used for alcohol) does Congress have the right to stop me from screwing up my life any way I wish?

      Copyright infringement is still a crime in the western world.

      Copyright infringement is largely a civil matter. And Pirate Bay doesn't limit itself to the western world; the internet is world wide.

    2. Re:Question by Cajun+Hell · · Score: 1

      But will it also ensure copyright protections or protect IP holders' rights?

      No, but it doesn't hurt those things either. I wouldn't worry about a tool that only serves one purpose and doesn't address others. For example, my car helps ensure I can travel, but it doesn't help me shave my beard. And yet, people who shave don't avoid using cars. IP holders who want privacy aren't going to be unusually (moreso than not-IP-holders) biased against using this VPN service.

      --
      "Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
    3. Re:Question by DMalic · · Score: 1

      Oh, crap. We need to sue Winrar. After all, everybody uses rars for piracy! If you weren't pirating you'd just use Zip! Ignore all the arguments otherwise! YES, KILL BUSINESSES WHICH PRODUCE SCARY SOUNDING PRODUCTS!

    4. Re:Question by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      No, but why should it? many of us think that the current US copyright laws are unconstitutional, despite what SCOTUS says; Stanford Professor Lawrence Lessig, for one, who argued that current copyright is unconstitutionally long in front of the Supremes. He details the reasons he lost, and what he did wrong that caused him (and us) to lose in his (copyrighted) book Free Culture, available for sale at your local bookstore, free at your local public library, or free on his web site.

      I do agree that the present copyright laws are unreasonably restrictive (especially as far as terms go). However, if we had a breakdown of copyrighted material illegally distributed via Pirate Bay by release year, how many of those would you expect to be still copyrighted even under the original U.S. copyright terms (which was 14 years initially + explicit 14 years extension, so 28 years)? I would expect 90%+. In fact, I would expect that most of the content wouldn't even reach a 10 year term yet.

    5. Re:Question by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 1

      What is the value of using the original US terms of copyright? The original terms of copyright in the US didn't apply to foreign owned works, if you were a British author your works had zero copyright protection in the US. Given that almost every studio is a multinational or completely foreign owned, under the original terms of copyright their products would have little or no protection either.

      See the problem with using the original terms as the benchmark?

      Times have changed. It has always been human nature to share cool stuff with others, back when the original US terms of copyright were written into law it was nearly impossible to make copies, the general public were limited to tedious handwriting or more commonly oral story telling and live performances. Thus the original terms were no great burden on the public.

      Now, because anyone has the ability to easily share cool stuff with friends and strangers alike it is a huge burden to restrict that ability, even for a few days. It is a burden on the people so restricted and it is a huge burden on anyone whose job it is to enforce the restrictions.

      It is kind of like arguing that US export limits on computers set back in the 80s (attempting to prevent foreign ability to develop home-grown military tech) should apply today - rolling back the restrictions to under 5mips doesn't help because computers aren't even manufactured in the US anymore. It is orthogonal to the real issue - the world has changed and going backwards sure doesn't help to catch up with modern reality.

    6. Re:Question by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      What is the value of using the original US terms of copyright?

      It was just a specific historical example of the more reasonable terms, for the whole "copyright is okay if it weren't extended all the time" crowd (to which I myself belong).

      If you think that copyright has no reasons to exist regardless of its scope, then it was not intended for you (and I do not know any good arguments; at that point, it's a matter of personal beliefs, not rational reasoning).

    7. Re:question by julesh · · Score: 1

      Sure. Just open a socket on my desktop and I'll stream it over.

    8. Re:Question by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 1

      It was just a specific historical example of the more reasonable terms, for the whole "copyright is okay if it weren't extended all the time" crowd (to which I myself belong).

      Those terms were reasonable within their own historic context. They would not be reasonable even today.

      If you think that copyright has no reasons to exist regardless of its scope, then it was not intended for you (and I do not know any good arguments; at that point, it's a matter of personal beliefs, not rational reasoning).

      I absolutely disagree that it is about belief and not rational reasoning. I thought I did a good job of laying out a rational argument for why copyright is infeasible within the context of the modern world. I'll try to do it again, but if I'm missing something then this will probably be a broken record:

      Copyright in the modern world is unenforceable. The cost to enforce it is way out of balance compared to the cost of enforcement before the internet. Today anyone can distribute tens of thousands of copies of any number of works to others for little effort. Whats more, unlike other crimes like murder, rape, assault, etc - people are naturally hardwired to share ideas, especially when it costs them practically nothing to share. So you have a situation where essentially everybody has motive and means to break the law.

      Thus, no matter how beneficial copyright may or may not be (which, I will concede *is* a matter of opinion) the cost of enforcing anything remotely like copyright will dwarf even the most optimistic evaluation of the benefits of copyright.

    9. Re:Question by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Thus, no matter how beneficial copyright may or may not be (which, I will concede *is* a matter of opinion) the cost of enforcing anything remotely like copyright will dwarf even the most optimistic evaluation of the benefits of copyright.

      Ah, but you do not need to enforce it to its fullest, vigorously tracking down every single case, no matter how scarce the evidence. That, indeed, would be quite unenforceable. But most people really only need to know that there is a chance - however slight - to get caught, to cut down on copyright infringing very significantly. Which is pretty much the situation that we have today. If it were a free-for-all, I'd imagine that a lot of content creators, which now make a profit even with all the piracy losses, would become unprofitable overnight.

    10. Re:Question by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 1

      Which is pretty much the situation that we have today.

      You seem to be implying that the current situation, other than duration, is perfectly acceptable.
      Byzantine laws, life-ruining fines, FBI task forces, copyright czars, strained international relations, ridiculous licensing requirements where samples of just six notes or 5 seconds of a painting in the background of a video don't qualify as fair use. All of those costs - enforcement or otherwise - are hugely destructive to our culture.

      If it were a free-for-all, I'd imagine that a lot of content creators, which now make a profit even with all the piracy losses, would become unprofitable overnight.

      Obviously there are lots of people who make money under the current system, but they are propped up by all the losses of the people who get the short end of the stick. Consumers, creators and tax payers who are bearing the costs of the current system.

  4. Not needed yet by Krneki · · Score: 1

    VPN networks may become useful if anti-sharing laws are passed or if sites starts to block foreign connection.

    Still it is good to know people are preparing if things doesn't go as we hoped.

    --
    Love many, trust a few, do harm to none.
    1. Re:Not needed yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Also, automated ATM machines use virtual VPN networks to keep your personal PIN number safe.

    2. Re:Not needed yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i see what you did there and i'm LOLling out loud here! :)

    3. Re:Not needed yet by QRDeNameland · · Score: 0, Redundant

      -6, Redundant.

      --
      Momentarily, the need for the construction of new light will no longer exist.
    4. Re:Not needed yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed - mod parent up!

    5. Re:Not needed yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also, automated ATM machines use virtual VPN networks to keep your personal PIN number safe.

      I hate you sooooooo much for typing that bold part.

  5. Erm by ilovegeorgebush · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You're as anonymous as your credit card details allow you to be. How are you supposed to pay for something web-based without handing over your details?

    Furthermore, couldn't the courts just request THB hand over a list of paying customers if it were pertinent to a case?

    1. Re:Erm by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 5, Informative

      Yea, so? If there are no traffic records, all they would know is that those people pay for a service, not that they actually used it to download anything.

      It's not illegal to pay someone for a secure connection, and since damages in most cases are attached to download records, they would have nothing to stand on really.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    2. Re:Erm by batquux · · Score: 1

      This is like buying a 'gold delivery service' from Blackbeard.

    3. Re:Erm by simonbas · · Score: 0

      Is there any service to pay anonymously over the net? comparable to cash?

    4. Re:Erm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Wow, young crowd here today: maybe a pre-paid Visa card from Wal*Mart? Like, duh?

      -jcr

    5. Re:Erm by Loadmaster · · Score: 2, Informative

      You're right that the user will not be totally anonymous, but TPB said they will not store traffic logs. Basically, even if they get your name as a user they cannot tie any illegal action to you. Just ask the RIAA how well lawsuits work with dynamic IP addresses. They paid out over $100,000 to Tonya Anderson of Beaverton, OR because of this.

    6. Re:Erm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, but using your credit card does not make you a criminal, does it?

      Compared to your friendly local ISP, at least THB would have to go to court to give a list of customers.

    7. Re:Erm by pilgrim23 · · Score: 1

      You are purchasing a VPN Service. nothing illegal about that. Now, track who paid for it, their downloads, the torrents they nabbed, the IP from which it was nabbed, match to known copyrighted materials.... Sounds an expensive and a possibly futile search given who is running this party. It would also require they hire geeks very good at this sort of thing and fluent in Swedish. If nothing else it will result in new and interesting letters in the PB legals...

      --
      - Minutus cantorum, minutus balorum, minutus carborata descendum pantorum.
    8. Re:Erm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you've never heard of pre-paid credit cards? I guess you've never heard of webmail accounts outside a given country? I think you should cancel your /. account and sod off over to digg.

    9. Re:Erm by wastedlife · · Score: 1

      And how do you explain to the authorities why you are paying for an overseas VPN account with a fake name and a pre-paid Visa? Granted, none of those things are technically illegal in the US AFAIK(the fake account details might be a problem with the Patriot Act though), but it might be suspicious enough to have a search warrant issued and your computer taken for analysis. This is the same problem with encrypting your hard drive and border searches, they are going to assume the worst even if you only do it because you expect reasonable privacy.

      --
      Said, "It's just like dice but it's got more sides And it tells me who lives and who dies"
    10. Re:Erm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I swear officer, I only paid that prostitute for her to spend time with me in a hotel room. You cant prove we actually had sex.

    11. Re:Erm by arndawg · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I swear officer, I only paid that prostitute for her to spend time with me in a hotel room. You cant prove we actually had sex.

      More like: I only paid for that hotel room. What prostitute are you talking about?

    12. Re:Erm by rattaroaz · · Score: 0

      I swear officer, I only paid that prostitute for her to spend time with me in a hotel room. You cant prove we actually had sex.

      No, but the gonorrhea had to come from somewhere.

    13. Re:Erm by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      It's not a crime to pay someone for their time.

      Your analogy is fucked.

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
    14. Re:Erm by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      Both perfectly legal

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
    15. Re:Erm by skeeto · · Score: 1

      You're as anonymous as your credit card details allow you to be.

      Then use anonymous Internet banking. There are a few implementations out there right now. I haven't used them myself, so I can't say if they are any good.

    16. Re:Erm by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      Western Union, It's what all the scammers and pedophiles use.

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
    17. Re:Erm by jhol13 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The fact that you have paid for TPB might be enough for a search warrant.

      And we all know how that is going to end (you'll never get your computer back).

      And that is all RIAA/... wants.

    18. Re:Erm by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      I'm not aware of any. But it's an interesting question what such a payment system would have to look like.
      Maybe it would be a money account with no name stored, but the only way you identify is by having the private part of a public/private key pair. However, there's still the question how you get your money on that account without identifying yourself (assuming you are earning your money through the normal payment systems), or how you get your money back into the normal payment systems. But then, maybe having several accounts with different providers would be enough.

      Payment would probably be made by a digital analog of a cheque: The first step would probably be to generate an unique identifier. This unique identifier and your account number would then together be encrypted with your account provider's public key to form an unique cheque ID (UCID). The reason for this is twofold: First, it would prevent the receiver to identify that two different cheques come from the same person (just encrypting your bank account number would not suffice, but the unique identifier would provide the needed randomness), and second, it would make sure that the cheque can only be used once: The account provider would not pay out a digital cheque if the same UCID was already used. To this UCID you would add the payment data (amount of money, purpose, etc, and of course your account provider, so it's clear where to get the money from), and sign the whole thing with your private key.

      Securely passing that cheque to the receiver would be something outside of the scope of the system (e.g. if you would pay for access to a web site, you could simply transfer it over the SSL protected connection to the web site owner).

      The receiver would then pass it to his anonymous account provider (again, the security of this step is up to the account provider; of course he would have to identify as account owner with his private account key), who would note the ID and receiver account, and then pass it on to your account provider. Your account provider would check that the cheque wasn't yet used (i.e. check if the UCID was already used), then he would decrypt the UCID with his private key to find out your account number. Since he now knows which account the money is to be payed from, he can check your signature with the public key of your account. If the check is successful (so he knows that the digital cheque is valid), he sends the money to the receipient's account provider (identifying the payment with the UCID), who then can book it to the receiver's account.

      This should be anonymous:
      * You don't need to know more about the receiver but how to securely get your digital cheque to him.
      * The receiver knows your account provider, but not your account number (presumably, the same account provider administrates many accounts). The same is true for the receiver's account provider.
      * Your account provider only knows to which account provider the money goes, but not to which account there.
      * Even if your account provider and you receiver's account provider are the same, the account provider only knows from which account to which account the money went, not who owns those accounts.

      It also should be secure (assuming all involved systems and transmissions are well secured, and the keys are not broken, of course):
      * The UCID makes sure that the same cheque can only be payed once.
      * You need your private signature (known only to you, not even to your account provider) in order to create a digital cheque.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    19. Re:Erm by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Thinking more about it, I came to the conclusion that the protocol should be slightly modified:
      * With the current scheme, your receiver cannot be sure that you gave him a valid cheque, and that you really have the amount of money.
      * Also, since the signature is only checked at your account provider (despite the name, only your account provider has your public key), the only thing which should be in the signed part is the amount of money, so only that part goes back to your account provider (it's the only thing, apart from your account number, he must know).

      To address the first point, the scheme could be that you first send your digital cheque with only the UCID, the amount of money and a random token previously sent to you by the receiver, signed with your private key, to your account provider, who checks that this UCID wasn't yet used for a digital cheque and that you indeed have that much payable money on your account, blocks the corresponding money (so it can only be payed using this special digital cheque), signs the DS with his private key (for which the corresponding public key indeed is public), and then sends the signed DS back to you, so you can rtansmit it to the receiver. Now the receiver knows that
      * you didn't use the same UCID before (if you had created another cheque with the same UCID before, the account provider would not have signed it; also the token proves that you created it for the exact transaction, and did not reuse an older one), and
      * you really have the money (again, the account provider would not have signed it if you hadn't, and it's now blocked).

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    20. Re:Erm by FrankieBaby1986 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And how do you explain to the authorities why you are paying for an overseas VPN account with a fake name and a pre-paid Visa?

      You don't have to.

      Or, if that doesn't suit you, "To be anonymous, thus the purchase of an anonymity service using anonymous methods...duh"

      --
      ERROR: SIG NOT FOUND (A)bort, (R)etry, (F)ail?:
    21. Re:Erm by intx13 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And how do you explain to the authorities why you are paying for an overseas VPN account with a fake name and a pre-paid Visa? Granted, none of those things are technically illegal in the US [...]

      What, is the US government my mom? I don't have to explain myself. It's none of the US government's business if I want to have candy after dinner and stay up late on a school night.

      I think part of The Problem is that people are beginning to think how you are thinking: "But how will you justify your legal actions to the government?" The proper sentiment is "Why on earth does the government care why I'm doing perfectly legal things?"

      I pay my taxes. I am not a felon. I've paid my "rent" so to speak and in return I get a handful of rights, a secure nation to live in, and (theoretically) a solid economy to base my finances on. And that is where my relationship with the government ends.

      (Though as a side-note: no affordable health care, no decent public transportation, poor economy, limited social rights, and a questionable education system... I'm not sure I'm getting my money's worth anymore!)

    22. Re:Erm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's the thing. I signed up for the beta (which I didn't get into) and I am seriously wanting to join the VPN once it becomes a paid service.

      I'm also not planning on using the VPN for file sharing, I just really believe that no one else has the right to see where I go on the internet, or what I do.

      Even if I'm Googling and on Wikipedia, there is no reason for anyone to need to know that. Privacy rights have been massively co-opted on the internet because of the "War on Terrorism" and "think of the children".

      Would you like to have a camera in your bedroom 24/7 and be treated like a criminal before you do anything to warrant that? That's our current enviornment.

      No thanks, if there's a way that I can opt out and go back to the way things used to be where no one knew where I was going on the Net, I want to go there. Even if I'm not downloading W4r3z or pR0n and am planning on going over to C/Net and reading some articles on the current state of the economy, or what the price of oil is this morning.

      Now, get off my lawn. ;)

    23. Re:Erm by Tuoqui · · Score: 1

      I presume that once the monetary transaction is complete the credit card details are expunged from the account information. Therefore they know you paid to TPB for the VPN service but they dont know what your account is. Or alternatively they know what the account is but they wont be able to trace it back to an individual via credit card number by warrant or subpoena.

      --
      09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
      +2 Troll is Slashdot's way of saying groupthink is confused
    24. Re:Erm by wastedlife · · Score: 1

      I agree. My statement is a reflection of the current state of affairs. It should be none of their business. What happened to "innocent until proven guilty" and similar protections from the government? It seems like the government is slowly shifting toward a dictatorship and it scares the shit out of me. This is not a anti-republican(though many of the big steps were taken under Bush) or anti-democrat rant. Both sides are yanking our rights out from under us under the guise of "stopping terrorism", "saving the children", and the "war on drugs".

      --
      Said, "It's just like dice but it's got more sides And it tells me who lives and who dies"
    25. Re:Erm by FictionPimp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Buy a visa gift card with cash?

    26. Re:Erm by Clandestine_Blaze · · Score: 3, Funny

      Hahaha - that made me smile. That would mean all consultants and lawyers are prostitutes.

      Oh, wait...

      (Disclaimer: I am a consultant)

    27. Re:Erm by Nutty_Irishman · · Score: 1

      If someone were truly interested in remaining fully anonymous, they would probably be using prepaid credit cards.

    28. Re:Erm by PJ1216 · · Score: 1

      No, that isn't enough for a search warrant. Thats like saying denying police a search into your car is enough for a search warrant (and its not. in fact, if thats all they got, you'll have an extremely good case for getting off without whatever illegal stuff they may have had and you may have a personal suit as well... most intelligent police officers will NOT use that as their only reason).

    29. Re:Erm by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      Currently its not illegal to purchase 'services' from a remote server so records of payment is meaningless.

      Since you can be using the legally purchased VPN account for legit reasons too ( like avoiding political percussion, or just to surf ) i don't see the simple act of purchase being grounds for anything.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    30. Re:Erm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh no, not a pre-paid credit card! So very complicated!

    31. Re:Erm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In prostitution stings police officers have to actually get a verbal confirmation from the suspect that they will pay so-and-so dollars for such-and-such act, in very specific terms.

    32. Re:Erm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about having a scheme where you can only push/deposit money, no pulls/withdrawals allowed. So if I want to give someone money, all I need is their account number and I iniate the deposit. If someone wants to give me money, I give them my account number and they initiate the deposit. My account number can be public for all the world to know and it doesn't matter. The only thing anyone can do is make deposits into it because there is no other transaction type.

    33. Re:Erm by jhol13 · · Score: 1

      Suppose I pay for a mail box. Suppose all/most other mail boxes have illegal drugs in them. What would police do, ignore mine or get a search warrant for me?

    34. Re:Erm by Kagura · · Score: 1

      I have heard about these border searches, but where are they? I flew from the US to Japan and back this Christmas, and I had no greater search than what they've been doing in customs for hundreds of years. No hard drive cloning or anything unreasonable.

    35. Re:Erm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I swear officer, I only paid that prostitute for her to spend time with me in a hotel room. You cant prove we actually had sex.

      More like:
      I only paid for that hotel room. What prostitute are you talking about?

      More like:

      I only paid for that hotel room. I don't know nothing about a prostitute, a strangled midget and a sexually abused cat. Most of all I don't see a connection to radical islamic terrorist cells in Pakistan!?

      Why the hotel room? I just needed a private place to log on to my piratebay VPN account and download the latest release of Ubuntu. Didn't want my husband Bill to find out I was using Linux behind his back.

    36. Re:Erm by PJ1216 · · Score: 1

      They won't ignore it, but they won't get a search warrant based on that either. They can have someone watch the mailbox and see if they can get any evidence to search it. But no, they can't get a search warrant for your mail box because they've seen other people use them to break the law. If its not illegal to own a mail box in your hypothetical, then its not legal to just get a search warrant because "hey, they can be used illegally sometimes." In that world, they'd then be allowed to search every mail box without any reason whatsoever. It's entirely foolish to think that makes sense. Thats like saying criminals wear hoodies so therefore cops should stop everyone in hoodies just to see if they have anything illegal on them.

    37. Re:Erm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      rofl, nice

    38. Re:Erm by Anti_Climax · · Score: 1

      Visa gift card, purchased with cash at a local retailer

      --
      Even people that believe in pre-destiny look both ways before crossing the street.
    39. Re:Erm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just buy a pre-paid Amex card at the grocery store (with cash). Use your imagination. The people that would track you are not *that* smart. At least not the people who would target you for downloading songs and movies.

    40. Re:Erm by mftb · · Score: 1

      Ignore it.

    41. Re:Erm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does no one accept money orders anymore?

    42. Re:Erm by marco.antonio.costa · · Score: 1

      That's kind of the GP's point. You can't suppose all/most other mail boxes have illegal drugs in them. You need reasonable suspicion, or evidence. And no, you can't get it by opening and looking at it just because you feel like it.

      I believe we still live in an 'innocent until proven guilty' world, but who knows, these are terrible times with everything changing for the worse I don't know how long that doctrine will stand.

      --
      Send your spendthrift head of state this
    43. Re:Erm by marco.antonio.costa · · Score: 1

      This is so sad. People often precede their "I have rights." routine with "I pay my taxes". We are led more and more to believe we pay the government for our rights, instead of them being innate to us and we having FORMED government to protect them.

      What in the hell is the world coming to?

      --
      Send your spendthrift head of state this
    44. Re:Erm by nog_lorp · · Score: 1

      Ignore yours, because no judge would give them a search warrant purely because you have a mail box.

    45. Re:Erm by jhol13 · · Score: 1

      Not in Finland. The warrant would be certain, after all it seems clear that the mailboxes in the premises were used for drug trafficking.

    46. Re:Erm by calmofthestorm · · Score: 1

      Just don't try to blow up any buildings or take pictures of bridges...

      --
      93rd rule of Slashdot: No matter how obvious my sarcasm is, my comment will be taken seriously by someone.
  6. Re:Please slashdot you must help me!!! by ilovegeorgebush · · Score: 4, Funny

    You're supposed to do it anonymously, noob.

    Oh, wait...

  7. Account details by wastedlife · · Score: 1

    Considering you have to pay them somehow, won't the authorities be able to extradite the client information that way? Granted, The Pirate Bay claims they won't log your activity, but having an account with them might put you under scrutiny.

    --
    Said, "It's just like dice but it's got more sides And it tells me who lives and who dies"
    1. Re:Account details by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You pay them by sending me $5, and I pay them for you... yeah!

    2. Re:Account details by joelmax · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yes, but really, if they only have your name and address, they can't search your home/sieze your system simply for having a vpn account with TPB. You are not violating any laws to have that account, therefore probable cause *shouldn't* work on the simple grounds that millions of people around the world use/connect to vpns all the time. Now IANAL by any means, and who knows what sort of strong-arm/sneaky tactics could be used... but simply having a vpn with TPB shouldn't be enough cause to gain a warrant.

    3. Re:Account details by wastedlife · · Score: 1

      Well, they were able to torture and imprison you without trial for "terrorist activities". They are able to take your laptop away for having encryption at a border search. I'd say that, realistically, they could probably have a warrant issued(or would just illegally search and seize) against you for having a VPN account with a web site filled with "illegal" material. Just because they shouldn't doesn't mean they won't.

      --
      Said, "It's just like dice but it's got more sides And it tells me who lives and who dies"
    4. Re:Account details by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      Is it somehow immoral to do business within the law?

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
    5. Re:Account details by DMalic · · Score: 1

      Border searches are performed in the never-neverland which is not technically within the United States, so certain protections do not apply.

    6. Re:Account details by wastedlife · · Score: 1

      I never said that I feel it is immoral. However, having a VPN account with a website full of "illegal" materials might put you under suspicion with the authorities. However, if the number of users grows large enough, it likely wouldn't be worth pursuing.

      --
      Said, "It's just like dice but it's got more sides And it tells me who lives and who dies"
    7. Re:Account details by legirons · · Score: 1

      Considering you have to pay them somehow, won't the authorities be able to extradite the client information that way? Granted, The Pirate Bay claims they won't log your activity, but having an account with them might put you under scrutiny.

      Suppose someone starts-up a stall in your town market where they buy TPB VPN accounts on their credit card and sell them for cash. Voila! no further link between payment info and VPN user.

      Now the source IP address for the VPN connection on the other hand, that probably has the correct person paying for it...

    8. Re:Account details by Fnord666 · · Score: 1

      Now the source IP address for the VPN connection on the other hand, that probably has the correct person paying for it...

      That's why I jump on my neighbor's open router when I want to visit TPB.

      --
      'The tyrant will always find pretext for his tyranny.' - Aesop's Fables
    9. Re:Account details by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      The website doesn't contain any illegal material.

      But anyway would it really matter if the MPAA knew you had a connection with The Pirate Bay, they can't sue you for it. Also it is in fact not a crime to download copyrighted content, if it where the police would have some involvement.

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
  8. Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

    Why would anyone need to "cover their tracks when torrenting" unless he was doing something illegal?

    --
    There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    1. Re:Why is it needed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      more importantly, why would anyone resist personal searches and eavesdropping if they've got nothing to hide?

    2. Re:Why is it needed? by Per+Wigren · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Illegal is not necessarily the same thing as immoral, wrong, evil, bad.

      Maybe the laws are wrong and should be changed? Before that can happen though, this will help people in need of privacy. You can look at it as a kind of civil disobedience.

      --
      My other account has a 3-digit UID.
    3. Re:Why is it needed? by itschy · · Score: 1

      Your position seems to be the widely spreading "guilty until otherwise proven" one.
      By that logic, why would anyone use sun glasses in winter?
      Or even: Why would anyone wear cloth, unless they are unbelievable ugly?

      Sadly, a lot of very attractive women seem to wear cloth these days.

      Where was I?
      Ah, yes: Forbid beautiful people to waer clothes. That was my point!

    4. Re:Why is it needed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't you have a webcam in your toilet?

      Are you doing something illegal in there?

    5. Re:Why is it needed? by Loadmaster · · Score: 1

      Privacy. It's your right whether you need/want it or not. Don't give yours away, and I'd appreciate you not giving mine away either.

      http://www.computerweekly.com/blogs/the-data-trust-blog/2009/02/debunking-a-myth-if-you-have-n.html

      And here's Professor Solove's essay on "I've got nothing to hide" and privacy.

      http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=998565

    6. Re:Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      By that logic, why would anyone use sun glasses in winter?

      Because the sun still shines in winter.

      Or even: Why would anyone wear cloth, unless they are unbelievable ugly?

      Because it is cold, or they burn easily, or they need protection from the elements, or simply because of social mores and laws.

      Would you care to use an analogy which is not completely false and has a modicum of reality and relevance?

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      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    7. Re:Why is it needed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just another rehash of the "if you've got nothing to hide..." trope which has been refuted on /. ad nauseam. Please go back to trolling Digg.

    8. Re:Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 0

      Maybe the laws are wrong and should be changed?

      Then you change the laws, not break them. It is not civil disobedience. It is simple criminality.

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      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    9. Re:Why is it needed? by PhrostyMcByte · · Score: 1

      Why would you shut your blinds unless you were doing something illegal? Why would you password protect your computer unless you have child porn on it? Some people just like their privacy. You don't have to be doing illegal things to want to keep your habits private.

      To be clear, I'm not arguing the likelihood of the service being used for anonymization of illegal activity.

    10. Re:Why is it needed? by Hatta · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Then you change the laws, not break them. It is not civil disobedience. It is simple criminality.

      Henry David Thoreau would disagree:

      As for adopting the ways which the State has provided for remedying the evil, I know not of such ways. They take too much time, and a man's life will be gone. I have other affairs to attend to. I came into this world, not chiefly to make this a good place to live in, but to live in it, be it good or bad. A man has not everything to do, but something; and because he cannot do everything, it is not necessary that he should do something wrong. It is not my business to be petitioning the Governor or the Legislature any more than it is theirs to petition me; and if they should not hear my petition, what should I do then? But in this case the State has provided no way; its very Constitution is the evil. This may seem to be harsh and stubborn and unconciliatory; but it is to treat with the utmost kindness and consideration the only spirit that can appreciate or deserves it.

      Civil Disobedience, 1849

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    11. Re:Why is it needed? by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1

      I don't think you're quite getting the concept of civil disobedience. Civil disobedience, by definition, involves breaking the law, hopefully in a way that shows that the law is "unjust".

      I'm not saying anything about whether this applies to the Pirate Bay's actions; I'm just saying that your understanding of civil disobedience is incorrect.

    12. Re:Why is it needed? by Vertana · · Score: 4, Insightful

      EVERYONE has something to hide. Not to say it would be illegal, but how about credit cards? Or something even a little more trivial, how about the way you like to have sex? Let's say you were talking to your wife over the internet about the way you like to have sex. Is it illegal? No. "Not tasteful?" According to who? And is it potentially embarrassing? Depending on what specifically you're talking about, maybe. Especially if it were revealed to your work or maybe your insurance company. Here you thought you were just talking about the great night you were gonna have with your wife and someone has 'eavesdropped' on that conversation and has twisted it to be a weapon against you. Yeah, that's extreme, but just one of those things that 'could happen' if we (the people) don't try to fight the little things.

      --
      "The best way to accelerate a Macintosh is at 9.8m/sec^2" -Marcus Dolengo
    13. Re:Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      There is already privacy available through pirate bay, so why is this extreme protection necessary? Please point out any legitimate reason one would need this on Pirate Bay, a service that already offers privacy.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    14. Re:Why is it needed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is simple criminality.

      No, copyright violation for personal use is a *civil matter* not a criminal offence. You fail.

    15. Re:Why is it needed? by jhol13 · · Score: 1

      1. PayPal has Accepted policy which prohibits "obscene".
      2. Your community might have huge, and I mean huge, "bias" against gay or communism or abortion or whatnot and they might (legally or illegally or "accidentally") snoop you.
      3. You country might be against Tibet. Or ...
      4. You might want to do adultery. It is almost nowhere *illegal*.
      5. You might want to have a demonstration outside "free speech zones". OK, this might be illegal ... but hardly immoral.

      Need I go on?

    16. Re:Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      This is not shutting one's blinds or password protecting one's computer. If you wish to use an analogy, use an appropriate one.

      This is building a sound-proof room in a bunker behind a 20ft, steel-reinforced, cinder block wall topped with barbed wire and watched by security cameras, and a gate guard that is specifically instructed to sound a silent alarm if the police show up and then to delay the police as long as possible before letting the police in.

      This is using a piece of software that requires a 64 character password, which will write 1s and 0s directly to the drive if there are two consecutive password failures, on a computer kept in a room with a security system which will hit the drive with a magnet pulse and fry the electronics if the room is breached, and turns the only entryway into an electromagnet to erase the drives if someone tries to remove the boxes.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    17. Re:Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      The only problem with using Thoreau is that his argument was in regards to an unjust state, which is not the case here.

      In fact, I wonder how he would feel about this issue considering he would be a content creator and copyright holder whose copy rights would be violated by the supporters of this system.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    18. Re:Why is it needed? by PhrostyMcByte · · Score: 1

      So what you are saying is, only criminals need strong security?

    19. Re:Why is it needed? by DMalic · · Score: 1

      His point is that he should not have to justify his personal reasons for use of a legal product or products to you, just the same as you should not have to do so to him.

    20. Re:Why is it needed? by DMalic · · Score: 1

      There is? When you can just send a letter to an ISP threatening a lawsuit and they'll cough up info, or start the lawsuit and then cancel it? (A favored practice by the RIAA)

    21. Re:Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But, no one is showing the law is unjust. They are just breaking the law and claiming the law is unjust because they don't like the law, and they don't like the law because the law says they can't make copies of copyrighted works even if it is cheap and easy to do so. They trample on the rights of the copyright holders and then claim it should be their right to do so.

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      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    22. Re:Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      1) So, you use a service to allow you to violate your contract with PayPal? Doesn't sound legal, moral, or ethical to me.
      2) And, your community might not, and hasn't, so this argument goes on the pile of all the other arguments from fear.
      3) And this requires a VPN connection to Pirate Bay why and how?
      4) And this requires a VPN connection to Pirate Bay why and how?
      5) And this requires a VPN connection to Pirate Bay why and how?

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    23. Re:Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      There is "strong security" and then there is "security that is geared to prevent legal investigation".

      There comes a point where "strong security" becomes suspicious in its own right due to its emphasis on preventing legal investigation and the enforcement of rights.

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    24. Re:Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      If that was his point, he should have said so. As it is, his analogies do not support such a claim.

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      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    25. Re:Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Did the Pirate Bay do that? Or, are you trying to change the argument?

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      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    26. Re:Why is it needed? by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      When the laws are written by those who would keep others under their thumbs, civil disobedience is frequently the only way to get the laws changed.

      You really need to read up on your black history in America, your women's rights history in America, and the existence of America as a country for that matter. All were facilitated by civil disobedience.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    27. Re:Why is it needed? by iiiears · · Score: 1

      I am forced to approach the eloquence of your argument with uncertainty. As I am not likely to equal it. Please consider it the possibility, That copyright theft is more than symbolic of a desire to use the copyrighted material. Also that the holder of the legal protections that is a "copyright" isn't weighing the price asked properly or is providing use of the copyrighted material in an inefficient manner. Essentially market forces are always, inexorably, trying to induce efficiency. ~Best Wishes.

      --
      15TW = 15,000 Nuclear Reactors. (Approx. one accident a month.)
    28. Re:Why is it needed? by cliffski · · Score: 1

      I've broken the law before, I'm guilty of breaking and entering and trespass. I did so as part of an organised public protest.

      When the police stopped us, they asked for our names and addresses, which we happily provided.
      We broke the law knowing the consequences, hoping that we could draw press attention to what we believed was unjust. We believed in the cause enough that we were happy to suffer the consequences, and would be happy to argue our case in court, although as it goes, we were not charged.

      That's what people who protest to achieve real change do. People who break and enter, then fuck off before the cops come are not protesters, they are just vandals and thugs.

      Torrenting movies anonymously is not public protest. If it was you would want to get caught. Getting caught is how you drag the issue into the spotlight and fight for change. Anyone using a VPN to torrent Hollywood movies isn't fighting the system, they are just tight-asses and leeches.

      --
      DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
    29. Re:Why is it needed? by vivaelamor · · Score: 1

      IANAL but my understanding is that copyright infringement is rarely dealt with under criminal law.

      That may seem like pedantry but it is an important distinction. If people are criminals for copyright infringement then they are also criminals for driving over the speed limit. This may well be your view, in which case a significant portion of the population should be considered criminals.

      I take the view that choice is more important than law. To base a decision solely on law is to me a sign that someone is incapable of making the decision in the first place. I would rather have a society full of petty criminals who choose not to be violent because they abhor the consequences than a society full of people who follow the law blindly and get led into a war because wars are lawful.

    30. Re:Why is it needed? by freeweed · · Score: 1

      more importantly, why would anyone resist personal searches and eavesdropping if they've got nothing to hide?

      We'll get right on installing those cameras and microphones in your bedroom, then.

      Oh, and in your children's bedroom. And bathroom.

      You've got nothing to hide, right?

      --
      Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
    31. Re:Why is it needed? by iiiears · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, I failed to include any mention of the economic issues of creating content protected by copyright. And particularly of those of weighting economic gain by efficiently licensing use of content by creators to a larger audience. This likely will direct the discussion into issues that are beyond difficult to measure in this forum. Far beyond the tools at hand. Certainly beyond me i believe, and into the realm of conjecture. If you feel my argument is unsubstantiated also likely too generalized to be of use you are right. Not really related to the topic but simply questions that are pestering me. Because everyone enjoys the use of copyrights and few can dispute their value only the length of time and terms granted in licensing them. Is it likely that those that can pay for a license would be more likely to pay if they felt that harm was being done by stealing and that using encryption and intimidation isn't enough? Wouldn't another additional measure be building consensus by releasing accurate and verifiable numbers related to economic damage? Just another rambling slashdot post thank you for your patience if you have read this far.

      --
      15TW = 15,000 Nuclear Reactors. (Approx. one accident a month.)
    32. Re:Why is it needed? by vivaelamor · · Score: 1

      That seems a rather improper rebuttal. To quote Mr Thoreau:

      âoeUnder a government which imprisons unjustly, the true place for a just man is also a prison.⦠where the State places those who are not with her, but against her, â" the only house in a slave State in which a free man can abide with honor.⦠Cast your whole vote, not a strip of paper merely, but your whole influence. A minority is powerless while it conforms to the majority; it is not even a minority then; but it is irresistible when it clogs by its whole weight. If the alternative is to keep all just men in prison, or give up war and slavery, the State will not hesitate which to choose. If a thousand men were not to pay their tax bills this year, that would not be a violent and bloody measure, as it would be to pay them, and enable the State to commit violence and shed innocent blood. This is, in fact, the definition of a peaceable revolution, if any such is possible.â

      Just because people are not objecting to slavery or war in this instance does not make his writings any less relevant.

      I also wonder how he would feel about this issue, and I wouldn't be so sure that he'd agree with you. As he's dead it's a rather pointless argument, though.

    33. Re:Why is it needed? by legirons · · Score: 1

      Why would anyone need to "cover their tracks when torrenting" unless he was doing something illegal?

      Go ask a military base with secure communications whether they're doing anything illegal.

    34. Re:Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Please consider it the possibility, That copyright theft is more than symbolic of a desire to use the copyrighted material.

      You are right, it is more than symbolic of said desire. It is the actually imposition of said desire.

      Also that the holder of the legal protections that is a "copyright" isn't weighing the price asked properly or is providing use of the copyrighted material in an inefficient manner.

      The holder sets the price asked. If one does not wish to pay said price, then one should neither pay the price nor enjoy the content.

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    35. Re:Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      And particularly of those of weighting economic gain by efficiently licensing use of content by creators to a larger audience.

      Again, the copyright holder sets the price and thus his own economic gain. The size of the economic gain and the efficiency of the licensing is a direct result of the holder's desire. If the creator is not the holder, then the creator no longer has any say in the distribution as the creator gave up that right when he gave up the copyright to the holder.

      Your arguments are specious.

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    36. Re:Why is it needed? by vivaelamor · · Score: 1

      Glad am I, to poke a hole in your reality.

      You seem to be mixing up public protesting with civil disobedience. While one may lead to the other.. they are different things. Civil disobedience may involve a public protest (as in your example) but it doesn't have to.

      If you were to stop paying your taxes because you did not want to fund the war in Iraq.. that would be civil disobedience and depending on your intent, a protest.

      If you were to chain yourself to a troop transport, that would also be civil disobedience as well as a public protest.

      The example you give of vandals and thugs does not give a very good indication of intent as we do not know what the protest was about. If the protest was about being able to enter abandoned buildings for example then yes they may be exercising civil disobedience, by breaking the law in order to assert their right to enter the building.

      If they were breaking the law for the hell of it then that is civil disobedience in the same way that physical harm is surgery; while it may be technically accurate it isn't the established use of the phrase.

    37. Re:Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      It is not improper because it is still not an unjust state. Preventing you from violating other people's rights does not make the state unjust. Refusing to give in to your selfish desires to the harm of others does not make the state unjust.

      You call the state unjust because it will not capitulate to your petty greed. That makes you childish and unjust.

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    38. Re:Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Disingenuous argument. The communications of the military base are classified by law and it is illegal for them to be insecure. Also, if the military base is in a foreign country, the activities may be illegal within said country.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    39. Re:Why is it needed? by merchant_x · · Score: 1

      Would you care to define when strong security be "too" strong? If I feel the need for privacy and security I'm going to go with the absolute strongest security I can afford, to do any less is wasting my time.

      This is building a sound-proof room in a bunker behind a 20ft, steel-reinforced, cinder block wall topped with barbed wire and watched by security cameras, and a gate guard that is specifically instructed to sound a silent alarm if the police show up and then to delay the police as long as possible before letting the police in.

      The security guard sounds the alarm whenever ANYONE shows up. If it is the police he delays them long enough to ensure that they have a legal and properly executed warrant before allowing them entry. If they do not have such he sends them on their way.

      This is using a piece of software that requires a 64 character password, which will write 1s and 0s directly to the drive if there are two consecutive password failures, on a computer kept in a room with a security system which will hit the drive with a magnet pulse and fry the electronics if the room is breached, and turns the only entryway into an electromagnet to erase the drives if someone tries to remove the boxes.

      I have a right to privacy and if I feel strongly about it I have a right to take whatever legal means i feel necessary to protect it. You may think it is excessive but it's none of your business nor the governments so long as they have no evidence of wrong doing. And having extremely strong security is NOT evidence of illegal activities.

    40. Re:Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      The security guard sounds the alarm whenever ANYONE shows up.

      No, he does not.

      Having strong security while doing something that has been proven to be dominated by illegal activity, it is suspicious.

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    41. Re:Why is it needed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would anyone need to "cover their tracks when torrenting" unless he was doing something illegal?

      So if my ISP is brain-dead and blocks all torrent traffic, even things like Fedora or Ubuntu, finding a way around thier brain-deadedness is illegal?

    42. Re:Why is it needed? by vivaelamor · · Score: 1

      Although I am not sure English is your first language, I think I understand what you're getting at.

      Is it likely that those that can pay for a license would be more likely to pay if they felt that harm was being done by stealing and that using encryption and intimidation isn't enough? Wouldn't another additional measure be building consensus by releasing accurate and verifiable numbers related to economic damage?

      You seem to be saying that rather than the current methods of WAR! on copyright infringers that rights holders should instead concentrate on realistically identifying the effect that infringement has.

      I agree that such an approach would be a lot better than what they are doing now and may even be successful. I am of the opinion that given the options of telling someone what to do against telling them about the consequences of their actions to enable them to make an informed choice, the latter should always be prefered.

      Having said that, I do not believe that such a thing would be enough to justify copyright to those who believe it does more harm than good or doubt it's effectiveness.

      As well, economic figures are notoriously hard to put into a useful context but easy to manipulate for a chosen goal if that goal includes making lots of money.

      It would be easy to show that copyright generates lots of money.. after all, as someone who opposes copyright I would be the first to say how big an impact it has. Copyright means more artists; more artists mean more works of art; more works of art generally lead to more money being made from art. If your goal is to create jobs then it may be considered a big success.

      That is only one side of the story though, for all the positive spin you can put on the effects of copyright.. it is usually taking at least as much away from society as it gives.

      More artists is a given, the worth of those artists is not.

      While copyright is often marketed as an incentive for creativity, it is more likely to marginalise creativity as a drip feed for a money making monster. When the incentive is based on how many records you sell.. good business is keeping new material to yourself until your previous record stops selling. Provided of course that you aren't a manufactured band in the first place who's creativity is based on market research.

      Economically speaking you can think of it in terms of resources. People are only ever going to spend as much on entertainment as they have spare and will usually spend less. With copyright, you have lots of artists. The constant influx of new records means that lots of money will be spent on them. Because records are an infinite resource, there is no upper limit on how much one artist can make; if they are popular they can become rich. Those that fail to sell so many records (maybe they aren't in fashion or don't have funds for a global advertising campaign) will receive a vastly smaller sum because people will be less likely to spend money on them. As well, the knock on effect of there being more artists and filthy rich artists is that there is less physical wealth in the economy to go around.

      So, without copyright.. I think: Artists would be fewer. Creativity would be better rewarded. The economy would be better off by the decrease in money going into music. Artists would have more wealth between them and it would be more evenly distributed.

      The downside? People having to choose to invest in artists? I believe that is where copyright is failing most dramatically and that even if everyone who currently pirates didn't start spending money on artists, the artists who were left would still be better off as would the economy as a whole.

    43. Re:Why is it needed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Illegal is not necessarily the same thing as immoral, wrong, evil, bad.

      People say this every time it's convenient to. "It's not immoral to break the rules if I don't believe the rules should apply to me."

      I disagree. I believe that everyone should follow the law, or change the law. In many cases, you deciding which laws you should and shouldn't follow could have an effect on me. We can't have people deciding which rules they should or shouldn't follow. That's selfish, potentially dangerous, and certainly immoral.

      So do it right, follow the law or change the law... otherwise don't live here. Anything else is just a convenient, selfish excuse.

    44. Re:Why is it needed? by vivaelamor · · Score: 1

      No one said it was an unjust state. I am guessing that your issue is that you feel Thoreau's actions were only justified by the fact that it was the constitution that he disagreed with. While that is a perfectly reasonable view.. Hatta was basing his statement on what Thoreau actually said. You seem to be basing your statement on what you think Thoreau would have felt.

      And *yawn* at the you're so selfish jabs. They are poorly used on a complete stranger.

    45. Re:Why is it needed? by cliffski · · Score: 1

      what bit confuses you?

      if you are involved in civil disobedience you do nOT try and hide your actions.
      if you do, the authorities canot distinguish your 'civil disobedience' from just being a common criminal.

      This is not hard to understand surely?

      99.9999% of people pirating stuff online sre not trying to change the law. They are trying to wangle out of paying for stuff. 99% of those people lie even to themselves about their true motives.
      I guess its not nice to realise you are a cheapass, so its understandable.

      --
      DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
    46. Re:Why is it needed? by vivaelamor · · Score: 1

      I think you are failing to grasp a key factor in morality, everyone is different.

      If you believe something is immoral, that is part of your moral code. While you can try and impose that moral code on others.. it is always their choice.

      To believe that your moral code is right and someone else's is wrong is inherent in the idea of morals. You choose what you believe is right. However, to believe that your moral code is always and wholly right is believing that you are infallible.

      So, having cleared up that your morals may not be my morals.. I would say that the statement you quoted is true. It is rather limited in its scope however. I think it would be more fitting as "It's not immoral to break rules if I don't believe the rules should apply to anyone".

    47. Re:Why is it needed? by vivaelamor · · Score: 1

      You cannot charge someone based on suspicion alone and grounds for a search would have to be more specific than believing they are criminals else politicians would get no privacy.

    48. Re:Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Politicians do not get as much privacy as you apparently think.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    49. Re:Why is it needed? by ableal · · Score: 1

      "Give me six lines written by the most honorable of men, and I will find an excuse in them to hang him."
      -- Cardinal Richelieu

    50. Re:Why is it needed? by jhol13 · · Score: 1

      1) I think it is moral and ethical. And most likely legal in Finland. Anyway there is zero chance prosecutor will prosecute for that "offence" (the restriction is very likely illegal and therefore void).
      2) Are you sane? Are you really claiming no community has ever had anything against gays or abortion or communists? Please!
      3) Require? No. Can keep out of (Chinese) jail? Yes.
      4) Require? No. Can keep out of blackmail? Yes.
      5) Require? No. Can mean difference between good demonstration and police detention before the demonstration? Yes.

    51. Re:Why is it needed? by jvkjvk · · Score: 1

      And the parent post is and example of why many people should distrust people who freely use analogies.

      The only use of the Parent's analogy is to get people to think in a certain way, not to illuminate the original topic.

      This is not shutting one's blinds or password protecting one's computer. If you wish to use an analogy, use an appropriate one.

      You should take this advice yourself, DaveV1.0.

      This is building a sound-proof room in a bunker behind a 20ft, steel-reinforced, cinder block wall topped with barbed wire and watched by security cameras, and a gate guard that is specifically instructed to sound a silent alarm if the police show up and then to delay the police as long as possible before letting the police in.

      Really? I thought this was eating a double cheezburger with bacon, but ordering it with pickles instead of without!

      This is using a piece of software that requires a 64 character password, which will write 1s and 0s directly to the drive if there are two consecutive password failures, on a computer kept in a room with a security system which will hit the drive with a magnet pulse and fry the electronics if the room is breached, and turns the only entryway into an electromagnet to erase the drives if someone tries to remove the boxes.

      If you want an actual Analogy to the real world, try this:

      It's like two people are talking on the street, and one says - it's not private enough out here, lets take our discussion elsewhere. Then, they go to a crowded chinese restaurant, but the guy who suggested they get off the street pays.

      Regards.

    52. Re:Why is it needed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

        I agree with you completly.

        Though because it is seemingly impossible to stop piracy or even casual copying there must be some way to create a second tier price to compete with free. Remembering that a consumer values first convenience.

        Radio supported by advertising provides convenience.
        Distribution methods supported by content creators provide quality. Anonymous torrents can't easily compete with quality and the feeling that the consumer is doing the right thing.

        Please, understand that consumers have a very strong positive feeling about content creators and want to support them,they also know they are stealing by using anonymous torrents.

        There are two things that i think are missing and i could easily have missed the mark on this. Tell me what you think.

          Secure micro-payments with a browser or cellphone and the ability to direct delivery and make use of content with the device the consumer chooses.

      ~Best Wishes.

        Further Conjecture
      Nonsense?
            PayPal may have missed wide spread adoption by not connecting banks and cellphone companies to a secure browser payment button.
      (Ducks - Because this is slashdot)
      "Trusted Platform Computing" Open source software is going to struggle with it. (sigh)

    53. Re:Why is it needed? by soporific16 · · Score: 1

      The existence of a State implies a class society, that is, a society where one section lives upon the labor of another. Down with class society and the State institutions that prop it up! A State is unjust by DEFINITION.

    54. Re:Why is it needed? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Tell me, what is it like to be an idiot?

      Remember, anarchy boy, the law exists to protect people like you from people like me.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    55. Re:Why is it needed? by soporific16 · · Score: 1
      OK, we were talking about the State, and now you're talking about the Law, excuse my idiocy, i didn't realize you'd changed the subject.

      And for your edification it's revolutionary socialist, not anarchist -- we believe in the State as something transitionary as we rid the world of the vestiges of Class, but in EVERY case, it is still an oppressive institution. We're talking about the STATE, ie, an armed body of men, which is decidedly NOT neutral as opposed to the concept of LAW which could be, depending on whether its based upon a society DIVIDED against itself, ie a class society.

      Ooops, sorry for all that argument and information, i forgot for a moment there that i was an idiot and wasn't in fact replying to one! Silly me.

    56. Re:Why is it needed? by marco.antonio.costa · · Score: 1

      So I suppose as a baker and a creator of bread I can not only charge you for it, but also decide on what you can do with it after you buy it? Maybe you can't eat it on Saturdays. And only take small bites from one end on Tuesdays or Thursdays.

      Suppose a matter replicator for multiplying bread was invented, would it be justified for the State to make it a crime to duplicate purchased bread with it as a means not to infringe upon the profits of the bakers?

      It is an unjust state with unjust laws. Intellectual property is not about protecting creators rights. It is about creating artificial scarcity to secure higher prices for a special interest. A State-granted monopoly.

      --
      Send your spendthrift head of state this
    57. Re:Why is it needed? by nog_lorp · · Score: 1

      This whole analogy is stupid.

      There is no "strong security" vs. "stronger security" in the realm of computers. There is "security that works" and there is no security at all. You are saying this is "security geared to prevent legal investigation", but how is this any different than all other security? Secure VPN is used in industry all the time for sensitive communications, is that "geared to prevent legal investigation?

      There is no way to secure data specifically against the police. You simply secure it from EVERYONE.

  9. Arr by Inda · · Score: 1, Informative

    If you are willing to pay something, why not use something else like the old University Networks. No uploads. Maximum download speeds your pipe can handle.

    --
    This post contains benzene, nitrosamines, formaldehyde and hydrogen cyanide.
    1. Re:Arr by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is "old University Networks" a generic term about accessing TPB from inside a
      university's network, or does the capitalization indicate something more specific?

      Either way, I'm puzzled how this would work. Enlighten me?

  10. It's like coppery but made of iron by Drakkenmensch · · Score: 1

    I hope that the RIAA and all the other IP zealots realize the delicious irony that if they hadn't come down so hard on the pirate bay to begin with, they might never have even though of offering such a strong way for its users to cover their own asses. Looks like the Copyright Overlords may have unintentionally done something right by trying to do something wrong!

    1. Re:It's like coppery but made of iron by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      It's the simple natural progression of things. When it comes to the Internet, people have shown time and time again that they can and will find a technical solution to route around any law that they see as unjust or unfair.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    2. Re:It's like coppery but made of iron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      No, the irony is the Pirate Bay are getting â5 that the music companies could have had.

    3. Re:It's like coppery but made of iron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This kind of service has existed for decades. TPB isn't doing anything new here.

    4. Re:It's like coppery but made of iron by Drakkenmensch · · Score: 1

      I'm not claiming it's anything new - only that they probably never would have gone into that kind of business if the music industry hadn't strong-armed the swedish courts into trying to throw them in jail.

  11. Anonymity at this level is dangerous by richardellisjr · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I'm all for an anonymous web, however this is really quickly going to be the way thieves, crackers and all the other low lifes on the net do their work. I can tell you that if I were to try and break into something like the pentagon or some large financial institution I'd use this service. How long will it be before see a major break in originate from this service?

    1. Re:Anonymity at this level is dangerous by gentry · · Score: 4, Informative

      You're not all for an anonymous web really are you?

      There are many ways to hide tracks already that are more effective than this offering (Tor, Open wireless access points, anonymous proxies and so on).

      Organisations that have significant risk from being hacked either improve their security or get the hell of the Internet.

    2. Re:Anonymity at this level is dangerous by wastedlife · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes, because overseas, anonymous VPN accounts are totally new and have never been used before for nefarious purposes...

      --
      Said, "It's just like dice but it's got more sides And it tells me who lives and who dies"
    3. Re:Anonymity at this level is dangerous by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      Of course it is all thieves and criminals. Laws have been passed to make all of us criminals.

      Please turn yourself in to the nearest enforcement bot.. You violated law 45634.21-5 Instigating thought for enabling anonymous webs.

      you will be rehabilitated shortly.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    4. Re:Anonymity at this level is dangerous by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      We can thank our lawmakers who force us to take drastic steps to defend ourselves. I few years ago whole drive encryption was almost unheard of, now it's a must have in order to keep your data out of the hands of private corporations.

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
    5. Re:Anonymity at this level is dangerous by cat_jesus · · Score: 1

      What makes you think they(the criminals) don't do that now?

      Or do you mean the dumb criminals will start doing it too?

    6. Re:Anonymity at this level is dangerous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is also this:
      http://www.cypherpunk.at/onioncat
      It is an ipv6 overlay for Tor hidden service.
      The only problem left is to get full ipv6 compatibility working in a bittorrent tracker.

    7. Re:Anonymity at this level is dangerous by richardellisjr · · Score: 1

      You are correct, however tor and anonymous proxies have limitations. Tor being slow (painfully at times) and anonymous proxies having limited functionality (can you ssh through an anonymous proxy?). I agree that open wireless access points is another way to do this, and I'm surprised governments haven't done more to shut them down, my guess is that there have been enough high profile cases of abuse to prompt legislation. The big difference with an open proxy is you either have to get within range of it, use one that's in range or get a powerful antenna to connect. With this service all you need to do is connect to it from home and you get (presumably) a decent connection speed that allows all sorts of attacks that wouldn't be possible or practical otherwise (say brute force ftp, telnet or ssh attacks) through the options you listed.

      Sure there are lots other ways to anonymously wreak havoc, I'm just pointing out that this is just another enabling system which happens to be fairly efficient.

      I'm all in favor of an anonymous internet however such an internet is impossible to regulate and governments love to regulate. The harder we push in one direction the harder they push in the other, and unfortunately they already push much much harder than we do. My concern is that when a large highly visible attack originates from this network the governments of the world will have a knee jerk reaction to regulate the internet and we'll see more great firewalls of china. A service that provides 100% fast anonymity was inevitable and the reaction from governments worldwide will be so as well. They'll block access which drops us down slippery slope we're already on. We as a community that believe in free and anonymous internet need to be prepared to defend it.

      Sorry for the rambling, I guess I'm just trying to say that the pirate bay is about to escalate the war for a free internet, we should expect retaliation.

    8. Re:Anonymity at this level is dangerous by arkhan_jg · · Score: 1

      I've been using a VPN service that's based outside my country (the UK) for years. VPNs have the advantage that absolutely everything is encrypted, except the tunnel itself. I even send DNS queries via it. Tor is slow (and not trusted, given you don't know who runs the endpoints), anonymous proxies are no cheaper, and they only work for browsing.

      This way, I can bypass all the logging my ISP does as a matter of course on behalf of the government. They want to find out where I go and what I read and post, they can damn well go to court, get a warrant and inform me first.

      As far as anyone else is concerned, my IP ends at a VPN provider that doesn't have any logs linking subscriptions to traffic.

      --
      Remember kids, it's all fun and games until someone commits wholesale galactic genocide.
    9. Re:Anonymity at this level is dangerous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Finally, someone who understands the necessities for anonymity/privacy. Mod parent up. Perhaps it's just me, but that's a sacrifice I'm willing to see society make: improve security, or get off. The only rule to govern the internet should be this: No clogging the pipes!

    10. Re:Anonymity at this level is dangerous by its_schwim · · Score: 1

      There are many ways to hide tracks already that are more effective than this offering (Tor...

      Tor was never more effective.

  12. Re:Please slashdot you must help me!!! by Drakkenmensch · · Score: 2, Funny

    I can't believe someone beat the Tsarkon Report guy to the first post!

  13. VPNOUT baby by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    https://vpnout.com/ does similar things, and some of us use it because we don't like being watched, for any suspected reason.

  14. Subscription to legal music store is 15$ by rexping · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Rhapsody is a subscription based music service with monthly fee of 15$. Someone will make it with 7$/month soon I am sure of it. Why be pirate if you have to pay for it?

    Rex Ping

    1. Re:Subscription to legal music store is 15$ by wastedlife · · Score: 1

      While I'm not condoning copyright infringement here (which, while you can be sued for it, is not the same as theft because it does not actually deprive them of anything tangible, "possible sales" are not a tangible thing to be stolen, otherwise it would be illegal for a company to compete with another company), with a subscription service, you do not get to keep the files. If you cancel your subscription, those files are deactivated unless you remove the DRM. Removing the DRM is illegal according to the DMCA, and might actually get you in more trouble than copyright infringement. While being on the moral and legal high ground by not downloading and/or distributing copyrighted materials is noble indeed and may be worth the restrictions and cost of a subscription service, it is certainly not the same. BTW, IANAL.

      --
      Said, "It's just like dice but it's got more sides And it tells me who lives and who dies"
    2. Re:Subscription to legal music store is 15$ by FrankieBaby1986 · · Score: 1

      Do I get lossless with this subscription? (I don't use lossless, but lots of people do)

      Can I keep the downloads forever and use them on ANY portable player with minimal effort?

      If the service goes under, can I keep my media?

      From what I can tell from the site: no, no and no.

      --
      ERROR: SIG NOT FOUND (A)bort, (R)etry, (F)ail?:
    3. Re:Subscription to legal music store is 15$ by Clandestine_Blaze · · Score: 1

      Very true and a good point.

      Correct me if I'm wrong, since I do not use Rhapsody, but in order to even use Rhapsody at all, you have to pay $15/month. In this case, TPB is offering a VPN service for $7/month, but you don't have to pay for it to be able to use their, um, tracker "services."

      Analogy time!!! Getting free sex, but paying for a condom. Either way, you'll get the sex, but the condom is for protection.

    4. Re:Subscription to legal music store is 15$ by iiiears · · Score: 1

      Entertainment is a desire the more you have the more you want. Price too high or you don't think they will be as straightforward as their written contract terms? Get an ad supported station and make an attempt at buying more quality entertainment and downloading/stealing less. Copyright holders aren't going to get any more generous than this after holding the line on price for years. Don't like it? Go to an online support group for internet addiction. and bring your CD player.

      --
      15TW = 15,000 Nuclear Reactors. (Approx. one accident a month.)
    5. Re:Subscription to legal music store is 15$ by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

      In other words, http://xkcd.com/488/ .

    6. Re:Subscription to legal music store is 15$ by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

      Analogy time!!! Getting free sex, but paying for a condom. Either way, you'll get the sex, but the condom is for protection.

      And in that analogy, the RIAA would be like the Catholic church. "If you have nothing to hide, you do not need to use contraception!" :D

    7. Re:Subscription to legal music store is 15$ by Clandestine_Blaze · · Score: 1

      hahaha so true! :)

    8. Re:Subscription to legal music store is 15$ by julesh · · Score: 1

      System Requirements
      Windows Vista, XP, or 2000* (32-bit versions only)
      Linux Fedora Core 4 and SuSe 9.3 and above

      Doesn't work with my OS.

      Rhapsody supports more portable players than ever before, including most Windows Media Players.

      But not, it would appear, iPods. So it doesn't work with my portable media player.

      No movies. No software. No audio books. No ebooks. No porn.

      TPB just works, and has a much wider collection of stuff. Now, once more, why would I want to pay for this service?

  15. Leaving dock... by avenema · · Score: 1

    Free to board, $7 for us to clean up behind you.

  16. Sensationalism? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    VPN services are just anonymous surfing... You don't have to use them solely for downloading by bittorrent, though many people do.

    All TPB has to say is they're offering a privacy service. I think the Swedes would be cool with that, especially considering the only evidence there could be is that you bought the service. There's no way to tell what you did with it.

    Also, it appears to be optional, so the last few sentences don't make sense except as sensationalism to sell ads on a website.

  17. no other function? by Sloppy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    No other function than circumventing copyright? Hey, I want to use it to send spam. Er, I mean, trade kiddie porn. Er, I mean, send death threats to politicians. Er, I mean, get around my employer's websense(tm).

    Oops, ignore all the above. I meant to say I want to use it to post political samizdat to wikileaks.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    1. Re:no other function? by Yamamato · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Yeah, no one every uses VPN connections for anything other than spam, kiddie porn trading and sending death threats. Fuck off you stupid troll.

    2. Re:no other function? by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      Fuck off you stupid troll.

      Sorry, I meant to say I want to use the VPN for trolling Slashdot.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  18. False sense of security by ACMENEWSLLC · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Years ago, the US Government opened up one of these Anonymous web surfing sites. There was no indication that it was the US Government. The let this run for considerable time. After a while, the truth came out in a proceeding. The US Government was using this Anonymous site to find people violating US law. Many people ended up in the tank.

    If you send ALL your traffic to this VPN service, what makes you think you are safe? While PB may not log, what is to stop a government from forcing PB to place their own logging device inline?

    After being a very quick and nice dialup service, Earthlink suffered a year of horrible response times, poor performance, and high drops. Then it quit, but not until after they lost a lot of subscribers. In a case it turned up that the US Government put these tracking devices inline between Earthlink and their backbone connections which was the cause of the slowdowns. The current crop, though, don't have this issue.

    People need to think about these things.

    1. Re:False sense of security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Years ago, the US Government opened up one of these Anonymous web surfing sites. There was no indication that it was the US Government. The let this run for considerable time. After a while, the truth came out in a proceeding. The US Government was using this Anonymous site to find people violating US law. Many people ended up in the tank.

      If you send ALL your traffic to this VPN service, what makes you think you are safe? While PB may not log, what is to stop a government from forcing PB to place their own logging device inline?

      After being a very quick and nice dialup service, Earthlink suffered a year of horrible response times, poor performance, and high drops. Then it quit, but not until after they lost a lot of subscribers. In a case it turned up that the US Government put these tracking devices inline between Earthlink and their backbone connections which was the cause of the slowdowns. The current crop, though, don't have this issue.

      People need to think about these things.

      Do you have some proof for these claims?

    2. Re:False sense of security by Dan667 · · Score: 1

      It is a VPN, not a regular connection and outside snooping would be pretty hard. To be honest there are probably only a hand full of gov agencies in the world that could do it and they don't care about copyright law. If you look at the competency of the prosecution in the TPB trial it is clear the RIAA don't have any access to them. Occam's razor.

    3. Re:False sense of security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Citation?

    4. Re:False sense of security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      This is a troll because 1) what they allege violates laws and 2) there is no record of it. Just because OP claims some conspiracy idea appeared in "court proceedings" doesn't mean it happened.

    5. Re:False sense of security by jerryasher · · Score: 1

      Everyone is ragging on the OP for cites and saying it can't be true because it would break laws. (As if that means much these days....)

      But Bruce Schneier discusses such reasoning in a column yesterday:

      It's Time to Drop the 'Expectation of Privacy' Test
      Commentary by Bruce Schneier

      In the United States, the concept of "expectation of privacy" matters because it's the constitutional test, based on the Fourth Amendment, that governs when and how the government can invade your privacy.

      Based on the 1967 Katz v. United States Supreme Court decision, this test actually has two parts. First, the government's action can't contravene an individual's subjective expectation of privacy; and second, that expectation of privacy must be one that society in general recognizes as reasonable. That second part isn't based on anything like polling data; it is more of a normative idea of what level of privacy people should be allowed to expect, given the competing importance of personal privacy on one hand and the government's interest in public safety on the other.

      The problem is, in today's information society, that definition test will rapidly leave us with no privacy at all.

      In Katz, the Court ruled that the police could not eavesdrop on a phone call without a warrant: Katz expected his phone conversations to be private and this expectation resulted from a reasonable balance between personal privacy and societal security. Given NSA's large-scale warrantless eavesdropping, and the previous administration's continual insistence that it was necessary to keep America safe from terrorism, is it still reasonable to expect that our phone conversations are private?

      Between the NSA's massive internet eavesdropping program and Gmail's content-dependent advertising, does anyone actually expect their e-mail to be private? Between calls for ISPs to retain user data and companies serving content-dependent web ads, does anyone expect their web browsing to be private? Between the various computer-infecting malware, and world governments increasingly demanding to see laptop data at borders, hard drives are barely private. I certainly don't believe that my SMSes, any of my telephone data, or anything I say on LiveJournal or Facebook -- regardless of the privacy settings -- is private.

      Aerial surveillance, data mining, automatic face recognition, terahertz radar that can "see" through walls, wholesale surveillance, brain scans, RFID, "life recorders" that save everything: Even if society still has some small expectation of digital privacy, that will change as these and other technologies become ubiquitous. In short, the problem with a normative expectation of privacy is that it changes with perceived threats, technology and large-scale abuses.

      Clearly, something has to change if we are to be left with any privacy at all...

      More at the link.

    6. Re:False sense of security by jank1887 · · Score: 2, Funny

      you must be new here.

    7. Re:False sense of security by Theoboley · · Score: 1

      Break out the tin foil hats, this post is a load. no Citation, loads of FUD.

      --
      Stupidity only gets you so far, then you've gotta try
    8. Re:False sense of security by Vainglorious+Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      US Government opened up one of these Anonymous web surfing sites...Many people ended up in the tank

      Do you have some proof for these claims?

      I suspect OP is thinking of the US Navy's Onion Router project, closed down in 2000. Best I can remember though, it wasn't a secret who was running it, and I find no references to anybody being prosecuted for using it

      --
      My next sig will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush
    9. Re:False sense of security by cliffski · · Score: 0, Troll

      not to mention TPB is funded by a fascist supporter of an extremist right wing party in Sweden.
      You trust that guy to keep your data and privacy safe?
      If so, you get what you deserve.

      --
      DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
    10. Re:False sense of security by Raenex · · Score: 2, Informative

      Do you have some proof for these claims?

      I don't know about the original poster's claims, but there are several well-known cases where supposedly anonymous services gave up info:

    11. Re:False sense of security by legirons · · Score: 1

      it all comes down to whether you trust TPB and their ISPs more than your own ISP. For many people this is a no-brainer. For others it may be more difficult to decide.

      One big benefit is that you don't have to trust TPB's sweedish ISP so much, since it will be very difficult for them to distinguish your traffic from other users.

    12. Re:False sense of security by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

      While PB may not log, what is to stop a government from forcing PB to place their own logging device inline?

      The fact that this just isn't going to happen?

      1.) They are run from Sweden. Good luck to any government, even the government of Sweden, with fighting Swedish privacy laws.

      2.) Public trial. Long before there were even the hint of a possibility this might happen, the entire world would be forewarned several times over.

      3.) As events of the past months have shown, TPB is run by the sort of people who will proverbially burn at a stake for their ethics. They would shut down their site long before they would betray their users' trust.

    13. Re:False sense of security by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

      The ironic part is that any actual onion-routing network is practically impervious against this kind of attack. An organization would need to own a vast majority or all of the servers in the network in order to sniff traffic - and any onion network operated by only a single organization is by definition suspect.

    14. Re:False sense of security by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

      First, the government's action can't contravene an individual's subjective expectation of privacy; and second, that expectation of privacy must be one that society in general recognizes as reasonable.

      No individual may be spied upon when they can reasonably expect to be in private - but in a society of total surveillance, who can reasonably expect privacy?

      Catch 22 strikes again! :)

    15. Re:False sense of security by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

      fascist

      If they were fascist, wouldn't they be helping the government spy on people rather than fighting it?

      What are you smoking?

    16. Re:False sense of security by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

      Being a commercial entity, my ISP would sell me out without blinking. I don't know how screwy service providers are in the US (though I've heard tales of Verizon), but around here they're screwy enough on their own even without law enforcement or the content mafia breathing down their necks.

      Compared to that, I'd practically trust the Pirate Bay with my life.

    17. Re:False sense of security by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      4.) Even if forced to cooperate, I'd bet they would find a way to make it public knowledge that their network was compromised and wasn't safe.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    18. Re:False sense of security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me think..
      Oh that's right, Earthlink was started by a Scientologist, then Scientology decided to use that to filter out all criticism of itself, which resulted in "a year of horrible response times, poor performance, and high drops"
      Then they came up with a cover story "that the US Government put these tracking devices inline between Earthlink and their backbone connections which was the cause of the slowdowns"

    19. Re:False sense of security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Proof?? Can't you see that it's plainly written right there on the Internet -- it must be true.

    20. Re:False sense of security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try this article: Not Earthlink but AT&T
      http://www.wired.com/politics/onlinerights/news/2007/05/kleininterview

  19. divide and conquer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope they are just making it a publicity stunt.
    Since this will divide the "pirates" and make it easier to (conquer) win over them.

    The power in Pirate Bay is the numbers of users.
    Noone thinks that they can sue 1million users, but if they can split them up in smaller parts they will sue.
    Because they just need enough "good" convictions and they scare the masses of piracy.

  20. Migrating users by quercus.aeternam · · Score: 1

    The question remains, however, if any significant portion of The Pirate Bay's users will decide to fork over 5 per month solely to remain anonymous. It seems more likely that the majority either won't care, or will simply start looking for lesser-known torrent trackers to use."

    Why would anyone move trackers just for this reason?

    This shouldn't affect their normal services in any way, so the only reason someone might shift would be because of a moral problem with the service, correct?

    And honestly, how many tpb users would switch in the context of a moral dilemma like this?

  21. Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by A.+B3ttik · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Suppose this takes off and TPB starts raking in cash.

    This shows that even Pirates are willing to fork over money and pay for the products if the service is good enough and the price is low enough.

    Netflix already has similar Pay-for-Unlimited-Access plans between $8 and $20... and if TPB is successful, I predict that more distributors will move to this service model.

    Imagine Blockbuster or Amazon or iTunes saying: "Take whatever you want. Movies, music, ANYTHING. $20/month." They'd make a fortune. Hell, if you threw games in there, I'd personally pay like $100/month.

    1. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by Dan667 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      they are to greedy to understand that they would make a lot more delivering something that people want that they could own than trying to squeeze a nickel out of everything even if it costs most of it to try make it work and have a draconian DRM system. I think a lot of this is driven by egos, control, and middle manager charts that are out of touch with the real world.

    2. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by Microlith · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This shows that even Pirates are willing to fork over money and pay for the products if the service is good enough and the price is low enough.

      Sure, they're willing to pay $7/month for VPN, they aren't willing to pay for what they download. Take away the VPN and they'll keep pirating. Charge a fair price and they'll keep pirating.

      "Take whatever you want. Movies, music, ANYTHING. $20/month." They'd make a fortune.

      Sure, they'd make a fortune. But would the fortune they make cover the production costs of everything they were selling?

      I mean, sure, Slashdot says you can take a PC, a shitty mic, and whip out a better album than anything produced by a major label (and since it isn't label backed, it's Definitely Better(tm)) and go back and make your money touring your ass off (at least, so sayeth Slashdot.)

      But that's just one medium. Not everything works like that. Remember, there's costs beyond what the retailers are charging.

    3. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by AcidPenguin9873 · · Score: 1

      Maybe that's the business model of the future, but I would want to make sure at least some of my money ended up in the hands of the creators of the media I'm enjoying via that service.

      If Blockbuster or Amazon or iTunes did it, there would have to be an agreement with *someone* involved in the production of the works (hopefully artists directly; unfortunately it would probably be record companies and studios). If TPB does it, $0 goes to the artists, and I cannot agree with that. I know that studios and record companies in general suck because they don't pay the artists enough, but they still pay them more than $0.

    4. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by Threni · · Score: 1

      > Imagine Blockbuster or Amazon or iTunes saying: "Take whatever you want. Movies, music, ANYTHING. $20/month." They'd make a fortune. Hell, if you threw games in there,
      > I'd personally pay like $100/month.

      I've imagine the labels themselves doing that for years. I still think it'll happen, but I'm not sure when. They'd need no DRM, and although technically people could not bother signing up and instead use their friends accounts to download music to stick on their mp3 players etc I think that eventually that'll be seen the same as someone today going on about not wanting to spend money on broadband and instead coming around to your house to do all their surfing, downloading etc.

    5. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by A.+B3ttik · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Sure, they're willing to pay $7/month for VPN, they aren't willing to pay for what they download. Take away the VPN and they'll keep pirating. Charge a fair price and they'll keep pirating.

      I doubt that. They're not _really_ paying use a VPN, they're paying $7/mo to securely download all the media they can handle. If a legit service came out for $7/mo, I bet most of the Pirates would switch to that.

      Sure, they'd make a fortune. But would the fortune they make cover the production costs of everything they were selling?

      Netflix seems to think so.

    6. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by lordandmaker · · Score: 1

      The point, though, is not where the money ends up. It's that it's being paid at all. Thus far, it has been widely acknowledged that pirates do what they do because they want everything for free. If The Pirate Bay can come up with a model whereby pirates are willing to pay for what they get, this proves that there is *some* model under which the people who are currently pirating will pay for their media. Odds are that many who will pay 5/month to download something illegally would be willing to pay 5/month to do it legally. Some might even be willing to pay more.

    7. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by whyloginwhysubscribe · · Score: 1

      Well isn't that what spotify and napster do - albeit with DRM?

    8. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by A.+B3ttik · · Score: 1

      they are to greedy to understand that they would make a lot more delivering something that people want that they could own than trying to squeeze a nickel out of everything even if it costs most of it to try make it work and have a draconian DRM system. I think a lot of this is driven by egos, control, and middle manager charts that are out of touch with the real world.

      You sound like James Taggart. Greed may be motivating the Labels to be douches now, but it is also what will compel them to change. If they make more money under this new model than they would suing people (possibly even more money than they ever were selling CDs), everyone ends up happy.

      Personally, I think that the DRM and Lawsuit Boondoggles are more the result of ignorance and refusal to change and adapt to new markets than outright "greed." "Greed" can inspire people to make revolutionary new technologies and offer competitive, efficient services... it is only dishonest greed coupled with ignorance that breeds the brand of assholes we see in the Big Labels today.

    9. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by A.+B3ttik · · Score: 1

      If TPB does it, $0 goes to the artists, and I cannot agree with that.

      I agree with you entirely.

      I hate pirates and hate all of the bullshit excuses that they come up with to keep doing it.

      I really hope that legitimate companies manage to survive and adapt the new service-oriented business model.

    10. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by fyoder · · Score: 1

      You sound like James Taggart. Greed may be motivating the Labels to be douches now, but it is also what will compel them to change.

      It might if 'Label' were a rational, sentient being who wisely observed that there is a value people would be willing to pay for in fast, efficient, no-surprises downloads, providing the price was not too high. And it's not just theoretical, it existed once as allofmp3.com (now mp3sparks.com, if you know how to fund your account).

      But Label isn't a rational sentient being. It is run in large part by middle men who provide little additional value, yet collect big money and live lavish life styles. It is entirely possible that they would rather 'go down fighting' than survive on less money.

      While greed can potentially be of value IF it can be harnessed as a motive power by a governing rationality, that is a big IF. Left on its own it is not rational, and potentially very destructive.

      --
      Loose lips lose spit.
    11. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by intx13 · · Score: 1

      they are to greedy to understand that they would make a lot more delivering something that people want that they could own than trying to squeeze a nickel out of everything even if it costs most of it to try make it work and have a draconian DRM system. I think a lot of this is driven by egos, control, and middle manager charts that are out of touch with the real world.

      I've never really understood this. The MPAA and RIAA (and every company ever) employ people whose job it is to figure out how to maximize profit. The MPAA and RIAA, however, just keep pushing the same tune. They're searching for the peak of the parabola but they're already too far to the right - rather than backtrack they just keep going further: "maybe if we just push the same idea a little harder... the slope has to change sometime!"

      The parent blames it on "egos, control, and middle manager charts that are out of touch with the real world" but to have two cartels that are from the top down completely lost? At any legitimate company that's when the board fires the CEO or the CEO shuffles the board and you hire a consultant to tell you "you're idiots, the money is all over there!" (Granted these organizations are structured differently but the concept still applies).

      With every further lawsuit and lobbying attempt, I get the idea that the MPAA and RIAA just hate movies and music, and they don't want anybody else to enjoy it either. After all, that's about the only goal they're achieving.

    12. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by nine-times · · Score: 1

      This shows that even Pirates are willing to fork over money and pay for the products if the service is good enough and the price is low enough.

      This is a very good point, and how clever of you to point this out.

      It's reasonable to conclude (even though it's not certain) that each of these pirates would be equally willing to pay $5/month to a legal service that provided access to the same things that are available on TPB. If you consider the fact that it's legal and therefore less dangerous, they may even be willing to pay more.

      Now add on the safety of sending your money to a reputable company rather than some random site called "The Pirate Bay", as well as whatever feel-goodery people get from believing that their money makes it to the actual people who create the content. Plus you could make it approved content rather than random trackers, meaning you end the risk of viruses as well as the annoyance of downloading gigabytes of content only to find that it was labelled incorrectly. Now lets say the company also provides seeds for each download, so you'd know that all the content would definitely be available. Plus, I imagine that it's not uncommon for people to try to limit their uploads as much as possible to lower the chances of getting caught, so the fact that it's legal could mean generally faster download speeds.

      Now think about additional values that could be added in, such as improved search and recommendation engines.

      So now add all that stuff together, and it gets pretty easy to argue that you should be able to charge significantly more than $5/month on such a service. Think about how much people spend on cable TV and Netflix combined, and you figure you should be able to charge more for a service that's more convenient (at least where Internet speeds are fast enough). Add on some peripheral services and cross-promotional opportunities, and you have something that looks like a real business plan.

      Too bad the content owners are all pretty much tied to distribution channels already.

    13. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moreover, given the wide spectrum of copyrighted works that can be collected from, and the public submission policy of TPB, They (Copyright owners) would be too busy squabbling over how to divvy up the loot from such a service, and nothing would ever get done.

    14. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And yet, some people don't like the Music and Film Tax. Forget about the people who don't want to download, it'll just lower the cost for the people who download!

    15. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by Acer500 · · Score: 1

      Suppose this takes off and TPB starts raking in cash.

      This shows that even "Pirates" are willing to fork over money and pay for the products if the service is good enough and the price is low enough.

      You're probably right. Back during the Napster days, I'd have paid quite a lot for a service with its functionality.

      Same nowadays, if they gave me a nice carrot to go along with a (hopefully not too big) stick, I'd probably pay for music... I don't buy CDs because they're simply obsolete, and way too many of the current music services are either US-only (heck, yesterday Youtube felt like not showing me music videos because of my country), iPod-centric (Apple's store), or not as comfortable as alternatives (Amazon store).

      If last.fm chose to let me pay to DOWNLOAD the music and keep it, I'd probably pay (maybe I'm ignorant, does it?). If my torrent tracker of choice did it, I probably would too (I currently use a mix of last.fm and the torrent tracker to get the music I want).

      If you think I wouldn't, consider this: I pay about USD 50/month for the Magic:The Gathering online card game, when I could be playing stuff for "free" (aka pirated or other versions of MTG).

      --
      There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.
    16. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I am guessing that your $100/month was an exaggeration - if you were serious the fact that the media companies have no mechanism for you to actually do this is a terrible ignorant oversight on their part. I've spent $100s a night on beer for friends - no shortage of bars will take my money. But try to spend $100s on electronic media .. and you can't ?
      That sounds really short-term stupid.

    17. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

      Imagine Blockbuster or Amazon or iTunes saying: "Take whatever you want. Movies, music, ANYTHING. $20/month." They'd make a fortune. Hell, if you threw games in there, I'd personally pay like $100/month.

      There are subscription services that do exactly that. The problem is that as soon as you cancel your subscription fee, you lose the content.

      It will take a lot of convincing to make content companies bill a flat rate for downloading, not for usage.

    18. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Corporations may place their profit above any ethical rules, but they will be damned if they place long-term profit over short-term profit.

      Companies are managed by people who are within a decade of retirement. By definition, any decision that would require executives to see beyond the next ten years will never be made.

    19. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      I hate over-long copyright terms with the subsequent wholesale theft (real, according to the legal definition) from society and hate all of the bullshit excuses that they come up with to keep doing it.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    20. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft already does this. It's called Zune Pass and for $15 a month you can download any music in their store and listen to it on your Zune as long as you keep the subscription up. I'm currently listening to a collection of music called a "channel" which is something like a downloadable radio station. Every week or so it gets updated with all newly released music. I can listen to the tracks, and any ones I like I can add to my (semi) permanent collection, and when i get back to my wifi or sync cable, I can download the rest of the album.

    21. Re:Might Actually be GOOD for the Movie Industry by PiSkyHi · · Score: 1

      Sure, they'd make a fortune. But would the fortune they make cover the production costs of everything they were selling?

      Well, if they got paid like the rest of us, then hell yes.

  22. Users Rights. by geekmux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why would anyone need to "cover their tracks when torrenting" unless he was doing something illegal?

    Ah, careful there. You're coming dangerously close to arguing the old "mind of I search your car/house, what do you have to hide?"...

    Remove the torrent-laced, copyright-riddled emotion from this for a moment. It's about offering users a service to stay anonymous while using the web. The concept is certainly not new (care for a fresh onion on your browser burger?), this one just happens to be offered by a fairly popular website. Something tells me if Google were to offer the same thing, we wouldn't be talking about people hiding Gmail content.

    1. Re:Users Rights. by mlts · · Score: 2, Interesting

      When I see the "you have nothing to hide" argument, I see people forget one thing when they use it:

      Criminals want any and all information to strike as well. Have no locks on the doors to make it easier for police to do their duty, but it makes it a cinch for crooks to do a heist too.

      Same with hard disk encryption. I use it because if my laptop gets stolen, I don't want the data on it being used for extortion/blackmail/ID theft. Enterprises use backup systems with AES encryption and advanced key management not to stay ahead of the FBI, but to keep a backup tape that gets lost from becoming a corporation-wrecking fiasco.

      In the UK, the man in the middle ad servers are an issue too, and there is a possibility some bad guy is going to find a way to compromise one and then try to insert browser exploits into people's TCP/IP streams. Protecting your traffic from snoops and potential active attacks is not in any way dodging the law, its akin to making sure you have your doors locked when you leave.

    2. Re:Users Rights. by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Say a "dissident" in a country like China wanted to upload/download torrents deemed "inappropriate" by the state.

      With a VPN, they would surely be safer.

    3. Re:Users Rights. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Something tells me if Google were to offer the same thing, we wouldn't be talking about people hiding Gmail content.

      It depends. If Google had explicitly advertised it as "the best way to cover your tracks when distributing information illegaly via email", and the name of the service would be "IllegalEmailCoverUp", then sure, we would be talking just about that.

    4. Re:Users Rights. by AntiSol · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Say a "dissident" in a country like China or Australia wanted to upload/download torrents deemed "inappropriate" by the state.

      With a VPN, they would surely be safer.

      There, fixed that for you...

    5. Re:Users Rights. by Reziac · · Score: 1

      "Criminals want any and all information to strike as well. Have no locks on the doors to make it easier for police to do their duty, but it makes it a cinch for crooks to do a heist too."

      From this I conclude that the two are functionally identical.

      (And I'm not sure that's a joke anymore, either :(

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  23. April 1? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has anyone actually read the article?

    Still, The Pirate Bay is sensitive to the concerns of its users, especially with IPRED going into effect on April 1. The question remains, however, if any significant portion of The Pirate Bay's users will decide to fork over â5 per month solely to remain anonymous. It seems more likely that the majority either won't care, or will simply start looking for lesser-known torrent trackers to use.

    1. Re:April 1? by Goateee · · Score: 1

      Sadly enough, IPRED is no april's fool joke.

  24. Lesser Known Torrent Trackers by manekineko2 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The question remains, however, if any significant portion of The Pirate Bay's users will decide to fork over 5 per month solely to remain anonymous. It seems more likely that the majority either won't care, or will simply start looking for lesser-known torrent trackers to use.

    I don't get this blurb from the headline. Seems to me like this service wouldn't be mainly targeted at users accessing torrent trackers. This is anonymity for the Internet in general, and torrent trackers are only one small part of that.

    Furthermore, I'm not familiar with any case so far that is based on turning over the logs from a website to get the users. I don't think that would present a strong enough case that someone is sharing, which is what they've been getting people on. Instead, they've been snooping the actual upload traffic from people by requesting downloads based on everything I've been seeing.

    1. Re:Lesser Known Torrent Trackers by skuzzlebutt · · Score: 1

      That's what I was thinking, too. I don't know that much about VPN, but I suppose in the case of them (**AA et al) sniffing traffic or just looking at seeding/downloading IPs, would it point back to PB's VPN servers, almost like a proxy, as opposed to the actual user's IP? Not sure.

      The other thing that occurred to me: if I sign up for PB's VPN service and they all of a sudden get subpoenaed to hand over their records, wouldn't my billing activity and, more importantly, traffic history potentially be in that report somewhere?

      --
      My debut novel AMITY now available: http://jeremydbrooks.c
    2. Re:Lesser Known Torrent Trackers by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

      IPREDator's website says that it won't store any traffic data, as its entire goal is to help people stay anonymous on the web.

      From TFS, not even the article. I assume they'll keep billing records, but just using an anonymising VPN isn't a crime in most countries. You can turn off logging. It's not recommended, but you can do it. In this case, they're doing it for a reason.

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
  25. Cheaper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... here

  26. Reminds me of.. by m0i · · Score: 1

    Relakks, anyone?
    Strange that TFA doesn't mention it.

    --
    have you been defaced today?
  27. Circumventing area restriction by meiao · · Score: 1

    Soon last.fm will charge for most non-US users. If the VPN gives me an american IP, I could listen to last.fm again. So it's 7 euros for VPN to listen to last.fm, which charges 3 euros... Well, I get to see all other goodies for americans only like Zulu and the like.

    1. Re:Circumventing area restriction by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

      Odds are the VPN will give you a Swedish IP, seeing as that is where TPB is based.

  28. Re:Erm... but what about money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the U.S. has turned a blind-eye to overseas bank accounts for the wealthy, and corrupt, I don't see why (or how) they could justify being more concerned about VPN's and privacy related issues.

    We are no longer under the thumb of Bush/Cheney, and *hopefully* (and I really mean this) President Obama will ensure rights are restored, and if there are restrictions they should be where they belong and not for something as stupid as protecting movie and music mogals.

    Seriously, which is a bigger threat: trillions of U.S. and international dollars hidden in bank accounts for who-knows-what, or a online account?

  29. Again? by FirstDivision · · Score: 1

    I'm not going to argue that providing a VPN service is in any way illegal. But please don't tell me that the majority of the customer base (if there actually is any, we'll see) is going to use this for legitimate purposes. You know it. I know it. Everyone knows it. (I'll' limit the rest of this to music): I am so sick of this stupid argument. It's illegal to download copyrighted works (without owner consent, etc), and everyone knows it. If you want to tell the RIAA/BMG/Sony something, just stop listening to their music instead of giving them a target. There's lifetimes worth of free music out there, go listen to some of that if you really want to tell the big record companies something. "I love your product so much, I'm willing to steal it!" is the only message you're sending here. Listen to some internet radio. Like what you hear? Go buy the album which is probably available at places like CD Baby, and very likely has been released by the artist themselves. No evil record companies required, only "good people" get the money. /rant. That's the first time (as far as I remember) that I've gotten into this argument. Hopefully the last.

  30. Prepaid credit card from any local vendor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No ID required - just cash....

  31. Re:Erm... but what about money? by wastedlife · · Score: 1

    Good point, and I can only hope that it does come true. However, I remain skeptical as things are not looking good:

    Obama DOJ Sides With RIAA

    --
    Said, "It's just like dice but it's got more sides And it tells me who lives and who dies"
  32. So now they are charging for stolen content? by joetheappleguy · · Score: 1, Troll

    Why don't they just give away free VPN access? Aren't they all about protecting "Freedom"

    Their porno ads should make them enough money already.

    1. Re:So now they are charging for stolen content? by Theoboley · · Score: 1

      Why? because nothing in this world is free, and if you happen to find something that is, well then that changes and you get charged up the rear end for it.

      --
      Stupidity only gets you so far, then you've gotta try
  33. easy to block by dickens · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The idea is vulnerable to traffic analysis. Once the IPs of the PB VPN endpoints are known, last mile providers could just drop traffic from them.

  34. Asking for trouble (technical, not legal) by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The whole point of P2P is to use the bandwidth of each client as a server in addition. This relies on a network being distributed without a central bottleneck.

    VPNing in to TPB will introduce just such a bottleneck, killing performance. Or have they figured out a way to do point-to-point VPNing between all registered users?

    What VPN technology are they using? How does it work?

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    1. Re:Asking for trouble (technical, not legal) by MikeBabcock · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Actually, being a connector agent allowing P2P IPSec would be a very helpful service.

      "Give me a peer"
      "Peer a.b.c.d is available and has IPSec"
      "Hello a.b.c.d, do you have a cert?"
      "Yes, here it is."
      "Oh good, its signed by TPB."

      The DNS method of key deployment isn't trustworthy, but central trusted certs are a good option.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    2. Re:Asking for trouble (technical, not legal) by legirons · · Score: 1

      VPNing in to TPB will introduce just such a bottleneck, killing performance.

      Presumably, they're selling bandwidth just like every other VPN provider, so you would expect to get $3.50-worth of bandwidth from this service (paying for both inbound + outbound).

      Are people planning to use this VPN access for bittorrent then, just because it's being offered by a bittorrent tracker website? It seems like the VPN service would be quite useful even for people who've never used TPB or bittorrent.

    3. Re:Asking for trouble (technical, not legal) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Presumably $7/month/user buys a hell of a lot of bandwidth.

    4. Re:Asking for trouble (technical, not legal) by glumx · · Score: 1

      I think this is either just for searching the web, or the majority of traffic is still between peers but central management is still encrypted. Just guessing...

    5. Re:Asking for trouble (technical, not legal) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What VPN technology are they using? How does it work?

      technology similar to Hamachi seems like a viable way.

  35. Parasites.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Suppose this takes off and TPB starts raking in cash.

    This shows that even Pirates are willing to fork over money and pay for the products if the service is good enough and the price is low enough.

    Netflix already has similar Pay-for-Unlimited-Access plans between $8 and $20... and if TPB is successful, I predict that more distributors will move to this service model.

    Imagine Blockbuster or Amazon or iTunes saying: "Take whatever you want. Movies, music, ANYTHING. $20/month." They'd make a fortune. Hell, if you threw games in there, I'd personally pay like $100/month.

    The vast majority of people will never pay for what they can get for free. Keep in mind that most users that use cracker sites and the services of outfits like TPB are willing to risk data and identity theft through one of a score of different malware varieties just to get serial generator or a cracked version of some piece of software they can usually afford to buy. They don't just download expensive software, many people will risk all this rather than cough up $4.99 for a license for some two bit shareware program. Most people with the computer skills to figure out how to get stuff for free through pirate bay are never going to pay for getting that content unless they are forced to because for some reason can only get the content by paying up. You can have as many wet dreams as you want of downloading all the Movies/Music you want plus unlimited copies of software like Photoshop, MS Office, sundry computer games and every other expensive piece of software out there for $20 per month or even $100 per month... it isn't ever going to happen. At least not for a pitiful flat fee of $20 per month it isn't. The more success the pirates have the less incentive there is for the people creating the stuff the pirates are distributing illegally and because there will always be an easy way to get this stuff for free, being a content creator will always be an uphill struggle. The funny thing is that technology is now imitating nature. The parasite (the pirates) now has a parasite of it's own (malware creators) who are using the pirates own networks and illegally copied material as a vessel for spreading their own 'product'. Perhaps when enough people have been burned badly enough by malware they got from pirate downloads they will see some sense in buying stuff rather than illegally downloading it. I essence this is just like nature, a species that has no predator (pirates) will see an uncontrollable population increase that will end in a sharp decline when the food supply runs out (content) due to overgrazing.

    Don't get me wrong. Companies like Adobe need to give up on offering stuff or download but still wanting to hold onto the idiotic idea that they can charge Europeans 70% more for the same download as a US citizen but all-you-want-for-20-bucks-per-month is a fantasy.

  36. US Only by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and probably won't last for long since it is used by pedophiles and terrorists^tm

  37. Except that they aren't buying anything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, no, it's nothing like that.

    People go to pirate by to download stuff for free.

    No counterfeiter is making money off of these downloads. Nobody is selling anyone else's stuff. There is no profit motive.

    Copyright is being violated, of course, but nobody is raking it in because of this.

    The new fee just covers the cost of the VPN, and still doesn't profit from the distribution of copyrighted content.

    And for the "it's still stealing" crowd, I say this: Legally copyright infringement is completely different than theft, so leagally you are wrong. Morally it is on different ground, since the content producer and content provider still have access to the content, and still have the ability to produce and/or provide it, so again you are wrong. It *might* still be morally wrong (I am not presently disclosing my opinion on that point), but it still isn't the same kind of wrong as stealing.

    The extra fee for a VPN changes none of these issues.

    1. Re:Except that they aren't buying anything by The+End+Of+Days · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Yeah, and the advertising revenue. And the donations. And yeah, the overflow from the VPN charges. They profit by facilitating distribution of the work of others, while providing no actual value themselves. Tricky accounting and semantic arguments don't change anything in that regard.

  38. Virtual Pirate Network by discord5 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Virtual Pirate Network, ijaaaaaaarrrr

    Oh come on, everyone was thinking it.

  39. Re:Please slashdot you must help me!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    I don't think he paid the $7 fee to do that ...

  40. I run a network by bugs2squash · · Score: 1
    And if my customers get upset they will bark at me. None of them has so far put a horse's head in my bed or drugged me and flown me to Cali for a pep-talk though.

    I'm not sure I want to be on the Cosa-Nostra Care Center staff, even if only 0.1% of their customers are criminal

    --
    Nullius in verba
  41. Argument, if you have nothing to hide. by leuk_he · · Score: 1

    Nothing to hide? argument again.

    "Privacy is an inherent human right, and a requirement for maintaining the human condition with dignity and respect."

  42. God bless those wonderful Swedes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The subject says it all...

  43. question by Texodore · · Score: 1

    Can Chloe O'Brien set up a secure channel for me?

  44. The fly-trap by westlake · · Score: 1

    Let's cut through the crap here.

    There is a reason they call it Pirate Bay.

    The more commercial and expansive the operation becomes the greater the risk for the Swedes. This is not a particularly good time to be alienating your major trading partners.

    So ecplain to me why the sterotypically tin-foiled - paranoid - geek - is looking at a VPN service that will be obviously under the gun from the day it launches.

  45. How does this protect you at all? by jemenake · · Score: 1

    While 99% of the comments here debate the morality of whether this is right or not, I'd like to ask: Would this even *work*?

    Let's suppose you're torrenting the latest hollywood movie and you're using TPB's VPN. The copyright police are out there, searching for people sharing it. They're paying the $7 for an account, too. So, they try to get a piece of the movie from you. I can only figure two ways they get the data: 1) TPB gives the downloader your real IP and instructs the downloader's VPN software to contact you directly (in which case, you're busted. Granted, nobody will know what traffic you exchanged with the copyright police except you and them... but you're still busted), or 2) all of the traffic goes through TPB, in which case you get a huge bottleneck... although, maybe they're planning on affording a huge pipe and huge servers at $7 per month per user.

    Is there some other way this is supposed to work that I'm not seeing?

  46. It could just work! by Stu101 · · Score: 1

    I have personally tried a few of these VPNs for just this purpose.

    It was mostly slow and unreliable.

    However TPB has a USP: They deal with I suspect some huge ass pipes. They will be able to buy a lot of bandwidth at prices most small and even medium sized ISPs would love to get.

    I suspect they will have some large support from certain anonymous people with financial clout

    Also think about it this way, if you torrent just a few torrents, you may only get 100K/s per torrent, so combined you are running 200K/s. You can fit 4-5 of them per MBit. Then. Wholesale price I suspect is a lot lower than $28-32 per Mbit, when buying multiple GBit pipes, obviously you have to include cost of encryption hardware, support etc but I suspect they will do ok.

    Another idea that I think would be great is to offer a per MBit price, so you pay for upto 5MBit, you get 5Mbits worth of pipe. Then for $4 or whatever you can do .5Mbit- Appeals to a wider audience.

    --
    http://www.writeitfor.us - Writing IT for the IT generation.
  47. How can they afford this. by richardellisjr · · Score: 1

    If say 5% of bitorrent users get the service and use it how could they afford the bandwidth costs at $7 an account. Now I know that a some of the traffic would remain on their network and wouldn't need to get out to the public net, but I can't imagine that $7 would cover even the bandwidth costs for the traffic going out of their network. Perhaps they plan on throttling the traffic, which would be ironic to a scary level.

    Also I'm not that familiar with the technology behind bitorrent or how it works. But wouldn't this create a huge swarm on their network and another huge swarm at the point of their internet feed. How would this affect the protocol?

  48. How do you maintain? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    How do you maintain that you're not expressly in the business of circumventing copyright law (as they did in the recent trial) when you offer a paid service that really has no other function?

    Seems like a risky strategy.

    Why should i? Around these parts its "innocent until proven guilty" beyond a reasonable dobut.

    Using a *legal* service is not grounds for being guilty of anything, other then perhaps paranoia.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  49. A security paradox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Any site which offers "ultimate security" for users will become a target for law enforcement which wants to find people who have something to hide.

    In other words, by running, you get them to chase you.

  50. Outlaw encryption, then onlycriminals will do math by edfardos · · Score: 1

    This could seriously lead to legislation that outlaws encryption. Until now, encryption hasn't hurt corporate profits. I expect the Honorable Senator from Disney to make encryption, and by extension, VPN, illegal. --edfardos

  51. relakks by puck01 · · Score: 1

    Isn't this what relakks already is? I thought the same guys the run TPB run relakks and relakks is nothing but an encrypted VPN, right?

  52. there's 2 problems with this: by big_paul76 · · Score: 1

    1) A lot of these battles between 'the pirates' of various types and copyright/content owners has to do with maintaining control over distribution, not just money.

    The RIAA is probably the best (or most obvious) case of this, as, without maintaining their role as a middle-man, eventually we'll reach a point where it's hard to see exactly what value they add (some would say we've already reached that point).

    2) Tragedy of the anticommons. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tragedy_of_the_anticommons)

    When you have multiple owners of a resource, where to do something or other requires complete unanimous agreement of all parties, then all it takes is one person to "overvalue" their interests/rights/property to bring it all to a screeching halt for everybody.

    This is, in the real estate world, generally why we have the concept of "eminent domain". If the government (or some other party) wants to build a railroad for example, if it requires the unanimous consent of all property owners along the proposed rail line, then it only takes one (out of perhaps hundreds or even thousands) crackpot who's overvalued his land by a couple orders of magnitude to screw it up for everybody.

    Maybe we'll reach a point in the future where we'll have the equivalent of eminent domain for IP?

    --
    The plural form of "anecdote" is "anecdotes", not "evidence".
  53. I see this a lot in arguments against libertarians by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

    One guy makes a reasoned argument, and the next guy quotes a catchphrase.

    OK, this one wasn't so bad, because he simply pointed out that it was a dangerous path to travel down, rather than saying "you're wrong, because the catch phrase said so".

    --
    You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
  54. Logging the VPN by slash.duncan · · Score: 1

    According to TFA, which I read at Ars earlier, they will specifically NOT be logging. So billing records, sure, but logging, no -- at least not pre-case. At least in the US (which this is not, what laws apply there I don't know), the service provider can be ordered to keep logs on a specific account, given sufficient cause. Originally the provider could demand a warrant (whether they did or not was of course up to them, the AOLs of the world infamously did NOT), but of course the (non-)Patriot Act did away with that and the Bush admin pushed even further, with fallout still winding its way thru the courts and the Obama admin justice dept. unfortunately often siding with the Bush admin justice dept. arguments.

    So while general logging may not be the case, individual logging must be assumed as possible by anyone using the service, at least beyond whatever reaction period might be necessary to actually get such an order.

    --
    Duncan
    "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master,
    and if you use the program, he is your master."
    R Stallman
    1. Re:Logging the VPN by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

      IANAL, but my understanding was that even in this country (the US) there is no actual legal requirement to log. You just have to be willing to turn over what logs you have. Since most ISPs do keep logs (for their own purposes) it's pretty hard to argue that they shouldn't have to turn those logs over in the event of a court order (or PATRIOT act order). There is no law saying you have to keep logs, it's just best practices to do so for reasons that usually don't have anything to do with the reasons the FBI might want those logs. You want to know where your users are going so you can make sure that the network is provisioned properly, any traffic shaping you're doing isn't impacting specific users, etc. By not keeping logs you're not (I don't think) breaking any laws, you're just making your life a bit harder in the service of complete user anonymity.

      (I could be totally wrong here of course.)

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    2. Re:Logging the VPN by slash.duncan · · Score: 1

      AFAIK, it works this way. No, they can't force you to do the logging. But they are very helpful and can be pretty persuasive, too. If you don't have a box that can do the logging, they helpfully provide one... one that's NOT named "Carnivore", that does NOT collect anything but the information they have an order to collect, "honest".

      Under those sorts of conditions what would you do? Would you suddenly find you had the equipment to log the ordered information after all, or would you provide the entire feed for their box to log "only the ordered information on only the ordered person, honest"?

      And that was BEFORE 9/11, the (anti-)PATRIOT Bill, etc.

      FWIW, I was once on an ISP that didn't log downloads. At one point there was a troublesome (performance-wise) "mystery hop" added to the routing to the news server, that the normally friendly news admin couldn't talk about. A few months later, the routing changed once again and the hop disappeared. Some of us regulars had our suspicions, but of course that's what they remained.

      --
      Duncan
      "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master,
      and if you use the program, he is your master."
      R Stallman
    3. Re:Logging the VPN by synthespian · · Score: 1

      In Brazil, the Senate recently passed legislation demanding that ISPs keep logs for 3 years. It's causing total outrage at the ISP side, because it'll raise operational costs. The project still has to go through the Chamber of Deputies (i.e., Congress). The Budapest Convention (whatever that is...) requires 90-days logs.

      Use your translator here (or, if you are able to comprehend Spanish you shouldn't have a lot of trouble with written Portuguese):

      http://br-linux.org/2008/ja-era-senado-aprova-projeto-de-lei-da-internet-todos-os-acessos-deverao-ser-arquivados-no-provedor-por-3-anos/

      http://idgnow.uol.com.br/internet/2008/07/10/prazo-para-guardar-logs-de-internautas-deve-ser-modificado-diz-abranet/

      --
      Main difference between the BSD license and the GPL license: one is from California and the other is from Massachusetts
  55. Re:I see this a lot in arguments against libertari by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1

    You should probably worry more about whether a concept is right or wrong than trying to stereotype the style in which it is presented like that's some kind of insight. In fact, I would go further to say that the reasoning of 'you're wrong because the pithy phrase said so' is actually more sound than 'you're wrong because you quoted somebody'. A phrase can itself be right or wrong, sound or unsound, relevant or irrelevant, but categorically dismissing arguments because they center on one is irrational.

    I will grant you didn't explicitly say that this is how such arguments should be handled, but at the very least you imply that they are somehow intrinsically inferior, regardless of how sound, relevant or even correct the reference made might be.

    --
    I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
  56. Re:I see this a lot in arguments against libertari by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 0

    (Forgive me in advance, I wasn't planning to be anywhere this mean.)

    You should probably worry more about whether a concept is right or wrong than trying to stereotype the style in which it is presented like that's some kind of insight.

    Wrong. I'm not trying to stereotype (unlike yourself right now).

    In fact, I would go further to say that the reasoning of 'you're wrong because the pithy phrase said so' is actually more sound than 'you're wrong because you quoted somebody'.

    Wrong. That is not my reasoning. In fact, there's very little reasoning needed to observe a trend. Also, I don't equate that with being wrong, but they're at a rhetorical disadvantage for ignoring the other guy's arguments, and quoting the one-size-fits-all phrase instead.

    A phrase can itself be right or wrong, sound or unsound, relevant or irrelevant, but categorically dismissing arguments because they center on one is irrational.

    Wrong. I may dismiss, very rationally, arguments centring on a fallacy, but that has nothing much to do with my previous statements. You are also wrong in the implication that I was dismissing the argument.

    I will grant you didn't explicitly say that this is how such arguments should be handled, but at the very least you imply that they are somehow intrinsically inferior, regardless of how sound, relevant or even correct the reference made might be.

    Wrong... er... right! Yes, that is true. Cookie-cutter arguments work with a specific set of circumstances (if they work at all). In order to use them, you may have to explain why the cookie cutter argument is a better fit for the situation than home-baked argument that is built for the situation.

    You probably want an example, right? All mothers say, "Wear a jumper, or you'll catch a cold", or something along those lines. However, if you say that to someone, and someone else says back "It's 40 degrees out here, and there's no-one in sight. The influenza virus could not possibly survive out here", you'll be (rightfully) laughed at. The "wear a jumper" argument is attached to certain conditions that make the argument valid. However, in other situations, there are counter-arguments that fit better than the cliché.

    Another example: it's a fairly common argument to say "Stereotyping is wrong". This too has conditions attached to it. It's great (mostly) if someone is stereotyping a group. It's not so great if someone is passively observing a trend. See how it works?

    --
    You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
  57. Re:I see this a lot in arguments against libertari by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1

    Wrong. I'm not trying to stereotype (unlike yourself right now).

    I guess the keyword is 'trying'? Because you were stereotyping. 'I see this a lot in arguments against libertarians' is a generalization of observation about a group. It is objectively equivalent in meaning to 'I see Jews being miserly a lot' or what have you. It's an oversimplified negative observation (albeit the negative is a later referenced antecedent) that you're trying to apply to a group of people. Textbook denotation of a stereotype. So, if the keyword is 'trying' then I guess I have to accept that your stereotyping is an accident, but if you're arguing that you're not stereotyping, you might as well be pointing at a cat and calling it a dog.

    As for me, only by a very subjective standard (specifically how much is something oversimplified) could my argument be considered a stereotype. Even that would be a stretch, since stereotyping connotes assumptions about groups much more than individuals, and I was talking only about you and what you said, never once saying 'you fall into group X, which is bad'.

    (If I might borrow your own logic momentarily, I must say I've seen a pattern in the behavior of Slashdot 'intellectuals' to knee jerk about the first assigned negative and assign it back to the accuser whether it's the least bit rational or not.)

    ... but they're at a rhetorical disadvantage for ignoring the other guy's arguments, and quoting the one-size-fits-all phrase instead.

    I can see and accept this as a reasonable perspective for your original post.

    Another example: it's a fairly common argument to say "Stereotyping is wrong". This too has conditions attached to it. It's great (mostly) if someone is stereotyping a group. It's not so great if someone is passively observing a trend.

    Too bad observations about a group, such as you made, are within the definition of stereotyping. The observations may be true, but it is an oversimplification (by nature) of the attributes or behavior of a group.

    See how it works?

    Another Slashdot favorite. Now ask yourself.

    --
    I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
  58. Relakks? by jetxee · · Score: 1

    Isn't Relakks offering just the same thing for P2P users?

    It is in Sweden, btw.

    Does anyone use it?

  59. Re:I see this a lot in arguments against libertari by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

    There is a common stereotype that wherever there is an observation of a trend correlating with a specific group, there is also a stereotype, but that isn't always true (although, it commonly is - I've noticed that trend myself). I made an observation, but I never generalised it, neither explicitly nor in implication (accept it, or prove me wrong). Thus it's not a stereotype. The whole thing just doesn't fit, despite your attempts to shoehorn me into the stereotype mould.

    If I might borrow your own logic momentarily, I must say I've seen a pattern in the behavior of Slashdot 'intellectuals' to knee jerk about the first assigned negative and assign it back to the accuser whether it's the least bit rational or not.

    Yeah, but there isn't logic in there, only observation. If you said that Slashdot 'intellectuals' knee jerk ... (etc, the rest of your observation), there would be the implied logic that because you made the original observation, it applies to generally to all Slashdot 'intellectuals'. Therein lies the stereotype.

    Or if you made that observation, and then concluded that my argument was without merit from that observation alone, then you would be stereotyping me. Always, always, there must be something more than a simple observation in order for there to be a stereotype.

    Just as a side note, I have argued with a lot of Slashdotters over the years over a variety of issues, and I have accused people (and been accused myself) of hypocrisy in much the same fashion as you have observed. It's a rhetorical technique that actually fits a surprising number of situations. Which is why, I take the effort to be careful with my words. As I said, I have been accused many times of hypocrisy, but I cannot think of a single time that someone has accused me of hypocrisy, and not have their claims subsequently, and conclusively disproved. Just a warning, in case you wished to try it on me.

    --
    You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
  60. Exactly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is exactly how it's done. If I had mod points I wouldnt have posted at all.

  61. Time to seriously think about other options... by /.Rooster · · Score: 1

    I have been following this project for years and while I knew it was a good idea I just never thought we would need it so soon.

    Please, show your support. Even if it is just spreading the word.

    http://freenetproject.org/

    --
    Rooster - A friend. "Anyone's friend in particular or just generally well disposed to people?"