Italian Court Rules ISPs Must Block Access To Pirate Bay
introt writes "After first being blocked in 2008, an Italian court has once again ruled that ISPs in the nation must block access to the infamous torrent tracker The Pirate Bay, leaving millions of users without access to one of the most popular sites on the planet. In the original case, after an appeal by the Pirate Bay, the Court of Bergamo ruled that foreign websites cannot be blocked over alleged copyright infringement. Fast forward until today and the Supreme Court has ruled that ISPs can indeed be forced to block torrent sites, even if they are foreign-based."
You can pretty much use any VPN, Proxy, TOR, etc.. maybe a DNS entry to avoid blocking. Is this like ruling against the clouds stoping the sun from warming the empirer body or something?
-Woof woof woof!
Blocking even through a proxy, this should be good. Like patching the wholes in a screen.
But when network experts say that the tracker doesn't distribute the information, they're not just employing a legal defense; they're telling you that blocking it that way won't work.
Case in point, you can use Tor to access the tracker and still enjoy the same peer-to-peer speeds as anyone.
Fast forward until today and the Supreme Court has ruled that ISPs can indeed be forced to block torrent sites, even if they are foreign-based.
This just in: A government agency simultaneously
a. reaffirms the power of the government
b. shows a lack of understanding of technical issues
News at 11pm
I think that's obvious: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silvio_Berlusconi
How to Be a Facist Leader:
1) Use media empire to prop up election campaign and suppress opponents ...
2) Use government to prop up media empire and bog down competitors in silly regulation (eg YouTube broadcasting license)
3)
4) Allegedly molest barely legal girl, pissing off wife
5) Profit!
93rd rule of Slashdot: No matter how obvious my sarcasm is, my comment will be taken seriously by someone.
This is getting very frightening; corporations are now able to use anti-piracy laws to decide what people can and can't communicate. It's not so much a slippery slope as it is a free fall from the edge of the mountain. What's next, banning google because you can add the word "torrent" to a search?
Not even that. They will access a board of their choice and whine that TPB is no longer accessible, then they will be pointed at tor.eff.org (or a similar service) and the whole deal that took months to hash out (and probably a few bucks spent here or there...) is rendered obsolete within mere minutes.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
...Norway says s'ok! http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jLc2Sd0IGZ0-56w-d7FAPNImTzZw
"leaving millions of users without access to one of the most popular sites on the planet" is a bullshit plea. Don't give me this "would somebody think of the children!" argument. It's bullshit.
It isn't that hard to understand why a court might not be fans of a website whose content is at least 95% links to stuff that is illegal!
Nothing is going to make illegal downloading go away. I think it's fair to say some folks have spent a good portion of the last two decades trying. But, let's not act like it's a travesty that a court didn't side with the downloaders.
I scream. You scream. I assume that means we're both acquainted with the problem. We proceed.
Are they planning to block Google too? You can find a crap load of torrents through simple google searches. Not to mention (as the article does) all the other specific .torrent search sites. Or proxies. Or tor. Or rapidshit. Or FTP. Or Usenet. Or other P2P networks/apps. (AD INFINITUM)
Not even that. They will access a board of their choice and whine that TPB is no longer accessible, then they will be pointed at tor.eff.org (or a similar service) and the whole deal that took months to hash out (and probably a few bucks spent here or there...) is rendered obsolete within mere minutes.
The only reason these measures are even attempted is because so many users don't even know to do that. They think the internet is broken when they can't login to facebook. They don't distinguish between servers, routers, clients, and all that... they know a black box in their house is connected to the internet. And sometimes the black box doesn't work and a geek-friend needs to poke it. They know ctrl+alt+del and unplugging and plugging it back in.
Average people are about habits. They don't know much more than what they're shown and they don't want to learn more than they need to. That's the only reason rulings like this happen (and have an effect)... it takes months to years for the collective knowledge to reach their ears and a new habit to be established.
#fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
They should know Ctrl-Shft-Esc instead. Takes you straight to the Windows Task Manager.
Half the techies I work with can't remember unplugging and plugging it back in. You really think the general user remembers that much?
I've been using computers since not long after I could read and write. I've done several years of tech support, field work, net/sys admin work, and deployment. I can say with confidence, yes -- the average user remembers that much. What they don't think of is that wires can come loose, expansion cards can be jostled from their seats, and ports can fail because after several hundred plug/unplug cycles those little surface-mounted USB and firewire ports come loose. But it still looks the same. Average users don't think of things like that.
As to techies not remembering that... Well, just because you work in this industry doesn't mean you do well in it. *shrug* I consider 'techie' a title you earn like any other and I don't call someone that unless they've proven themselves. You shouldn't either -- we all benefit from a meritocratic culture.
#fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
So what if it is popular!? We block Nazi sites and other sites we deem are culturally or economically hazardous. Bottom line is that - today - distributing files your don't have permission to access or share is illegal. This is not an argument whether or not copyright laws are just or unjust. Simply, this is blocking illegal content. It is not the same as China censoring sites the government approve of. (I am sure the US gov is blocking sites, too.)
I think the bigger argument against blocking Pirate Bay is that they are an index, not a a distributor.
TFA and TFS both say that ISP's are required to block access to TPB's "Tracker". TFA goes on to mention "sites offering torrent links" but doesn't seem to make a distinction between .torrent files and the notorious "tracker".
Which is it? Because TPB shut down their tracker a couple of months ago
Italian Government: You will BAN the web address for the Pirate Bay!
ISP: Okay. *adds thepiratebay.com and thepiratebay.org to the "ban" list.*
Italian Government: ...You did that awful fast. Are you sure it's blocked?
ISP: Try it.
Italian Government: *types in both URLs with no joy* Right. Good riddance.
ISP: Yup. Bye.
Home user: *types 194.71.107.15 into their browser*
[End Of Line]
Time is what keeps everything from happening at once. Space is what keeps it all from happening to you.
Do not mock my vision of impractical footwear