Internet Providers To Begin Warning Customers Who Pirate Content
beltsbear writes "Welcome to the future that you warned us about. Starting soon, Verizon, Comcast and others will work with the Center for Copyright Information to reduce piracy. Customers thought to be pirating will receive alerts. 'The progressive series of alerts is designed to make consumers aware of activity that has occurred using their Internet accounts, educate them on how they can prevent such activity from happening again,' If a customer feels they are being wrongly accused, they can ask for a review, which will cost them $35, according to the Verge."
... if I didn't do anything wrong. THEY should first prove I did.
now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
What's stopping them from extorting people by blanketing these notices and collecting $$$ for "reviews"?
Can I sue them for defamation instead?
while(1) attack(People.Sandy);
yo ISP, am I downloading warez? I am just running a TOR relay and I also participate in folding dem protein chainz, dem electric-sheep, dem distributed computing sh!ts. Oh, did i also mention I am running a public open WiFi Hot Spot and a proxy server for my friends in foreign countries, who cant access our local private warez sites, I meant linux trackers?? it wasnt me. it was the evil hacker next door, i guess. I doubt ISP's in Pridnestrovie Republic or other similar regions will comply, LULZ. Yawn.
A Slashdot story about how they are bad.
now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
Did you get one, or know anyone who received one of these? Visit the US Pirate Party.
When the copyright term is "forever minus a day", live every day like it's the last.
Hey does anyone in Kansas City have a REALLY long ethernet cord?
This is just to lay the legal groundwork for the music and movie industries. This way they can demand this list from the ISP and show that the evildoer just kept going in the face of legal threats.
Pretty dumb for any ISP to help to attack their customers. When will the media companies learn that going to war with your customers is not a sustainable business model?
Plus I torrent Linux quite often how long before they start threatening even legitimate torrent users?
I'm using a VPN. I am very curious why they haven't complained about my bandwidth usage, which runs around 50 GB per month. Is that high or does it compare with Netflicks? I don't know, but my mkv goodness with no advertisements, censorship, or in-screen ads, is marvelous. I still go to the theatre but it feels like a total rip-off. My experience last month was the bright smart phone displays making it impossible to enjoy the film. You'd think they would fix that. Oh yeah, the popcorn at home costs about a nickel, with real butter.
an illegal wiretap
Your'e all thinking it, I just said it for you
If a customer feels they are being wrongly accused, they can ask for a review, which will cost them $35, according to the Verge.
My initial reaction was the typical knee-jerk thought that "innocent until proven guilty" has clearly been thrown out the window, but after further reflection I changed my mind. If you are accused of a crime in court you will end up having to pay legal fees. This is not that different. Reviewing the case requires manpower and the review is not working for free.
To be fair, the fee for the review should only be charged if the customer is found guilty. If the customer is innocent, then the accuser should be charged a fee. In addition to the amount for the review, the accuser should be forced to pay for at least one month of service for the customer, to compensate him for the inconvenience.
There must be deterrents against false accusations and none against proving one's innocence, otherwise this will be abused like DMCA takedowns.
Of course, I don't expect such a reasonable system to be put in place. The telcos just want to make money. They're only doing this to relieve the pressure from the content mafia. They know that even if it makes customers unhappy, relatively few will let them know about it and fewer still can actually do anything.
vpn
How would that stop them from accusing you or charging you fees? An unusual or hidden traffic pattern may be proof enough.
Even more suspicious than downloading files -- because identifying file ownership is not that easy. But people hiding traffic must be doing something bad.
[/sarcasm], just in case.
They send you the warning by replacing http websites you visit with the warning message.
This is exactly why we need competition.
Shithead companies that have nothing to fear will abuse everything they can to make a buck.
In fact, the strongest reason to support competition is probably how much they hate it.
Anything that pisses off the bad guys is probably a good thing.
1. Accuse all users of infringement
2. Collect $35 from all suckers
3. Profit1
Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
I was curious whether a major regional ISP was taking part in this clusterfuck, and found an interesting interview from August stating that the only ISPs taking part are AT&T, Cablevision, Comcast, Time Warner Cable and Verizon; independent ISPs are not involved and weren't even asked.
Relatedly, I highly recommend that anyone in the service area for Sonic.net (their CEO/founder was the one interviewed) use them as an ISP -- they're the only one I know of that has been persistently doing what we've all been saying we want ISPs to do when it comes to governmental & *AA demands and investing in fiber connections. No better way to show appreciation than voting with our wallets where we can...
Now mostly at Usenet:comp.misc & SoylentNews.org (it's made of people!)
So, let me get this straight...they work for free for the music and film labels, and scam, threaten and extort money from the very own people that supports their business model and pays their salaries...sweet.
The dude parked outside pirating kiddie porn through my open router will probably see the message first and dismiss it!
How about not overspeed in the first place?
How about not punishing people for such a ridiculous thing in the first place? Expecting people to be perfect is ludicrous and destroys respect for both the law and police officers.
That bird flew away from the nest a long time ago.
Ever since about 1980 there was a movement in law enforcement called "proactive policing". Prior to that, police were much less aggressive in terms of actively trying to find violations themselves. Other than regular patrols, they tended to come only when called. They try much harder now to look for trouble, to nail you for every little technical violation they can write up.
Believe it or not, a couple of generations ago the general attitude was "the police officer is your friend, if you have a problem go find a cop and he will help you". People believed in it, expected it, and it worked. The relationship now is much more adversarial because the police don't see us anymore as a community they are serving, like they once did (believe it or not). They see us as potential tickets and arrests to pad out their performance records. That's what proactive policing has done.
Incidentally, a lot of license plate scanners, GPS trackers, infrared scanners, and other surveillance tools local police are implementing are actually being funded with federal money. Most of the 1984 bullshit is coming from the federal government, not your local elected sheriff. Of course for their part, the local cops are only too happy to get all the new toys...
It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
Somehow the content industry has convinced the ISPs to give up a large percentage of their customers. We'll just have to wait and see how effective this is.
This new measure will be effective within the borders of the United States if and only if:
1. The majority of the ISP's customers never torrent or infringe copyright online. It would be funny if some ISPs were willing to actually go out of business to help enforce copyright law.
2. The ISPs are willing to lose at least some amount of money.
3. No other ISPs are willing to cross the picket line by not being part of this.
4. The ISPs are willing to prevent known infringers from just signing up again.
5. People don't simply sign up for a VPN just before their ISP kicks them off.
It just so happens that one of my local choices for broadband ISPs (I have at least 3) is not a part of this agreement. I pay around $1400 per year for my internet service. If my ISP doesn't want me as a customer I'll just switch to the local ISP that is not a part of this ridiculous one sided agreement. It will be interesting to see if ISPs even try to enforce this in areas with competitors who are not part of the agreement.
Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
Off topic I know. Not sure how to pm
In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run..
Unfortunately the UK is a good (bad) example of government appeasing media as in Daily Mail hysteria campaigns. Media is corporation control of the masses
You will find that this is true in most democracies. In a democracy the people who hold true power are the ones who shape voting behavior. Since advertising works the end result of a democracy is that the people who control the advertising control the government. There is nothing that a democratically elected figure fears more than the media. Therefore the people who are elected are not the ones with real power but are figureheads. Democracy ends up being a cover, a sham, theater.
In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.