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Pirate Bay Blockade Censors CloudFlare Customers

An anonymous reader writes: The blockade of the Pirate Bay by UK ISPs is causing trouble for CloudFlare customers. Several websites have been inadvertently blocked by Sky because a Pirate Bay proxy is hosted behind the same IP-addresses. In a response, CloudFlare threatened to disconnect the proxy site from its network. Like any form of censorship web blockades can sometime lead to overblocking, targeting perfectly legitimate websites by mistake. This is also happening in the UK where Sky's blocking technology is inadvertently blocking sites that have nothing to do with piracy.

6 of 160 comments (clear)

  1. UK ISPs cause DoS by gavron · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The UK ISPs are paid by their customers connect to the Internet.

    The UK ISPs are blocking connections.

    There are no "pirates".
    There is no "piracy".

    There is only UK ISPs not allowing their Internet customers who have paid for to reach all Internet sites to not reach all Internet sites.

    Shame on UK ISPs.

    There is nobody else to blame.

    UK ISP customers. Sue your provider.

    E

    1. Re:UK ISPs cause DoS by julian67 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The block is by order of the High Court. The ISPs have no choice. It's this troublesome thing called "the law". Outside the inane and naive minds of certain slashdotters it's commonly thought to be quite a useful thing. You could look it up on Wikipedia.

    2. Re:UK ISPs cause DoS by gavron · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yea, right mate, because laws are all genuinely for the good of the people, right?

      No need to challenge, ask, rebuke, or seek to have it overturned.

      It's the law.

      Try not to speed on the way home, will you?

  2. Re:Inept, or the plan? by dgatwood · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As a current CloudFlare customer, the fact that they're so quickly and easily kowtowing to enemies of freedom disturbs me greatly. If I publish a book that makes some random government cranky and gets my site on a ban list, are they going to threaten to throw me off, too? What if somebody posts a link to an illegal torrent on my blog and I don't notice it quickly enough? Where do you draw the line? At what point does the threat of government censorship become too great a burden for the Internet to bear, stifling creativity by causing site owners to be afraid of their own shadows, and destroying the most basic freedoms upon which the 'net as we know it was founded?

    In my opinion, CDNs should send a clear, unwavering message by declaring in one voice that government censorship of the Internet is unacceptable in a free society, and simply cannot be tolerated. That's what I look for in a CDN. If the CDN providers have any cojones at all, they should deliberately ensure that torrent mirrors and other potentially objectionable content share IPs with some of the most high-value targets that they host, so that blocking one of those sites would cause as much collateral damage as possible, and then refuse to do anything about it. Let the sites that are blocked complain to Cloudflare, let Cloudflare redirect their complaints to the ISPs who are doing the blocking, and let the ISPs scream at their MPs to demand that the laws be changed.

    Basically, the CDNs need to parade the naked emperor down the street. Only by maximizing the extent to which these ill-conceived laws destroy citizens' access to the Internet can we force the clowns in power to actually take the time to understand how the Internet works, and understand why these laws can only cause harm, and can never actually be successful in any meaningful way. The only way those laws will ever get fixed is if a million people wake up tomorrow and call their MPs screaming because their IP violator block lists are preventing them from using Amazon.co.uk or Pinterest or Facebook.

    So for the next "Ask Slashdot", does anybody know of a CDN that actually has a spine?

    --

    Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  3. Re:Human Shield? by dgatwood · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The thing is, you could say the same thing about any other form of speech that happens to be illegal in a particular country. For example, a site hosting Nazi propaganda would be illegal in Germany. A site hosting pornography would be illegal in most of the Middle East. A site hosting news coverage or historical documentaries about the events of June 4, 1989 would be illegal in mainland China. And so on.

    Where do you draw the line? Which countries' laws do you require all your sites to comply with? And what is lost by doing so?

    --

    Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  4. Re:CloudFlare *threatened* to disconnect the proxy by JoelKatz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Do you really believe that if North Korea passes a law prohibiting web sites that mock their leader, CloudFlare wouldn't be a reputable company unless they disconnected any customer who had a site that mocked their leader?