No you completely missed my point. These files wouldn't be public, or even posted on peer to peer networks. Just basic html pages. The submissions would be "anonymous" reports of piracy to these recently created websites.
Of course the only way the MPAA could figure out that they had been fooled would be to download a big ass file, try to unzip it (its encrypted). If they ever go forth with a lawsuit, the host is in the clear, the files contain no pirated video, they are just gobbly gook. Case dismissed.
Not only this, someone needs to write a program to automatically do this. the program could run a loop and make giant files on the server, and create names from a list of recent movies.
Then we could report these to the MPAA. Think of it, 100+ phony submissions a day that appear very legitimate. They would have to spend hours downloading the files, which should be ecrypted with secret.zip passwords to further tease them.
It would tie them up for weeks!
No you completely missed my point. These files wouldn't be public, or even posted on peer to peer networks. Just basic html pages. The submissions would be "anonymous" reports of piracy to these recently created websites. Of course the only way the MPAA could figure out that they had been fooled would be to download a big ass file, try to unzip it (its encrypted). If they ever go forth with a lawsuit, the host is in the clear, the files contain no pirated video, they are just gobbly gook. Case dismissed.
Not only this, someone needs to write a program to automatically do this. the program could run a loop and make giant files on the server, and create names from a list of recent movies. Then we could report these to the MPAA. Think of it, 100+ phony submissions a day that appear very legitimate. They would have to spend hours downloading the files, which should be ecrypted with secret .zip passwords to further tease them.
It would tie them up for weeks!