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Armpit_and_Ass ago

Having a VPN beats getting DMCA notices three or five times a week from downloading movies and TV shows.

B3bomber ago

Tell them you are a gamer. Games often come with peer to peer (torrent) patching and sometimes outright only exist on a torrent as their release. The silence afterwards is golden. When that happens a lot of IP addresses are going to overlap because it is part of the DHT and who is actually seeding what becomes a very messy issue.

They really aren't very thorough in checking those hashes because that requires having the entire file and the process for checking a 1+ GB file, even on a SSD, is not fast. That can be 10-30 minutes per file. Doing this shit takes up huge amounts of resources and they do not want to admit it and just use some tiny ass chunk of a file and pray it doesn't match any other file in existance (fat chance).

Armpit_and_Ass ago

That's not how DMCA notices work. They are accompanied with a filename and the amount of data uploaded (downloading for TV shows isn't the "crime" - uploading it is). I can't exactly claim I'm downloading game patches when the complainant is NBCUniversal and the cited filename is COLONY.S02E03.1080P.SADPANDA.

B3bomber ago

Tell them to provide proof because you have no knowledge of what they claim. IP address != person (this is something they really try to erode).

There are also torrent applications that allow 0 upload.

Armpit_and_Ass ago

Tell them to provide proof because you have no knowledge of what they claim. IP address != person

See above.

There are also torrent applications that allow 0 upload.

I think just about any torrent app out there, you can set the ratio to zero and all you send upstream is the overhead. Kind of a dickish thing to do, but yeah, totally possible. My year subscription to my VPN just re-upped, so I'm good until next year this time.