UK 'Pirates' Get 20-Day Grace Period After Each Warning (torrentfreak.com) 35
UK Internet providers will soon begin sending piracy warnings to subscribers whose accounts are used to share copyright-infringing material. The associated "Get It Right" campaign has now published a detailed website, answering the most asked questions, while adding some new information as well. From a report: "After an Educational Email has been sent, there is a 20 day grace period during which time you will not receive any further emails. However, if further copyright infringement activity occurs and is detected after the 20 day grace period, you may receive another email from your ISP," the FAQ reads. Almost three weeks is significantly longer than the 7-days the U.S. equivalent has. Also good to know is that if no other piracy incidents are recorded in the future, all data is scrapped from the database after 12 months.
20 days to set up a proxy? (Score:5, Funny)
20 days to set up a proxy? That's about right.
Re: (Score:1)
If your getting letters while using a VPN you don't have your VPN setup correctly or you are using a VPN that doesn't give a crap about your privacy.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
But those are your main street, well-lit, vetted, western VPNs, and they probably don't give a fuck about you watching Game of Thrones anyway. Meanwhile, if you have an IP showing you in Singapore, sending the letter at all is a waste of time.
Re: 20 days to set up a proxy? (Score:1)
when you get dinged
Good morning Security Guard Class 4 Number 47632943 Department 511 Level 4. This is your third wake up call. If you are late you will receive 7 demerits. You already have 991 demerits.
Re: (Score:1)
And when you get dinged for copyright infringement through your proxy, get a VPN.... And when you get dinged for copyright infringement through your VPN
Get a better VPN which doesn't log.
switch to Tor...
Don't do that; Tor wasn't built with filesharing in mind and will cripple it dead.
Captcha: Refrain
Re: (Score:1)
All this will do is drive VPN sales and scare innocent people.
Re: (Score:2)
20 days to set up a proxy? That's about right.
No, 20 days, so when you are arrested for still doing it, you can't claim ignorance. Also, it is not in society's interest to penalise a lot of young first-time offenders, many of whom will feel sufficiently worried about this to refrain in the future; the real criminals are the ones that look at the law - any law, really - with contempt and think they are too smart to ever get caught, and who immediately think of ways to try to dodge the law.
20 Day Window (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Cough, cough, upload not download. Download what ever, just do not upload, especially not target protocols or ips. You are not required to personally ensure that every website you can possibly connect is not uploading copyrighted content to you that they do not have licence to, that is their responsibility and not yours. Keep in mind every paragraph of writing, every picture, every graphic as well as of course sound and video recording is all copyrighted, except that which is already in the public domain. S
Re: (Score:2)
What do you do with so many films? Do you actually buy a few TB in storage each month just to store them? Are there even enough hours in the day to watch so much film?
Re: (Score:2)
A long film in 4K could easily hit a terabyte, just for one film. IMDB's ratings history tells me I've watched over two new films (so not including rewatching films I've seen before) every week since 2003.
Terabytes a month? Easily, especially if someone has kids, multiple family members, includes TV and TV series.
Twenty days ... (Score:2)
So... (Score:2)
basically the internet providers are snooping on all your traffic. Seems like we need to start building a log more TOR enabled routers.
Re:So... (Score:5, Informative)
> basically the internet providers are snooping on all your traffic
They may or may not, but that's not where copyright violation notices come from. Specialized companies working for the copyright industry monitor public torrent swarms, and simply register the ip addresses that connect to the swarm. Then they send out letters to the ISPs who own the ip addresses, with details of the infringement, and generally the ISP just coughs up your information.
Re: (Score:1)
Under the new Snooper's Charter they are likely snooping all your traffic. They have to log vast amounts of metadata, more than can be recovered simply by logging DNS requests. In fact one of the objections they raised to the law was that the equipment to do the packet inspection would be too expensive.
Re: (Score:1)
Its been awhile since I worked for an ISP, but when we received infringement notices, we would just send an email to the end user informing them that we had received notice and to please stop, then just replied whoever sent us the notice and told them we have dealt with it.. We never gave any user information back to them (Isn't that a data protection issue?).
As to snooping, the only thing we had was the standard log files to look at (there's not enough money in the ISP business to invest in any fancy netw
Re: (Score:3)
If you actually cared about your arguments you'd post them here instead of just using them as a reason to whore your channel.
Re:Not my channel (Score:1)
Copyright not right (Score:3)
The internet providers just opened themselves up to being sued for aiding and abetting the copyright cartels Everyone knows how many fake claims these copyright cartels make on a Youtube upload, they get no repercussions for their claims, but you have to deal with their lies. We also know these corporations have no problem in stealing YOUR content, then telling you to get lost. Time to abolish copyright law and stop this protectionist cartel.