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Thread: MPAA Wants ISPs to Cut Off Pirates

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    MPAA Wants ISPs to Cut Off Pirates

    Following on from the IFPI-inspired Italian blockade of The Pirate Bay, the MPAA’s President has been in Italy offering ideas on how to deal with the ‘problem’ of unauthorized file-sharing. Not wanting to flirt too much with originality, Robert Pisano is backing a 3 strikes-and-you’re-out policy. Just how far will the Italian government go in its currently tough anti-piracy mood?
    MPAA Wants ISPs to Cut Off Pirates | TorrentFreak

    Well, I'm not surprised he took a nice trip to Italy to "collaborate"
    "I just remembered something that happened a long time ago."
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    hitman (03.09.08)

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    I think it's a matter of time till the Italian gov just gives up the whole damn thing,since other orgs won't affect local ones that easily IMO unless they do have something touchy regarding illegal filesharing movements taking place in their own country,so just forget about that jerk "Robert Pisano",he is just a loser who wants to spread out his silly policy outside his country (no doubt that he internally failed to convince them over there with his views)
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    Quote Originally Posted by Aurion View Post
    I think it's a matter of time till the Italian gov just gives up the whole damn thing
    Hopefully so it'll be
    They have stated that "[their] goal is not to punish anyone but rather to give them a reason to do the same downloading, but through legal channels"... sounds better than cutting down and jailing filesharers to me.
    "I just remembered something that happened a long time ago."
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    even with authorizing those downloads,do you think that users would stop torrenting ?? I don't think so,dude it's about freedom of Inet experience whenever users like it to happen so they got to stop that sh**
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    Of course not
    Anyway I have tried those "legal P2P programs" and they're a disaster... the UI is so bloated, they take a long time to start, you have to register to use them, it's impossible to find even popular tracks and all MP3s are of very low quality (64kbps or worse), speeds suck and peers disconnect all the time.
    Compare this with the "illegal" programs that start instantly, have a straightforward GUI, and a wide selection of mostly high-quality tracks which take just a few minutes to download, mostly at full speed...
    "I just remembered something that happened a long time ago."
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    Yeah sure,I was mentioning that they just want us to use Legal tools instead of using out Illegal ones which just make us comfortable with whatever we do,this sux man
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    P2P deemed as "illegal": you can max out your connection, there's a huge variety of content and most of it is of acceptable/good bitrates.

    "Legal" P2P: slow/terrible speeds, and very restricted, low-quality content. <- THIS IS WHAT THE RIAA WANTS YOU TO USE

    I think the message is clear
    "I just remembered something that happened a long time ago."
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