I wish it would have been for the Sopranos. I'm sitting here ripping 6 seasons and one of my DVD's won't read an episode so I torrented it. I'd send them a wordy email! But no, it has to be a show that I can't prove I have rights to. The pricks.
Anyway, looks like a one time warning doesn't /usually/ end up in court or with fines.
I've never had anything like that, but I tend to stick to a lot of private trackers, enforce encryption and use Peer Block (not sure if it does much good, but might as well!).
My sister did once get picked up by the infamous ACS Law over a torrent she downloaded. She was especially miffed as they complained over one of the music files in the torrent that she wasn't even bothered about (it was a compilation). Thankfully, the complaint was sent to my dad, who played the ignorant card that he was in his 60s and he'd never download modern pop music, and it strung out for several months of letters until ACS Law went bust and not a penny was paid in the end.
But personally, not had any letters yet........
Oh, and I second the ButTorrent thing :D
Nope, never had anything like that.
I go through phases of torrenting - at the moment I'm torrenting /lots/ (mainly to avoid studying), other times I don't download stuff for months.
I do force encryption, but don't use peer block. And get all my torrents from the big bad bay in the sky (which, laughably, my ISP believe they've blocked :'D ). I also try to avoid downloading brand new shit - games and DVDs/BRs I usually wait till month or two after the release date before evening thinking about downloading them, and I never ever ever bother with cams & screeners.
But does encryption work? You can still see every peer who is connected to the swarm. And apparently that's all they need. That's why I use NG. A one on one connection with a secure pipe in between.
No idea if it works, but I haven't had any nasty letters :D
Me either, until today. They must know my heel and back are broken, otherwise they'd never provoke a guntoter. The pricks.
I've no idea either. What it does potentially do is weaken any possible evidence. And if you stand up to a bullying letter, the company ultimately has to eventually make a decision as to whether they have sufficient evidence to push it through the courts.
So, anything I can do to weaken this is a good thing IMO.
I think the encryption thing is more to hide what you're doing from your ISP, so they can't throttle the traffic as easily.
Both good points. And I don't know how long they are going to pretend that an IP address works in court. It's been shown many times that an IP address isn't a reliable way to identify someone.