• @hoshikarakitaridia@sh.itjust.works
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    30411 months ago

    Literally illegal. Discussing crimes doesn’t equal crime, so there’s no reason for them to requeust IPs. And at least in the EU you aren’t even allowed to disclose information related to your person.

    • SGG
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      13211 months ago

      They don’t care. It’s the film industry equivalent to the Microsoft support scammers. Get a bunch of targets, spam out hundreds of thousands of threatening emails, profit off the small percent of people who fall for it.

      • @vrek@programming.dev
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        6111 months ago

        I had a Microsoft support scammer once… I let him in to my system too…well not really.

        I quickly spin up a quick fresh install of slack ware Linux in a virtual machine that didn’t even have x11 never mind wine installed. When it was up I told him a friend uses something called tellynet (aka telnet but I was playing dumb) to help me on the computer.

        He telnetted in and could not understand why any of his malware wasn’t working…

        • @FutileRecipe@lemmy.world
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          2811 months ago

          uses something called tellynet (aka telnet but I was playing dumb)

          I wonder if he got the joke, or was a scriptkiddie who just relies on existing tools without understanding them, and thought you meant television or similar.

          • @nilloc@discuss.tchncs.de
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            2211 months ago

            They’re basically telemarketing workers with hacking tools provided by an employer. They follow scripts and click the buttons they’ve been trained to use.

            I’m surprised they got in with telnet and not their usual RDP. However I’m not sure they would have gotten anywhere on a Linux box with commands that are so different, unless they were a little familiar with at least MacOS (bash or zsh based now a days).

      • @hoshikarakitaridia@sh.itjust.works
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        911 months ago

        they don’t care

        Yes they do. They are boxed in neatly in the current laws and unless you are discussing specifics about doing a crime in the past or future, they will not get that subpoena and thus they are in a catch 22.

        Now if you are actively torrenting, chances are you could run into one of those fake peers that will grab your IP and they can start suing you. But other than that they would need real good evidence to subpoena.

        • @bamboo@lemm.ee
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          111 months ago

          Subpoenas are tools the government uses to compel a private entity to provide information. This isn’t that though, this is one private entity asking another private entity to just give them data. It’s not a legal case, and because of our non-existant privacy regulations in the US, Reddit is free to just hand over this information, or not if they want. No crime has to even be alleged, Reddit can just hand that information out.

          • @hoshikarakitaridia@sh.itjust.works
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            111 months ago

            Ok yes sorry I should have specified, what you’re saying might apply to the US.

            What I said applies to the EU.

            Thing is, companies need to know beforehand if they are dealing with a user from US or EU because they don’t wanna break laws when they have to deal with the court system anyway on stuff like this. So technically they could transmit information about US citizens, but in practice this is super tricky and risky.

            Let’s say you got an IP. Alright you can pinpoint The location. Problem: you don’t know whether you just grabbed the target IP or an IP from a VPN or a proxy. There’s ways to obscure this so you might not even be able to find out. Now if you turn this over, there’s a small risk you just did a crime because they are spoofing their location. And if you just captured a VPN or proxy, you are now pursuing the wrong person and in EU law this won’t go over well.

            So in practice there’s basically no way to do this and be sure you didn’t make a mistake, and mistakes in law are risky and costly. No company would ever take such a risk.

            Now I could go into detail about all the technical details on why things work like that but it would make this twice as long.

            TL;DR in theory you are right for US users, in practice there’s no way to tell and it gets risky pretty fast.

            Also obligatory IANAL and always check in with a lawyer if you need specific legal advice.

            • @bamboo@lemm.ee
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              111 months ago

              That’s a really interesting point, has it been tested in court? The article is about US companies and US websites so I figured EU law was irrelevant, but I am curious to see if the EU can claim jurisdiction for actions foreign companies take outside the EU, regardless of if they have any official EU presence.

              • @hoshikarakitaridia@sh.itjust.works
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                11 months ago

                Well I can not give you a specific case for that, but it widely accepted that online actions against users from the EU that violate laws in the EU can get persued.

                Do you remember seeing some US websites saying “we don’t service EU users at the moment”? That’s because they didn’t want to get a lawyer so they can comply with the EU GDPR back then. I assume this is because they knew there was some precedent.

                If you are keen on it I can go digging for case law though.

                EDIT: Nevermind I literally only had to do one Google search and here’s an official link: https://gdpr.eu/compliance-checklist-us-companies/

                Note that one of the headings literally says “Why US companies must comply with the GDPR” and the answer is “because it is extra-territorial in scope”.

                • @bamboo@lemm.ee
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                  111 months ago

                  On that page you linked, they say “So far, the EU’s reach has not been tested, but no doubt data protection authorities are exploring their options on a case-by-case basis.” So it hasn’t really been tested yet it seems. It’s true that there are extradition treaties and interpol that aid in cross-border prosecution, but that tends to be used primarily when the alleged crime happened in the prosecuting country’s jurisdiction, or the alleged crime is handled similarly in both countries. A GDPR violation by a US company wouldn’t be considered a crime at all in the US, so it’s entirely possible that they might decline to assist in prosecution.

                  • @hoshikarakitaridia@sh.itjust.works
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                    11 months ago

                    Ok you wound me up now so I had a little scouring of the internet.

                    Yes, I can not find case law of extradition of US based companies through US entities.

                    What I can find is a couple of cases against bigger companies that also act in the realm of the EU. Google has been fined in the Netherlands for global violations if I understand correctly. Meta has been fined even a few times for global violations, enforced in Ireland.

                    So yes, technically enforcement in the US is not guaranteed, but they basically can’t build up their company in the EU anymore unless they deal with it. It’s not perfect, but violations can still suck for business expansion, and that is good. and then I do have to look into the new EU data privacy laws if they changed enforcement or anything else important.

      • @hoshikarakitaridia@sh.itjust.works
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        1511 months ago

        I could give you a full breakdown of how it works in EU, but basically there needs to be indisputable evidence that a crime occured for any party to subpoena any ISP or service provider company. Otherwise those companies will be in huge trouble. The one doing the subpoena because they wouldn’t have an order for that and if they fuck around right before suing, courts will not take kindly to that. And the other receiving the subpoena for disclosing personal information (although they’d maybe win a defense to that, because if they did their due diligence they are not supposed to tank the damages).

        What I’m saying is, considering currently laws in the EU, I think we’re good. Of course IANAL so ask one if you need specific advice.

        • @Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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          911 months ago

          Did they actually issue a subpoena though, or did they just send some emails saying “give pls”.

          A subpoena is a legal document and thus there are rules that go along with it. But an email asking to be given something is not a subpoena.

    • @800XL@lemmy.world
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      3211 months ago

      If discussing crimes equals crime then police, CEOs, and politicians should all be in jail.

        • @800XL@lemmy.world
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          411 months ago

          “Man, you know how easy it would be to get away with insider trading/misreporting earnings/reselling seized fentanyl/asking for a key piece of evidence to go missing? I have a friend/family member/employee/business contact/perp I let go that owes me a favor.”

      • DebatableRaccoon
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        311 months ago

        I stand by the conclusion no matter the reason at this point. Bunch of scum the lot of them

      • @explodicle@local106.com
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        211 months ago

        If they were held accountable for their crimes then police, CEOs, and politicians would already all be in jail.

    • BolexForSoup
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      11 months ago

      You should read the article. I don’t agree with them, but it’s more nuanced than that/isn’t about discussing piracy.

      They are basically trying to get the IP‘s so that they can claim frontier is at fault and not being proactive. It is not actually targeting the users in a way that is designed to go after them individually. It’s trying to prove users are using frontier to pirate with impunity.

      • conciselyverbose
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        4411 months ago

        That’s not really extra nuance, and is about discussing piracy.

        The premise that an ISP has an obligation to proactively monitor traffic when they shouldn’t even legally be permitted to do so is disgusting.

        • BolexForSoup
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          11 months ago

          I literally said I don’t agree with them lol but the point is they aren’t trying to figure out who is discussing piracy on Reddit. They are trying to implicate frontier. Again, I don’t agree. I am against this.

          • conciselyverbose
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            1611 months ago

            That’s not a meaningful distinction.

            They’re still trying to take action against discussion of piracy. The target does not matter and is not meaningful to the discussion.

            • BolexForSoup
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              11 months ago

              What? That is incredibly meaningful. The legal implications are are very distinct, and also open some pretty frightening doors.

              If we can’t even distinguish the legal channels they are trying to screw us with, how can we possibly protect Internet privacy?

              I get you want to win an Internet argument or whatever but let’s keep our eye on the ball here, dude

              • conciselyverbose
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                11 months ago

                The important legal concept is that it’s literally impossible for discussion of piracy to entitle them to any information in any possible context.

                The target of their harassment does not matter. Giving them a single bit of data is every bit as unconditionally unacceptable in either case, and you don’t get to any ruling on anything else unless you bypass that.

                • BolexForSoup
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                  11 months ago

                  Again, this isn’t about the discussions. They are taking IP’s discussing it and tracing them to frontier. They’re “moving upstream” instead of targeting users, which means they need less info,the discussion themselves are immaterial because they aren’t targeting individuals - which means it’s more likely. This is a different tactic.

                  • conciselyverbose
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                    811 months ago

                    It is exclusively about the discussion. If discussion doesn’t entitle them to any information, that’s the end of everything. They have no path to proceed in a case or get a ruling on anything else without that barrier being destroyed.

                    They have many ways to harass both users and companies if it is. It’s the only line that means anything. There can’t be any precedent set on anything else without that being trampled.

                • @Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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                  111 months ago

                  “I saw a guy get shot last night. He was close enough I was able to record the whole thing in my phone. The police say that the victim was wearing a blue shirt, but didn’t mention they were also wearing a yellow hat. I’ve saved the footage, but I won’t be posting it anywhere, so don’t even ask.”

                  I make that statement on Reddit. Investigators see that my statement matches their crime scene.

                  They can subpoena Reddit for my reddit account information, including the IP address from which I posted that comment. They can subpoena the ISP who controlled that IP address and get subscriber information. They can then go to that subscriber and request and require their assistance in identifying the specific person who made that comment. They can then question that commenter as a witness, and subpoena their video.

                  That’s basically what the rightsholders are trying to do here: subpoena “witnesses” to Frontier violating its duties under Safe Harbor provisions.

                  I agree that they should be told to go fuck themselves with rusty Buicks, but they do have a (tenuous) legal claim for the information they seek.

        • @Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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          111 months ago

          Nobody is claiming that Frontier should be monitoring traffic.

          Safe harbor provisions require them to forward DMCA letters to subscribers when rightsholders send them, and suspend service to repeat violators.

          A subscriber who has received 44 DMCA letters without Frontier suspending their service is evidence that Frontier is not abiding by their safe harbor obligations.

          The rightsholders want the identity of a person willing to make such a claim, so that person can be compelled to testify that they weren’t lying their ass off when they made that claim.

      • Chewy
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        511 months ago

        Great explanation, it’s what I was hoping to write until my lemmy client crashed with the unfinished comment.

        I’m curious what would happen if some copyright holder tried to get information about a user on lemmy. Iirc only the users instance could log their IP, but almost all instances are run by volunteers, so risking a lawsuit might no be viable. Just look at what Tachiyomi devs have to go through, even though all they’re doing was and is legal.

        • BolexForSoup
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          911 months ago

          I am very much against this and totally agree. I think this could open some really dangerous doors re: internet privacy.

          Wear a VPN, folks.

        • Ademir
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          111 months ago

          My server is in Brazil. So fuck those companies.

    • @spiderman@ani.social
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      711 months ago

      even if they have our ip addresses, they can’t take any legal actions for discussing about piracy right?

      • @hoshikarakitaridia@sh.itjust.works
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        11 months ago

        Not unless you talk about how you will commit or have committed a specific instance of piracy. E.g. “I downloaded back to the future last night from (insert website)”. Then they have reasonable suspicion and can start to subpoena.

        Obligatory IANAL. Always do research and ask in lawyer if you wanna talk specifics.

    • @shalafi@lemmy.world
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      111 months ago

      I’ve always read it that action must be taken, above and beyond speech.

      Legally, a Conspiracy exists when 2 or more persons join together and form an agreement to violate the law, and then act on that agreement.

      I could argue that these users collaborated to break the law and did so, but I don’t see that being argued. Fuck I know, INAL.

      • @hoshikarakitaridia@sh.itjust.works
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        11 months ago

        Well in theory you are right. And if you have evidence like in the case of the 2pac murder (he literally wrote about handing the gun over so they could kill him with it), then sure. But to get a subpoena, and let’s use me as an example, you would need to prove that I talked about specifics on how I would or will pirate a stream, and then you would need to find writing of me saying something to the effect of “I did this yesterday” or “I will do this next week” or something very specific like that.

        And this is only to get the information. Then they still need to tie you to it and get enough evidence to start suing, otherwise they might not be able to prove their prima facia case.

        I know it’s scary, but the truth is we have laws to protect us from government overreach and at the same time those keep companies in check as well. Let’s not make it more dramatic than it is.

        Let’s also acknowledge that conspiracy is easy to say in theory and hard to prove in practice, specifically because you need to make sure you can inextricably link 2 defendant together and they are linked in the context of the same instance of a crime. And at that point no one would waste the resources for such a charge. They would rather chase the piracy websites to shut down a whole network for a bit, that’s more efficient. It’s easier to just serve the server providers a cease and desist and have be over with.

        Obligatory IANAL.