With the copyright industry hating VPN In public, you know they are Doing Good

7:01:00 PM
With the copyright industry hating VPN In public, you know they are Doing Good -

many news surfaced about VPN this week, each of them about how the copyright industry does not like. This is when you know the VPN serve a good purpose in society.

In the words of Galadriel, the world has changed . It used to be that the copyright industry could establish different rules, different prices, different distributions for each country. They always claim that this is how the world works

This is not the hackers mind paying for good service -. Every hacker knows that it is just the copyright industry who do not. I pay subscriber number # 110 (hundred and ten) for Pandora (music player), for example, more than 150 million today. See there? Pirates are early adopters, too, when it comes to services that provide value.

No wonder the copyright industry has tried every trick in the book to close Pandora, because he does not play by their rules. For example, in Sweden, I could not access Pandora for a while. Then the Internet community was fed up with all the nonsense and pretend that national borders exist on the net, and has developed a number of solutions to this.

VPN is such a solution.

For Pandora, I'm using a plugin for Chrome called "Hola Better Internet." When I go to Pandora Internet Radio, the "Getting lost" briefly flashes since I am located in Europe. Then Hola kicked, and suddenly the Hola plugin tells me that I am now egressing somewhere in the United States for access to Pandora and Pandora loads well. Everything happens in a split second. It is even difficult. (If I want, I could go out in other countries, too.)

It is not surprising that the copyright industry is trying to crack down against this obvious technology. (Just as they cracked down on the AutoPlay piano, phonograph, speaker, and so on.) In the last line, it says on TorrentFreak that the copyright industry is pressuring Netflix to ban all users ( pay users!) coming to Netflix via VPN.

Apparently paying subscribers Netflix 'in Australia are so disappointed with the selection there, they choose to exit the United States and use Netflix from there. instead

Let's take it again: In Australia, the Netflix selection is so poor that his pay users, keyword being pay , choose to use the service they pay to another country instead.

in any market principle, it is not correct, what is expected and completely normal. But it disrupts the fantasies of power jam, segment, and control the copyright industry market - in segments that do not exist any longer. It is obviously not in the interest Netflix to lock their customers from a better offer, it remains to see what the copyright industry is barking here. (Also, it should be noted that the Hulu service is already mistreats its customers this way.)

The next step is predictable debate on SOPA - it has put pressure on the payment providers to refuse service to VPN services, in a blatant display of cartelization of the few payment providers. (There are only two reasons to use a VPN that accepts Bitcoin, right there. Trying to cut bitcoin payments)

It is also interesting to see how effective VPN is to protect end users who make unauthorized copies of knowledge and culture of the copyright industry monopolized - apparently, the people behind the Expendables 3 is a continuing party, but hit a no-VPN log on address end is literally a dead end - there is nowhere to go from there. (This is another reason to use only the VPN services that a) create any newspaper, b) does not require personal information in the first place -. As for paying with Bitcoin)

The copyright industry is start looking displeased with VPN services, which is a technical measure that can guarantee civil liberties. It is a sign that they perform an important function in society.

Privacy remains your own responsibility.

Previous
Next Post »
0 Komentar