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Thread: Internet download copyright threat

  1. #31
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    Easy way around this, simply turn on encryption in your torrent client then nobody can see inside your packets.

  2. #32
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    Quote Originally Posted by Aussie View Post
    Easy way around this, simply turn on encryption in your torrent client then nobody can see inside your packets.
    Lol. That won't matter to a router doing dpi

  3. #33
    Davo is offline ChatterBox Silver Subscriber
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    Quote Originally Posted by Didge View Post
    Good idea Tombie, done - what a dill I am
    No, just a normal person trying to deal with the gooey morass that is the Internet.
    At any given point in time, somewhere in the world someone is working on a Land-Rover.

  4. #34
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    Another way to reduce these emails is to reduce the upload speed and limit when downloading torrents from public sources. After a long chat with my ISP they indicated that it is the upload that is counted as distribution of copyright material and they are less concerned with the download. Also don't leave the torrent to seed for to long.

    woody

  5. #35
    Davo is offline ChatterBox Silver Subscriber
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    If only this thread was in English.
    At any given point in time, somewhere in the world someone is working on a Land-Rover.

  6. #36
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    Quote Originally Posted by Aussie View Post
    Easy way around this, simply turn on encryption in your torrent client then nobody can see inside your packets.
    Please, Sir, what does that mean?
    I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food

    A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking

  7. #37
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    [quote=Eevo;1965324]Lol. That won't matter to a router doing dpi[/]

    That's a very broad statement and not strictly correct encryption can defeat DPI

    Bypassing Telstra's P2P crackdown is child's play

    Until ISPs spend more money to implement better dpi systems, the method I mentioned above is the easiest and simplest way of using p2p. It's a cat and mouse game ISP implement something, people find a way to circumvent it.

  8. #38
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    Quote Originally Posted by woody View Post
    Also don't leave the torrent to seed for to long.
    I rarely seed.
    I know, I'm a bad person
    The Phantom - Oslo Blue 2001 Td5 SE.
    Half dead but will live again!

    Nina - Chawton White 2003 Td5 S
    Slowly being improved

    Quote Originally Posted by Judo View Post
    You worry me sometimes Muppet!!


  9. #39
    Didge Guest
    Yeah, that was the cause for my second warning; I'd forgotten I was seeding

  10. #40
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    [quote=Aussie;1965630]
    Quote Originally Posted by Eevo View Post
    Lol. That won't matter to a router doing dpi[/]

    That's a very broad statement and not strictly correct encryption can defeat DPI

    Bypassing Telstra's P2P crackdown is child's play

    Until ISPs spend more money to implement better dpi systems, the method I mentioned above is the easiest and simplest way of using p2p. It's a cat and mouse game ISP implement something, people find a way to circumvent it.
    1) telstra does not currently shape p2p traffic
    2) telstra has some of the most up to date layer 5 (routing/firewalls) devices in the world

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