Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie
Hi all! We have been experiencing an issue on site where threads have been missing the latest postings. The platform host Vanilla are working on this issue. A workaround that has been used by some is to navigate back from 1 to 10+ pages to re-sync the thread and this will then show the latest posts. Thanks, Mike.
Hi there,
There is an issue with role permissions that is being worked on at the moment.
If you are having trouble with access or permissions on regional forums please post here to get access: https://www.boards.ie/discussion/2058365403/you-do-not-have-permission-for-that#latest

[Article] Eircom to cut off Music File Sharers ..

1356717

Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 26 ronan675


    cgarvey wrote: »
    There's not one part of that correct, best I can tell. In fact, all of your networking-related points on this thread are highly inacurate.

    An eircom IP address is associated with a registered account at any given time (and logged). If you have 20 computers on your own network, it doesn't matter, the account holder is still responsible.. if that's what you're getting at? eircom don't share IP addresses across a number of registered customers simultaneously.


    Agreed.... Also another obvious thing people are forgetting is that eircom already have an easy system in place to track down owners of IP's. Their download statistics system! Obviously to generate bandwidth usage for a customer they need to log all the IP's the customer has been assigned and the exact login / logout times to generate traffic reports. Therefore tracking down the owner of the account is just a simple matter of typing the IP address into a database which already exists for the stats system and getting back the registered account holder which will immediately give them your billing address.

    So anyone who says it's impossible for them to track down the owner of an IP should really think again. Most of the system is already in place.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,046 ✭✭✭jos22


    ronan675 wrote: »
    Agreed.... Also another obvious thing people are forgetting is that eircom already have an easy system in place to track down owners of IP's. Their download statistics system! Obviously to generate bandwidth usage for a customer they need to log all the IP's the customer has been assigned and the exact login / logout times to generate traffic reports. Therefore tracking down the owner of the account is just a simple matter of typing the IP address into a database which already exists for the stats system and getting back the registered account holder which will immediately give them your billing address.

    So anyone who says it's impossible for them to track down the owner of an IP should really think again. Most of the system is already in place.

    ip address dont proof anything. they can be easily faked.
    and the music industry mythods of collection this " evidence is flawed and questionable at best.

    sure eircom cant very quickly determine which account the ip was leased to. but that dosent not prove that person is guilty.

    the only to prove anything is to take the pc in question and exam logs and HDDS to evidence to support that file was either downloaded uploaded or both.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,046 ✭✭✭jos22


    ronan675 wrote: »
    Originally Posted by cgarvey View Post
    There's not one part of that correct, best I can tell. In fact, all of your networking-related points on this thread are highly inacurate.

    An eircom IP address is associated with a registered account at any given time (and logged). If you have 20 computers on your own network, it doesn't matter, the account holder is still responsible.. if that's what you're getting at? eircom don't share IP addresses across a number of registered customers simultaneously..

    wheather or not the account holder is reasonable is open for debate courts in other EU countries ruled that the account holder can not be held responsible if someone else access their router.
    see
    http://torrentfreak.com/danish-file-sharers-not-responsible-for-wi-fi-theft-080906/


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,449 ✭✭✭Call Me Jimmy


    bk wrote: »
    This is a pointless exercise, it won't have hardly any effect. The music industry would be much better off putting it's effort into developing, all you can eat, flat fee, file sharing services.

    this.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Education Moderators Posts: 27,263 CMod ✭✭✭✭spurious


    nuxxx wrote: »

    that said, i dont really care.. 25 euro for a cd that cost less than 50 cents to make, ye fo

    Or 25 euro for music you already have paid them handsomely for on LP/Cassette etc.
    How my heart doesn't bleed for the record companies.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,553 ✭✭✭lmimmfn


    aidanodr wrote: »

    The RECORD COMPANIES will SUPPLY Eircom with the IP Addresses, not the other way around, hence these companies have ways of tracking Peer to Peer traffic? Maybe this - http://www.baytsp.com/solutions/index.html

    Aidan
    The record/music industry setup up dummy seeders/leechers, download PeerGuardian2 and it'll block all that crap.

    I really cannot see how this will work:
    1. People will reduce their broadband package to minimum or get rid of BB altogether/go for cheaper 3 option, 20euro->no line rental, basically Eircon will lose £
    2. They cant get rid of peer->peer, thats just stupid, a lot of PC gaming is peer 2 peer, even analysing the packets they can be encrypted and tunneled. Peer 2 peer is use by a lot of people when working from home
    3. Can encrypt the torrents
    4. Download instead from news groups/usenet or file servers
    5. What about older folk who dont know how to secure their network and have everyone using it, do they get their internet removed? cant secure your network=ban lol

    Really cant see this working, they'll end up sending out load of letters to people who havnt got a clue whats going on and the whole thing will fizzle out. Maybe they should just stop the net lol

    Ignoring idiots who comment "far right" because they don't even know what it means



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,874 ✭✭✭✭PogMoThoin


    Folks, I'm quoting my own post further back here, but it makes sense
    PogMoThoin wrote: »
    I don't see any change in this, it certainly won't stop me dl'in.

    By this Eircom have just fobbed them off with the "We'll have a word with them"..............."We've a 3 strikes and they're out policy"....................... like all other ISP's do. In reality its dynamic ip, here is no tracability for the music industry, all they'll know is its an Eircom ip address.

    Smart move Eircom, gets them off Your back and saves money on legal costs.

    Its not a legal agreement, its a settlement and a very intelligent move by Eircom, They and only they can pinpoint your ip address.


  • Registered Users Posts: 188 ✭✭_Nuno_


    spurious wrote: »
    Or 25 euro for music you already have paid them handsomely for on LP/Cassette etc.
    How my heart doesn't bleed for the record companies.

    lol, that's very funny. And completely clueless. I recorded a few CD's. The Studio cost 100 euro an hour. We were there for around 5 or 6 weeks, 6-7 days a week, 10 hours a day. We did 2 months pre production, 12 hours a day 5 days a week. 6 people during during pre production, 7 during production. You think the CD is worth 50 cents?

    I don't really download music, and I'm not really interested in the debate, but comments like yours just show how clueless people are.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,553 ✭✭✭lmimmfn


    PogMoThoin wrote: »
    Its not a legal agreement, its a settlement and a very intelligent move by Eircom, They and only they can pinpoint your ip address.
    as in my post above, thats not true, they use dummy seeders/leechers for torrents to get ipaddresses, but you can block them with PeerGuardian, and also i doubt that could be used in court or the fact that it was YOU that downloaded it

    Ignoring idiots who comment "far right" because they don't even know what it means



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 142 ✭✭notnem


    Why is Eircom getting involved in what is effectively a business model problem the music industry has? The music industry has spent the last 10 years trying to keep its out of date business model going instead of coming up with solutions that would give users options without restrictive anti piracy measures.
    Now Eircom have the additional challenge of attracting new customers while they protect the music industries interests. If you were looking for broadband today would you go with Eircom?
    Last April, the European Parliament spoke out against these anti-piracy measures, by saying it would be “conflicting with civil liberties and human rights and with the principles of proportionality, effectiveness and dissuasiveness”.


  • Advertisement
  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,874 ✭✭✭✭PogMoThoin


    lmimmfn wrote: »
    as in my post above, thats not true, they use dummy seeders/leechers for torrents to get ipaddresses, but you can block them with PeerGuardian, and also i doubt that could be used in court or the fact that it was YOU that downloaded it

    Yes they get an ip address, one which is dynamically changing, only Eircom can tie that ip address to a customer at that exact time. Getting an ip adddress is very vague and will not pinpoint anyone.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,553 ✭✭✭lmimmfn


    PogMoThoin wrote: »
    Yes they get an ip address, one which is dynamically changing, only Eircom can tie that ip address to a customer at that exact time. Getting an ip adddress is very vague and will not pinpoint anyone.
    well its not hard to tie ip address to private internal one on eircoms network, however it is actually worse than that, because eircom hasnt got a clue what IP address ISPs are giving out to users at any one time so to track someone would require:
    IRMA contacts eircom with ipaddress, file and time
    Eircom looks at what public ipaddress ranges ISPs connected to their access network are using to determine the ISP, and asks the ISP to send on the details of the phone number attached to that ipaddress.
    ISP hasnt made any agreement with Eircom to give this information out or in fact pay for someone to spend time looking up that information, also why would the ISP give Eircom info to ban one of their customers, ISP tell Eircom no, lol

    Ignoring idiots who comment "far right" because they don't even know what it means



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 44,028 ✭✭✭✭Basq


    Just heard about this now.. sorry if this has been mentioned already but not arsed in reading 8 pages. If you are warned and continue on as normal, will Eircom simply disconnect your service with them or put a stop on your line?

    Because the way I see it - it's a good idea they have in place but surely not infallible.

    I mean if a user was warned and continues as normal and Eircom discontinued their service with them, they could simply move to another ISP. If they put a hold on your line, they could go for mobile broadband.

    The only way around this I assume would be some kind of an "blacklist" of users that all ISP's should heed.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,553 ✭✭✭lmimmfn


    basquille wrote: »
    The only way around this I assume would be some kind of an "blacklist" of users that all ISP's should heed.
    Half the country would be blacklisted lol

    Ignoring idiots who comment "far right" because they don't even know what it means



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,538 ✭✭✭niceirishfella


    A MESSAGE FOR THE RECORD CO'S LOOKING @ THIS THREAD;

    It's taken you over a decade to move on illegal downloaders. Every song on earth has been downloaded for free by people, back catelogues X hundreds of millions of tracks.
    Ye have missed the boat and your moves right now are futile.
    You are merely learning dino's in a digital age.....but you can't learn fast enough to beat technology and the peer to peers who will just be that inch ahead of you.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,713 ✭✭✭✭jor el


    lmimmfn wrote: »
    well its not hard to tie ip address to private internal one on eircoms network, however it is actually worse than that, because eircom hasnt got a clue what IP address ISPs are giving out to users at any one time so to track someone would require:
    IRMA contacts eircom with ipaddress, file and time
    Eircom looks at what public ipaddress ranges ISPs connected to their access network are using to determine the ISP, and asks the ISP to send on the details of the phone number attached to that ipaddress.
    ISP hasnt made any agreement with Eircom to give this information out or in fact pay for someone to spend time looking up that information, also why would the ISP give Eircom info to ban one of their customers, ISP tell Eircom no, lol

    Please stop giving out such utterly wrong information. You appear to have no idea what's being talked about. I'm even confused by what you mean, when you say ISP! eircom ARE the ISP, eircom give out the IP address to the user, and eircom know EXACTLY who this is at any given time.

    The record companies will supply eircom with a list of IP addresses that they determined were sharing their products, without permission. It will then be up to eircom to contact their customer to inform them of this.

    If the information was incorrect, you will be able to contact eircom to clear it up. eircom will be able to determine if there was any P2P traffic going through your connection at the date and time indicated by the record companies.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,874 ✭✭✭✭PogMoThoin


    Its a fob off, one that works. The music industry constantly send out nasty "cease and desist" legal letters to every ISP. They chance their arm and try and bully. This settlement is an out of court agreement with no legal standing.

    I work for an ISP who take cease and desist letters like this very seriously. Being a smaller player in the market we haven't the power to defend ourselves against the money and power of the music industry. We just play along, anything to avoid a day in court, we don't give them any information though.

    By this Eircom have saved themselves a fortune spent in legal fees representing itself.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 605 ✭✭✭PaddyTheNth


    lmimmfn wrote: »
    as in my post above, thats not true, they use dummy seeders/leechers for torrents to get ipaddresses, but you can block them with PeerGuardian
    Not true. All they need is to issue a notice is to see your IP supplied by the tracker. Doesn't matter if you actually download the stuff or connect to them. Its the tracker which handles initial identification. See the case of the printer being sued.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,553 ✭✭✭lmimmfn


    jor el wrote: »
    Please stop giving out such utterly wrong information. You appear to have no idea what's being talked about. I'm even confused by what you mean, when you say ISP! eircom ARE the ISP, eircom give out the IP address to the user, and eircom know EXACTLY who this is at any given time.

    The record companies will supply eircom with a list of IP addresses that they determined were sharing their products, without permission. It will then be up to eircom to contact their customer to inform them of this.

    If the information was incorrect, you will be able to contact eircom to clear it up. eircom will be able to determine if there was any P2P traffic going through your connection at the date and time indicated by the record companies.
    whats your problem? explain to me whats wrong with that information?
    im talking about ISPs that are using Eircoms access network, not Eircom being the ISP. Eircom are both an access provider and an ISP, the article states:
    Under the settlement, the record companies will supply Eircom with the internet provider addresses of all persons who they detect illegally uploading or downloading copywrite works on a peer to peer basis.

    How is eircom going to contact UTV/Vodafone/whoevers customers based on a public ipaddress used by UTV/Vodafone/whoevers, how can eircom tie that public ipaddress to a customer? they cant, they need to contact the ISP and last i checked other ISPs havnt agreed to this.

    Ignoring idiots who comment "far right" because they don't even know what it means



  • Advertisement
  • Closed Accounts Posts: 81 ✭✭hill16dub


    firstly eircom can't even run their own company competantly imo do you actually think they can master this crap.
    Secondly they would lose a hugh amount of their clients to rivals.
    thirdly this settlement was only made to cut the legal bill and avoid a large pay out

    its wait and see for eircom.

    Knowing their track record it will be a long wait


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,222 ✭✭✭Scruff


    they are talking about it on the Gerry ryan show atm.
    /hangs head in shame for listening to this show :o


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,553 ✭✭✭lmimmfn


    hill16dub wrote: »
    firstly eircom can't even run their own company competantly imo do you actually think they can master this crap.
    Secondly they would lose a hugh amount of their clients to rivals.
    thirdly this settlement was only made to cut the legal bill and avoid a large pay out

    its wait and see for eircom.

    Knowing their track record it will be a long wait
    lol, very true

    Ignoring idiots who comment "far right" because they don't even know what it means



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 101 ✭✭zillmere


    lmimmfn wrote: »
    whats your problem? explain to me whats wrong with that information?
    im talking about ISPs that are using Eircoms access network, not Eircom being the ISP.

    How is eircom going to contact UTV/Vodafone/whoevers customers based on a public ipaddress used by UTV/Vodafone/whoevers, how can eircom tie that public ipaddress to a customer? they cant, they need to contact the ISP and last i checked other ISPs havnt agreed to this.

    Firstly, the article & entire discussion is about Eircom, not other ISP's. Secondly, OF COURSE Eircom knows exactly what IP addresses belong to its customers and what IP addresses belong to another ISP & which one. Eircom sell backbone access & IP ranges on to other ISP's. They are the only company with cable in the ground in Ireland. I am not 100% sure about the wireless providers but if they are using Eircom DNS servers then they know what IP range they use.

    There is a lot of totally wrong info being posted here about IP addresses. Of course they are accurate & can be used against you. Look at any child porn court case.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,713 ✭✭✭✭jor el


    lmimmfn wrote: »
    whats your problem? explain to me whats wrong with that information?
    Everything.
    lmimmfn wrote: »
    im talking about ISPs that are using Eircoms access network, not Eircom being the ISP. Eircom are both an access provider and an ISP, the article states:
    Other ISPs are not included in this agreement, so re-sellers of eircom broadband, and ISPs that don't use eircom at all, have nothing to do with this.

    When it says "internet provider addresses", they mean the Internet Protocol, IP, address, which is assigned by eircom, to eircom customers. Internet Provider address, is meaningless.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,553 ✭✭✭lmimmfn


    jor el wrote: »
    Everything.


    Other ISPs are not included in this agreement, so re-sellers of eircom broadband, and ISPs that don't use eircom at all, have nothing to do with this.

    When it says "internet provider addresses", they mean the Internet Protocol, IP, address, which is assigned by eircom, to eircom customers. Internet Provider address, is meaningless.
    that is NOT what the article states, go back and reread it
    again:
    Under the settlement, the record companies will supply Eircom with the internet provider addresses of all persons who they detect illegally uploading or downloading copywrite works on a peer to peer basis.
    Internet provider address is NOT just eircoms IP address its the ISP's IP addresses, if it was just Eircoms ip addresses it would just state that
    jor el wrote: »
    Internet Provider address, is meaningless.
    It is if you havnt got a clue what youre talking about

    Ignoring idiots who comment "far right" because they don't even know what it means



  • Advertisement
  • Closed Accounts Posts: 101 ✭✭zillmere


    Forgot to add, yes Eircom are totally useless, nothing will ever be done about it, I never bother with P2P anyway it is ****e.

    The sooner the music industry sets up a proper web network where people can buy tracks directly from the artist & cuts out all middle men including the newest middle man Itunes, the better.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,727 ✭✭✭✭Sherifu


    Scruff wrote: »
    they are talking about it on the Gerry ryan show atm.
    /hangs head in shame for listening to this show :o
    This has to be the greatest load of cock i've heard in a while...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,305 ✭✭✭yoshytoshy


    Someone just mentioned about the ip renewed after reboot.
    No one has a way of knowing it's the same person except for eircom.
    How can the record companies prove one person is a repeat offender ,without eircom sharing information ?

    Edit : I've never actually used p2p myself ,it's actually put it in my mind now.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 331 ✭✭darkestlord


    Maybe Gerry Ryan should get someone that knows what they are talking about.:D
    Does anyone use Lime wire anymore.I thought only kids used that.:p

    But one thing I wanted to ask.Are eircon planning to monitor what websites you go on or are they watching what you download.
    Because if they are monitring what sites you go on - a proxy would be useful.
    But for the time being I'll wait and see what happens but someone will think of a away around this problem.
    Eircom cannot even secure their wireless connections so I dont think they will win this war.:D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,210 ✭✭✭20goto10


    There should be a mass exodus from Eircom, hit them where it hurts and they'll change their minds quick enough and it will also give the other ISP's a reason to not take up this agreement.

    p.s How much dosh are Eircom getting for this "agreement"? It must be something substantial.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,553 ✭✭✭lmimmfn


    20goto10 wrote: »
    p.s How much dosh are Eircom getting for this "agreement"? It must be something substantial.
    I doubt theyre getting anything( probably just saving on legal fees ), but it would be very very interesting if they were

    Nearly tempted to switch over from TodayFM to Gerry Ryan to listen to his ranting

    Ignoring idiots who comment "far right" because they don't even know what it means



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,713 ✭✭✭✭jor el


    lmimmfn wrote: »
    that is NOT what the article states, go back and reread it

    That article on RTE is full of errors.
    lmimmfn wrote: »
    Internet provider address is NOT just eircoms IP address its the ISP's IP addresses, if it was just Eircoms ip addresses it would just state that
    As I said, Internet Provider Address, is meaningless. It is far more accurate to presume that they (quite obviously) mean IP address, and not the IP addresses being used by other ISPs.

    "Internet Provider address", would be the street address of an ISP, such as Vodafone, or BT Ireland. I don't know why IRMA would be providing the address of other ISPs to eircom, since eircom are probably fully aware of where their wholesale customers currently reside.

    If they were actually giving the IP addresses of customers of other ISPs, to eircom, then they would say that, and not "the record companies will supply Eircom with the internet provider addresses of all persons who they detect illegally uploading or downloading copywrite works on a peer to peer basis", which is obviously talking about eircom customers, which is what the entire agreement, and article, is about.
    lmimmfn wrote: »
    It is if you havnt got a clue what youre talking about

    No, you're the one who hasn't a clue, as I've pointed out on a number of posts now.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,553 ✭✭✭lmimmfn


    jor el wrote: »
    No, you're the one who hasn't a clue, as I've pointed out on a number of posts now.
    lmao, youre just too funny

    Ignoring idiots who comment "far right" because they don't even know what it means



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,807 ✭✭✭✭Orion


    aidanodr wrote: »
    AS I SAID: "The ruling means a precedent has been set and all other ISPs in the Irish market will now have to cooperate with the music industry."

    SO THEIR NOW ...
    Aidan

    Just cos it's on Silicon Republic doesn't make it true. It was an out of court settlement not a judge's ruling therefore there is no legal precedent.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 42 shebop


    Let's try and look at this from a legal point of view and add some perspective here:

    The record companies (I don't know which ones) purposely targeted Eircom to 'test' whether or not an ISP would be willing to comply with regulating the sharing of their intellectual property rights (IPR). This is absolutely nothing new, and similar legal proceedings have been brought against 'monopoly' ISPs like Eircom around the world. Very generally speaking, the record companies have had little or no grounds to enforce ISPs to comply for a plethora of reasons, one of the main reasons being, that an ISP is an intermediary and not responsible for the direct internet conduct of its users. Record companies are keen to test these cases in different jurisdictions to find an ISP weak enough to bend over and serve its needs and establish a precedence. It looks like they found that with Eircom.

    Eircom's willingness to comply shows the absolute disregard and apathy they have towards their customers (what's new, I hear you say?).

    What this boils down to is the record companies being sore over the lack of control over technologies THEY fund to invent, ultimately taking it out on the consumer by finding ISPs as pathetically weak and anti-consumer as Eircom.

    As a lot of you already have mentioned, there is a lot of hot air involved with threats made against P2P downloaders. The law simply is not adequately reflective of the real status out there, and bully tactics employed by record companies to trump the consumer time and time again are frankly tiresome.

    Eircom on the other hand, show they have no backbone, no actual awareness of the overall ethics behind intellectual property and licence agreements 'standardised' by rich fatcats, and quite frankly are a coward.

    Why support them??

    It's very simple- change ISP and slap Eircom for being so downright disrespectful to you as their customer, or simply ignore them, continue downloading and be rest assured, that unless you are sharing files en masse, profiting or being 'unreasonable' with your downloads, then there is very little as it currently stands that can be brought against you.

    Eircom Employees, if you are reading this, you ought to be ashamed of your wholly regressive and cowardly treatment in serving and representing your customers. This test case could have set wonderful precedent for not just Irish law, but intellectual property law in general. You failed to take a challenge on the basis of fear, lack of information and quite evidently from what is coming out in the news today, ignorance.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,713 ✭✭✭✭jor el


    yoshytoshy wrote: »
    How can the record companies prove one person is a repeat offender ,without eircom sharing information ?

    The record companies won't know anything about the individuals involved. They also won't know anything about repeat offenders, as the IP addresses are shared, and reset every 24 hours. It will be up to eircom to sanction repeat offenders, or those who ignore the warnings.
    Are eircon planning to monitor what websites you go on or are they watching what you download.

    They won't be monitoring anything, apart from what they already monitor. All ISPs are required, by law, to keep logs. They will not be doing anything new because of this agreement.
    20goto10 wrote: »
    There should be a mass exodus from Eircom, hit them where it hurts and they'll change their minds quick enough and it will also give the other ISP's a reason to not take up this agreement.

    p.s How much dosh are Eircom getting for this "agreement"? It must be something substantial.

    I doubt there'll be any change in eircom's customer base, or minimal anyway. The number of people effected by this will be low. The other ISPs are also sure to follow suit, unless they want a lengthy, and possibly costly, legal battle on their hands. If eircom aren't fighting, the others will likely not fight either. There was no mention of money, and I would guess that there will be none.


    This is not a bad thing. eircom have saved themselves a costly legal battle, a cost that would ultimately be borne by the customers. They have saved their customers from being caught up in legal threats, and fines, from IRMA (which has happened in the past). IRMA and it's cohorts, can now be placated by seeing that "something" is being done, where as before nothing was being done, to stem the illegal sharing of their property. Your details will not be passed on to other companies, you will not be sued, you will not be fined, you will not face court appearances.

    This is a good thing, for pretty much everyone, except if you're one of the ones sharing thousands of copyrighted music tracks.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,001 ✭✭✭lynchie


    And for those wondering about Eircom being able to trace the IP address, their accounting package radius, will log every log-on / log-off attempt in a database which records your telephone number, ip address, bytes downloaded, bytes uploaded and length of time online with a date / time stamp. So even if you get a different IP address from their DHCP servers every day, once Eircom have a date/time and ip address they can say which telephone number had that ip address and from there they can get your account number to identify the household.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 32,417 ✭✭✭✭watty


    What Record companies do:

    By various methods[1] they gather the IP address and time/Date. Unless the "whatever it is you are downloading from" has your real IP address, you can't get the packets back. Dynamic or Static IP is not relevant.

    They give the IP and date/time to the ISP (eircom in this case), they know from the address range which ISP it is as that is all public. They have no idea where it is or who it is.

    What the ISPs do:
    They can almost instantly accurately know who was using that IP, if the time /date is correct. Sometimes it's an hour or hours out due to UTC/Summertime/Local time issues. In which case the wrong user is identified.
    The ISP gives NO information at all to the RIAA or whoever.

    The ISP then contacts the user...

    Why an ISP might like this
    Heavy P2P users are not much liked by ANY ISP. They don't care if all of them are cut off (light / occasional ones they don't care about). About 10% of users can eat 80% of capacity. Hence Caps, throttling and such.

    Deep packet inspection (if it was ISP responsibility to see who is running P2P) has a number of problems:
    • It's very expensive.
    • Encryption and port 80/443 connections probably defeat it.
    • It can't reliably identify copyright material or even legal BBC/Sky/C4 P2P
    Getting the IP from 3rd party with assurance that it is used for illegal P2P only requires them to change the T&C to say "If a copyright holder gives us an IP that is identified with your connection at the time and they assure us it was for illegal file sharing or download we reserve the right to disconnect you" or similar.

    It becomes someone else's problem, costs them nothing and even improves the network more than a Cap + throttling does.

    I'd assume that the ISP will check traffic of the user identified and not bother issuing a notice for light users. The RIAA or copyright holder never actually gets to know who is issued with warnings or disconnected as the Data Protection Act would be broken.

    Issues:
    There needs to be some right of appeal. There is zero transparency as to how the Copyright holders get the IP.
    • The hour can be wrong on time = Wrong User
    • Landlord may be sharing the connection via Router and Switch to 10 separate tenants without telling ISP. (ISPs hate this). = Which User?
    • The clandestinely obtained information could be simply wrong.

    [1] Various Methods:
    The RIAA and others have various schemes using 3rd party companies:
    • set up their own bittorrent clients
    • set up fake (but possibly functional) trackers
    • possibly even newsgroup or other servers
    • hack the trackers to get connection details
    • install root kits, trojans etc to monitor on the users PC
    The 3rd party companies don't tell the Copyright owners exactly how they do what they do to try and keep the RIAA's hands clean.

    Finally
    • The onus is on the Copyright holder to prove than an IP at the stated time was used to infringe their copyright. This is not transparent nor provable nor does there appear to be an appeals mechanism. However if you never get near your Cap you might not ever be warned. The ISP is only doing this as it absolves them of spending serious money, saves them money and makes it someone else's problem.
    • The price of CDs and DVDs is not relevant to breaking copyright. I agree that it's proven in history than piracy, smuggling and forging increases as the price is artificially increased. Piracy indeed is greatly reduced when the physical media is more affordable. People do prefer the real media
    • Yes, the price of legal downloads is often higher per album and lower quality than a CD. This is stupid. DVDs on re-release are often cheaper than re-released CD. New CDs can sometimes be the same price as new DVDs. This is stupidity. But CD and DVD prices have fallen.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,807 ✭✭✭✭Orion


    Yeh the record companies will be, that's my point. And the record companies will be handing those IP's to Eircom. Those IP's will NOT pinpoint your PC within a network.

    edit: http://whatismyipaddress.com/

    Zoom all the way in, this is how close those recording companies are going to get to you.

    Apparently I'm located in the middle of a river.

    gg
    Dear god. That's a general location based on the information available to that site which is shag all.
    Eircon, on the other hand, have actual logs which tie that actual IP address to your actual account. It's not a geographical location - it's an accounting & billing detail. The letter will be to the bill payer for that account.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 605 ✭✭✭PaddyTheNth


    yoshytoshy wrote: »
    Someone just mentioned about the ip renewed after reboot.
    No one has a way of knowing it's the same person except for eircom.
    They're the only people who need to know, and your IP won't actually change unless you reboot the router...and even if you do, it's not always guaranteed. Even so, Eircom still know exactly which IP is used by any account at a given time, and this IP is what they are supplied with by the anti-p2p people.
    Are eircon planning to monitor what websites you go on or are they watching what you download.
    No, they'll just be handed a list of IP addresses by the anti-p2p folks and they'll match those addresses to the accounts which were using them at the time and say 'you've been caught sharing files, stop it or we'll disconnect you.'

    And to everyone using IP incorrectly, IP means Internet Protocol, not Internet Provider for ****s sake, as I think has been said by one person. I hate when articles are written by people who clearly don't have a clue what they're talking about.


  • Advertisement
  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20 beefyjohn


    It Simple.

    Eircom monitors all there network usage and knows exactly what traffic is passing through it. they use servers to keep a record of exactly how much youve downloaded. thats how there able to put a cap on everybodys account.

    They log all ips given to customers and if they have any intelligence at all more than likely an ip range will be associated to specific region. so your ip will be easy to monitor as it will retain the same subnet gateway and probably the same first 24 bits of your ip.

    So in a nutshell we are all screwed and we all need to get off eircom dsl lines and that includes all the resellers as they come off the same lines.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 42 shebop


    This is not a bad thing. eircom have saved themselves a costly legal battle, a cost that would ultimately be borne by the customers. They have saved their customers from being caught up in legal threats, and fines, from IRMA (which has happened in the past). IRMA and it's cohorts, can now be placated by seeing that "something" is being done, where as before nothing was being done, to stem the illegal sharing of their property. Your details will not be passed on to other companies, you will not be sued, you will not be fined, you will not face court appearances.

    This reads as nothing more than cowardly to me on Eircom's part. How can Eircom customers be saved when they are being dictated as to what they can and can't do online? Let's not forget, a lot of p2p IS legal. It seems realistically much more problematic for record companies (or is it eircom who will have this onus) to fund in resources to be able to determine what files are being lawfully exchanged on p2p networks?

    Code, thankfully dictates.

    Copyright is an essential tool and of course a very necessary right to creators seeking to protect their work.

    HOWEVER, time and time again technology companies show absolute disregard to the essence that is copyright;

    e.g. Why suddenly is it ok for record companies to bully ISPs/the consumer against a technological flaw(?)/reality regarding p2p sharing, when, for example, they lay silent on the fact that 18 months ago, according to Irish copyright law, it was ILLEGAL for people to purchase a CD, rip it onto a computer and sync it with their iPod? Why were the record companies not sueing Apple or dishing out legal threats to mp3-player users then?

    This boils down to the fact that record companies are bitter and sore about technology they funded to create work against lining their pockets and are using a distorted approach to copyright law to try and rectify things. Copyright and current technology (particularly code) simply open up a whole other kettle of fish that, if properly test, would inevitably work against the record companies. How Eircom nonetheless complied is something else and something their users should be aware of ....


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,082 ✭✭✭lostexpectation


    http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2009/01/irish-isp-agrees-three-strikes-against-its-users The difference is that an ISP is not a court; and its customers will never have a chance to defend themselves against the recording industry's accusations and "proof". To whom, without judicial oversight, has the ISP obligated itself to provide meaningful due process and to ensure that the standard of proof has been met?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 42 shebop


    Anyone willing to give this 3 strike deal a go then? I wonder what would happen ... oh no, we might get cut off and have to change ISP? How would it stand if other areas of copyright were brough in to a defence. e.g. Boards.ie using that YouTube link which is another intermediary-harbourer of content trumping copyright .... it's a minefield.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,067 ✭✭✭L31mr0d


    I personally welcome this decision by Eircom. Like was said the less torrent users out there the better.

    Although, I can't see how this will have any effect on users of file storage sites and usenet, who usually download archive files from an index that have no descriptive details in their titles. Couple this with SSL and encryption and I'd say it will be a while before anything like this will have a large effect on piracy. I'd say the only apparent change will be the amount of people jumping ship from Eircom once they get wind of this.

    I'd say the only people who will get caught out by this are your beboers with limewire who don't really know what they're doing anyway.

    Personally, I haven't downloaded music in ages, I prefer to use music streaming sites like grooveshark and songza. I rarely commute so I only really listen to music when I'm at a PC.


  • Registered Users Posts: 279 ✭✭apope8


    Much easier way to download music.
    1) Find a public music video on youtube
    2) Download the video using realplayer or something else.
    3) Use a program like total video converter to extract the audio as an mp3!

    Takes about 2mins altogether!

    Done, Dusted, Legal!!!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 959 ✭✭✭ZeRoY


    good for Ireland, thats rubbish - as mentioned earlier, the monitoring of ip addresses and record company's reporting it to Eircom - = embarrasing for Ireland.

    This has been the case for at least the past 2 years .... Mediasentry has been sending copyrights infringements to ISP but since they had no obligation to do anything with the reports noone got warned/disconnected.

    As for the detection, how easy can it be? Just use any Torrent / P2P type software and you can get a list of IP connected to the trackers.... a submission to www.ripe.net to match IP with ISP and your are done.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,807 ✭✭✭✭Orion


    L31mr0d wrote: »
    I personally welcome this decision by Eircom. Like was said the less torrent users out there the better.

    I agree - more bandwidth for us usenet leechers :D


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,910 ✭✭✭barnicles


    Mostly what Media Defender etc. Do is make decoy torrents or seed decoy files on proper torrents. They also use all the bandwidth of the seeders, so leechers torrents will crawl.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,065 ✭✭✭Fighting Irish


    yoshytoshy wrote: »
    in a way stuff like this is good for ireland ,especially if we are to become more competitive in the IT area of business.

    :rolleyes:


This discussion has been closed.
Advertisement