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File sharing safety guide

p2pnet.net news special:- With the entertainment cartels apparently hell bent on completely alienating their own customers by trying to sue them into buying product, as they correctly call their low quality, high price offerings, discretion is obviously the better part of valour.

Students are currently the primary targets of choice but sooner or later, Warner Music, EMI, Vivendi Universal and Sony BMG’s RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America) gets around everybody, not excluding very young children.

With that in mind, ZeroPaid’s Jared Moya has come up with a few handy thoughts aimed at keeping you and your identity safe. It shouldn’t be necessary, but since it is >>>>>>>>

1. Use Private BitTorrent tracker sites

The first is fairly obvious and that is of the inherent risk of using public BitTorrent tracker sites instead of private members only ones. The risk stems from the fact that almost anybody can connect to the swarm and take a peek at your IP address.

2. Don’t act as a Supernode

The RIAA has targeted subpoenas at users who allow their computers to be “Supernodes” on the FastTrack P2P System (used, for instance, by KaZaA or KaZaA Lite). In order to further reduce the risk of having your ISP subpoenaed or of being sued yourself, we recommend that you make sure your computer isn’t being used as a Supernode. To learn more about Supernodes and how to make sure your computer is not one, look here: Disabling the Supernode function with KaZaA (EFF - PDF 331k).

3. Try to use campus DC Hubs:

The RIAA and MPAA have sued college students for using publicly-accessible file sharing networks, including systems like i2hub. However, with one particularly notable exception, the RIAA and MPAA have not targeted users downloading or uploading music over closed, college campus intranets — in other words, students sharing with other students at the same school over the school’s own network. Tracking intranet infringements is practically more difficult, though not necessarily impossible.

4. Use IM data transfer programs:

Similarly, the RIAA and MPAA have not targeted file sharing through instant messaging systems, closed networks such as WASTE, and other sharing tools in which users can limit access by third-parties.

5. Use PeerGuardian:

This handy tool blocks “harmful” IP addresses from connecting to your PC. Using a list that’s regularly updated on Blocklist.org, it detects and closes connections from specified IP ranges.

6. Use Safe Peer:

This handy Azureus plugin for BitTorrent users is similar to PeerGuardian in that it also imports a list of IP addresses from Blocklist.org to use as an IP filter before connecting to peers.

What else can I do?

The Electonic Frontier Foundation (EFF) has posted a list of additional tips to help you avoid getting busted for illegal file-sharing.

First off, for those of you who are unware of what constitues illegal file-sharing, the crime occurs in the “distribution” of copyrighted material, the uploading or sharing of content, and not by simply downloading it.

The EFF points out that there is no way to know for sure as to exactly what the RIAA and MPAA are going to do or who they are going to sue but, in the meantime users of publicly-accessible P2P networks can take the following steps to reduce their chances of being targeted:

Either…

Make sure there are no potentially infringing files in your shared folder. This would ordinarily mean that your shared folder contains only files 1) that are in the public domain, 2) for which you have permission to share, or 3) that are made available under pro-sharing licenses, such as the Creative Commons license or other open media licenses, and

Remove all potentially misleading file names that might be confused with the name of an RIAA artist or song (e.g., “Usher” or “Madonna”) from your shared folder

Or…

Disable the “sharing” or “uploading” features on your P2P application, if your application allows it (see below).

We hate this option - it blocks your non-infringing sharing, and it doesn’t get us any closer to a real solution that gets artists paid while making file sharing legal. But, at the moment, it does appear that turning off sharing will reduce your chances of becoming a lawsuit target.

This can usually be accomplished in the “Options” or “Preferences” of your P2P application by removing all shared directories and sometimes setting an explicit option not to share files or to allow zero uploads. The specific method will vary depending on your P2P application, but looking at a few examples can give you the general idea.

The EFF suggests (but can’t guarantee) the following links for instructions (you can also try Google searches for (”turn off sharing”+the software’s name):

University of Chicago’s resources: http://security.uchicago.edu/peer-to-peer/no_fileshare.shtml

Duke University resources: http://www.oit.duke.edu/helpdesk/filesharing/steps.html

Note: Not all clients allow you to turn off “sharing.”

If you use software such as BitTorrent and eDonkey (as well as related clients like Azureus and eMule, respectively), you’ll automatically be uploading whatever you’re currently downloading.

In eDonkey, these files may appear in search results and thus become visible to the MPAA and RIAA.

In BitTorrent, you must connect to a BitTorrent “tracker” to download a file, and your Internet address is visible to anyone else - including the MPAA or RIAA - connected to that tracker. In these instances, you may be at greater risk.

Slashdot Slashdot it!

Also See:
primary targets - Answer or else, RIAA tells universities, June 5, 2007
young children - Tanya Andersen beats the RIAA, June 5, 2007
ZeroPaid - Tips on how to not get busted for file-sharing, June 5, 2007

If your Net access is blocked by government restrictions, try Psiphon from the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto’s Munk Centre for International Studies. Go here for the official download, and here for details. And if you’re Chinese and you’re looking for a way to access independent Internet news sources, try Freegate, the DIT program written to help Chinese citizens circumvent web site blocking outside of China. Download it here.


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Tired of being treated like a criminal? They depend on you, not the other way around. Don’t buy their ‘product’. Do bug your local politicians. Use emails, snail-mail, phone calls, faxes, IM, stop them in the street, blog. And if you’re into organizing, organize petitions, organize demonstrations and then turn up on your local political rep’s doorstep, making sure you’ve contacted your local tv/radio station/newspaper in advance. Don’t just complain. Do something!

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5 Responses to “File sharing safety guide”

  1. Reader's Write Says:

    blocklist.org has not been updated in months

  2. Reader's Write Says:

    pg is ok though

  3. Reader's Write Says:

    Well if you use NEWSGROUPS you are MUCH safer than even private BT sites!

    Ask the people who ran Loki torrents or Elite torrents and you will see what I mean.

    Private Bit Torrent sites are only marginally safer than public BT sites. And the feds DO go after them from time to time.

    If you only leech with newsgroups though, no one to date has EVER been sued for just leeching off of newsgroups.

  4. Pete Says:

    There is another option… actually put your hand in your pocket and pay for it legally.

  5. Pete's dad Says:

    Pete, why would you even read this article? Go apply for an RIAA job, you narc.

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