That seems like a big enough fine to not be just be a slap on the wrist.
SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
on 09 Feb 2025 16:09
nextcollapse
Anyone else remember all the Torrentfreak articles from the early 2000’s about how folks in major corporations and the government were torrenting TV shows and music on corporate/government computers?
Pepperidge Farm Remembers.
Everyone’s IP is exposed in a swarm, all Torrentfreak did was track down those IPs, and tons of them went to corporate and government networks and computers.
archomrade@midwest.social
on 09 Feb 2025 16:50
nextcollapse
In another universe, Meta is being sued for having leeched without seeding
According to mental outlaw they were careful to never seed.
muhyb@programming.dev
on 09 Feb 2025 22:11
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Fucking leechers! And for torrent too.
rottingleaf@lemmy.world
on 09 Feb 2025 17:54
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So they work at Meta, but this is what doesn’t feel right?
I mean, I didn’t have to write this explicitly, just wanted to know how many people had that same smile. The headline is gold.
lurch@sh.itjust.works
on 09 Feb 2025 18:45
nextcollapse
There are actually legal torrents and valid reasons to download them from within a company network or company workstations, for example here are the Debian install media torrents: www.debian.org/CD/torrent-cd/
However, you should make sure the admins and bosses don’t mind.
acosmichippo@lemmy.world
on 10 Feb 2025 01:51
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not a very secure distribution method.
lambda@programming.dev
on 10 Feb 2025 02:18
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False. But, feel free to explain why you think so.
example@reddthat.com
on 10 Feb 2025 02:19
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not a very informed comment.
torrents have checksums, you can’t just send someone incorrect parts, they’ll get rejected.
acosmichippo@lemmy.world
on 10 Feb 2025 02:49
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yes you’ll get what you’re looking for but you also open up your network to every other torrent under the sun.
Cenzorrll@lemmy.world
on 10 Feb 2025 05:37
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Wut?
ayyy@sh.itjust.works
on 10 Feb 2025 08:11
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Explain to me what you think torrenting a file does.
diffusive@lemmy.world
on 10 Feb 2025 12:17
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You don’t seem to understand how torrents work, or you don’t want to.
Third option would be that you aren’t very bright, but I’d refrain to assume that to give you a chance to better explain your stance.
corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
on 09 Feb 2025 20:21
nextcollapse
emails
\sigh
obinice@lemmy.world
on 09 Feb 2025 23:12
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That’s because it’s illegal and you’re committing a crime on behalf of your employer.
meowmeowbeanz@sh.itjust.works
on 10 Feb 2025 08:27
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Meta out here roleplaying as a digital kleptocracy—81.7 terabytes of pirated books?Classic.Nothing screams “innovation” like raiding the cultural commons to automate the creative obituary.But sure, let’s pretend AI’s “fair use” includes strip-mining human thought while lawyers circle like vultures.
This isn’t theft—it’s data feudalism.Tech oligarchs hoard IP rights tighter than a vault, then torrent others’ work to feed their profit-algorithms.Imagine Nietzsche’s ghost training a chatbot to spit nihilist ad copy. The future’s bright: infinite content mills, zero living writers.
threaded - newest
Doesn’t matter, laws are for the poor, not the rich elite!
mstdn.social/@stux/113974665364673502 <img alt="1000030000" src="https://discuss.tchncs.de/pictrs/image/ba801861-5c8d-430c-b979-fa7c48b2ab21.jpeg">
80,000/70 ≈ 1150.
1 Million * 1150 = 1.15 Billion
That seems like a big enough fine to not be just be a slap on the wrist.
Anyone else remember all the Torrentfreak articles from the early 2000’s about how folks in major corporations and the government were torrenting TV shows and music on corporate/government computers?
Pepperidge Farm Remembers.
Everyone’s IP is exposed in a swarm, all Torrentfreak did was track down those IPs, and tons of them went to corporate and government networks and computers.
In another universe, Meta is being sued for having leeched without seeding
I hope they still seed, ’cause that ratio is gonna be hard to fix…
According to mental outlaw they were careful to never seed.
Fucking leechers! And for torrent too.
So they work at Meta, but this is what doesn’t feel right?
I mean, I didn’t have to write this explicitly, just wanted to know how many people had that same smile. The headline is gold.
There are actually legal torrents and valid reasons to download them from within a company network or company workstations, for example here are the Debian install media torrents: www.debian.org/CD/torrent-cd/
However, you should make sure the admins and bosses don’t mind.
not a very secure distribution method.
False. But, feel free to explain why you think so.
not a very informed comment.
torrents have checksums, you can’t just send someone incorrect parts, they’ll get rejected.
yes you’ll get what you’re looking for but you also open up your network to every other torrent under the sun.
Wut?
Explain to me what you think torrenting a file does.
Hahaha No.
You don’t seem to understand how torrents work, or you don’t want to. Third option would be that you aren’t very bright, but I’d refrain to assume that to give you a chance to better explain your stance.
\sigh
That’s because it’s illegal and you’re committing a crime on behalf of your employer.
Meta out here roleplaying as a digital kleptocracy—81.7 terabytes of pirated books? Classic. Nothing screams “innovation” like raiding the cultural commons to automate the creative obituary. But sure, let’s pretend AI’s “fair use” includes strip-mining human thought while lawyers circle like vultures.
This isn’t theft—it’s data feudalism. Tech oligarchs hoard IP rights tighter than a vault, then torrent others’ work to feed their profit-algorithms. Imagine Nietzsche’s ghost training a chatbot to spit nihilist ad copy. The future’s bright: infinite content mills, zero living writers.