-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On 05/01/2017 10:36 AM, Razer wrote: [ ... ]
I don't think there's been a decentralized Internet since AOL first appeared. But it works... For them. Now days Warner, part of AOL Time Warner, seems to sniff all torrent packets going through their portals for Warner content and notifies downstream admins.
A much more economical attack where seed boxes operated by hostile parties record IP addresses of connecting users was the dominant torrent surveillance model for a long time. Typically, a comically self-mutilating corporation (thou shalt not promote our product to a wide audience at no cost to us) would provide a contractor with a list of "intellectual property" items to monitor and report on. Either the contractor would blackmail the account holders at those IP addresses, or refer them to their ISPs for hostile action. I recall a study from maybe 10 years ago, indicating that then-availble blocklists of known and probable "troll" IPs were around 90% effective. Got pointers to any more current information, especially regarding inspection of data in transit? Inquiring minds wants to know... :o) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.22 (GNU/Linux) iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJZB1ZbAAoJEECU6c5XzmuqhgEH/0D16jxEQ89gMBiQbtD3ahR6 IMtyVa7dAvxmf8g2C0NT7/drER9NtbYlO4R1lYV2mB3thKH4FdlOwp7Sf8zlA1F5 /tu1QqSS6tCSSvUJvrtuy01jDGisEbKn3FijFkDO1cv6p4kM1VyhSSjF3w8HNJ1x hItcr5mX/XFaLlIt/k3gaMWcYyPBnU3UnwMnB2hRvC61ZAw+chPRmO5yxUk8TRD7 nb5sCf2A5iZax/JjHM7UHwZ+dlRczYzX/quuGmvOToLTBxF8AlB1D6AhogBHJGMY UGJ+VCYcXHhKDr00a9DBzVFs2PK1KhRxCtnDUEhKKXe04plrQz8h98vYUWClMJA= =CURf -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----