Hi Al
As I am sure everyone here is aware Multichoice has started an anti piracy division, which may mean problems down the road for a small number of people. The main reason I have never taken a threat like this seriously is because generally it was very hard to force a ISP to part with info.
However the following just dawned on me, I currently have an active DSTV subscription and also a Explora decoder which happens to be connected. Have I not just given DSTV a perfect insight into my online identity?
They know my Name and billing details as I pay them monthly
They know my ID number as I am sure it was one the form
They know my IP address as I connect to their servers
Now they just need to browse around P2P areas and wait for the IP address to be flashed, and bam I become the first person to be prosecuted.
Before I get abused for not securing my IP and using other methods of download the above scenario should not happen to me as I use a 3rd party remote server to download to which converts traffic to html and then downloads zipped versions of the file. However there are many normal people who might walk into a trap like this. Is it as simple as feared above?
regards
As I am sure everyone here is aware Multichoice has started an anti piracy division, which may mean problems down the road for a small number of people. The main reason I have never taken a threat like this seriously is because generally it was very hard to force a ISP to part with info.
However the following just dawned on me, I currently have an active DSTV subscription and also a Explora decoder which happens to be connected. Have I not just given DSTV a perfect insight into my online identity?
They know my Name and billing details as I pay them monthly
They know my ID number as I am sure it was one the form
They know my IP address as I connect to their servers
Now they just need to browse around P2P areas and wait for the IP address to be flashed, and bam I become the first person to be prosecuted.
Before I get abused for not securing my IP and using other methods of download the above scenario should not happen to me as I use a 3rd party remote server to download to which converts traffic to html and then downloads zipped versions of the file. However there are many normal people who might walk into a trap like this. Is it as simple as feared above?
regards