'Meta Torrented over 81 TB of Data Through Anna's Archive, Despite Few Seeders' * TorrentFreak
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I agree. Still doesn't hurt to bring it up on appropriate tangents.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Calling property labor, doesn't make you a socialist.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
TPB and 1337x are torrents, whereas Anna’s Archive typically uses direct downloads. So it’s more akin to the old CoolROMs back before the massive takedown purges.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
https://phys.org/news/2010-11-million-dollar-verdict-music-piracy-case.html
In all fairness, meta should be assessed a fee of 250k per EACH pirated work.
This would amount to forfeiting all assets to doge.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Facebook: I’ll just
torrent what I needburden your underfunded project and volunteers with over 81 TB of bandwidth costs without contributing anything in return, see yaaFTFY
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Nope. Get fucked
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
If someone was to acquire a few hundred gigs of books and feed them to something like paperless-ngx, would it work as a sort of google of books? Are there any software projects better suited for doing thisand understand synonyms and perhaps some context? I guess AI search but guided for the intermediate user.
Google is so bad lately. Basically every result is official sponsored corporate biased BS. It would be nice to be able to instantly query a bunch of ebooks.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
If the existence of open source LLMs hinges on the benevolence of one of the few most cancerous tech companies in the world, maybe they're not really worth it?
This isn't about "heroes" and "villains". Facebook has been and has stayed the "villain", they've done something colossally illegal that any mere mortal would be sued to death for (by an another "villainous" instance, the media system that has made piracy a necessity in the first place), and they're hoping to get away with it simply on technicalities and by having more money for better lawyers. Rules are rules, if you don't like them maybe Facebook should try to change them (and not just for themselves, but for the rest of us too)?
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Where is the source content then
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Rules for thee, not for me
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Average ebook size: 2.5 MB or so.
Meta downloaded 81 TB, or 81,000,000 MB.
81,000,000 / 2.5 = Approx 30 million books.
30,000,000 books * $250,000 per offence = $7.5 trillion
(are you sure you're from programming.dev?)
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Yes. This exactly.