Chloroform Sauna ([info]martcore) rakstīja,
@ 2009-04-02 18:49:00

Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
tikmēr asi nosodu svenskteroru par to, ka zviedrijā tomēr ir pieņēmuši antipirātisma likumu, bet viņš neko par to mums neziņo

The same day a new antipiracy law went into effect in Sweden, Internet traffic took a dive and five audio book publishers went after an alleged illegal file sharer in court.

The so-called IPRED law, which went into effect Wednesday, requires Internet service providers to reveal subscribers' Internet Protocol addresses to copyright holders in cases where a court finds ample evidence of illegal activity.

As of 2 p.m. local time Wednesday in Sweden, Internet traffic was down about 30 percent from the day before, according to Computer Sweden (in Swedish). The average traffic over Netnod, a company that measures most of the Internet traffic access points between Swedish and international networks, was 80Gbps Wednesday compared to Tuesday's 120Gbps. Traffic had been steady the previous week.
http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-10209544-93.html

domāju, pienācis laiks iegādāties pāris resnus HD un sākt uztarīties pa īstam :)


(Lasīt komentārus)

Nopūsties:

No:
Lietotājvārds:
Parole:
Ievadi te 'qws' (liidzeklis pret spambotiem):
Temats:
Tematā HTML ir aizliegts
  
Ziņa:

Gandrīz jau aizmirsu pateikt – šis lietotājs ir ieslēdzis IP adrešu noglabāšanu. Operatore Nr. 65.
Neesi iežurnalējies. Iežurnalēties?