- cross-posted to:
- hackernews@derp.foo
- cross-posted to:
- hackernews@derp.foo
Governments blocking websites:
hoping it stays that way
There have also been several reports suggesting that traffic to domains decreased after blockades were implemented. This seems logical since blocked sites should be harder to reach. However, new research […] suggests that’s not always true.
Perhaps Streisand effect? “They’re blocking it, so it’s probably good. I can find stuff there.”
The report doesn’t offer any hard conclusions, but MUSO informs TorrentFreak that if these traffic trends say anything about the success of site blocking, Russia and Korea are the most effective.
Perhaps availability? I’ve seen plenty pirate sites in Russian, even not actively looking for them; to the point that it made learning Cyrillic useful for me.
For me, I just get an additional urgency, like, if they block these things more and more I may as well download as much as I can while I still can. As a side effect I’m also passively seeding more.
Streisand effect?
thx, I always forget the name of this one
I went to PB a lot more after gov went after it so it had an endless supply of mirrors and proxies. But I’m just the guy that will absolutely break into the Forbidden Knowledge section of the library.
Ooo, what books we pinching?
I believe the one teaching evolution is in there somewhere
Telekinesis for Beginners, Defense against the Dark Arts, and the current edition D&D monster manual w/ artwork.
Oh so it’s an American library
Roughly a quarter
So it’s still beneficial to copyright companies and governments to block sites.
WHY? THEY’RE BLOCKED. WHY DON’T THE RETARDS GET IT?