More threads by David Baxter PhD

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
Internet BitTorrent Spies
By Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols, ZDNet
December 12, 2011

Think no one knows what you?ve downloaded off the Internet with BitTorrent? Think again.

People have privacy delusions about the Internet. They seem to think that just because they don?t sign their real name to a site that no one can see what they?ve been doing on it. Oh dear. So dumb, so wrong.

The latest example of what you do on the Internet is no where near as ?private? as you think it is comes from a new Russian site, YouHaveDownloaded. This site claims to track 20 percent of all public BitTorrent downloads? and tell the world who they?ve found downloading what. So, that final episode of Dexter? The DVD rip of Cowboys & Aliens? That copy of Call of Duty Modern Warfare? And, that illicit video of "Smoking Hot Grannies" that you really, really don?t want to talk about? Yeah, your permanent record of what you?ve been downloading off BitTorrent sites may all be available for the amusement of your friends, neighbors, and, oh yes, the copyright owners.

Happy downloading!

To be exact, YouHaveDownloaded collects your Internet address and the titles of what you?ve been downloading. Some of you might immediately now think that that?s not enough to track someone down since many ISPs now use dynamic Internet Protocol (IP) addresses. Think again.

According to a Facebook posting by Suren Ter, one of the site?s founders, ?We don?t bother ourselves to separate dynamic IPs. The site is just for show. However we have time-stamps. 3.3.3.3 might be a dynamic IP - however it belonged to a certain person at 12:12am 12/12/2011. Besides DHT (distributed hash table) allows us to get a user?s machine fingerprint.?

DHTs, for those of you don?t work on peer-to-peer (P2) networking for a living, is a distributed, look-up system that?s to constantly update who?s doing what on a P2P at any given moment. It is, as you may have guessed by now, an essential part of BitTorrent. So, yes, armed with the data the site provides to the public a savvy network administrator could figure out that it was you?or someone with access to your PC?who downloaded a copy of Debbie Does Dallas last night at the office. Good luck explaining to the boss about how your ?study? of historical porn was essential for the business.

Why are they as, one commenter putting it, being ?Pretty f**king irresponsible, no consideration for what harm you may cause to people checking their family's torrents?? Ter explained to TorrentFreak, a publication that tracks the on-going collision of file sharing news and copyright, that ?We just want to remind people that the Internet is not a place to expect privacy). Nowadays many people use it without understanding what information they leave behind. Also, even those who understand choose to ignore it quite often.?

Ter is right. While YouHaveDownloaded it has ?only? 52-million users in its database, so your records may not be on their site, they?ve certainly are showing how trivial it is for someone to see what you?ve been doing on the Internet with only a bit of effort.

Of course, it?s not just YouHaveDownloaded it that?s trying to track users. I recently received a note from NBC, via my ISP, that I?d been illegally downloading a copy of the TV show Community. As it happens, I hadn?t been?I?m use BitTorrent for Linux distros and old BBC shows?but there?s nothing like the threat of a lawsuit for downloading copyrighted material to get your attention.

After all, while one U.S. court has ruled that IP addresses, alone, can?t be used to identify people in download copyright violation lawsuits, that doesn?t mean that another court will see it the same way. Or, as YouHaveDownloaded has just shown, that a company can?t put together IP addresses, date/time stamps, and DHT data to really narrow down who?s really downloading a movie, video game, or song.

For better or for worse, if you?re downloading videos, games, whatever, from BitTorrent sites keep in mind that you?re doing it in public.
 
I used to have to write up tickets for copyright infringements when I did ISP support. (Not fun by the way.)

People were always so shocked (I don't remember downloading that or that must have been my son or daughter or they had their wireless open so it traced to their router ip) when they received the phone call informing them that they were in danger of being taken to court.

In Canada the laws only effect those who've been uploading the copyrighted material and that if they didn't cease uploading and destroy the material (providing the proof through remote access by the isp) then they would be taken to court.

On most torrent programs you have upload and download rates whenever you download a torrent so when you download a file you are also uploading it at the same time which you can lower to 1 kbps while downloading at unlimited speed if you go through your settings.

In any case torrents won't work without people uploading or seeding the file or content so other people can have access to it, know the laws in your area or country if you are going to do it and/or how to cover your tracks if you do.
 
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