PDA

View Full Version : peer-to-peer ip disclosure


Oblivion
May5-04, 05:41 PM
Quick question:

I'm a frequent user of Kazaa's peer-peer network to obtain music files. I would like to continue downloading without the concern of a lawsuit, so I am wondering if anyone knows a simple way to fake/hide your ip address without altering the port you're plugged into. Could I use another computer to act as an intermediary? Thanks for any input.

chroot
May5-04, 06:24 PM
Stop using Kazaa, it sucks anyway.

- Warren

dduardo
May5-04, 06:50 PM
Oblivion, don't worry about being caught. There are too many people and unless your serving 1000s of songs, the RIAA doesn't care about the small beans.

If your soo paranoid about the RIAA handing you a lawsuit, try using this encrypted p2p program:

http://waste.sourceforge.net/

It was orignally developed by some people at AOL. Then they got fired. Some people over at Via, the company that makes motherboards and such, have a modified version that works with the companies hardware encryption system, but that was later removed from their website. Now you can get it over at sourceforge.

This software is very much like direct connect, but encrypted. Be prepared to have GBs upon GBs of shared material to get into the good groups.

DarkAnt
May5-04, 07:45 PM
I've been kinda looking for a good p2p program. thanks dduardo

chroot
May5-04, 07:48 PM
Tsk.. if I got a nickel for everytime someone ignored my (quite pertinent) advice to stop using p2p..

- Warren

dduardo
May5-04, 07:59 PM
Tsk.. if I got a nickel for everytime someone ignored my (quite pertinent) advice to stop using p2p..

Now there is a business model the RIAA can use to replace their currently dying one. :wink:

DarkAnt
May5-04, 08:05 PM
aww, this is depressing. I don't have any friends... just as well I guess, like chroot said p2p are bad. Its just that the temptation for free stuff gets to you sometimes

ShawnD
May8-04, 04:21 AM
this is depressing. I don't have any friends
:eek:

There is one way to protect yourself. Create a botnet and use one of the bots as a proxy. I have a buddy who does that. All file sharing programs, chat programs, and email are routed through one of his bots.

One of these days I'll run a botnet.

chroot
May8-04, 05:11 AM
For god's sake, just use usenet. It's huge, it's active, it's super high quality, and it's completely untraceable.

Welcome to the stone age, folks.

- Warren

ShawnD
May8-04, 06:03 AM
For god's sake, just use usenet. It's huge, it's active, it's super high quality, and it's completely untraceable.

It also costs $20 per month.

dduardo
May8-04, 07:43 AM
Actually, I lucked out because my ISP provides me with free usenet.

alt.binaries.......yum

chroot
May8-04, 03:16 PM
ShawnD: no, it's usually free -- most ISPs have a news server. A premium provider is only $10/month, too. At any rate, it beats the ever-living-hell out of peer-to-peer filesharing, and is worth every penny.

- Warren

The_Professional
May8-04, 07:37 PM
Quick question:

I'm a frequent user of Kazaa's peer-peer network to obtain music files. I would like to continue downloading without the concern of a lawsuit, so I am wondering if anyone knows a simple way to fake/hide your ip address without altering the port you're plugged into. Could I use another computer to act as an intermediary? Thanks for any input.

There is a program called PeerGuardian which adds a level of protection from RIAA/MPAA Honeypots. So if your computer tries to make a connection on anyone of their servers it blocks it out automatically like a firewall, just google it.

aychamo
May9-04, 04:00 PM
Should we load PeerGuardian only when doing Kazaa? I hate to have resources wasting away if it doesn't do anything any other time.

Also, is there a PeerGuardian type program that I can put on one of the computers in my network that woudl constatly stop this type of thing?

I have my internet going to a router, and my comps on the router. I'd like to have a prog running on one of the PCs that protects them all from the bad IPs for kazaa, etc, is this possible? All my PCs have ZoneAlarm, if that matters.

The_Professional
May9-04, 08:52 PM
Should we load PeerGuardian only when doing Kazaa? I hate to have resources wasting away if it doesn't do anything any other time.

Sure


Also, is there a PeerGuardian type program that I can put on one of the computers in my network that woudl constatly stop this type of thing?


I have my internet going to a router, and my comps on the router. I'd like to have a prog running on one of the PCs that protects them all from the bad IPs for kazaa, etc, is this possible? All my PCs have ZoneAlarm, if that matters.

Just install PeerGuardian on every computer you use kazaa on. And make sure you update the IP blocklist.

It's a very powerful program so don't run it when you're just surfing as it won't let you connect to most sites. And don't let this give you a false sense of security, as it may block most known decoy servers but they are constantly updated by the RIAA, the movie industry, the military, police and everyone else...