![]() ![]() It would have to be done with entirely new lines and infrastructure not owned by a “utility”. This is why community fiber has failed here in the US. Not the property owner and certainly not the city/municipality. The last mile problem with internet and telecommunications to homes has been a battle going on now for decades.Ĭomcast, Spectrum, Charter, etc all lobbied for laws that said that they “own” the equipment (and poles) going all the way to your house. I summarize this in the README of Taboo: Downloading random hashes from the DHT is not something I’d suggest doing from a computer that can easily be traced back to your identity. Dumps of credit card info, sus military schematics written in an Eastern European language, etc.Įthics aside - if you live in the United States, more than 90% of what falls out of the Roulette Wheel is going to be strictly illegal because of copyright law. I have, however found some ethically questionable things. ![]() ![]() It’s a guy sitting at a desk in front of the state flag advertising an anonymous support hotline. I’ve noticed a government in LatAm has a lot of honeypot content on the public BitTorrent DHT. You do find content labeled as such - but it’s either password protected rars (I suspect the password is to remove plausible deniability? Idk what’s inside these rars, I obviously don’t have the password and I immediately shred them when they do fall out of the roulette wheel - I’m not interested in trying to break into them) or a honeypot with a government agency video advertising a support hotline. I never have, and I’ve resolved a metric tonne of random torrent hashes. The ratio of this content on the DHT is so incredibly low you’re very unlikely to pull it. ![]()
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