piracy

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lukas, w got the disk space and the bandwidth to spare so
@lukas@lemmy.haigner.me avatar

I hoped that memes stay out of here, but that ship sailed. Perhaps Lemmy will allow people to tag posts in the future, so people like me can exclude memes from community feeds.

kniescherz, w Watermark removal?

Video or still image?

programmer_having_errors,

Image

kniescherz,

PhotoShop

programmer_having_errors,

I probably need to be more specific 😅 I’m looking for an automatic solution

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Time to learn photoshop then.

uriel238, w Can they even track pirated installs ?
@uriel238@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Can I pirate just the Unity bits, so they don’t telemetrize?

rockhandle,
@rockhandle@lemm.ee avatar

Firewall your pirated games

Nankeru, (edited )
@Nankeru@reddthat.com avatar

That was my thought as well, since they count installs and not use count of bought copies directly from a platform.

What if people create cracks for legit purchased games, e.g. on Steam, which only removes the Unity tracking part?

A simple Firewall rule which “fixes it” for all games installed on a machine might work as well?

I believe it might be similar or the same procedure for every game using Unity. We might see this popping up at some point.

YoMismo, w If all adblocks get deleted, would you still pirate?

Many of us was already a pirate before Mozilla, Google and adblocks were created.

theKalash, w If all adblocks get deleted, would you still pirate?

There will always be adblock in some form, it can’t be removed.

But even if it somehow happened, I don’t see how that would affect my pirating. Sure, some torrent sites might be a bit harder to navigate, but that’s just an inconvenience.

hellequin67,

They can remove adblocks all they want.

Private DNS will still exist, there’s at least two that have noads DNS, Mullvad and LibreDNS.

They work in most browser’s/devices etc.

matey,

I believe Proton also has the ability to block ads via DNS.

Onionizer,

That doesn’t work if the ad is served from the same server as the website

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

And if, a browser will be forked that can still use the extension interface.

nerdschleife, (edited ) w I am looking into setting up a home mediaserver. Any good guides?

Would suggest jellyfin over Plex due to the latter’s increasing corporate greed.

  • Radar - for movies
  • Sonarr - for series
  • Prowlarr - for indexing

Optional:

  • Jellyseer - a nice frontend for the above
  • Bazarr - subtitles

This is a super simplified list, but the wikis are easy enough to get started with.

Edit: cjf has listed some useful links for the same

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Mobile alternative (Android) frontend: NZB360

randompepsi, w Can they even track pirated installs ?

No, they can not. This is just a standard PR response.

lukas, (edited )
@lukas@lemmy.haigner.me avatar

When crackers don’t patch out the phone line, they can.

Edit: Only in some cases, though. They can detect popular ways to crack games, like Steam DRM stubs. If the game has zero identifiable information about the buyer and no or an unsupported DRM, they’re SOL.

ce_,

and how exactly is unity going to know whether it was gotten legitimately or not? the only way the developers wouldn’t get charged is if crackers patched it out

lukas,
@lukas@lemmy.haigner.me avatar

They can’t detect everything, but let’s look at Steam as an example. If the game detects Steam DRM, then the game knows that they should’ve bought the game on Steam. They can check whether the Steam DRM is a stub and therefore a crack, or get your local Steam account ID and cross-check whether you bought the game with a Steam API.

lukas,
@lukas@lemmy.haigner.me avatar

But you’re also correct that the developers don’t get charged when crackers patch out the phone line.

genoxidedev1,

Idc about anything right now I'm hungry af and the only thing I was able to read was crackers fml

laylawashere44,

The thing is that most Unity games don’t even have DRM in the first place. At most most will have the Steam DRM which is trivial to bypass. And Unity Games released on GOG will be especially at risk.

nevernevermore, w With PLEX blocking Hetzner Hosting, I'm thinking of Moving to Jellyfin, but I have some questions.

not really a striesand effect but I'd never heard of hetzner until plex blocked them and now im heavily considering moving my library over

Vaggumon,
@Vaggumon@lemm.ee avatar

Check out the auctions, they tend to have some pretty great deals.

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

It’s not like Hetzner is a small player in the European datacenter VPS market. :p

phoenixz, w I am looking into setting up a home mediaserver. Any good guides?

Don’t use Plex they regularly screw over their users.

Go for open source, go for jellyfin, it’s awesome

kniescherz, w I am looking into setting up a home mediaserver. Any good guides?
kniescherz, w I am looking into setting up a home mediaserver. Any good guides?

I would look into the zima board or zima blade, cheap but should be powerful enough. Otherwise there are really great server builds possible with low powered mini PCs possible. See Wolfgangs channel on youtube for inspiration.

You could use a raspi but there are more powerful options for a similar price.

ultratiem, w Why WARP is OK for torrenting
@ultratiem@lemmy.ca avatar

WARP is a great. The only issue when it comes to torrenting is you can’t drill open any ports. Makes seeding super hard near impossible.

Other than that, yeah it will protect all traffic and is insanely fast for a free service (I snapped 700Mbps and my line is 1Gbps).

whitecapstromgard, w What are the best alternatives to The Pirate Bay in 2023?

I just search for “name of movie + download” in a non-Google search engine. Google does censorship right, but the others are usually good.

FeelzGoodMan420, (edited )

Doesn’t duckduckgo also censor it since it uses Bing as the primary search algorithm?

whitecapstromgard,

not as bad as google does

PoisonedPrisonPanda,

yandex is very good in this. often being able to read cyrillix helps.

yote_zip, w I am looking into setting up a home mediaserver. Any good guides?
@yote_zip@pawb.social avatar

Hi I accidentally wrote a wall of text:

perfectmediaserver.com can give you some inspiration on system architecture/layout. There’s a lot of right answers here depending on your situation, so you’ll likely want to research the various options and trade-offs.

Some common base architecture layouts that I know of:

Any Linux + no parity: Just throw Debian on a box, put Docker on it, and away we go. No data integrity, and data loss will be permanent, but it’s an option if you set up backups for your important data and assume the rest is expendable. If you want to start setting up parity on raw Linux you’ll probably want to move down to a more dedicated architecture below for less headaches.

OpenMediaVault + SnapRAID + MergerFS + backed by BTRFS disks: my personal choice for ad-hoc/budget setups. Great for having really flexible storage that lets you make use of all HDD space that you have laying around without fuss. You’ll need to sacrifice your largest drive to hold RAID parity and the storage architecture is not especially performant but that’s not a big deal for a media server. OpenMediaVault can run Docker for you on the host without needing to run it in a VM (and you should be using Docker for your software stack).

Unraid: Similar in storage architecture to the OpenMediaVault combo, but it’s not free. I don’t have personal experience with this one but a lot of people like it. IMO this option would only make sense if you want a turn-key system and don’t want to think about anything on the software side. It has turn-key “apps” that are just Docker behind the scenes (to my knowledge).

TrueNAS Scale: This will be running ZFS for storage, but ZFS has a lot of problems with storage flexibility. You need to really know what you’re doing when designing your storage layout, and you probably won’t get full usage out of the HDDs you have laying around. In exchange, ZFS is bulletproof for data integrity and makes full use of your drives’ combined speed. You’ll likely be giving up 50% of your total HDD capacity to run ZFS - either explicitly by running mirrored drives or by running mismatched RAIDZ1/2 (which makes all drives become the size of the smallest disk). I would recommend a mirrored setup for home use due to its flexibility - it gives up more space than RAIDZ but it’s able to be upgraded easier in the future, so you can throw random drives that are on sale into your system when needed. You could write a book on ZFS’s complexities and trade-offs and I’m sure many have. TrueNAS itself is basically just a turn-key appliance to run a ZFS storage server, but the “Scale” version also comes with the ability to install apps via some Kubernetes+Docker thing. It’s still in beta and I hear a lot of people have problems with how the app system is designed, so if you go this route I’d recommend installing Debian/Alpine Linux under TrueNAS Scale in a VM with something like this method, and running normal Docker on that VM. TrueNAS is otherwise very locked down and if your usecase is not supported by them you’ll probably need to bail out to a VM anyway.

Proxmox + TrueNAS + Docker Host: This has all the caveats of ZFS from before. Proxmox is just a virtualization hypervisor that you can put other operating systems on, via VMs and LXCs. The easiest way to use it in a NAS configuration is to install Proxmox on the bare metal, then spin up a TrueNAS Core/Scale VM and pass through your HDDs to that (may require special hardware consideration). You’ll probably want to run a minimal Debian/Alpine Linux VM under Proxmox to hold your Docker stack. Then you can use an NFS/SMB mount to get access to your ZFS storage from your Docker VM. You can also run ZFS raw on Proxmox without the GUI of TrueNAS, but you’ll have to manage it by CLI. Proxmox can be more difficult to understand than the other architectures, but personally I think it’s easier to use once you do. It allows greater flexibility on the software side via snapshotting VMs and building up/tearing down operating systems at-will.

Proxmox + OpenMediaVault + SnapRAID + MergerFS + backed by BTRFS disks: Same as Proxmox+TrueNAS, except instead of TrueNAS you run OpenMediaVault’s storage stack to give yourself flexibility with HDDs. You’ll might also want to move your Docker stack into its own VM instead of running it on OpenMediaVault, but this isn’t required. While this is technically an option, it feels a bit weird. If you want to dive head-first into a robust server setup but don’t want to buy a bunch of new drives, this could work in a pinch.

Personally my two recommended options are the OpenMediaVault stack or the Proxmox+TrueNAS stack, depending on if you want to buy new drives for a clean storage layout. Keep in mind these blurbs are just a crash course on each option and there’s a lot more going on behind the scenes that will also need consideration/planning.

Freeman,

Thank you a lot! I’ll look into it!

LeonardHawksmoor, w Is there a way to seed things I have downloaded but already deleted the torrent for?
@LeonardHawksmoor@mastodon.online avatar

@luthis

Go back to the tracker you got the file from and re-download the torrent. Make sure your client is pointing to the correct location where the file is stored. [set location, verify local data] and it should just seed it.

luthis,

Dam, I was hoping there would be an easier way

cooopsspace,

It is literally that easy.

The torrent client will just see the file in the correct spot on disk and assume it’s downloaded already.

rambos,

Dude if you are always using the same download folder you just have to start torrent again. It cant be easier unless someone else do it for you

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