He's referring to piracy release date circumvention.
Aemon Send a noteboard - 06/03/2012 05:12:31 PM
ME3 was leaked prior to official release, meaning that pirates get the game sooner. As to the specific "VPN" term, a VPN is a Virtual Private Network. It encrypts all of your internet traffic and redirects it to a common server operated by a VPN provider. That server fetches the data you request, encrypts it, and passes it back to you. VPNs have a lot of legitimate uses but they're commonly used by pirates for protection from law enforcement. Why? Because:
1) The encryption prevents anyone from seeing your data en route to the VPN provider. If law enforcement were to force your IP to spy on you (all of your data goes through your ISP), they couldn't do so if you were using a VPN. Your traffic is encrypted.
2) Anything you do on the web through a VPN shows the VPN's IP address instead of yours. So if you're torrenting something, for example, ordinarily your IP would be shown to everyone in the swarm (which is how people typically get caught pirating things). Using a VPN, though, the server's IP is shown instead.
3) VPNs are often located offshore, in jurisdictions with lenient rules on file sharing. For example, one popular provider is incorporated in the Seychelles with a parent company in the Netherlands, and has servers in dozens of different countries. Legally speaking it is VERY difficult to force a company like that to keep logs and spy on users.
Anyway, that might have been more information than you wanted to know. What you should take away from this, though, is that a VPN is a privacy/anonymity service which CAN be used to help protect the privacy/identity of pirates.
1) The encryption prevents anyone from seeing your data en route to the VPN provider. If law enforcement were to force your IP to spy on you (all of your data goes through your ISP), they couldn't do so if you were using a VPN. Your traffic is encrypted.
2) Anything you do on the web through a VPN shows the VPN's IP address instead of yours. So if you're torrenting something, for example, ordinarily your IP would be shown to everyone in the swarm (which is how people typically get caught pirating things). Using a VPN, though, the server's IP is shown instead.
3) VPNs are often located offshore, in jurisdictions with lenient rules on file sharing. For example, one popular provider is incorporated in the Seychelles with a parent company in the Netherlands, and has servers in dozens of different countries. Legally speaking it is VERY difficult to force a company like that to keep logs and spy on users.
Anyway, that might have been more information than you wanted to know. What you should take away from this, though, is that a VPN is a privacy/anonymity service which CAN be used to help protect the privacy/identity of pirates.
This message last edited by Aemon on 09/03/2012 at 06:51:52 PM
Mass Effect 3 is released tomorrow . . .
05/03/2012 06:40:45 PM
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Today. Use a VPN to unlock it. *NM*
05/03/2012 08:09:36 PM
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I'm not familiar with the term 'VPN'
06/03/2012 07:44:01 AM
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He's referring to piracy release date circumvention.
06/03/2012 05:12:31 PM
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I wasn't, actually. I used a Hong Kong VPN to circumvent the release date check. *NM*
08/03/2012 09:18:08 PM
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Oh, sorry. My bad. I guess my VPN description is still relevant, though, so I'll leave it. *NM*
09/03/2012 06:50:15 PM
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Excited about it, but also patient
06/03/2012 10:03:40 AM
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The Kinect is fun...
07/03/2012 08:42:11 AM
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I still have to finish ME2. Other games kept getting in the way. *NM*
06/03/2012 06:39:43 PM
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My God. Ignore the haters. Best ending I have ever seen in a video game. 10/10.
10/03/2012 09:33:04 AM
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It's out for two days and you are done?
10/03/2012 04:30:44 PM
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It's hard to find the time, but I prefer to finish games quickly.
10/03/2012 07:30:12 PM
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