A few have attended Microsoft Solution seminars. These are not pimply teenagers devoid of social life and graces, little ferrets who talk in bIFF text and make napalm out of soap and lightbulbs; they're not downloading porn or being careful not to wake their parents or spelling "cool" as "kewl. Most are plus. Champion uploader Digital has been happily married for 22 of his 46 years. Most are well-adjusted white males with day jobs and thoroughly nuclear families. Founding member Abraxas has three kids, one over Mad Hatter runs a small business from home.
Technical guru TAG is a computer animator. Irrelevant maintains commercial real estate. They're spread all over the United States.
A few are concentrated around Orlando, Florida. Two or three others are California-based. For obvious reasons, that's as precise as they like to get. The Inner Circle was born of a sense of outrage that their beloved pirate-wares newsgroups were going to pot. Warez had been around for more than a decade, but the growth of the Internet was bringing clueless newbies onto the boards. Warez needed a code of ethics and a group of leaders to set some examples.
The leaders would be the best crackers - some of whom became the Inner Circle. The groups were being overrun by clueless people. They needed help. They were wasting Internet resources. Perhaps if we could encourage responsible use of the available bandwidth, the whole Usenet warez 'scene' might last a while longer.
Warez was around before we were, and will be after, but we wanted to help people and preserve resources using common sense. As enforcers of the warez code, the Inner Circle can be swift and sure. In April , a pirate gang called Nomad, convinced that posts to warez groups were being suppressed, decided to get themselves some unsupervised elbow room. They selected an antiwork newsgroup - alt.
Within 24 hours, the forum was flooded with the latest releases. The slackers bestirred themselves from their apathy and fought back, posting files that told the pirates politely to push off.
The warez kept coming. Then the Inner Circle waded in on the slackers' side and castigated the invaders for their poor manners. The pirates left meekly - though as a parting gift, one of them posted Microsoft NT, Beta 3, all 48 Mbytes of it, in 5, parts. The slackers' newsfeed was clogged for days. A slightly disturbing revelation came out of the slacker invasion. As a side effect, the patch also reduced email spams by two-thirds. By mid-'96, Mad Hatter decided that police work was getting to be too much of a chore.
The newsfeed was being clogged by lamers, requesters, and partials posters with "room-temperature IQs. In a rare fit of pique, Mad Hatter took his revenge. I will not help and will laugh my ass off that everyone is suffering.
If for some reason you doubt that I make a difference, it's your loss, as I personally have uploaded 85 percent of all the shit that's getting posted now when it was zero day or still fresh. Keep fighting over stale shit - I like to watch; keep posting partials, and I'll stop upping my to Mbytes a week.
In fact, I think I'll stop now. And stop the Inner Circle did. Instead, a range of guaranteed lamer-free encrypted newsgroups was created for posting PGP-encoded warez, for Inner Circle-approved members only. Those on the select interested-parties list are given the codes to unlock the software, and anyone can apply to join.
Requirement: a reasonable knowledge of PGP. At the last count, the IPL had subscribers, happily trading warez under the protection of the latest in antilamer technology.
Warez on Usenet are basically gifts - testimony to the power and stature of the giver. Files are posted for all to download, free. Just fire up your newsreader, point it at an appropriate forum, and a list like a home-shopping catalog of the latest software spills down your screen. There is no pressure, but if you download and you like the vibe, you are expected to join the community and contribute uploads whenever possible.
On the freewheeling IRC chat forums, warez are no longer gifts - they're trade goods. The rewards are greater, but you've got to work for them. There are private channels, hidden areas, and invite-only piracy parties. And there are no free lunches - every piece of software has to be paid for, in software. The more recent the application, the higher its value. The ultimate bartering tools are zero-day warez - software released by a commercial house in the last 24 hours, cracked if necessary and uploaded.
The prizes for good zero-day warez vary; you may get instant download status on a particular server, logins and passwords for exclusive FTP sites, or admission to the ranks of a powerful cartel like the Inner Circle.
Most are invite only. The average IRC warez trader doesn't get that kind of access unless he puts a lot of effort into it. Then two days later, you get a working crack. We get most of our freshest stuff from private FTP and courier drop sites. If your software collection is more mundane, you can trade one piece directly for another.
But with so many unpoliced egos in one place, this can be risky. People will often welsh on deals, allowing you to pass them a file and then disappearing into the ether. Cunning traders will barter with "trojans" - zipped-up files of gunk, realistic enough to carry out half the transaction. In extreme cases, someone may feed you a virus. A step down from zero-day warez are drop sites, where fresh cracks can be found for the cost of a download.
Some drop sites run on the trader's own machine; others piggyback on government or corporate mainframes, shareware mirrors, and university networks. Often they're only in existence for 24 hours, or on weekends when the sysops are at home.
Wherever you end up, you'll be struck by the extreme politesse and measured courtesy, united by a common language. Have appz, gamez and crackz on Looking for Pshop 4. Upload for leech access. No lamers. Back in Phil's world, they can't quite cope with the idea of this ferocious brag-driven barter economy cloaked in courtesy. Casual observers of the BSA's Web site may well be convinced, if only because they're stunned by the money that's involved - or seems to be. Fifteen point five billion dollars a year!
But those figures are based on the assumption that if piracy were stopped, someone would be willing to pay for every pirated copy in circulation. It's just another file that you might swap for another program, which might cost four grand. How much it costs in real money is meaningless.
How do you ram home sales figures and quarterly losses to a bunch of teenagers who see warez trading as their passport to acceptance on the scurrilous side of a brave new world? How do you convince middle-aged men who see incandescently expensive software as monopoly money in a vast, global boardgame that what they're doing is "harmful"?
In the software industry's latest campaign, you scare them - or try. The BSA's mandate used to be "not to capture pirates, but to eradicate piracy. Prosecuting clear offenders - warez-vending BBS operators and FTP-site pirates, for instance - is one thing; suing ISPs for carrying Web pages containing pirate links and cracks is another.
In what smacked of a token prosecution - or, in the words of C2Net's president, Sameer Parekh, "legal terrorism" - the action by Adobe, Claris, and Traveling Software, under the aegis of the SPA, held the provider responsible as "publishers" for the contents of its server, and for the activities of individual account holders.
C2Net says it will not give in to litigious "bullying. And then there are straightforward busts. Phil, our undercover Internet detective, wasn't responsible for that particular drama, but he's been integral to others. Phil, impersonating a trader, infiltrated the site admittedly no great feat , collected evidence, then handed it over to the Swiss police. He accompanied them on the raid to ensure no evidence was damaged. Unfortunately, The Shadow was on holiday with his parents.
The family returned two weeks later to find their front door broken down; the son was arrested. The Pirate's mistake - aside from his suicidal choice of nickname - was to plant himself geographically. Phil knows his networks; this makes him the perfect undercover agent - and one of Novell UK's most envied employees. There's a bit more to it than that. Phil and his counterparts in Asia and the US are deployed to infiltrate pirate groups; to study IRC; to get under the skin of the lamers, the dabblers, and the professionals; to chat, seduce, charm, and interact with the denizens of this bizarre over-underworld.
Phil talks to traders in their own language, understands the tricks and traps. After busting The Pirate, he says, "we were talking and he was moaning about the sluggishness of his network. I pointed out that, aside from using LANtastic, he was using a ohm terminator on the back of his file server, slowing the whole thing down. In many jurisdictions, any hardware deemed to be part of an illegal setup can be taken by investigators and - if part of a civil prosecution - can be worked in as part of the settlement.
Once sucked dry of evidence and incriminating data, the cannibalized machines are moved to Bracknell and hooked up to the network. But despite the resources at his disposal and his status as a network ninja, Phil doesn't always get his man. It's technically possible for them to bounce their messages all around the world and have us running around like blue-arsed flies. Successful prosecutions aren't always that easy either.
LaMacchia was arrested in , only to have the case thrown out by a judge who ruled that no "commercial motive" was involved. Prosecutors tried charging him with wire fraud, but this was ruled an unacceptable stretching of the law. LaMacchia walked free. Tell that to the former warez traders of America Online, which had a meteoric history as a pirate mecca. For years, instructions on how to crack AOL's security and obtain free accounts were a Usenet staple. Online, "freewarez" chat rooms were packed with traders, 24 hours a day.
Megabytes of warez were kept in permanent circulation. Then came the crackdown of , a dark period in warez history. Goaded by software-industry watchdogs, AOL introduced countermeasures to disinfect its system; alt. CATwatch automated sentinels were placed on AOL's warez chat channels, logging off anyone who entered. Michael, the weight-lifting trader and also an AOL veteran, says everyone thought that "the FBI had infiltrated the warez groups, and we were all going to get busted.
I reckon I could've got it down from 58 disks to 9. But then everything went haywire. Es wird ihre …. DALnet Servers. DALnet is comprised of a number of servers hosted by our generous sponsors, and run by our team of volunteer staff members. Primarily, users connect either to an IX server or a Public server.
IX servers have direct, fast connections to many ISP's - but not all providers are directly connected to our IX servers Best Warez Irc Channels Listl. Probably one of the best IRC client apps for Android out there, IRC Trading.
Not far up from peer-to-peer users we have the people who go to IRC for their warez. In general, these people intend to have a better knowledge about computers and the internet. Warez channels are often run by people who have access to a fair amount of pirated material. There are generally two types of these channels. The oldest and one of the largest IRC networks in the world. EFnet - Eris Free Network.
Webchat Login Login. Nickname; …. LIST Lists all registered channels within the given range In the past, lists of ftp sites abused to this end have been posted, I have obtained a list of the people who frequent the "warez" IRC channels warez , warez1 , warez2 , warez3 , warez4 , warez5 , warez6 , and possibly others. Since these channels are usually. To start, a client connects to a server or more commonly a network of servers where clients have either one on one conversations or group conversations in channels.
IRC Channel Lists. How to find a channel. On IRC, channels are where people meet and chat. You may …. Internet Relay Chat IRC is an application layer protocol that facilitates communication in the form of text.
IRC clients are computer programs that users can install on their system or web based applications running either locally in the browser or on a third party server. These clients communicate with chat servers to transfer messages to other …. We are located on irc server irc.
The mission of ebooks has always been to have a nice, friendly irc channel for trading ebooks and chatting with others of the same interests. We endeavor to create a fun loving, helpful environment without the typical …. Because you're bored. Approfondisci queste questioni, e vedrai che hai ben altro di cui preoccuparti, altro che mirc..
Sono semplici utenti che amano condividere i file? Come ci guadagnano? Sapete dove posso trovarlo? Per favore qualcuno sa dirmi che fine ha fatto la chat rippers che era su rootworld? I server rimasti attivi son questi: irc. Org irc. Che infinita tristezza, quegli ultimi server rispecchiano la liberta che pian piano stiamo perdendo.
Posso chiedervi, se accedo ad un server e scarico un file esempio una guida in pdf cosa e come ci guadagna chi ha il server? Roberto alcuni server hanno smesso di funzionare o sono chiusi momentaneamente. I commenti saranno pubblicati dopo esser stati verificati dagli amministratori.
Ultime notizie. Manga in italiano - Lista di siti per leggere manga e fumetti online. Lista Codici Telecomando Bravo. Prima di continuare facciamo chiarezza IRC , cos'e e come funziona? I client IRC sono programmi per computer che gli utenti possono installare sul proprio sistema o applicazioni web based che vengono eseguite localmente nel browser o su server di terze parti.
Questi client comunicano con i server di chat per trasferire messaggi ad altri client. Tags :- Guide e Tutorial Internet. Posta un commento 43 Commenti. Paolo 14 marzo Gianni 20 marzo Anonimo 30 giugno
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