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cyanydeezyesterday at 8:16 PM4 repliesview on HN

mmm, in many cases these residential proxies are media boxes, and they consent as much as anyone else consents to what amazon, or google or facebook does; it's buried somewhere in the recesses of the TOS.

The question is more about why the US and others can't properly enforce the bullshit all this amounts to.


Replies

TurdF3rgusonyesterday at 11:00 PM

What exactly should be illegal here? Scraping websites? AI agents? Not following robots.txt?

SR2Zyesterday at 10:44 PM

Because this isn't clearly against the law, nor should it be. If websites want to ban based on IP address lots of innocent users get caught in the cross-fire.

I'm not sure what the solution would look like - maybe Cloudflare's payment required for requests beyond a certain limit? But I think that the world needs user freedoms now more than ever.

bell-cotyesterday at 9:25 PM

"He who has the gold makes the rules" is older than the pyramids.

mschuster91yesterday at 10:49 PM

> The question is more about why the US and others can't properly enforce the bullshit all this amounts to.

It would cost too much money, either for police to raid all the physical shops and ebay sellers selling dodgy IPTV boxes, or for ISPs to hire enough competent support staff to monitor and respond to abuse@ email addresses and follow through.