| You don't have to build special purpose software, though. All you got to do is know the block number that it was published on. Maybe you could even have the "speciality purpose software" published in the bitcoin blockchain itself. It might still be "illegal", but the purpose is not to be 100% bullet proof. The purpose is to make enforcement so expensive as to be impractical. I am glad that you brought up bittorrent, though. Bittorrent and torrents in general is a great example of how you can spend billions trying to enforce copyright law, and yet free Game of Thrones episodes are still a click away, for me. Technical solutions to fighting DMCA have worked extraordinarily well. The copyright lobby has massively failed to achieve its goals. |
> All you got to do is know the block number that it was published on.
> Maybe you could even have the "speciality purpose software" published in the bitcoin blockchain itself.
Okay, and how is your web browser going to access that list? At some point there has to be a path from the "anonymous" blockchain to your browser, and that's who will get sued.
> The purpose is to make enforcement so expensive as to be impractical.
I still think you're trying to solve the wrong problem. Breaking the law doesn't help your cause. You need to challenge people who are abusing laws, because that's how you actually make a change in this arena.
> Bittorrent and torrents in general is a great example of how you can spend billions trying to enforce copyright law, and yet free Game of Thrones episodes are still a click away, for me.
> The copyright lobby has massively failed to achieve its goals.
That's an incredibly optimistic view. The copyright lobby has successfully managed to create the most pervasive DRM systems in existence thanks to the threat of "piracy", including EME. While a large number of people still torrent, the copyright lobby has managed to smear the entire technology. Who distributes their own content via BitTorrent? Almost nobody (distributions are the only example I can think of).
That doesn't sound like success from our side to me. In Australia, ISPs will DNS-block torrenting websites and also null-route any torrent traffic.