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50 <h2>Preventing Piracy: A Guide On How To Avoid Pirate Activities</h2>
51 <br>
52 <h3>Foreword:</h3>
53 <br>
54 <p>I am a man who has despised piracy and the works of copyright thieves my entire life. As soon as I could
55 understand what copyright was, I became a massive proponent for it and for what it stand for: Order, a
56 bulwark against those who'd stoop so low as to steal someone else's idea and pawn it off as their own.
57 I can not STAND pirates, I get physically violent around them, my family has banned any mention of pirates
58 or pirate adjacent activities in my presence! Yet however much I hate pirates, I understand that some people
59 simply do not know better; some are ignorant to the damage they're doing by downloading a game or a book for
60 free. That's what this guide is for, for those who don't know how to avoid piracy!<br>
61 <br>
62 In this guide on avoiding piracy, I seek to teach you, the reader, on how to spot piracy in the wild,
63 and the most common / popular services currently used in modern copyright theft so that you may avoid them.
64 </p>
65 <br>
66 <br>
67 <h3>What IS Piracy Anyways?</h3>
68 <br>
69 <p>The <a href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/piracy" target="_blank">Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines piracy</a> as:</p>
70 <blockquote cite="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/piracy">
71 &emsp;<em>... The unauthorized use of another's production, invention, or conception especially in infringement of a copyright</em>
72 </blockquote>
73 <br>
74 <p>While the <a href="https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/piracy" target="_blank">Cambridge Dictionary defines piracy</a> as:</p>
75 <blockquote cite="https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/piracy">
76 &emsp;<em>... The act of illegally copying computer programs, recordings, films, etc. to sell them at much cheaper prices</em>
77 </blockquote>
78 <br>
79 <p>Now these definitions, while succinct, are insufficient for truly understanding what piracy is and what it entails.
80 What does it mean to "illegally" copy a piece of media, or to "infringe" on copyright? Maybe <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright_infringement" target="_blank">Wikipedia's definition
81 of piracy</a> is better:
82 </p>
83 <blockquote cite="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright_infringement">
84 &emsp;<em>Copyright infringement <u>(at times referred to as piracy)</u> is the use of works protected by copyright without
85 permission for a usage where such permission is required, thereby infringing certain exclusive rights granted
86 to the copyright holder, such as the right to reproduce, distribute, display or perform the protected work,
87 or to make derivative works. The copyright holder is typically the work's creator, or a publisher or other
88 business to whom copyright has been assigned. Copyright holders routinely invoke legal and technological
89 measures to prevent and penalize copyright infringement</em>
90 </blockquote>
91 <br>
92 <p>Ok now we can work with this. Summarizing, piracy -- or copyright infringement -- is when someone does something to a
93 copyrighted work without permission, like making a copy and redistributing it. This is, for the most part, the extent
94 of piracy for most internet users: the copying and redistribution of a copyrighted work. The actual details of real
95 copyright law are a bit too verbose and unnecessarily fine-grained for this guide, so I'll spare you the detail.<br>
96 <br>
97 TL:DR - Piracy is the unauthorized copying and redistribution of a copyrighted material.
98 </p>
99 <br>
100 <h3>But Why Do People Pirate?</h3>
101 <br>
102 <p>
103 People pirate for a multitude of reasons, all unacceptable, but some more "valid" than others. Some of these reasons
104 include:
105 </p>
106 <ul>
107 <li><b>Pricing</b>: The pirate may believe the copyrighted work is priced too high, or may be unable to afford a legitimate purchase.</li>
108 <br>
109 <li><b>"Trials"</b>: The pirate may wish to trial the copyrighted work, say in the case of software, to determine its "true" value.</li>
110 <br>
111 <li><b>Availability</b>: The pirate may be unable to acquire the copyrighted work through legitimate means, and is
112 forced to pirate as a means to access the content.</li>
113 <br>
114 <li><b>DRM Removal</b>: The copyrighted work may employ <abbr title="Digital Rights Management">DRM</abbr> as a
115 means to prevent pirates from exploiting their work, which may interfere with the legitimate use of the
116 software/media.</li>
117 <br>
118 <li><b>Flagrant Disregard</b>: Some people simply disagree with the concept of copyright, and become pirates as they do not respect the law.</li>
119 <br>
120 <li><b>Etc.</b>: Other <em>(still invalid)</em> reasons not mentioned for lack of time.</li>
121 </ul>
122 <br>
123 <p>Again, none of these reasons are valid excuses to break the law:</p>
124 <ul>
125 <li><b>Pricing</b>: Many things are unaffordable to the average person, such as a jet carrier. Should I be able to
126 steal a jet carrier just because I selfishly believe the price I was given is "unrepresentative" of the
127 actual value of the jet carrier? No! That would be completely preposterous.</li>
128 <br>
129 <li><b>"Trials"</b>: If a company wished to offer a demo of their software for the general public to trial their
130 software and determine if they should purchase it, then they would simply offer the trial. Furthermore,
131 acquiring a full copy of a piece of interactive media such as software or a video game is NOWHERE near
132 a traditional "demo", as the entire content of the media is contained within the pirated copy. If the
133 pirate didn't wish to pay for the real product, but still wanted to use it, there would be nothing
134 preventing them from simply using the copy they already have.</li>
135 <br>
136 <li><b>Availability</b>: This is possibly the most understandable reason as to why someone would intentionally
137 commit piracy, however it is yet again unacceptable. There is plenty of media that has been rendered
138 exclusive to a specific piece of hardware, most notably game consoles. A game which is exclusive to Xbox
139 or Playstation should not be pirated just because it's otherwise exclusive! That's like saying you should
140 be able to steal one of the motors out of a Tesla brand car just because it has motors and your car doesn't!</li>
141 <br>
142 <li><b>DRM Removal</b>: DRM, or Digital Rights Management, is implemented in a piece of software or media as a
143 way to prevent pirates from stealing their product. However, sometimes the measures taken impact user
144 experience and simultaneously fail to prevent pirates from stealing. This is unfortunate, yes, but wouldn't
145 be necessary if it weren't for pirates in the first place! You can't seriously blame the inventor of barbed
146 wire for the injuries of criminals who can obviously see the danger and still cut themselves on it. It's an
147 even more preposterous action to blame him for the injuries of innocents when it's the installer's fault for
148 the faulty use. Don't blame DRM, blame the pirates. And if you can't blame the pirates for some reason, blame
149 the companies who implement DRM in ways that harm the consumer.</li>
150 <br>
151 <li><b>Flagrant Disregard</b>: I shouldn't need to comment on this, but I shall regardless. We depend on law and
152 order to keep the peace in modern society. When someone willingly goes against law and order, they are naturally
153 enemies to society as whole and must be dealt with swiftly. While copyright infringement may feel like a
154 victimless crime, it is far from one, and it really does harm the companies it affects. Furthermore, if someone
155 is so willing to skirt the law when it comes to something like copyright infringement, what's preventing them
156 from skirting the law in other places? Pirates are already stealing, so what's to prevent them from shoplifting
157 or snatching purses from frail old ladies?</li>
158 </ul>
159 <p>There really is no reason to break the law and pirate. No rational one at least.</p>
160 <br>
161 <h3>Avoiding Piracy In The Wild</h3>
162 <br>
163 <p>
164 Not everyone has as sharp an eye for piracy as me, and it can't be expected that someone with no experience
165 nor any idea of what piracy looks like should be able to spot it and avoid it; You can't expect
166 someone who's never been taught that "stealing is bad" to avoid stealing. Luckily, piracy is rather easy to spot.<br>
167 <br>
168 Piracy is usually an intentional activity, as it's fairly hard to participate in piracy on accident. It's
169 possible to be a pirate ignorantly, but the pirate must take some action to infringe on someone's copyright
170 for it to be piracy. This is quite nice for us copyright respecters, as it means we don't need to worry about
171 infringing on anything in most daily activities. Piracy is <b>NOT</b>:
172 </p>
173 <ul>
174 <li>Listening to music</li>
175 <li>Watching a movie</li>
176 <li>Playing a video game</li>
177 <li>Interacting with a copyrighted work through its intended means</li>
178 </ul>
179 <p>
180 Piracy in most daily scenarios boils down to the dissemination of material through improper channels and
181 without permission of the copyright holder. This means most interactions with pirates will take place at
182 the point of distribution. This may happen online or offline, in-person or from half-way across the world.
183 One easy way to tell if something is piracy or not is to ask yourself it it seems sketchy. If you have
184 second thoughts about if this is what the owner would want, or if your safety is put at risk through the
185 activity, it's probably piracy. If someone offers you a magazine for significantly cheaper than you'd
186 expect, they're probably pirating the magazine. If you're offered cheap software through some sketchy
187 website, it's probably piracy. Really, just use common sense and stay away from those weird dark corners
188 of the internet. Here are some examples of what piracy <b>IS</b>:
189 </p>
190 <ul>
191 <li>Using a YouTube video downloader to download a song</li>
192 <li>Torrenting movies, software, video games, etc.</li>
193 <li>Using ad-free versions of apps that normally require ads</li>
194 <li>Using an ad-blocker on a website that normally serves ads</li>
195 <li>Recording a movie or video with a screen recorder or camera</li>
196 <li>Giving or receiving a copy of a game to/from a friend</li>
197 <li>Redistributing or modifying media in any way that you are not given express permission to do so</li>
198 </ul>
199 <br>
200 <h3>Links, sites, and tech to avoid</h3>
201 <br>
202 <p>
203 Despite my best efforts, there will inevitably be people who will end up as pirates if not given EXPLICIT
204 instructions on what to avoid.This section is intended to be a list of things to AVOID, NOT THINGS TO USE!
205 I do NOT endorse piracy in any way, if I haven't made that obviously clear so far. Do NOT use these "services"
206 (crime facilitators) to subvert the copyright protections of others. This is simply a list of things to AVOID!!!!<br>
207 </p>
208 <br>
209 <h4>Torrenting</h4>
210 <br>
211 <p>
212 Torrenting, or the use of the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BitTorrent" target="_blank">BitTorrent Protocol</a>, is not inherently illegal. It is perfectly legal to use
213 the BitTorrent Protocol to share files with your friends or strangers, <em>GIVEN THAT THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER HAS
214 AUTHORIZED THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE CONTENT!!!</em> For example, sharing Linux ISOs is perfectly fine because of
215 Linux's GPLv2 License. This is <b>NOT</b> the case for, say, <em>"Spiderman: Into the Spideyverse"</em>. Unless Sony comes
216 out and says <em>"WE DON'T CARE ABOUT SPIDERMAN ANYMORE, GO NUTS!"</em>, it is piracy (and illegal!) to download or
217 redistribute any Spiderman movies using the BitTorrent protocol (or any information transmission protocol
218 for that matter).<br>
219 <br>
220 Some examples of illegal torrenting sites / trackers include:
221 </p>
222 <ul>
223 <li><b>The Pirate Bay</b> <a class="bad" href="https://thepiratebay.org/" target="_blank">thepiratebay.org</a>: A public
224 torrent tracker which provides the .torrent files required to download files illegally. Curiously
225 enough, <abbr title="The Pirate Bay">TPB</abbr> doesn't host any copyrighted material, they only facilitate the act of copyright
226 infringement by offering a safe haven for pirates to congregate.</li>
227 <br>
228 <li><b>1337x</b> <a class="bad" href="https://1337x.to/" target="_blank">1337x.to</a> <a class="tor" href="http://l337xdarkkaqfwzntnfk5bmoaroivtl6xsbatabvlb52umg6v3ch44yd.onion" target="_blank">l337xdarkkaqfwzntnfk5bmoaroivtl6xsbatabvlb52umg6v3ch44yd.onion</a>:
229 Another very popular torrent site that provides .torrent files and magnet links without being a tracker.
230 According to <a href="https://torrentfreak.com/top-10-most-popular-torrent-sites-of-2020-200105/" target="_blank">TorrentFreak</a>,
231 it is the 2nd most popular torrent site of 2023.</li>
232 <br>
233 <li><b>BTDigg</b> <a class="bad" href="https://btdig.com/" target="_blank">btdig.com</a> <a class="tor" href="http://btdigggink2pdqzqrik3blmqemsbntpzwxottujilcdjfz56jumzfsyd.onion" target="_blank">btdigggink2pdqzqrik3blmqemsbntpzwxottujilcdjfz56jumzfsyd.onion</a>:
234 A torrent search engine that uses the Mainline DHT as a way to find and serve magnet links. Unlike other
235 sites it is neither a tracker nor an index as it does not store any information about magnet links, it
236 simply traverses the Mainline DHT to find torrents for pirates to download.</li>
237 <br>
238 <li><b>rutracker</b> <a class="bad" href="https://rutracker.org/" target="_blank">rutracker.org</a> <a class="tor" href="http://torrentsru5dbmqszbdinnz7cjiubxsjngq52qij6ih3fmp3gn7hwqqd.onion" target="_blank">torrentsru5dbmqszbdinnz7cjiubxsjngq52qij6ih3fmp3gn7hwqqd.onion</a>:
239 The largest Russian BitTorrent tracker to date. Tracks an enormous number of torrents, and is often used
240 by non-russians due to the sheer volume of content stored there.</li>
241 </ul>
242 <p>
243 There are far more torrent trackers that I could have listed, but they'd pale in comparison to these 3 titans. Generally, you'll know if a
244 website is a torrent tracker because it won't be shy about telling you. If it IS shy about telling you, it's a private tracker, which you
245 aren't getting invited to without doing a lot of torrenting (which you wouldn't do, because you're not a pirate!).<br>
246 <br>
247 </p>
248 <h4>Torrenting Peripherals</h4>
249 <br>
250 <p>
251 Because of how the BitTorrent Protocol was written, it exposes your IP address to anyone else who's torrenting
252 a file you're uploading/downloading. This is great news for us pirate haters, because this means copyright
253 holders can get a pirate's IP and report them to their <abbr title="Internet Service Provider">ISP</abbr> for
254 copyright infringement and get their internet shutdown. If someone is a big enough pirate they may even get a
255 visit from our boys in the FBI. Unluckily, most pirates know about the dangers of their craft and work to circumvent
256 these efforts to shut them down.<br>
257 <br>
258 Some of these services include:
259 </p>
260 <ul>
261 <li><b><abbr title="Virtual Private Network(s)">VPNs</abbr></b>: A piece of software used to mask your IP,
262 which can be used to circumvent a copyright holder's request to shut off your WiFi. Not all VPNs allow
263 torrenting, however there are VPNs that are built entirely for piracy. VPNs in and of themselves are
264 perfectly legal, it's just that some people decide that they can commit crimes if it's harder for their actions
265 to point back to them.</li>
266 <br>
267 <li><b>Meshnets</b>: A special form of internet that requires special software to access. Meshnets tend to
268 bounce internet traffic between multiple different computers in an attempt to make it nigh-impossible to
269 track any individual user. Again, these services in and of themselves are not illegal, but people tend to
270 do illegal things while on them. Some of these services include: <a class="tor" href="https://torproject.org" target="_blank"><abbr title="The Onion Router">Tor</abbr></a>,
271 <a class="i2p" href="https://geti2p.net/en/" target="_blank"><abbr title="Invisible Internet Project">I2P</abbr></a>,
272 and <a class="bad" href="https://www.tribler.org/" target="_blank">Tribler</a>.</li>
273 </ul>
274 <p>
275 The earlier links that ended in <a class="tor">".onion"</a> are links to Onion Sites, special sites hosted using <a href="https://torproject.org" target="_blank"><abbr title="The Onion Router">Tor</abbr></a>.
276 To access an Onion Site, one must use the <a href="https://www.torproject.org/download/" target="_blank">Tor Browser Bundle / Tor Browser</a>. More tech savvy readers may know that sites hosted
277 using Tor are on the <b><em>Dark Web</em></b>; By the way, <a href="https://geti2p.net/en/" target="_blank"><abbr title="Invisible Internet Project">I2P</abbr></a> counts as the Dark Web too!
278 If that's not enough of a reason to avoid them, I don't know what is!<br>
279 </p>
280 <br>
281 <h4>Non-Torrenting Piracy Sites</h4>
282 <br>
283 <p>
284 Not every piracy site uses torrenting to distribute their ill-gotten goods. Some sites distribute materials directly,
285 while others use other technologies to disseminate their illegitimate copies. Some of these sites include:
286 </p>
287 <ul>
288 <li><b>Scihub</b> <a class="bad" href="https://sci-hub.st/about" target="_blank">sci-hub.st</a>: Scihub mainly
289 provides access to research papers, regardless of the copyright or licensing agreements held by
290 the paper's authors. Papers require <abbr title="Digital Object Identifier(s)">DOIs</abbr> to
291 access. I have personal experience with this site, as a (now fired, lol!) college professor recommended
292 it to me (disgusting!).</li><br>
293 <li><b>Library Genesis</b> <a class="bad" href="https://libgen.li" target="_blank">libgen.is</a>: Another shadow library in the vein
294 of Scihub, but this one offers books instead of research papers. LibGen is one of the more popular shadow libraries, as it
295 has been around since 2008 and sports a very large catalog of pirated material. LibGen is unique from the other libraries
296 in that it offers downloads using the <a href="https://ipfs.tech/" target="_blank"><abbr title="Interplanetary Filesystem">IPFS</abbr></a>
297 protocol, another filesharing protocol similar to BitTorrent. Another funny fact is that LibGen came from the Soviet Union; only
298 commies could bear such a terrible disregard of copyright law!</li><br>
299 <li><b>Z-Library</b> <a class="tor" href="http://loginzlib2vrak5zzpcocc3ouizykn6k5qecgj2tzlnab5wcbqhembyd.onion" target="_blank">loginzlib2vrak5zzpcocc3ouizykn6k5qecgj2tzlnab5wcbqhembyd.onion</a> <a class="i2p" href="http://zlib24th6ptyb4ibzn3tj2cndqafs6rhm4ed4gruxztaaco35lka.b32.i2p/" target="_blank">zlib24th6ptyb4ibzn3tj2cndqafs6rhm4ed4gruxztaaco35lka.b32.i2p</a>:
300 yet again another shadow library, but this one has been fully kicked off the clearnet and into the Dark
301 Web. Currently only accessible through either Tor or I2P (using the .b32.i2p link), Z-Library is possibly the most illegal site I've
302 covered so far. It sports a similarly large catalog of books to LibGen, and can be seen as an alternative.
303 Not that anyone should be looking for alternatives anyway.</li><br>
304 <li><b>Anna's Archive</b> <a class="bad" href="https://annas-archive.org/" target="_blank">annas-archive.org</a>: Anna's archive differs
305 from the other shadow libraries in that it is not a shadow library in and of itself, but a search engine for the rest of the
306 previously mentioned shadow libraries. It does not host any copyrighted content, much like TPB, but facilitates piracy by making
307 it trivially easy to find media across the different libraries. Anna's Archive claims that they do not wish to hurt the authors
308 of the content they link to, in their about page, but fail spectacularly by simply existing!</li>
309 </ul>
310 <p>
311 Again, there are many more examples of non torrent-based piracy sites, but if I were to list them then we'd be here all day. Pirates regularly
312 have their domains seized and are forced to either go dark and take their site down or switch to another domain. It's likely that all the
313 domains I've listed will be different or defunct within a year (here's hoping!). Going on a pirate hunt is a lot like trying to kill the hydra,
314 kill one pirate and 3 more hop out of the hole you blasted through their ship, each with a new domain to shoot down.<br>
315 </p>
316 <br>
317 <h4>Other Miscellaneous Piracy Techniques</h4>
318 <br>
319 <p>
320 Some methods of piracy do not use torrenting or some other random website, but instead use a piece of illicit software
321 dedicated to the goal of piracy. These pieces of software can be harder to shoot down by copyright holders due to legal
322 loopholes that allow them to skirt by. Hopefully organizations like the <a href="https://www.riaa.com" target="_blank"><abbr title="Recording Industry Association of America">RIAA</abbr></a>
323 can get these hideous blemishes on the books wiped from the record.<br>
324 <br>
325 &emsp;<b>- YouTube Piracy Tools</b><br>
326 YouTube, one of the largest video sharing platforms in the world, has a piracy problem. Not only are pirates
327 uploading content to YouTube without proper authorization, they're also creating tools to download videos as
328 .mp3/4's so they can redistribute those as well. Some of these tools include:
329 </p>
330 <ul>
331 <li><em>yt-dlp</em> <a class="bad" href="https://github.com/yt-dlp/yt-dlp" target="_blank">github.com/yt-dlp/yt-dlp</a>:
332 A command-line tool used to download YouTube videos as either video files or audio files. Supports many
333 different types of file format, and bypasses YouTube's rate-limit, enticing pirates who'd want to download
334 entire playlists at once. Often used by pirates to download videos and thumbnails either to reupload to an
335 unauthorized place -- such as another YouTube channel, or TikTok -- or to download massive amounts of music.</li><br>
336 <li><em>YouTube Revanced</em> <a class="bad" href="https://github.com/ReVanced/revanced-manager" target="_blank">github.com/ReVanced/revanced-manager</a>: YouTube Revanced, or rather Revanced Manager
337 is an app that modifies a local installation of YouTube to add/remove features from the original app, such as blocking ads (piracy), automatically skipping in-video sponsorships (piracy), and
338 making it trivially easy to download videos (piracy). There are some interesting features that are available from ReVanced, but the piracy should be enough to put anyone off from ever using the
339 app in any capacity. This is one of those apps that uses a legal loophole to continue existing, as it is illegal to distribute a modified version of YouTube, but it isn't illegal to distribute
340 "patches" that would modify YouTube, and a "patcher" to actually modify the app.</li><br>
341 <li><em>NewPipe</em> <a class="bad" href="https://newpipe.net/" target="_blank">newpipe.net</a>: NewPipe is a "free front-end" for YouTube that doesn't log into a Google account and allows its user to
342 view YouTube videos without ads, along with enabling the downloading of videos. NewPipe is actually used by ReVanced to download its videos. NewPipe claims that it respects users privacy, but
343 without preventing piracy, what's the point?</li><br>
344 <li><em>GrayJay</em> <a class="bad" href="https://grayjay.app/" target="_blank">grayjay.app</a>: An app created by <a href="https://futo.org/what-is-futo/" target="_blank">"FUTO"</a> and <a href="https://www.youtube.com/user/rossmanngroup" target="_blank">Louis Rossmann</a>,
345 a notorious pirate who has outright advocated for piracy in many of his videos on YouTube. GrayJay provides an ad-free experience for several platforms, not just YouTube. Furthermore, it
346 provides an account system so pirates can leave comments on videos and chat with each other. What's even more heinous is that Louis and FUTO are charging for this app!
347 There has never been a clearer, textbook case of piracy to ever exist: A group of users seek to subvert copyright protections, and then charge for removing the copyright! Despicable!</li>
348 </ul>
349 <br>
350 <p>
351 &emsp;<b>- Ad-Blocking</b><br>
352 Ad-blocking is a form of piracy where the intrinsic social contract between the user of a site and the site
353 administrator of "User will watch ads to pay for the Administrator's site so that they may keep serving the user"
354 is broken by preventing ads from showing -- thus preventing ad revenue from being claimed by the site admin --
355 while still loading the rest of the website. This is unacceptable, as running a website is not only difficult, but
356 costs money! (Trust me, it's both.)<br>
357 <br>
358 Some of the most popular ad-blocking software includes:
359 </p>
360 <ul>
361 <li><em>uBlock Origin</em> <a class="bad" href="https://ublockorigin.com/" target="_blank">ublockorigin.com</a>: uBlock Origin is one of the most popular ad-blocker extensions across all the currently popular web-browsers.
362 uBlock offers a large list of different sites to block, and has a feature that lets pirates define their own blocking rules to prevent certain sites or even elements on a site from loading. Luckily for us pirate haters,
363 Google Chrome's implementation of <a href="https://developer.chrome.com/docs/extensions/develop/migrate/what-is-mv3" target="_blank">Manifest v3</a> should prevent ad-blocking from working at all! Manifest v3 will be
364 adopted by all current popular web browsers, however Firefox has stated that they will refuse to gimp ad-blockers. Sounds to me like they need to be taught a lesson by the copyright industry with a bankrupting lawsuit!</li><br>
365 <li><em>uMatrix</em> <a class="bad" href="https://github.com/gorhill/uMatrix" target="_blank">github.com/gorhill/uMatrix</a>: uMatrix was uBlock before uBlock, and can do quite a few of the things uBlock Origin can currently do. It
366 acts like a built-in firewall that pirates can edit on the fly to block the elements of certain sites from loading. Luckily, uMatirx has been abandoned and deprecated by uBlock Origin. One less project to worry about!</li><br>
367 <li><em>Ghostery</em> <a class="bad" href="https://www.ghostery.com/ghostery-ad-blocker" target="_blank">www.ghostery.com/ghostery-ad-blocker</a>: Ghostery is another one of the more popular ad-blockers being used right now, and is
368 available for all platforms (unlike uMatrix). Ghostery claims that they block trackers and make your web browsing experience safer, but they're actively harming the job safety of the site admins that are having their ads blocked!</li>
369 </ul>
370 <br>
371 <p>
372 &emsp;<b>- Other notable apps/methods</b><br>
373 As it turns out, the internet isn't just YouTube! There are other platforms with their own pirate problems.
374 There are too many possible piracy methods for me to point out every single one, but I will occasionally
375 update this section with other notable apps or methods used to pirate, and which service the app/method impacts.<br>
376 </p>
377 <ul>
378 <li>xManager <a class="bad" href="https://github.com/Team-xManager/xManager/releases" target="_blank">github.com/Team-xManager/xManager/releases</a>: xManager is another app in the same vein of ReVanced Manager, an app that doesn't
379 outright distribute a modified version of Spotify, but distributes patches and a patcher to modify your local install of Spotify. xManager offers premium features without paying for them, which is a godsend for the filthy pirates
380 who'd stoop so low as to steal from starving artists. I was told about this app by a now former friend; former of course as I can not stand to be associated with pirates in any capacity.</li>
381 </ul>
382 <br>
383 <h3>Closing Remarks:</h3>
384 <br>
385 <p>
386 While piracy may never come to an end, I hope I have convinced you to give up any future piracy you may
387 have potentially committed. Maybe I was so convincing as to have you share this article around and spread
388 the word of anti-piracy to the masses. If I can have even one person swear off piracy forever, I will be
389 satisfied with my efforts. I hope this guide has been helpful in your journey to become a better person
390 and better netizen. Remember, piracy kills!
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