, SecurityFocus 2002-05-08
An ambitious hackware project promises to bring illicit broadband "uncapping" to the masses, and with it the risks that come with high-speed hijinks.
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Cable Modem Hacking Goes Mainstream
2002-05-09
Anonymous (6 replies)
Anonymous (6 replies)
Yeah well...
2002-05-09
Myko (8 replies)
Myko (8 replies)
Yeah well...
2002-05-09
Anonymous (3 replies)
Anonymous (3 replies)
Yeah well...
2002-05-09
Anonymous (5 replies)
Anonymous (5 replies)
You are idiots!!!!
2002-05-10
Anonymous (3 replies)
Anonymous (3 replies)
Cable Modem Hacking Goes Mainstream
2002-05-10
RayReis (at) aol (dot) com [email concealed] (1 replies)
RayReis (at) aol (dot) com [email concealed] (1 replies)
Cable Modem Hacking Goes Mainstream
2002-05-09
Anonymous (2 replies)
Anonymous (2 replies)
Cable Modem Hacking Goes Mainstream
2002-05-10
Anonymous (4 replies)
Anonymous (4 replies)
This Is Why DSL Rules
2002-05-10
Anonymous (2 replies)
Anonymous (2 replies)

If you download a commercial artist's music, and don't own the CD, ideally, you're stealing.
If you're using Adobe Photoshop 6, and you didn't pay the 450$, you're stealing.
Yadda yadda etc...
Keep in mind, I offered to pay full retribution for the bandwidth I "stole" (a whole 6 hours worth, 3 of which were gaming, the other 3 idling, perhaps). My uncap was only that as well, it reset me back to the old cap, and again it was fully automated, 3mbps down, but 512kbps up, it still varied on the old @home system... From what I gather.
Another thing I don't understand is, you'll sit here and pull the "Holier than thou" act, but you post Anonymously?
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Link to this comment: http://www.securityfocus.com/comments/articles/394/12325#12325