This is a nearly blank world map. Pick the relevant color for your country and fill

This is a nearly blank world map. Pick the relevant color for your country and fill.
Note this isn't only about file sharing, but internet freedom in general.

Other urls found in this thread:

youtu.be/dbhxibO1Pcg?t=2410
dr.dk/nyheder/kultur/film/ekspert-til-netpirater-jeg-ville-afvise-betale-boede-ulovlig-download
twitter.com/SFWRedditImages

Light green for Brazil. Uma delĂ­cia.

cba to do that but light green for bulgaria

Also stop drawing lines between Morocco and the western Sahara, it's one country.

Green for Sweden

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Netherlands light green pls.

And shouldn't it be the same for Sweden? Illigal to download but not enforced in any way.

Red for Finland.

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Light green for Argentina, the whitest country on this organic rock.

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>Spain: no issue, 7+ years as of today.
>Portugal: same
>Mex: friends told me no issue there as well.

Isn't the US very picky? ISPs send letters.

That bad down there user?

Do they monitor everything going out?
Who are you working with down there?

Light green for Italy, also
>light green
>UK
No fucking way

Right now it's light green, but slowly it's edging to red.

Germany is a black hole.

Can't do the map but Romania:
>piracy theoretically illegal, but this law is almost unenforced
>online content is very free, something you would not expect from a semi-Eastern European country
>very few things illegal to put on the internet
>the only thing that's forbidden is child porn; anything else, including zoophilia or necrophilia, is legal (these are illegal in many western countries unfortunately). And Holocaust denial is also illegal by EU law.
>politicians are almost computer-illiterate, once when there were protests during which people where flashing their phone flashlights one wondered if it doesn't use their mobile data plan
>speaking of data plans, they are cheap, have good signal and unlimited data plans are easy to get
This may be a pretty nasty county in many aspects, but in this aspect it's in a very good situation.

Give it a gradient and an arrow pointing down.

Isn't porn illegal in Bulgaria?

>theoretically illegal, but this law is almost unenforced
Daily lifero in Romania

What are you trying to say?

Fux no. Lucky you have Internet that isn't mobile, so have fun killing your shit speed with Tor. Plus, the government are banging coconuts together.
VPN is always necessary anywhere where the state actor or ISP is in the threat model, and that should be practically everywhere.
>lol they don't give a fuck what I surf in Mexico
Right, but the poor regulation corollary with that stance also lends itself to the ISP spying on customers without anyone giving a fuck for shits and giggles. Are you comfy with that?

It's light green and red at the same time. They don't really care about piracy, but they block some other sites so you'd want to get a proxy at least.
It's a very weird scale.

Land of fraudom.

>Holocaust denial is also illegal by EU law

hahaha holy shit

As an American, I've never heard of bandwidth limits being imposed on home data, only mobile.

Europe is an experiment in deprecation of liberty for SJW groupthink.
When they pass a hate speech law over here in Burgerland, it's over. Twitter won't just shadowban you for a racist joke; you'll go to jail.

youtu.be/dbhxibO1Pcg?t=2410

The EU law have nothing to do with criminal law.

Europe is shit for a lot pf reasons. That's just a detail among them.

I thought it was already red tier along with Germany? Well, good luck, some pals told me you guys are giving tribute to 1984

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(OP)
Ukraine

which is it?

No it's not, only some EU countries have holocaust denial laws.

I corrected mine. There are no anti piracy measures here in Ukraine.

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The government likes to grandstand on issues like piracy but noone actually wants to invest the time or resources required to enforce it. I suppose you might get an email if you torrent all the latest gay of thrones episodes or whatever but it wouldn't go beyond that.

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What about ex.ua and fs.to shutdowns?

What about them?

In the UK you get letters from your ISP for piracy, but unlike France they can't actually do anything yet. This will probably change soon since the notifying system is already in place.

I added Denmark as being "VPN mandatory"
If you don't have one you'll get spammed by lawyers trying to scam you into "settling"

bandwidth limits are norm in Canada

This is kind of anti-piracy measures, don't you think?

So which is it Turkey?

its illegal in spain, it should be light green you fucking retarded, you can't even into maps

The crazy thing about that is that it's not actually illegal in Denmark as I udnerstand. It's illegal to make money on piracy, ie selling bootleg DVDs and whatnot. But if you're just pirating shit they need to be able to prove you cost them revenue in a civil suit.

No, not not really. There are no kind of blocking methods fo you to access pirated content, not even DNS ones. No form of "user notification" for accessing this kind of content either (I honestly still not believe that western ISP's send you letters if you go to TPB for instance).

Bullshit.

they also have extremely fast internet and beautiful mountains
might move there one day

>I honestly still not believe that western ISP's send you letters if you go to TPB for instance
that only happens if you're stupid enough to torrent the latest justin bieber album 10 minutest after its release

My point is that's something that does not happen here at all.

but we cant shitpost without a vpn

Bullshit.

Slovenia here. Every couple of years the topic of piracy is brought up in the parliament but nothing ever gets done, so it's ok.

Love it how none of you noticed that Israel is already colored light green on OP (and everyone else's) pic.
I can confirm that color. None of the ISPs I had over the years cared for pirating, never got a letter/legal action. Pretty sure there are a to piracy laws but never seen them being executed.

thats because you dont have any money. germany if full of people with way too much money.

many of these letters are not even legit and ignoring them will simply result in nothing happening, but many people panic and say "on noes better pay up Im scared"

tl;dr youre poor thats why

>tl;dr youre poor thats why
Okay..?

What the fuck are you talking about.

Im also poor but countries where these copyright bullshit letters are send large scale are usually wealthy on average, was my point

He's talking about

The only thing I know about Slovenia is that it's where waterblocks come from

fixed

"Mostly legal" means even your ISP is running a file sharing server. Is that really the case with all these green countries? Where I live that was certainly the case 10 years ago. Not so much now.

I changed it back, those new letters are terrifiyng, but you are stupid to respond. they have no case against you. It's highly unlikely they'll do anything for under a $250.000, and almost the whole legal system in Denmark are criticizing them publicly. Just don't respond, as even the state television encourage you to do:

dr.dk/nyheder/kultur/film/ekspert-til-netpirater-jeg-ville-afvise-betale-boede-ulovlig-download

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thanks

>access to the Internet in the DPRK
lol

merge

Added Belgium

>anti-aliased borders
you had one job op

What colour is that? And you fucked up Netherlands too, or whatever that tiny thing is.

And even if they tried to take you to court for, as you say, $250.000, it is unlikely that they can prove that you are guilty. If you, after receiving the letters, hide all your stuff (out of any of your property) how are they going to prove that you have done it? To claim that you where involved will get you nowhere in the danish legal system.

I've seen one of those letters, they send over 5 pages of written law, all confusing for the stupid, on nice formal think paper, with watermarks, the whole shebang. The way the letter is written, and all of the above, would get any intelligent man to wonder if they're just trying to freak you the fuck out. They even talk about some case from 10 years ago, just bullcrap to scare you.

To my experiences with the new mass surveillance laws being proposed in the Netherlands, I only thought it was appropriate to change it a bit more towards yellow.
Yeah, I chose a hex between green and yellow for both.

The US is so different region to region. I've never seen an internet company have bandwidth limits in any of the areas I've traveled. I would by no means say limits are the norm

If that's a merge how did Denmark change colour?

Repaint Portugal to light green too. There's some talk about muh piracy, but other than dns blocks that are stupid easy to bypass there's not much being done.

Absolutely

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x2 for repainting portugal

I mean even light green is kind of wrong since anti piracy is somewhat enforced by dns blocking, but oh well

you also might want to post this on Sup Forums

Fuck ya map, nigga.

Germany - light green, although anti piracy IS enforced, you really have to go your way out to get slapped. I never bothered with VPNs, always used public trackers and never had any issues in decades.

Shit, as a teen I downloaded questionable type of porn from bearshare/limewire and no one broke down my door yet.

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>is somewhat enforced by dns blocking

>set up a different dns server
>install the Ahoy! extension
>etc

Light green suits it fine, you have so much options it's almost like there's no enforcing at all.

>Norway
>VPN mandatory
Not even. I've torrented so much shit it's not even funny, and I used a vanilla browser.

Thank god data caps aren't the norm.

Already marked, weon.

Buena culiao

fug :DD

>US
>bandwidth limits are the norm
shit graph

Bandwidth limit and enforcement of anti-piracy is not mutually exclusive. Canada should be striped light-green and yellow.

Clearly the newfags have taken over Sup Forums. VPN is mandatory in the US, ISPs are allowed to perform deep packet inspection on your ass.

This might as well be the green continent, I've only see people busted for selling counterfeit software in the streets, and very rarely.

I don't like your scale. Bandwidth limitations do not necessarily have anything to do with freedom but rather the economics of the local and global telecom industry, nor does it find the appropriate middle ground between "Anti piracy is not enforced" and "VPN mandatory".

> doesn't know what bandwidth is

Can you torrent in Sweden even after the pirate Bay case?

I've always wondered about this...do average Moroccans actually believe WS is national territory? How much control does the Moroccan government have down in the hinterland?

Australia is yellow