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Who doesn't? Honestly us college students can't afford to shell out hundreds of bucks on Office and other programs necessary for school. Sure we could all use Wordpad, but teachers want assignments emailed in .doc form
All software will be free one day, it's just inevitable. Gotta put ads in software to get the money.
That's what OpenOffice is for . But personally, I don't like Warez one bit. The only things I really buy are games and operating systems, but besides that, when I want an Office Program or the like, I use OpenOffice. For video editing software, I use the stuff that comes with my OS regardless of it's stinkyness until I find some better software to use, and more. Sure Warez may be good to some people, but they're only asking for problems in the long run. For example, when you download or upload anything using the BitTorrent client, your Internet IP address is released onto a client IP pool to see what peers are downloading/uploading, and all of that information is public information. Your IP address is basically like a roadmap to your home. Giving it away, regardless if it is a dynamic IP is never a good idea. Since your IP address is tied to your home's account, all that needs to happen is for your ISP to get called up with an IP that you've used recently or have had and tell your ISP that you need to be shut off because you're pirating and it's all over. ISPs keey records of your IPs for two years.
Also, I'm dead serious as to why you should never give anyone your IP, even if it changes hourly. All that's asking for is trouble since hackers can break into your computer, and if you've ever seen the way Google Maps pinpoints you, it's usually no more than 10 feet from your location. I'm not kidding. One time when my Internet IP changed, I grabbed my iPod Touch, opened up Google Maps and pressed the locate me button. Within 3 seconds, a 2 minute old IP tracked down to my exact spot in my house D: .
EDIT: Also, might I mention, when sites get shut down by the RIAA, MPAA, MediaDefender, etc, they're asked for their traffic logs. These contain everything from activities and stuff accessed on the site to the IP addresses of the clients. Heck, right now Viacom is in the middle of suing Google for having copyrighted videos on YouTube, and Google has to hand over a 3TB dump (seriously! 3TB!!!) worth of log files for YouTube.
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