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449 points bertman | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.41s | source
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garblegarble ◴[] No.29703013[source]
The repo readme is pretty telling - this is being leaked to force this particular key to be blacklisted, I guess one group annoyed with others and wanting to cut off their access (and presumably the leaking group already has other L1 keys so doesn't fear this key being burned...)
replies(3): >>29703084 #>>29703220 #>>29704610 #
betterunix2 ◴[] No.29703220[source]
There is something amusing about weaponizing the key revocation process like this...
replies(1): >>29703609 #
hatware ◴[] No.29703609[source]
Everything about it is fascinating. These people all have day jobs yet they provide a better experience than the multi-trillion dollar corporations that are releasing the product in the first place.
replies(1): >>29703771 #
londons_explore ◴[] No.29703771[source]
These people probably all have day school... I think most people who get past school age tend to retire out of this crowd of people...
replies(2): >>29703821 #>>29704076 #
hatware ◴[] No.29704076[source]
Are you implying that young adults are more responsible for the state of piracy today than adults? I don't see that at all.
replies(2): >>29704507 #>>29706197 #
Commodore63 ◴[] No.29706197[source]
It was definitely the case for me! I aged out of warez when I got a full time job.
replies(1): >>29707391 #
1. jorvi ◴[] No.29707391[source]
I think the warez ‘golden age’ was 1995-2015.

Before that most of the protections were just not that severe (and thus interesting), and after 2015 Steam, Netflix and Spotify severely stemmed the influx of people being exposed to piracy and thus potentially going deeper into the culture.

Tangentially related but I think that’s also why in a strange way the advent of the smartphone and other ‘curated technological experiences’ has lowered computer literacy for the average person born after ~1995.

replies(1): >>29710867 #
2. arsome ◴[] No.29710867[source]
Yeah, I think software piracy was a huge part of technological learning for me from an early age, figuring out how to the name of what I was even looking for (cracks, Warez), using astalavista, early torrent clients, forwarding ports, finding good torrents, using a firewall to block applications, applying cracks, learning about loaders, key generators, patches, protectors, and later reverse engineering and cracking software myself... staring at assembly in IDA for a few days straight so you can do something no one else online has done is a pretty interesting experience and probably one of the most formative ones to my enjoyment of computing.