• 0 Posts
  • 5 Comments
Joined 21 hours ago
Cake day: July 7th, 2026


  • I want to point out there is something that most people aren’t aware of. FED Government uses it. It’s called a law called ECPA (Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986).

    There’s a rule that’s so outdated. It basically says if your emails are 180 days old. It treats it as if you ‘abandoned’ it. No 4th amendment right, I’m not sure about people elsewhere. They can just access these emails with a mere subpoena without a court order or judge approval.

    So if you must use any email providers with servers within the US that’s not encrypted or US based such as Gmail or Yahoo. Enable Pop3 and download it locally, delete it from your main gmail account. This will be different if it’s an employer. For me, I don’t keep it for more than 180 days.

    There was one court case. It didn’t go to SCOTUS. It’s Warshak v. United States. Anything under 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals jurisdiction is I believe supposedly protected, but who knows.

    I learned about this a year ago. I thought people here might want to know about it in addition to this. I’m not a lawyer. I just wanted them to know about the 180 day rule.




  • Movies? Just owning a dvd or bluray. It was filled with a bunch of trailers and other junk when I just wanted the movie itself to start and didn’t care for all of the other.

    TV Shows?

    Right when it releases, so I don’t have to see the between ads and I couldn’t actually buy it until the full season released. Even then, now they moved to streaming only, where even now you can’t buy the optical media if you want leaving you with only the option to download it. Even if you wanted to pay, they won’t let you buy it.

    Music?

    Instead of a bunch of music at the time, on MP3 player, I could just rip my discs or download them. If my disc was damaged, I could download. Instead of just having all of these crappy songs, I could select just the ones I want and put on cd at the time.

    Software?

    When I couldn’t afford it, and still refuse to pay for subscription. I usually try to use open source now other than gaming. I will buy games, on sale, on gog or steam. Provided it’s on sale, and not $60 or $80. $20 or $30? Sure.

    Now? One time license? Sure.

    I specifically own a computer, for dedicated cracked software and cracked games that doesn’t ever connect to the internet. So, no issue if it’s infected. For those games, I will buy them, when they’re not $80 dollars. I’ll wait until it’s $30. I only install trusted sources, but you never know.

    Never will I pay $80 for a new game. Even if I want it bad. That’s beyond ridiculous.