Looking for a free .pdf of this book


It is always fishy when a website ask you to register for a "free" trial to download a book. Most of the time you will have to give them your CC number, and when the registration is complete they will tell you that the book (or movie) is no longer available due to blah blah blah.
 
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You are just wrong. This is why we have the VPN. ISPs track all internet traffic. They know what sites you go and what you download. Nothing to hide.

No I am not wrong. No one said that ISPs dont track through cookies and other means.

What i did say though, is that the probability of the ISP allocating anytime toward someone that downloads a book due to copyright issues is not going to happen - as you asserted and what i responded to. Nor would law enforcement barring some egregious circumstances

If you werent a wannabe smart guy you would be able to understand a flow of conversation and what the reply was saying.

Only if a certain "crime" is on the governments radar would an ISP do anything (read, be forced) - like in your Napster example. ISPs didnt give a fuck until the government wanted to make it a problem.

Wannabe smart guy.
 
the probability of the ISP allocating anytime toward someone that downloads a book due to copyright issues

True, ISP do not give a hoot about copyrighted books, songs or movies. They only act when they receive an official complaint from the official source. And most of the time they will simply send you a polite warning.
 
It is always fishy when a website ask you to register for a "free" trial to download a book. Most of the time you will have to give them your CC number, and when the registration is complete they will tell you that the book (or movie) is no longer available due to blah blah blah.

answering the OP question

on that point, from here .... found in a blog/forum

http://yamtohv.pro/?a_aid=1953480f&a_bid=c28f910b&chan=two&data1=Brian+J+Stark+-+Special+Situation+Investing:+Hedging,+Arbitrage,+And+Liquidation&data2=back200&p=af

that is why I posted 3 links ..... at your own risk YMMV
 
answering the OP question

on that point, from here .... found in a blog/forum

http://yamtohv.pro/?a_aid=1953480f&a_bid=c28f910b&chan=two&data1=Brian+J+Stark+-+Special+Situation+Investing:+Hedging,+Arbitrage,+And+Liquidation&data2=back200&p=af

that is why I posted 3 links ..... at your own risk YMMV

Yeah -- that site has links to every book you would ever need, such as
http://yamtohv.pro/?a_aid=1953480f&...mplete+Proctology+Handbook&data2=back200&p=af
upload_2021-4-7_17-36-56.png

:)
 
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No I am not wrong. No one said that ISPs dont track through cookies and other means.

What i did say though, is that the probability of the ISP allocating anytime toward someone that downloads a book due to copyright issues is not going to happen - as you asserted and what i responded to. Nor would law enforcement barring some egregious circumstances

If you werent a wannabe smart guy you would be able to understand a flow of conversation and what the reply was saying.

Only if a certain "crime" is on the governments radar would an ISP do anything (read, be forced) - like in your Napster example. ISPs didnt give a fuck until the government wanted to make it a problem.

Wannabe smart guy.
Just do not forget the folks who was sued to download the MP3 music in the Napster era. Parents of some 13 year old kids had to pay $2,000 to $3,000 to settle the lawsuits against them. Somehow the music owners forced ISPs for the names of those offenders and sued them....

The law is not on your side when you are doing something illegal. Just not caught yet.
 
Just do not forget the folks who was sued to download the MP3 music in the Napster era. Parents of some 13 year old kids had to pay $2,000 to $3,000 to settle the lawsuits against them. Somehow the music owners forced ISPs for the names of those offenders and sued them....

The law is not on your side when you are doing something illegal. Just not caught yet.


Again, only because the government wanted to make it a thing. Napster wasnt the only p2p download place - just the only one the govt had its sights on.
 
Again, only because the government wanted to make it a thing. Napster wasnt the only p2p download place - just the only one the govt had its sights on.


IIRC, it was Lars Ulrich from Metallica who made the Napster thing a big deal. And at the time, Napster was the primary P2P portal on the web for the masses.
 
Again, only because the government wanted to make it a thing. Napster wasnt the only p2p download place - just the only one the govt had its sights on.
Clearly download copyrighted material from internet is illegal. Period.

No foul language can change that.
 
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