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skipidar2012-02-02 16:36:13
Law in IT
skipidar, 2012-02-02 16:36:13

In which country should a server with semi-legal content be located in order not to be disturbed?

Maybe someone knows in which country neither the “K” department nor their colleagues from Europe and America can reach the server?
Is there any state in which it is customary to install servers? I imagine something like island republics without taxes, where there are 10 banks per square meter, but not with no taxes, but with increased tolerance for Internet freedoms.

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12 answer(s)
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uinner, 2012-02-02
@uinner

The Librusec library is hosted in Ecuador for the reason mentioned above. I can’t give an answer to the question “whose, specifically, hands don’t reach there”.

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egorinsk, 2012-02-03
@egorinsk

so-called. bulletproof servers are many times more expensive than regular servers and there are unlikely to be enough resources for your content. They are designed for botnets and trojans, not file dumps.
Also, copyright is recognized in all countries of the world, at least those where there is a normal Internet.
I advise you to make a pseudo-legal service: for example, supposedly a file sharing service like mediafire, where users upload files and where there is a page for copyright holders, where you ardently swear to support DCMA, crawl in front of the RIAA on your knees at the first request. Or supposedly a social network of video lovers. Or supposedly a microblogging service with the ability to host files that allegedly uploaded by third-party users.
But nevertheless, with the laws you will be in a very precarious situation, since all this can be unraveled and proved if you wish, I would advise you to give up this idea. It does not matter in which country you rent a server, you will be judged in the country of residence.

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fraky, 2012-02-02
@fraky

what prevents you from reading policies from hosters in the same South America?

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skipidar, 2012-02-02
@skipidar

Bring People to the oil platform, for God's sake...

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lashtal, 2012-02-02
@lashtal

Thepiratebay, for example, moved to .se in Sweden.
Kavkaztsentr is hosted in Finland.

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skipidar, 2012-02-02
@skipidar

I think this is what I was looking for: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulletproof_hosting

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gnum, 2012-02-02
@gnum

Taiwan

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compressor64, 2012-02-02
@compressor64

search for
"bulletproof domain"
and
"bulletproof hosting"

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skipidar, 2012-02-02
@skipidar

So I'm asking: which country's hosters have policies to read?

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girichev, 2012-02-02
@girichev

in neutral waters)

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skipidar, 2012-02-03
@skipidar

China is also advised to Malaysia, a dedicated server costs around 300 USD per month, but the disk is only 200 gigabytes.

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Mark, 2012-02-03
@printf

The question already contains the answer: if you are concerned about the "K" department in the USSR and their colleagues from Europe and the USA, then you need to take a car outside the territory of the USSR, Europe and the USA.
With copyright, everything is quite simple in the Arab countries, in China.
Well, as it was rightly said above, if the authorities are interested in the activities of the site, it will not be the server that will judge, but the owner. Evidence in the form of hard drives with semi-legal content, of course, is a real gift to operatives, but the fairest court in the world does quite well without them.

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