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acka | 2 months ago
Assuming your VPN identification service operates commercially, I trust that you are in full compliance with all contractual agreements and Terms of Service for the services you utilize. Many of these agreements specifically prohibit commercial use, which could encompass the harvesting of exit node IP addresses and the subsequent sale of such information.
infecto|2 months ago
itintheory|2 months ago
fourside|2 months ago
MangoToupe|2 months ago
Why? It's not like there's any real moral (or, likely, legal) reason to care beyond avoiding the service's ban hammer.
qingcharles|2 months ago
immibis|2 months ago
Unless you're the one-in-a-million unlucky user who gets prosecuted under the CFAA's very generic "unauthorized access to a protected computer" clause, like Aaron Swartz. It seems the general consensus is this doesn't apply to breaking a website ToS, and Aaron was only in so much trouble because he broke into a network closet, as well as for copyright violation. But consult a lawyer if unsure. (That's another difference: A business will ask a lawyer if it wants to do something shady, while an individual will simply avoid doing it)