P2P users get tracked 100% if not using blocklists
The trick with using P2P file-sharing is that everybody (including you) knows that it is illegal. Nevertheless, countless people around the globe share hundreds of terabytes of data every day. However, recent lawsuits against P2P users threaten to destabilize the community, as it turns out that file transaction can be tracked by the Powers That Be.
Intellectual property owners use their own tactics to combat P2P users. Namely, subversion. Owners and employees of copyright protection agencies create faux users on P2P networks and "share" their files, only to track those who download them. A recent study showed that a whopping 100% of such downloaders will be tracked by the fake users. This fact is not new, as P2P proponents have been compiling "blocklist" of such fake peers and distributing them over P2P networks to those who want to keep their file transactions private.
It has been aknowledged that those who do not use blocklists will be tracked inevitably, as there are thousands of copyright agency "commandos" behind the curtain who compile and store the personal data of P2P users. It means that the only way of escaping the Big Brother is to use blocklists.

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