I get notifications all the time from companies in the US asking my ISP for my identifying information
But it's illegal for ISPs (in Canada) to give out customer information without being taken to court
So they essentially just pass on the email from the originating company, which is usually warner brothers
No company is dumb enough to take on Bell or Rogers, the duopoly of telecommunications in Canada
and the ISPs know that if they fail a court case on that, it'll make national coverage and they will lose so much money from people switching..so they would win
And in essence, everybody continues to pirate to their heart's content
@ballBreaker I don't know much about this, but receiving a letter from an entertainment corporate is incredibly scary :D
just look at the megaupload guy, even though he was super rich, even though he had tons of lawyers, that didn't save him from all the copyrights infringements they had on him
HMD has 0 idea about providing services to such faults, I even e-mail them under the alliance of a big reviewer telling we are urged to inform the dutch customer about the production fault and how they will fix this, just to put pressure on them
They didn't care, just got two lazy responses telling me they will "deal with it"
and then it became very quiet
I never got scammed before actually
Never expected my first scam to be from a giant company like HMD Nokia