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  • MrGrackle
    replied
    Originally posted by 0xFeedBeef View Post
    A few quick thoughts- AWS "knows" when you request each title, if you have the regular account (with ads) it might be triggering no ads watched tripwire, also, they might have a trigger to see if you "got the title" but Amazon's player doesn't register the title as "watched"

    The short of it is: it's naïve to assume that someone at amazon hasn't worked out what the difference between genuine player and what SF does (even just going off the ads, recall it's an avenue stream that SF deprives of the corporation that's posting billions in net profit)
    I have an Android box that has an option to set a crazy prefetch number in the buffering settings. In essence, it it possible to prefetch the entire show before actually watching it. If the prefetch is high enough and the file size of the program small enough, it often times doesn't count as "watched."

    As I recall though, Disney+ was detecting something at one point and temp banning IPs.

    If this truly is happening, what it could mean is a different method to obtain the content. To actually send it through a 'player' but then do what the program normally does with the raw data. So a 45 minute program would take, 45+ minutes to download.

    Even on a set top player, you can fast forward the show to the end and get credit for watching it. There are always other methods.

    And they do have an actual "download" button on a lot of content on their site too --- what would it take to decode that downloaded content?


    Keep in mind other streamers use AWS to host their data as well. So one has got to wonder what triggered such a thing.

    Without seeing the full message, it could be a phishing attempt. I get them all the time on my cell phone. Nowhere in the messages do they state who I am, very generic.

    Leave a comment:


  • october262
    replied
    Originally posted by MrMayor View Post

    Over on the Discord, any discussion on download habits? For example, people that got warned/banned were doing X, while people who didn't get anything did X?
    no mention of download habbits, amazon knows what accounts are being used to download stuff.

    Leave a comment:


  • MrMayor
    replied
    Originally posted by october262 View Post

    it's being talked about over here on discord, their banning accounts of people that rip stuff from Amazon.
    Over on the Discord, any discussion on download habits? For example, people that got warned/banned were doing X, while people who didn't get anything did X?

    Leave a comment:


  • Sebastian001
    replied
    Who says the email is really from Amazon? I get emails every day from banks, insurance companies, and parcel services. They all tell me to do something, otherwise this will happen... It's all a rip-off.

    Once a year, I get an email from RTL+ with statistics on what I've watched most. It never includes anything I've downloaded, so they don't see it at all.

    I don't know if Amazon sees it...​

    Leave a comment:


  • october262
    replied
    Originally posted by MrMayor View Post

    Over on the Discord, any discussion on download habits? For example, people that got warned/banned were doing X, while people who didn't get anything did X?
    doesn't really say what they were doing, althougth one thread mentions being detected during the license request.

    Leave a comment:


  • MrMayor
    replied
    Originally posted by october262 View Post

    it's being talked about over here on discord, their banning accounts of people that rip stuff from Amazon.
    Over on the Discord, any discussion on download habits? For example, people that got warned/banned were doing X, while people who didn't get anything did X?

    Leave a comment:


  • simchris
    replied
    I think some common sense would come into play too, if the VPN use itself is not the trigger. If all you do is rip, and never actually watch shows on your Prime Video account, that would trigger me if it were my service. I try to watch shows on my Prime account quite a bit via my Apple TV and I have the full upgraded Prime subscription, as well as couple of addon channels. Sorry if that was 'captain obvious' comment, but I'm actually in midst of downloading some stuff for my new movie box in living room, some to replace ancient dvd isos of discs I purchased, as my movie box gets confused by mult-disc sets per season, so the ripped versions (e.g., Invader Zim, etc.) is way more practical. Keeping eye on this topic since top of mind. Kinda been going nuts on Amazon downloads as it was a way to get many of my Apple legit purchases as downloads for my new movie box which cannot use the Apple 'app' at all.

    Leave a comment:


  • Stan001
    replied
    Reddit had several people; in fact, one thread was deleted.
    I don't know what is setting this in motion. I haven't seen anyone post about it here in the forum till now.
    In the other deleted thread, it was from Amazon uk. Not sure if there is just an issue with the UK version, or it's something that will spread out over all of Amazon, including Amazon.com.
    I suppose in a way, they may have found something they are trying and focusing on; many I know do 100 max downloads a day. I know there were times when I did 100 per day for several days in a row.
    Some are wondering why just getting the email now; it could be that they just started to implement it. Now I don't have the demand to do 100 per day. I do still see where it can be hard. We talked before about an increase to 200 or more for Amazon because people are buying Paramount and many other providers through Amazon. If you have 3 other providers and count Amazon as well, that's 4, divide 100 by 4 that gives you 25 downloads per provider per day.
    All that can be done is watch the situation, and if you need 100, maybe try to spread it out at 10 to 25, then take a break and repeat.

    In the end, they can possibly lose money if they keep letting people download, but no matter what, it will continue, and to ban or block paying people from watching or using Prime for watching movies or shows really can cause a loss of money as well. Amazon, the last thing they need to worry about is losing money. And the added money to remove ads when Prime never had them since its inception is just that, BS.

    Another interesting point is that many claim most other programs record, although I know 2 that surely go out of their way to make it look as though they are downloading and not recording, but you wonder if they will cause this problem to trigger if they do either download or record.

    I am not even sure Amazon has a way to reply or contact them, but I feel that if I got the letter, I would want more details.

    Because we don't know if these people are purchasing trials and then canceling, or what else they may be doing, even maybe sharing their accounts.

    And people may need to stop VPN use, as that's one of the easiest things for websites to detect.
    Try it and check it out on reliable bank sites, etc. OR check
    Proxy & VPN Detection API | proxycheck.io
    Last edited by Stan001; 07-12-2025, 03:14 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • 0xFeedBeef
    replied
    Originally posted by phelings View Post
    Amazons loss.
    Since they started the ripoff £1.99 to remove ads in addition to the Prime Video sub we are forced to pay even if we only want quick deliveries I cancel my Prime every month. I used to let it roll but now I cancel then renew as and when I need it. Sometimes weeks sometimes days but they lose out. If they stopped us being able to download stuff I would not bother. Although I don't currently have Netflix or Paramount subs if they did block downloading I wouldn't bother with them at all
    I've long been saying all this nonsense from the vendors actually enables the scene and download sites get rich at the expense of amazon

    Leave a comment:


  • 0xFeedBeef
    replied
    Originally posted by bricks View Post
    This is not how it works. You can download an encrypted file without an Amazon account, just follow the link from the MPD. SF gets the decryption key and does not play the file, as recordings programs do. then, using the key, decryption module and muxer, the user receives his file. An Amazon account is required to access the MPD file and receive the key.

    Suspicion often arises when people often buy a TV series or a movie and after some time (for which you can download what you bought using SF) cancel the purchase, as if they bought it by mistake. many people indulge in this
    You are free to believe whatever you like, or you can set up an injector between SF and AWS and find out yourself by pushing random errors that claim to be
    from AWS toward SF

    And in the case of a latter (purchased, downloaded, cancelled), AWS registers "access" but no corresponding "play," the "play" would prevent cancellation, but the cancellation happened, hence you get a discrepancy triggered

    Leave a comment:


  • phelings
    replied
    Amazons loss.
    Since they started the ripoff £1.99 to remove ads in addition to the Prime Video sub we are forced to pay even if we only want quick deliveries I cancel my Prime every month. I used to let it roll but now I cancel then renew as and when I need it. Sometimes weeks sometimes days but they lose out. If they stopped us being able to download stuff I would not bother. Although I don't currently have Netflix or Paramount subs if they did block downloading I wouldn't bother with them at all

    Leave a comment:


  • bricks
    replied
    This is not how it works. You can download an encrypted file without an Amazon account, just follow the link from the MPD. SF gets the decryption key and does not play the file, as recordings programs do. then, using the key, decryption module and muxer, the user receives his file. An Amazon account is required to access the MPD file and receive the key.

    Suspicion often arises when people often buy a TV series or a movie and after some time (for which you can download what you bought using SF) cancel the purchase, as if they bought it by mistake. many people indulge in this

    Leave a comment:


  • 0xFeedBeef
    replied
    A few quick thoughts- AWS "knows" when you request each title, if you have the regular account (with ads) it might be triggering no ads watched tripwire, also, they might have a trigger to see if you "got the title" but Amazon's player doesn't register the title as "watched"

    The short of it is: it's naïve to assume that someone at amazon hasn't worked out what the difference between genuine player and what SF does (even just going off the ads, recall it's an avenue stream that SF deprives of the corporation that's posting billions in net profit)

    Leave a comment:


  • october262
    replied
    Originally posted by Cats4U View Post
    Interesting! What are the circumstances behind the emails? Is the user downloading 100 files per day, possibly for several days at a time? Are they downloading from their own region, or are they VPNing to another region? In other words, what is the "activity detected on your Amazon prime video account" that is abnormal enough that they feel the need to issue a warning or to ban an account? As for the 100 files a day, the very most a people could actually watch in a single day would 48 half-hour shows. Hour long shows and movies are even less. It's very easy for them to know that you aren't just binge-watching. Greed ruins it for everybody.
    On the other hand, if Amazon (or anyone else) wants to ban me, that's fine with me. They'd be out subscription money for Amazon Prime and three other providers that I get over Amazon now. I wind up with more dollars in my pocket, and I'll still be able to get all the files I want via Torrenting. It's their loss, not mine. I guarantee that the time will come in a short amount of time that Amazon will offer downloads for a few extra dollars as part of their subscriptions. They don't really care that you are downloading, they just want to be the one making the money off it and not a third party like DVDFab.
    see here - https://www.reddit.com/r/Streamfab/c...are&utm_term=1

    Leave a comment:


  • Cats4U
    replied
    Interesting! What are the circumstances behind the emails? Is the user downloading 100 files per day, possibly for several days at a time? Are they downloading from their own region, or are they VPNing to another region? In other words, what is the "activity detected on your Amazon prime video account" that is abnormal enough that they feel the need to issue a warning or to ban an account? As for the 100 files a day, the very most a people could actually watch in a single day would 48 half-hour shows. Hour long shows and movies are even less. It's very easy for them to know that you aren't just binge-watching. Greed ruins it for everybody.
    On the other hand, if Amazon (or anyone else) wants to ban me, that's fine with me. They'd be out subscription money for Amazon Prime and three other providers that I get over Amazon now. I wind up with more dollars in my pocket, and I'll still be able to get all the files I want via Torrenting. It's their loss, not mine. I guarantee that the time will come in a short amount of time that Amazon will offer downloads for a few extra dollars as part of their subscriptions. They don't really care that you are downloading, they just want to be the one making the money off it and not a third party like DVDFab.

    Leave a comment:

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