But i think a lot of these companies know that it would be legally hairy to get into vigilante DRM justice, so instead they just surreptitiously collect data that will let them plot their next move. maybe that's paranoid, but comeon in this day & age everything is logged. Even if they are serving 404s, it's trivial to log that data anyway (as was pointed out) or maybe it goes straight to server logs and someone in LG analytics says in the future "well, that data is there somewhere... we may as well use it"
it's hard for me to imagine someone at a corporation standing up and going "NO! that's violating our users' privacy". they pretty much consider any info they can get to hit their servers to be their property no questions asked
But i think a lot of these companies know that it would be legally hairy to get into vigilante DRM justice, so instead they just surreptitiously collect data that will let them plot their next move. maybe that's paranoid, but comeon in this day & age everything is logged. Even if they are serving 404s, it's trivial to log that data anyway (as was pointed out) or maybe it goes straight to server logs and someone in LG analytics says in the future "well, that data is there somewhere... we may as well use it"
it's hard for me to imagine someone at a corporation standing up and going "NO! that's violating our users' privacy". they pretty much consider any info they can get to hit their servers to be their property no questions asked