So can't an evil fee be avoided by simply shutting your service modem off. Then putting it on getting a completely new ip.
The evil fee also applies to their neighborhood IPs. So even if you change your IP, you can get one which is close range to your previous malicious evil IP and get to pay the fee anyways.
Here is an old post about this with a visualization of the IP ranges.
When someone is banned,
their IP and some of their neighboring IPs receive evil points. The thought occurred to me recently that you could create a map of the Internet according to evil points, and I couldn't resist doing this right away. The result is pretty cool-looking IMO. It also seems to show that the evil score system is working as expected: the vast majority of the Internet is not being forced to pay, and in the isolated sections where a registration fee is required, prohibitively-large fees are very rare.
Here's the image (zoom in):
https://bitcointalk.org/banmap201510.pngEach pixel is a /24 address block (ie. each pixel represents 256 IP addresses). The colors are:
█ Zero or nearly zero evil
█ A small amount of evil
█ More
█ More
█ At this point you actually have to pay if you register an account in this block
█ More
█ More
█ More
█ Pretty high
█ A ton of evil, more than anyone is likely to pay
This is per block, so a single IP address could have an evil score requiring payment while its block still shows up as black here. A colored pixel indicates the evil score of a
typical IP in that block.
Addresses are laid out in the standard way. So you can for example cross-reference with these maps:
https://ant.isi.edu/address/A /24 should almost never uniquely identify someone, but to be safe I randomly added, removed, and modified some of this data for plausible deniability.