One of their key rules (paraphrased from scene lore):

When R2R says they are against "business warez," they are drawing a line in the sand:

R2R has specifically targeted corporate license servers (e.g., FlexLM, Sentinel RMS) in their releases. However, they often include specific warnings: “Do not use this in a production environment.”

: The group frequently includes notes in their releases (NFO files) criticizing the quality of paid piracy sites and the heavy, intrusive DRM (Digital Rights Management) used by legitimate companies, which they argue often slows down software compared to their cracked versions. Why R2R Implements This

Third, and most critically, R2R takes direct action against business warez by refusing to work with them and exposing their scams. Scene rules explicitly forbid "leaking" to commercial sites before the official public release window. More importantly, R2R has been known to deliberately crack software in ways that break when bundled with adware, or to release fake "crack only" files that contain nothing but a warning .NFO file exposing a commercial site’s malware. In several documented cases, R2R releases have included scripts that delete or block known commercial warez domain hosts. This is a direct act of war against business pirates. By contrast, R2R refuses to integrate with cryptocurrency miners, browser toolbars, or rootkits—all common tools of the business warez trade.