Sunday, June 28, 2020

TorrentFreak's Latest News

 

Torrentz2.eu Domain Suspended by Registry on Public Prosecutor's Order
Ernesto Van der Sar, 28 Jun 04:36 PM

torrentz2 logoWith millions of visitors per day, Torrentz2 is the most-used torrent meta-search engine on the Internet.

Torrentz2 took over from the original Torrentz site, which closed its doors during the summer of 2016, and continued business as usual.

The site's popularity hasn't gone unnoticed by copyright holders who successfully requested the site to be blocked in countries around the world. The Torrentz2.eu domain remained operational in other parts of the world but this weekend that changed as well.

Starting a few hours ago, Torrentz2 became unreachable. Instead of seeing the site's familiar homepage, browsers return an error message informing people that the site can't be reached.

torrentz2.eu not reachable

While downtime can happen for a variety of reasons, a quick glance at the domain's status shows that something serious is going on. The EURid registry has placed the domain on 'serverhold,' which means that it's suspended and under investigation.

"This domain name is registered to the domain name holder as shown in WHOIS, but is temporarily inactive (i.e. website and email do not function) and under investigation," the registry reports.

Eurid Torrentz2.eu status

The EURid registry doesn't provide any more details but the actions are likely part of an enforcement effort related to copyright infringement allegations.

Indeed, the Torrentz2 operator informs us that the action is the result of an order from a public prosecutor.

"Torrentz2.eu has been suspended upon Public Prosecutor's Order," the site's operator says, adding that its backup domain, Torrentz2.is, is still functioning.

The site operator didn't mention the jurisdiction or country the order came from. We asked for clarification and further details and will add those if we hear back (see update below).

In the past, the EURid registry also took action against torrent sites, including the original Torrentz.eu, putting these domains 'on hold.' This was done after a complaint was filed with the Brussels prosecutor. These domains remained operational, however, and the 'on hold' status was eventually removed.

In this case, Torrentz2.eu has been harder hit. Users can no longer access the site from its original domain name. The site's official backup domain Torrentz2.is, which is managed by Iceland's ISNIC registry, remains available.

Update: The email Torrentz2 received from EURid only referenced a "Public Prosecutor's Order" without any specifics, including the jurisdiction or country. We will try to find out more.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Amazon Profits From Pirate IPTV So Can't Sue Pirate IPTV Provider, Court Hears
Andy Maxwell, 28 Jun 11:13 AM

IPTVEarly April, companies owned by Columbia, Amazon, Disney, Paramount, Warner, and Universal filed a lawsuit in a California district court targeting 'pirate' IPTV provider Nitro TV and alleged operator Alejandro Galindo.

The complaint alleged that Nitro TV offered subscription packages consisting of thousands of "live and title-curated television channels" throughout the United States and abroad, available via the web, mobile devices, and smart TVs.

Complaint and Preliminary Injunction

"Defendants' unlawful conduct in operating Nitro TV directly and willfully subverts that ecosystem through pursuit of illicit profits from massive and blatant infringement of Plaintiffs' Copyrighted Works," the lawsuit added.

Central to the case are Nitro TV's '24/7′ channels, offering TV shows such as Friends and Peaky Blinders plus movies including Spider-Man and Captain America. The companies alleged direct copyright infringement, demanding $150,000 per infringed work or, in the alternative, contributory copyright infringement in the same amount.

The plaintiffs further demanded preliminary and permanent injunctions, the former of which was granted by the Court in May.

Answer to Complaint

It took a while but Alejandro Galindo has now filed his answer to the complaint. It features broad denials to the vast majority of the plaintiffs' allegations but then goes on to list 12 affirmative defenses, beginning with the assertion that the complaint fails to state a claim for which relief can be granted against the defendant.

However, things start to get interesting when moving to other defenses, with Galindo claiming that the plaintiffs failed to mitigate damages and have 'unclean hands'. The basis for the claims appear to be that Amazon allegedly allows sellers of 'pirate' IPTV packages to distribute their products via the Amazon sales platform.

"Amazon Profits From Pirate IPTV Sales"

"Plaintiff has failed to mitigate their damages and is engaged in selective enforcement as there are 100's if not thousands of IPTV sellers on the Amazon website. Meaning, Amazon profits from the alleged wrongdoing and have known about this for a long time," the answer reads.

"Defendant's actions were innocent in nature and not willful or with an intent to injure. Plaintiff Amazon creates a situation where it sanctions IPTV services leading the average ordinary person to believe there is nothing wrong in acting as a seller or reseller of their services," it adds, noting that there had never been any "culpable intent" by Galindo.

Claiming that each cause of action is barred in whole or in part under the doctrine of Estoppel and Waiver, Galindo's answer states that Amazon's alleged profiting from the sale of 'pirate' IPTV subscriptions implies authorization of such products.

"Plaintiff are profiting from the conduct they allege is illegal and allow others to continue to sell IPTV services on their website thus encourage, aiding, abetting, ratifying and consenting to the alleged wrongful conduct," it states.

DMCA Safe Harbor and Discovery

Finally, the answer notes that Nitro is protected under the safe harbor provisions of the DMCA but at this stage provides no reasons as to why that should be the case. Galindo demands a trial by jury so in the meantime, the parties will engage in a discovery process that will entail picking Nitro apart with a fine toothcomb.

The answer to complaint and subsequent filings can be found here (1,2,3, pdf)

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

 
 
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