Monday, August 31, 2020

TorrentFreak's Latest News

 

The Pirate Bay: Expert Appears to Reconsider Existence of VPN Provider Logs
Andy Maxwell, 31 Aug 08:14 PM

pirate bayBack in June, movie companies Svensk Filmindustri and Nordisk Film, supported by anti-piracy partner Rights Alliance, began legal action to try and pick up a trail on The Pirate Bay.

In an effort to get closer to the location of the site and then presumably its operators, Rights Alliance filed requests with Cloudflare and subsequently filed a lawsuit in Sweden against VPN provider OVPN.

According to Rights Alliance, The Pirate Bay had used OVPN to shield its location and the company should therefore have useful information to share.

The case has taken multiple twists and turns since but on the whole, a successful outcome in the case appears to have been leaning in favor of OVPN, which insists that as a no-logs provider, it has nothing useful to hand over.

Testimony From Expert VPN Company Penetration Tester

Earlier this month, however, Rights Alliance handed testimony to the court from an expert with substantial experience with VPN services. Jesper Larsson works at security company Ox4a but is involved with Cure 53 where he says he "regularly" performs penetration tests against the ten largest VPN providers in the world.

We covered his opinion in detail in our earlier report but it essentially concluded that it should be "considered extremely likely" that the user or identity associated with the specific type of VPN configuration allegedly used by The Pirate Bay would have been stored in a database at some point.

"OVPN should thus be able to search its VPN servers for the given IP address, or alternatively search in their user databases or in backups of these to locate a given user or identity," the opinion read.

While in ordinary circumstances that would be a reasonable conclusion to reach, in our report following the filing of the expert's opinion, we published statements from OVPN indicating special circumstances, ones that suggested that it is unable to search its userbase or recover data from backups from the period in question. This is something that Larsson probably wasn't aware of at the time.

Has the Expert Hired By Rights Alliance Reconsidered?

OVPN founder David Wibergh is part of a pretty large Telegram group which has around 339 members. According to screenshots made available by him, Jesper Larsson is also a member of that same group.

On August 22, 2020, a user of the group posted a link to our article of August 21 which reported that Rights Alliance had hired Larsson to assess the security and potential logging abilities of OVPN. As previously noted, the article also presented comments from OVPN on the limited usefulness of databases and backups in this matter, which were only made public after Larsson's opinion was filed.

As the image posted by OVPN and reproduced below reveals, a discussion ensued – including a response from Larsson himself.

OVPN Larsson

All comments are in Swedish but Wibergh has provided commentary and translations.

"[T]hree days after his remark in the Patent and Market Court – [Larsson] seems to have changed his position in a group conversation on Telegram. In the conversation, Jesper comments on our business. Jesper first states that he 'believes that ovpn has clearly done a good job with its integrity and privacy'," Wibergh writes.

In a follow-up comment, Larsson says: "I guess the account with the static IP-address is not linked to any ounce of PII data that can be traced to any person or organization"

Wibergh notes that 'PII data' stands for Personally Identifiable Information about an individual.

"The security specialist's statement in the group conversation thus seems to be in direct conflict with his conclusions in the statement to the court," Wibergh says.

"It will be exciting to see what the Rights Alliance now comes up with as their own expert agrees that OVPN does a good job regarding integrity and privacy, and that he does not believe that there is any identifiable information to retrieve."

For clarity, it's worth noting the sequence of events. While Larsson appears to have changed his opinion on the existence of useful information at OVPN, that came after Wibergh's commentary on the company's backup procedures. These were a response to statements made in the earlier technical opinion, suggesting that backups (if they exist) would be useful.

Other Events Over the Course of the Case

Rights Alliance's case against OVPN has been running all summer but it hasn't been straightforward. First of all, it is based on a simple and direct conflict – Rights Alliance insists that OVPN has information to hand over on The Pirate Bay and OVPN insists that it does not.

The battle, therefore, has centered on both parties trying to convince the court that the other is wrong, with both sides producing statements and testimony, such as that provided by the third-party security expert, to back up or add weight to various claims.

However, OVPN is questioning the claim that Rights Alliance "is run by independent consultants" since the movie companies' case is being run by Rights Alliance chief Sara Lindbäck who has presented comments by her colleague Anders Nilsson (concerning how OVPN's systems work) as 'evidence' when OVPN's lawyer believes it shouldn't be considered as such.

"With regard to the memorandum referred to as 'evidence', it is noted that – as previously submitted memorandums – it was written by an employee at the Rights Alliance, ie. the applicants' representatives," OVPNs lawyer wrote.

"In OVPN's view, this is to be seen as a supplementary submission to the Applicants rather than evidence," he continued, adding that in any event, the submission is "speculative and vague" since the person writing the memorandum doesn't appear to know how the company's system works at all.

OVPN suggests that this type of educated guesswork, carried out by outsiders who have no real knowledge of how the company operates, has become a feature of the case on more than one occasion. However, the bottom line is that it does not have the information requested so cannot hand it over, no matter how the requests are framed.

OVPN believes that a final decision from the Patent and Market Court (PMC) should arrive in September.

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

Pirated Copies of Tenet Leak Online, For Real
Ernesto Van der Sar, 31 Aug 12:47 PM

tenetIn recent months many films have skipped the box office or faced delays due to the coronavirus pandemic.

This was also the case for Christopher Nolan's highly anticipated sci-fi thriller 'Tenet,' which was initially scheduled to premiere in July.

After several delays, Warner Bros. eventually chose a staggered release schedule, which started last week. The film came out in Australia, Canada, Germany, the UK, and South Korea, among others, with the US, Russia and China following in a few days.

In the lead up to the official premiere, there was a lot of piracy chatter. The highly anticipated movie and the staggered release could create a perfect piracy storm, one anti-piracy expert predicted.

Warner Bros. was also on high alert. The company took down several copies of leaked Tenet footage that appeared in theaters during the re-release of Inception. In addition, it also took down many 'fake' pirate releases of Tenet that surfaced on torrent sites and elsewhere.

Pirated Copies of Tenet Appear Online

These fake releases were not really much of a threat to the movie studio. However, several pirated copies of the real Tenet film started to surface yesterday, and those are a much bigger concern.

At the moment there are various 'camcorded' (CAM) leaks of Tenet in circulation. These are copies of the film that were recorded in a movie theater, which tend to be very low in quality. That's no different here.

tenet slotslights

As we've seen more often in recent years, some of the leaked copies are "sponsored" by a gaming brand. In this case, the URL of the casino referral site Slotslights.com appears throughout the film, inviting viewers to take a gamble.

On closer inspection, it appears that there are at least two different sources floating around. One release is tagged as a Korean CAM, and indeed, in some parts of the movie badly cropped Korean subtitles are visible.

tenet korean

Other copies, which don't have any location tags, reveal parts of German subtitles, as shown below. This is also the release with the visible sponsored messages, that appear throughout the film.

tenet german

It's clear that Warner Bros. won't be happy with these leaks and the company will likely send out hundreds of takedown requests in the days to come. That said, thus far, the download numbers are relatively modest. It's certainly not the most downloaded movie at the moment.

This can be easily explained by the fact that one important factor for a 'perfect piracy storm' is missing; there is no high-quality leak available.

Not Everyone Likes Low Quality Releases

While so-called CAM releases draw plenty of attention from a subset of curious viewers, many film fans stay far away from them. They don't fancy watching a good film in bad quality, especially not one that has advertisements and partial foreign subtitles.

When we were browsing through various comment threads, several people rated the quality of these leaks as decent. However, that means decent for a film that's recorded in a movie theater. Others prefer to wait.

"Some movies deserve to be viewed in the best possible quality, some deserve the patience needed to be viewed. This is one such movie, I'll be waiting," one commenter notes.

Generally speaking, a movie's big piracy boom comes when the first high-quality copy appears online. This was also the case with 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' and we have no reason to believe that it will be different here.

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

Top 10 Most Torrented Movies of The Week – 08/31/20
Ernesto Van der Sar, 31 Aug 09:14 AM

ava movieThe data for our weekly download chart is estimated by TorrentFreak, and is for informational and educational reference only.

These torrent download statistics are meant to provide further insight into the piracy trends. All data are gathered from public resources.

This week we have three new entries in the list. The action thriller movie "Ava" is the most downloaded title this week. The film was released at the box office in a number of countries and will premiere in the US through Amazon Prime on September 25.

The most torrented movies for the week ending on August 31 are:

Movie Rank Rank last week Movie name IMDb Rating / Trailer
Most downloaded movies via torrent sites
1 (3) Ava 5.4 / trailer
2 (…) Bill & Ted Face the Music 6.5 / trailer
3 (1) Project Power 6.1 / trailer
4 (…) Peninsula 5.6 / trailer
5 (…) Hard Kill 3.0 / trailer
6 (2) Rogue ?.? / trailer
7 (…) The War With Grandpa 5.0 / trailer
8 (5) Greyhound 7.1 / trailer
9 (…) One Night in Bangkok 4.8 / trailer
10 (4) Tax Collector 4.7 / trailer

Note: We also publish an updating archive of all the list of weekly most torrented movies lists.

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

 
 
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Sunday, August 30, 2020

TorrentFreak's Latest News

 

Anti-Piracy Groups Keep Sending Takedown Notices for Dead Sites After Many Years
Ernesto Van der Sar, 30 Aug 10:40 PM

Many 'pirate' sites – we use that term very loosely here – have come and gone over the years.

Older readers may recall that Suprnova was once the leading torrent site, a brief reign that came to an end in 2004. The same can be said for other torrent juggernauts, such as Mininova, isoHunt and KickassTorrents.

In the file-hosting arena, the same process unfolded. Rapidshare was once the site to beat, a spot that was later taken over by Megaupload. Today, both sites and many others no longer exist.

While these names may occasionally cross the minds of melancholic file-sharers, the masses have moved on. However, when we browsed through Lumen's database of Google takedown notices this week, some old giants were brought back to life.

Apparently, several anti-piracy organizations still believe the dead sites to be a threat. Below is an overview of some random findings. We will start with Openload, which disappeared just a few months ago, and work our way back from there.

Openload

Openload should still be a familiar name to most. The file-hosting service was shut down by the anti-piracy group ACE last October. The site handed over its domain names to the group and reportedly paid "significant damages".

Today, all former Openload URLs point to a page on the ACE website where people can find out how to watch content legally. However, that doesn't stop the DMCA notices from coming in.

In recent months, tens of thousands of Openload.co URLs were reported to Google by reporting companies. These are sent on behalf of a variety of copyright holders, including ACE members Amazon and Disney.

We totally understand that it may take reporting companies some time to adapt to the new reality, but you'd expect that it would have sunk in by now. However, things can get worse, much worse.

KickassTorrents

Let's take a leap back to 2016 when KickassTorrents was shut down by the US Government. This came as a surprise to millions of users. However, it appears that some anti-piracy groups still can't believe that it's gone.

Today, more than four years later, several reporters continue to flag KAT.ph links. The majority of the recent notices are sent by MUSO, who have flagged hundreds of KAT.ph links this year alone.

kat late takedown

When we checked the Kat.ph domain it was throwing up all sorts of security warnings, but there were no torrents in sight.

Rapidshare

We can go even further back though. Half a decade ago, Rapidshare closed its doors. At that time the site's traffic had already plunged as the result of various voluntary anti-piracy measures.

After five years one would think that anti-piracy outfits have all moved on, but that's certainly not the case. Reporting companies including Marketly, Digimarc, Link-Busters, and WebSheriff, continue to report Rapidshare links.

isoHunt and Hotfile

2013 was a big year for the Motion Picture Association (MPA) as it booked legal victories against torrent site isoHunt and the filehoster Hotfile. In the years that followed both domains remained online, linking to the MPA website.

We are pretty sure that the MPA wouldn't host any infringing content. However, the takedown notices for both domains continue to trickle in 2020. Some are even sent on behalf of MPA member Disney.

disney hotfile

Megaupload

The further we go back in time, the number of takedown notices is generally lower. But Megaupload.com was still being flagged last December, after nearly eight years of downtime. This suggests that some reporting organizations may want to dust off their databases.

2012 is also where our quest stops, but not without leaving you with a head-scratcher. If we look at Megaupload, we see that Google received requests to take down 14,505 URLs.

That number is not very impressive, but the fact that more than half of these URLs were reported AFTER the site was taken down certainly is.

All in all, it's safe to say that reporting agencies are sending tens of thousands of pointless notices, if not more. We don't know if they all charge based on volume, but regardless, it's a waste of resources.

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

DISH Network Sues Universe IPTV For Mass Copyright Infringement
Andy Maxwell, 30 Aug 12:41 PM

DISH logoUS broadcaster DISH Networks is well known for its seemingly relentless pursuit of groups and individuals who access and rebroadcast the company's content without permission.

In recent years, DISH has targeted a number of 'pirate' IPTV providers, sometimes under the Federal Communications Act and in other instances under copyright law. A new lawsuit filed in the United States falls into the latter category and claims that unlicensed IPTV service Universe IPTV infringes its exclusive rights.

Copyright Infringement Lawsuit Targets Universal IPTV

The suit targets five 'doe' defendants, together doing business as Universe IPTV and Universe TV. The complaint alleges that the service's business was carried out via several domains, including but not limited to World-Universeiptv.com, Uni-Update.com, and UniWeb.online.

DISH explains that it has contracts and licensing deals to transmit more than 400 channels in the United States and also acquires copyrights for shows that air on various channels, whether transmitted via satellite or the Internet. Some of these works are registered with the Copyright Office in the US while DISH holds the exclusive distribution and public performance rights for others that are unregistered.

Universal IPTV has not been authorized by DISH to distribute these protected works and channels, the suit claims, so has therefore breached the company's exclusive rights.

"Defendants distribute, sell, and promote Universe Subscriptions to consumers, including Service Users, and to resellers, including Universeonlinetv.co; Universeiptv.stream; Universeiptvs.com; Iptvuniverse.net; and Universe2iptv.com, with knowledge that these and other resellers distribute, sell, and promote Universe Subscriptions to Service Users," the complaint reads.

"Defendants promoted the Universe Service on their World-Universeiptv.com website, instructing consumers that '[t]here are more than 40,000 channels, films and series in every country in the world,' 'we are constantly expanding the number of channels,' they have '[a]ll channels,' and 'we continuously update our service'," DISH adds.

Universe Advertised on Facebook and Instagram

The complaint alleges that Universe advertised to consumers and potential resellers of its service on social media, including Instagram and two Facebook accounts, where it promoted the availability of channels including CBC and CBC Drama, among others.

DISH says that the social media platforms removed these pages for violations of Facebook's policy on copyright infringement. A Twitter account was also deleted but a Telegram page offering the service remains online.

DISH Asked About Becoming a Reseller Via WhatsApp

Via its websites and social media, subscriptions were offered at the rate of $70 for 12 months, $40 for six months and $22 for three months worth of access. The IPTV supplier also invited people to get in touch via WhatsApp to become a reseller, so that's exactly what DISH did as part of its investigation.

"In July 2020, DISH's investigator contacted Defendants through WhatsApp at +43 [redacted] to inquire about becoming a reseller of Universe Subscriptions.

"Defendants responded that the price for one three month Universe Subscription was 20 Euro (approximately $22) and the price for ten three month Universe Subscriptions was 200 Euro (approximately $220) with payments to be made to their PayPal account [redacted]@gmail.com," the complaint reveals.

Attempts to Take Down Universal IPTV Failed

Universe IPTV reportedly told DISH investigators that they live in Austria but it appears that the broadcaster's attempts to take their service down weren't successful.

Between August 27, 2019 and the filing of its lawsuit, DISH sent at least 10 cease-and-desist notices to the IPTV outfit, none of which received a response. During roughly the same timeframe, DISH also filed at least 14 complaints with CDN networks associated with the Universe service, some of which were forwarded to the defendants. However, DISH claims that even CDNs took action to remove content, Universe simply shifted to other CDNs or locations.

Copyright Infringement Claims Running to At Least $5 Million

In addition to demanding a permanent injunction against the defendants under 17 U.S.C. § 502 of the Copyright Act, preventing Universe IPTV from streaming, distributing, publicly performing, and selling or providing its content in the United States, DISH also demands substantial damages.

"For 37 or more registered works, statutory damages as awarded by the Court up to $150,000 per registered work infringed under 17 U.S.C. § 504(c), or the Defendants' profits attributable to the infringement of those registered works under 17 U.S.C. § 504(b)," the complaint requests.

For any and all unregistered works (DISH lists more than 200), the company demands defendants' profits attributable to the infringement of those works. When all is considered, the broadcaster is requesting well in excess of $5 million in damages and potentially, depending on the discretion of the court, substantially more.

In common with other pending lawsuits of its type, DISH also seeks to take control of Universe IPTV's domains.

A copy of the complaint can be found here (pdf)

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

 
 
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