Friday, September 18, 2020

TorrentFreak's Latest News

 

University Voluntarily Agrees to Block Pirate Sites Under Code of Conduct
Andy Maxwell, 18 Sep 06:15 PM

Page BlockedToday's site-blocking measures to counter online copyright infringement may seem relatively new but Denmark has been engaged in the practice for almost 15 years.

Pirate Site Blocking in Denmark

After initial target AllofMP3 was first ordered to be blocked by local ISP Tele2 back in 2006 following action by the IFPI, anti-piracy group Rights Alliance picked up the baton. As a result, almost 500 sites are now blocked by ISPs in the country but not all are legally required to do so.

This is the result of a Code of Conduct agreed with local Internet providers, which voluntarily block pirate sites once a court has ruled them to be illegal. This agreement was renewed in the summer and now helps to quickly block torrent, streaming and similar platforms that switch domains or deploy proxies to circumvent blocking orders.

Interestingly, it now transpires that Rights Alliance has managed to expand this voluntary scheme beyond consumer ISPs to encompass the country's largest university.

University Will Block Pirate Site Access

Based in the second-largest city in Denmark, Aarhus University currently plays host to 38,000 students, 1,800 PhD students, and 8,000 employees. After being established in 1928, it's now the country's largest university and probably has its fair share of students choosing to scoop up movies, TV shows and music from pirate sites.

That, however, will be more difficult moving forward.

On August 20, 2020, Rights Alliance and Aarhus University entered into a Code of Conduct Agreement that requires the education facility to prevent users of its network from accessing pirate sites. Whether a site is given this label will be down to the courts, which will have to rule that a site is seriously infringing before it gets blocked under the agreement.

According to Rights Alliance, which reported the news Monday, the agreement will put the university on an equal footing with the country's Internet service providers when it comes to voluntary action against pirate sites.

Progress Welcomed by Rights Alliance, Expansion Sought

"The illegal services are run by criminals and undermine the livelihoods of creative producers. It is therefore crucial that the blocking of the services is as effective as possible, and that public institutions and the like that offer Internet access participate in the blocking effort," a statement from the anti-piracy group reads.

"The fact that an institution as large and significant as Aarhus University engages and participates in the efforts against illegal services helps to ensure the effectiveness of the Rights Alliance's blocking efforts against the illegal market, thereby strengthening the strength of Danish cooperation between rights holders, Internet providers and authorities."

As the founder of pirate site blocking as we know it today, Denmark is keen to expand its efforts in this arena. Rights Alliance is now looking for other "significant network providers and institutions" to join its voluntary scheme in order to put further pressure on the pirate market.

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

Piratebay.org Now Being Used to Crowdsource "The Torrent Man" Film
Ernesto Van der Sar, 18 Sep 11:49 AM

torrent man laptopThe real Pirate Bay website operates from ThePiratebay.org, but the site always had many backup domains in place, just in case.

This included Piratebay.org (without the) as well as ThePiratebay.com. The former was sold for $50,000 at auction earlier this week after the previous owner seemingly forgot to extend the registration. The .com domain also lapsed and will be auctioned off this weekend.

The high price tag is quite unusual for a Pirate Bay domain. Many domain brokers buy these types of domains to monetize them through advertising feeds, but at this price, it isn't really a good deal.

This made us wonder what the buyer was up to. Could he or she be planning to start a Pirate Bay copy, hoping to take over part of the torrent site's traffic? Could it become a malware invested 'pirate trap', or even a honeypot?

PirateBay Pictures Announces 'The Torrent Man'

A few hours ago the plan became more became clear but it's not what anyone expected. People who visit Piratebay.org today will see a message from "PirateBay Pictures," in collaboration with "I'm Feeling Lucky Studios," announcing their film project; The Torrent Man.

"Yes, it's official, the PirateBay Pictures is starting to film The Torrent Man, an indie feature movie about the darknet, torrenting world, crypto, and the real people behind them," they announce.

torrent man

While that sounds intriguing, it appears that thus far, the aspiring filmmakers don't have much else. After spending $50,000 on the Piratebay.org domain they now hope to sell the domain for nearly $2 million to raise funds for their project.

Crowdsourcing Everything

In addition, they also need a film script, and pretty much the entire film crew, which they hope to crowdsource.

"We need actors, crew members, and authors (!) as we are crowdsourcing the movie script. Any unusual twists you can think of, any characters you want to see, crazy storylines?"

This is all highly unusual, to say the least. Based on the information that's presented in public it seems that the people behind the site basically have nothing, except for a title. While that could be an 'artsy peer-to-peer' way of creating content, caution is warranted.

Skeptical Notes

The domain experts we've spoken with say that asking $2 million for the domain isn't realistic at all. That makes sense, as the brokers who were previously interested already bid in this week's auction and bailed out when the price went too high.

That said, 'The Torrent Man' idea will get plenty of attention for the Piratebay.org domain, which makes it more valuable with an increased number of backlinks. We're not saying that this is the true goal but without more information, we're a bit skeptical.

Perhaps we're being too cautious, but without more information, the entire plan seems quite confusing. For example, the site mentions that the "original shoot got pushed back due to Covid," which is odd as there was no script or crew yet.

We have reached out to "PirateBay Pictures" for more details and are looking forward to hearing more. We will update this article when their answers come in.

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

 
 
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