Wednesday, October 14, 2020

TorrentFreak's Latest News

 

Italian Court Orders Cloudflare to Block a Pirate IPTV Service
Ernesto Van der Sar, 14 Oct 09:30 PM

In recent years, many copyright holders have complained that Cloudflare does little to nothing to stop pirate sites from using its services.

The US-based company receives numerous DMCA notices but aside from forwarding these to the affected customers, it takes no action.

Cloudflare sees itself as a neutral intermediary that simply passes on bits. This approach is not welcomed by everyone and, as a result, the company has been placed on the EU piracy watchlist alongside familiar pirate sites such as The Pirate Bay, Seasonvar and Rapidgator.

Despite this callout, Cloudflare maintains its position. The company doesn't want to intervene based on allegations from copyright holders and requests a court order to take action. These orders are very rare, but a few days ago the Court of Milan, Italy, set a precedent.

Sky and Serie A Sued Cloudflare

The case in question was filed by the TV platform Sky Italy and Lega Serie A, Italy's top football league. The organizations requested a court order to stop various third-party intermediaries from providing access to "IPTV THE BEST", a popular IPTV service targeted at an Italian audience.

Since the IPTV service is a Cloudflare customer the US-based CDN provider was also sued. The copyright holders demanded Cloudflare and several other companies including hosting provider OVH, and ISPs such as Vodafone, TIM, Fastweb, Wind and Tiscali, to stop working with the pirate service.

Last September, the Court of Milan sided with Sky and Serie A. It issued a preliminary injunction ordering the companies to stop working with the IPTV provider, regardless of the domain name or IP-address it uses.

Cloudflare objected to the claim. In its defense, the company pointed out that it isn't hosting any infringing content. As a CDN, it simply caches content and relays traffic, nothing more. In addition, the Italian court would lack jurisdiction as well, the company argued.

Cloudflare's Defense Falls Flat

Despite the fierce defense from Cloudflare, which extended the case by more than a year, the court didn't change its position. In a recent order, it explained that it's irrelevant whether a company hosts files or merely caches the content. In both cases, it helps to facilitate copyright-infringing activity.

This is an important decision because services like Cloudflare are hard to classify under EU law, which makes a general distinction between hosting providers and mere conduit services. The Italian court clarified that such classification is irrelevant in this matter.

"The ruling is unique in its kind because it expressly addresses the issue of the provision of information society services that are difficult to classify in the types outlined by the European eCommerce Directive," attorney Alessandro La Rosa informs TorrentFreak.

Together with Mr. Bruno Ghirardi, his colleague at the law firm Studio Previti, La Rosa represented the football league in this matter. They worked in tandem with attorney Simona Lavagnini, who represented Sky Italy.

'Unique and Important Ruling'

Lavagnini tells us that the ruling is important because it's the first blocking order to be issued against a CDN provider in Italy.

"The order is important because, at least to my knowledge, it is the first issued against a CDN, in which the CDN was ordered to cease the activities carried out in relation to illegal services, also including those activities which cannot qualify as hosting activities," she says.

"The recent order clearly says that the services of the CDN shall be inhibited because they help to allow third parties to carry out the illegal action which is the subject matter of the urgent proceeding, even if there is no data storage by the CDN," Lavagnini adds.

TorrentFreak also reached out to Cloudflare for a comment but at the time of writing the company has yet to respond.

Cloudflare Blocking Becomes More Common

While the attorneys we spoke with highlight the uniqueness of the ruling, Cloudflare previously noted in its transparency report that it has already blocked 22 domain names in Italy following a court order. It's not known what case the company was referring to there, but it affects 15 separate accounts.

The blocking actions will only affect Italians but in theory, they could expand. There are grounds to apply them across Europe or even worldwide, Lavagnini tells us, but that will likely require further clarification from the court.

This isn't the first time that Cloudflare has been ordered to block a copyright-infringing site in Europe. Earlier this year a German court ordered the company to block access to DDL-Music, or face fines and a potential prison sentence.

In Italy, the CDN provider was also required to terminate the accounts of several pirate sites last year. However, in that case, Cloudflare was seen as a hosting provider due to its "Always Online" feature. Also, that court order didn't mention geo-blocking or blocking in general.

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

Massive Pirate Anime Site Uses Visitors' Connections to DDoS Competitor
Andy Maxwell, 14 Oct 08:25 AM

FacepalmOver the years there have been many feuds, fights and conflicts between rival pirate sites.

These can involve site operators and even users, who feel that a rival has overstepped the mark and needs to be put in its place.

Like most conflicts, these usually blow over quite quickly when participants realize that no one benefits in the long run. The big problems come when those who go on the attack have big power at their disposal.

9anime.to is a Major Player in Anime Piracy

From a relative niche topic of interest several years ago, anime is now massive business. Indeed, some of the largest pirate sites on the Internet are devoted to the content, including NYAA.si, for example, which at last count was the world's fifth most-popular torrent site.

In traffic terms, 9anime.to is no slouch either. According to SimilarWeb stats, the streaming site is currently enjoying just over 39 million visits per month, making it a major player in this ever-growing niche. However, 9anime.to had a problem, one that caused tensions to boil over this week.

Competitor AniMixPlay.to Kept 'Stealing' 9anime's content

From what appears to be a standing start this summer, AniMixPlay.to has enjoyed a steep growth in traffic and now enjoys around 1.4 million visits per month. While very respectable indeed, these visitor numbers are dwarfed by those at 9anime.to.

However, it appears that AniMixPlay was to a degree leaning on the content available at 9anime and when we say 'leaning', what we mean is deploying scrapers to obtain the site's content. Here's the verbatim explanation from 9anime's operator (English not corrected).

"From when AniMixPlay start, they use CloudFlare's worker feature to hide their real IP (if a firewall block CloudFlare's IP, their website can't use Cloudflare proxy anymore) and massive sending requests to our site every second of all day and every day, they do massive requests to search and listing anime on our site to crawl all anime for their database," he explained on Reddit.

"They just want a big database in a short time, while we have to do fill it daily and for years. Their action like DDOS and make our server work harder then make our site laggy and slow down."

The Response: Use 9anime's Users to DDoS AniMixPlay

9anime's operator didn't just randomly blurt out the above. The explanation of what triggered the conflict came in response to a post by Reddit user Snaacky, who noticed something weird on the 9anime site.

"I would avoid using 9anime right now," he wrote.

"9anime is serving this JavaScript across all its pages at the moment which will use your Internet connection to endlessly flood AniMixPlay servers. It looks like 9anime is weaponizing its community as DDoS bots."

The code Snaacky found is detailed below, confirming that visitors to 9anime were indeed being used to attack AniMixPlay, apparently to teach its operator that misusing the resources of other sites isn't acceptable…ahem.

9anime DDoS Code

It's hard to say how many users of 9anime unwittingly participated in the DDoS attack against AniMixPlay but it could've been tens of thousands. While that is completely unacceptable, 9anime's operator says his pleas for AniMixPlay to stop scraping the 9anime site were repeatedly ignored, so action was needed.

This Wasn't Bullying, 9anime's Operator Insists

The disparity between the size of the sites prompted the obvious conclusion that 9anime was throwing its weight around but its operator says that his rival had been given every chance to stop.

"How [would you feel] if you are walking in the street, someone come and hit to your face multiple times for 30 minutes. You ask him to stop but he didn't, then you just hit them back 1 hit, everybody in both street sides come to judge you?" he wrote, defending his position.

"We don't touch to anyone first, we're just fair."

After potentially tens of thousands of innocent bystanders were dragged into their dispute, it now appears that the operators of both sides have found it in their hearts to come to an amicable settlement. The DDoS code has reportedly been withdrawn and while they may not be the best of friends, a digital ceasefire has been unofficially signed.

Users, however, aren't best pleased.

"You know I like your anime collection and all but you two should stop doing such childish shit. We already lost kissanime," one user wrote, referring to the demise of KissAnime and KissManga during the summer.

"We don't want to lose another site with huge content due to petty squabbles like this."

Fortunately, these types of disputes are few and far between. The last time anything like this was seen at scale was more than three years ago when Kodi addon Exodus was briefly turned into a DDoS 'botnet'.

That also blew over quickly so hopefully it'll be another three, four or six years before anything like this happens again. But preferably never.

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

 
 
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