Thursday, October 15, 2020

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Dutch ISPs Must Block Pirate Bay Proxies and Mirrors Again, Court Rules
Ernesto Van der Sar, 15 Oct 08:15 PM

pirate bayFollowing court orders and site blocking regimes worldwide, The Pirate Bay is blocked in dozens of countries.

This is also the case in the Netherlands where the legal process took more than a decade to conclude.

In 2010, Dutch anti-piracy group BREIN first went to court demanding that local ISP Ziggo should block The Pirate Bay. The ISP, which was later joined by XS4ALL, fought tooth and nail and used all options at its disposal to prevent a blocking requirement.

After multiple rulings, appeals, and detours through the Supreme Court and the EU Court of Justice, the Amsterdam Court issued its final verdict this June. The outcome was clear – the ISPs must block subscribers from accessing The Pirate Bay.

While many people assumed that this would end the legal battle once and for all, it didn't. Soon after the verdict was made public, Ziggo, KPN and XS4All unblocked all Pirate Bay proxies.

These proxies had been blocked for years as part of a preliminary ruling that also required the providers to block The Pirate Bay. However, the final verdict superseded that ruling and, unlike the preliminary injunction, didn't cover proxies and mirrors.

BREIN initially hoped that the companies would call an end to the fight by simply blocking these additional domains voluntarily. Especially since a separate court order already requires other Dutch ISPs to do the same. However, Ziggo, KPN and XS4All dug their heels in.

The ISPs decided to unblock all Pirate Bay mirrors and proxies and argued that BREIN had to go to court again if they wanted these to be re-blocked. This is exactly what the anti-piracy group – who described the ISPs' actions as "downright silly" – did a few weeks ago.

In an interim proceeding, the ISPs argued that instead of going after them, BREIN should target the operators directly. Or alternatively, it could go after their domain registries or Cloudflare, which provides services to many of the sites in question.

In a new verdict announced last week, the court doesn't deny that these intermediaries play a role, but it notes that the same arguments were already considered in a previous case and haven't changed. As such, it doesn't have an impact on the request directed at the ISPs.

The court concluded that the proxies and mirrors are directly copying The Pirate Bay. They communicate copyright infringing works to the public and a blockade is therefore warranted.

The ISPs also argued that blocking proxies and mirrors is ineffective. People can easily bypass the blockades with VPNs, for example. In addition, pirate streaming sites have outgrown torrent sites such as The Pirate Bay in recent years, which means that the effect of a blockade will be limited.

Again, the court doesn't see how that changes things here. Torrent sites still remain widely used. And while site blocking may not be perfect, it has some effect.

"Although it can be assumed that streaming has increased and that the blocks can be avoided using VPNs, this does not mean that it should be assumed, in these interim relief proceedings, that the proposed blockades are ineffective or not effective enough," the court notes.

"For the normal internet user it can be assumed that a blockade of mirror and proxy sites results in these sites no longer being accessible, or at least harder to access, which makes copyright infringement more difficult. This type of blocking is considered to be effective."

The court kept European jurisprudence in mind, which holds that blockades have to make it harder to block pirated material but shouldn't needlessly block legitimate content. While The Pirate Bay does have legitimate content, this is believed to be minimal.

Ziggo also brought up that the high costs of the blocking efforts, which were €62,280 between September 2017 and October 2018, outweigh the potential benefits, especially when these can rise even higher with future blocks. Again, the court disagreed.

All in all, the Lelystad Court ruled that Ziggo, KPN, and XS4ALl must block the TPB proxy and mirror sites. It granted a so-called dynamic blockade, which means that BREIN can frequently request updates to add new domain names if they become available.

The ISPs must implement the blocking measures within 10 days and risk a €10,000 fine for every violation of the order, to a maximum of €100,000. In addition, the companies also have to pay the costs of the proceeding, which are put at €15,000 for each provider.

A copy of the court order, courtesy of IE-forum, is available here (pdf)

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

Games Piracy Scene Reinvigorated, Four Denuvo-Protected Titles Released in One Day
Andy Maxwell, 15 Oct 09:49 AM

Late August, many of the world's top-tier piracy groups collectively known as The Scene were thrown into chaos when law enforcement operations were carried out around Europe.

The main targets were members of the movie and TV show piracy groups known as SPARKS, GECKOS, DRONES, ROVERS and SPRINTER, whose members were indicted in the US for allegedly participating in a conspiracy to release thousands of titles online. However, the action was much more widespread, targeting other groups around Europe and as Scene members went back underground, a historic drop in releases was observed.

Scene Releases of New Videogames Fell Almost to Zero

As the image below shows, releases of new games by The Scene flatlined just after the end-August raids leaving many pirates wondering when things would recover – or even if.

Game and Ebook releases before and after the raids
games ebooks scene

Since then, small releases and repacks of older titles have been appearing online but nothing particularly obvious to suggest that a significant recovery of The Scene was coming anytime soon. That changed in a matter of hours yesterday with a flurry of releases from veteran games cracking group CPY, all of which featured games with the formidable Denuvo anti-piracy protection defeated.

CPY (aka Conspiracy) Breaks The Deadlock

Established back in 1999, CPY is one of the best-known games cracking groups. Following their release of the Denuvo-protected Ace Combat 7: Skies Unknown back in February 2019, the veterans went on a short release run before returning for the last time 325 days ago with Heavy Rain.

However, over the course of just a few hours yesterday, CPY placed itself back on the map by releasing four new titles within minutes of each other, all of which were previously protected by the effective (but much hated) Denuvo anti-tamper technology.

The Releases – All Previously Protected by Denuvo

Judging by the reception on pirate sites and various discussion forums, action game 'Death Stranding' is probably the highlight of the batch released by Denuvo a few hours ago. As is tradition with such releases, the game came with an NFO (information) file, partially shown below:

Interestingly, the NFO file also comes with what appears to be some kind of puzzle or clue. The jury is out on what it means exactly but we include it here for the curious: "A little gift to our 1803 friends: 0x141627D3D JMP around!"

In popularity terms (at least among pirates) next up is the action-adventure game Mafia: Definitive Edition. This 2020 release is a remake of the 2002 game Mafia and was again protected by Denuvo. No secret messages or clues in this NFO but nevertheless this cracked version has been anticipated by pirates after the original title was released just last month by developer Hangar 13.

Catering to football fans, the third most popular release thus far is eFootball PES 2021. Released last month, the title was also protected by Denuvo but after CPY's work, is now available without restrictions or, indeed, a price tag.

Rounding up the quartet is A Total War Saga: Troy, which is perhaps a curious choice when considering that the game was picked up by millions of players for free following its launch in the summer. Nevertheless, it soon reverted to its regular pricing structure, with Denuvo included for good measure.

Given that CPY is clearly on a roll, there were probably few problems releasing it along with the others.

Despite Excitement Among Fans, Denuvo is Still Doing Its Job

This quartet of releases has game-starved pirates pretty excited, especially since all four feature the defeat of Denuvo's anti-piracy technology. However, if we take Denuvo's position, that it aims to protect games during the first few days and weeks of their official releases, the technology is still doing its job.

Death Stranding was released officially on July 14, 2020 and cracked/released on October 14, 2020, giving the title three whole months worth of protection. Mafia: Definitive Edition and A Total War Saga: Troy faired identically slightly worse, having been released on August 13, 2020 and their protections removed/bypassed two months later.

eFootball PES 2021, on the other hand, was released on September 15, 2020, so with a cracked release landing during the past few hours, it only 'survived' piracy-free for just short of a month.

The big question now is whether other groups will return with the same vigor as CPY in the days and weeks to come.

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

 
 
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