Friday, November 27, 2020

TorrentFreak's Latest News

 

EU Commission Calls For Substantial Law Enforcement Boost to Fight Piracy
Andy Maxwell, 27 Nov 06:30 PM

EU CopyrightWhile cooperation across borders has been a regular feature of piracy and similar IP crime investigations across Europe, there is considerable momentum in Brussels to make better use of international resources.

Recent actions to tackle unlicensed IPTV providers, resellers and related infrastructure reveal that law enforcement entities are able to pool resources to shut down huge operations. But according to the EU Commission, more needs to be done.

Law Enforcement Needs to Give More Priority to IP Crime

In a paper published this week directed at the European Parliament and European Council, among others, the Commission details an intellectual property action plan designed to support the EU's "innovative potential". The 15-page document covers a wide range of IP-related topics, from general counterfeiting to pharmaceuticals, patents, and online piracy.

"As regards counterfeiting and piracy, the Commission sees a clear need to step up efforts. In 2016, imports of counterfeit and pirated goods into the EU amounted to as much as EUR 121 billion, which represents up to 6.8% of EU imports (against 5% of EU imports in 2013)," the paper reads.

"New forms of IP infringements have arisen on the internet, such as cyber theft of trade secrets (accounting for an estimated EUR 60 billion of losses in the EU, illegal internet protocol television (IPTV) and other forms of illegal (live) streaming. They raise particular challenges for manufacturing, the creative and cultural industries as well as the sports sector."

Part of the problem, the Commission notes, is that IP crime doesn't receive the necessary resources at the enforcement level, something that needs to be corrected in order for the EU to maximize its potential.

"The capacity of law enforcement authorities has to be substantially strengthened. Counterfeiting and piracy must become a higher priority," the Commission notes, urging Member States and the European Council to include IP crime among the priorities for the next EU Policy Cycle.

EU Commission Promises to Reinforce Stakeholder Cooperation

Noting that all relevant stakeholders should continue their exchanges with Europol in order to further improve threat assessment and coordinated action against IP crime, the Commission says it will do its part to improve and increase cooperation between all players involved in or affected by infringement online.

At the top end, this will not only encompass numerous rightsholders but also intermediaries, including online platforms, social media companies, and the advertising industry. Enhanced cooperation will be sought from other entities too, such as those that may play a more passive role in piracy – payment services and domain name registrars and registries, for example.

This cooperation will form a part of what the Commission describes as the "EU Toolbox", which among other things will clarify roles and responsibilities while identifying how stakeholders can work together. It will also promote new technologies such as image recognition, artificial intelligence and blockchain, to increase the effectiveness of the EU's IP protection systems.

Protecting EU Companies From Unfair Competition

Noting that its large single market puts the EU in a special position to act as a "global standard-setter in IP", the Commission says that must be accompanied by better protections against IP theft originating from non-EU countries.

Part of the effort to promote a global level playing field will come via the fledgling Counterfeit and Piracy Watch List, which late last year called out a broad range of alleged 'pirate' sites in the BitTorrent, cyberlocker, stream-ripping spaces.

The EU Commission's paper can be obtained here (pdf)

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

Torrentz2 Suffers Prolonged 'Downtime' and Returns a 503 Error
Ernesto Van der Sar, 27 Nov 09:57 AM

torrentz2With millions of regular visitors, Torrentz2 is without a doubt the most popular torrent meta-search engine on the Internet.

The site took this spot from the original Torrentz site, which shut down unexpectedly during the summer of 2016.

Since then, not much has changed. The site has continued to operate quietly like its predecessor by indexing and linking to dozens of millions of links on external torrent sites.

Torrentz2's Domain Issues

Earlier this year the site suffered a major setback. In June, the official Torrentz2.eu domain name was suspended by the EURid registry, an action that was taken following an order from the Belgian Public Prosecutor in Brussels.

Torrentz2 swiftly responded and moved to Torrentz2.is, while adding several backup domains such as Torrentz.pl and Torrentsmirror.com. While these domains still work fine, torrents are hard to find at the moment.

503 Service Unavailable

For more than a day, Torrentz2 has been returning a "503 Service Unavailable" error, as shown in the screenshot below.

torrentz2 503

"503 Service Unavailable" is an HTTP status code that typically indicates that the server of a website is overloaded. This is often a temporary issue but, in this case, it's taking unusually long.

TorrentFreak reached out to the operator of Torrentz2 to ask whether the problem will be resolved in the near future, but we have yet to hear back.

Without an official comment, we can only speculate as to the reason for the 'downtime'. It seems likely, however, that it is of a technical nature. That could include DDoS attacks, which are not uncommon for torrent sites.

Torrentz2 uses Cloudflare, which generally protects servers from DDoS attacks. However, if attackers know the origin IP-address, they can bypass that protection layer.

There doesn't appear to be a connection to the domain issues from earlier this year, which appeared to be linked to Hollywood. Torrentz2's main .is domain, which is managed by Iceland's ISNIC registry, is functioning properly.

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

 
 
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