Monday, November 9, 2020

TorrentFreak's Latest News

 

Court Dismisses Charter's Claim of 'False' RIAA DMCA Notices
Ernesto Van der Sar, 09 Nov 08:47 PM

Legal battles between copyright holders and Internet providers are not new. In most countries these disputes revolve around site blocking but, in the US, the vocal point lies elsewhere.

Over the past years, several major ISPs have been sued for failing to terminate the accounts of alleged repeat copyright infringers.

These lawsuits are serious business. Late last year, for example, a jury found Cox liable for the infringements of its customers, awarding a billion dollars in damages to several record labels. While the judgment is being appealed, other ISPs are on high alert.

This is also true for Charter Communications, one of the largest Internet providers in the US. The company was sued last year by several major music companies, including Capitol Records, Warner Bros, and Sony Music, which argued that the ISP is liable for pirating subscribers.

Charter Countersues Over 'False' DMCA Notices

In March, Charter replied to the record labels' complaint. In addition to denying many of the allegations, the ISP also went on the offensive. Charter submitted a counterclaim accusing the labels of sending inaccurate, false, deceptive, or even fraudulent DMCA takedown notices.

The claims come after the music companies removed 272 sound recordings and 183 music compositions from their initial complaint. These were dropped after the record labels were ordered to produce further evidence that they indeed owned the rights.

Charter saw this as evidence that the companies, helped by the RIAA, have sent many inaccurate takedown notices in the past. These notices reportedly caused damage to the ISP, which said it incurred costs and reputational damage by forwarding the "false accusations."

"Charter is injured when it processes inaccurate notices, causing it to forward false accusations to its subscribers, to the extent this creates tension with the impacted subscribers, negatively affects goodwill, and causes reputational harm to Charter," the counterclaim reads.

The music companies were not impressed by this characterization. They countered the accusations by arguing that they were not knowingly aware of any mistakes or errors. In addition, they said there is no evidence that Charter customers were harmed as no customers were disconnected by the ISP.

Judge Sides With Music Companies

After hearing the arguments from both sides, US District Court Judge R. Brooke Jackson ruled on the matter last week. In a ten-page order, he clearly sides with the music companies.

The Judge ruled that, even if the RIAA and record labels didn't have a valid complaint for the 455 works, there is no evidence that they knowingly made these wrong claims.

"Even if I assume, as does Charter, that plaintiffs dropped the 455 works because they did not have a valid infringement claim as to them, Charter has not alleged facts plausibly showing that plaintiffs knowingly or materially misrepresented its infringement claims in the original complaint," Judge Jackson writes.

Lacking Evidence

Charter argued that the music companies had or should have had knowledge of their inaccurate claims but that is not enough. Also, additional evidence concerning the inaccuracies of the RIAA's anti-piracy partner Marmonitor and the problems with flawed takedown notices, in general, does not suffice.

"The several paragraphs discussing the 2016 Urban Study and the invalid infringement claims allegedly submitted by plaintiffs' agent MarkMonitor, say nothing about the 455 dropped works."

While errors are never good, the contested claims are only a small fraction of the total number of DMCA notices. That is not "material," the court notes. Also, Judge Jackson believes it's "ironic" that the ISP is complaining that the number of copyright claims, for which it can be held liable, has been reduced.

Finally, Charter's DMCA abuse claim also fails because the court doesn't believe that the company or its subscribers suffered any damage as a result of the allegedly inaccurate notices.

"It appears to be undisputed in this lawsuit that although Charter has notified some of its subscribers of some of plaintiffs' claims of infringement, it has not cancelled any subscriptions or taken other actions to disable subscribers' access to Charter's service," the order reads.

Consumer Protection Claim Fails Too

Based on these and other arguments the court dismisses Charter's DMCA abuse counterclaim. The ISP also alleged that the 'false' notices violated the Colorado Consumer Protection Act. This claim was dismissed on similar grounds.

"[T]he premise that plaintiffs' dropping the 455 works constituted bad faith conduct that was 'fraudulent, reckless, willful, knowing, and/or intentional' does not come close to satisfying the particularity required for allegations of fraud," Judge Jackson writes.

The dismissal of both counterclaims is a major setback for Charter and a big win for the music companies, who face similar 'false' DMCA allegations from other companies.

The lawsuit between the ISP and the record labels is far from over, however. In his order Judge Jackson allows Charter to amend two other counterclaims. These ask for a declaratory judgment that the ISP isn't liable for contributory and vicarious copyright infringement due to subscribers' pirating activities.

A copy of Judge R. Brooke Jackson's order is available here (pdf)

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

Pirate Streaming Sites Raided By Thai Police For Streaming Hollywood Movies
Andy Maxwell, 09 Nov 12:50 PM

IPTVA recent survey commission by the Asia Video Industry Association's Coalition Against Piracy (CAP) and conducted by YouGov revealed that around 53% of online consumers in Thailand use illegal streaming platforms or torrent sites to access otherwise premium content.

The survey also found that of those who admitted using such platforms, around 66% claimed to have canceled some or even all of their legal subscriptions as a result. This and other similar reports helped sound alarm bells in the country so, last month, authorities carried out a series of actions to shut down pirate sites.

Raids During October, Resurrected Sites Hit Again in November

On October 22, the Department of Special Investigation carried out raids targeting a number of illegal sites, shutting several down while seizing computer equipment. Among them were Kingiptv.cc, Doohdbox.com, and Hdplay.tv but it appears that the operators of these platforms weren't immediately ready to throw in the towel.

According to local media reports, the three sites switched to new domains – Kingiptv.cc to Kingiptv.info, doohdbox.com to skyhdbox.com, and hdplay.tv to hdlive.site. This prompted further action by the authorities.

doohdbox

Lieutenant Colonel Wichai Suwanprasert, head of the DSI's Bureau of Technology and Cyber Crime, says that his unit traced the whereabouts of the resurrected sites and subsequently raided four locations in Bangkok, Nakhon Pathom, and two areas in the central province of Samut Prakan.

In addition to shutting down the four streaming platforms, which together generated an alleged seven million baht per month (US$229,357), officers also seized computer hardware, mobile phones, bank books and ATM cards.

"These websites were streaming copyright material belonging to True Visions Group Co and the Motion Picture Association without permission," said Police Lieutenant Col Wichai.

Earlier Collaboration Between the MPA and DSI

TrueVisions is a cable and satellite television operator in Thailand and as the group representing the major Hollywood studios and Netflix, the Motion Picture Association needs little introduction.

The MPA and DSI already have an operational relationship. Following an MPA request late 2019, the DSI shut down streaming portal Movie2free.com, arresting a 22-year-old man.

At the time, Movie2free.com was Thailand's most popular pirate site and one of the most popular on the Internet, period. It had previously appeared in the MPA's overview of "notorious pirate sites", which was submitted to the United States Trade Representative.

Site-Blocking in Thailand

Back in August, the Department of Intellectual Property (DIP), the Ministry of Digital Economy and Society (DES), and the National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission (NBTC) announced new site-blocking provisions to deal more efficiently with the threat posed by pirate sites.

After a court hands down a blocking injunction, Internet service providers now have just 15 days to block domains, including new domains that are used by pirate site operators to circumvent blocking orders. Failing to do so so means an ISP can be fined under the Computer Crimes Act.

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

Top 10 Most Torrented Movies of The Week – 11/09/20
Ernesto Van der Sar, 08 Nov 11:30 PM

boratThe 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 four new entries in the list. The Amazon-exclusive Borat Subsequent Moviefilm, released two weeks ago, is the most downloaded moviefilm this week.

The most torrented movies for the week ending on November 09 are:

Movie Rank Rank last week Movie name IMDb Rating / Trailer
Most downloaded movies via torrent sites
1 (1) Borat Subsequent Moviefilm 7.0 / trailer
2 (…) The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run 6.2 / trailer
3 (4) Mulan 5.7 / trailer
4 (…) The New Mutants 5.4 / trailer
5 (2) The Witches 5.4 / trailer
6 (3) Love and Monsters 7.1 / trailer
7 (…) Possessor 6.5 / trailer
8 (6) Unhinged 6.1 / trailer
9 (5) The Craft Legacy 4.1 / trailer
10 (…) Triggered 5.2 / 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.

 
 
Powered by Mad Mimi®A GoDaddy® company

No comments: