Saturday, February 6, 2021

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Copyright Holders Asked Google to Remove 5 Billion 'Pirate' Links
Ernesto Van der Sar, 06 Feb 07:55 PM

google pirate bayWhile search engines are extremely helpful for the average Internet user, copyright holders also see a massive downside.

The fact that "infringing sites" show up in search results has become a source of frustration. As a result, Google and other search engines are facing a steady stream of DMCA takedown notices.

New Milestone

This week, Google reached a new milestone when it processed the five billionth removal request. It's a mind-boggling number that calls for a detailed overview of how we got to this point.

5 billion

It all started at the beginning of the last decade. In the spring of 2012, Google launched its Transparency Report which publishes all DMCA requests the company receives, including the targeted links and their senders. This provided fuel for hundreds of news reports as well as academic research.

What stood out right away is the number of questionable takedown notices, with copyright holders sometimes even going after their own sites. The transparency eventually helped to bring down the frequency of inaccurate complaints over time, but it also marked the start of a takedown surge.

Takedown Surge

A month before the notices were published in public, copyright holders reported an average of 35,000 URLs per day. Three months later that number had increased by 600%, to more than 210,000 links per day. And that was just the start.

surge takedown 2012

Over the years we have kept a close eye on the takedown volume which continues to rise. At one point, the search engine processed close to three million links per day. Needless to say, getting to five billion was only a matter of time.

Trend Reverses

As time passed by, the trend slowly started to reverse. In recent years, the number of takedown requests has declined substantially. This is in part due to Google's active anti-piracy policy which includes making such sites less visible in its search results.

These anti-piracy measures didn't come out of anywhere. Copyright holders frequently and repeatedly urged Google to do something about the pirate link whack-a-mole. Up to the point where various governments were urged to intervene.

In 2017 this resulted in an anti-piracy agreement where search engines and copyright holders agreed to tackle the problem together. At the time Google had already taken some measures of its own, but the agreement likely helped, as takedown volumes started to drop soon after.

The precise details of the agreement were never published, nor have we heard of any updates in recent years. However, copyright holders informed TorrentFreak that they are happy with the direction that's taken. That's not surprising, since pirate sites continue to drop in search rankings.

Top Domains and Senders

If we look at the transparency report today, it's also clear that times have changed. Not only has the takedown volume decreased, many of the domains for which Google received the most DMCA notices, are no longer active. This includes Filestube.com, MP3toys.xyz, and Unblocksites.co, which are in the all-time top 20.

top takedown

Looking at the most active senders, things have changed as well. UK music group BPI leads that list with over half a billion reported links, but their reporting rate has tanked. The same is true for another top sender, Zee Entertainment, which went from more than three million takedowns per week in 2017, to less than 30,000 last week.

5 Billion in Perspective

The five billion figure itself also deserves some clarification. This number only refers to the URLs that were reported to Google, and includes duplicates, as well as pages that were not in Google's index. The latter category is placed on a special watchlist to make sure they're not added in the future.

Finally, Google also rejects millions of takedown requests because they are not pointing to infringing content. This applies to the more than hundred TorrentFreak URLs that were flagged, as well as pages from Netflix, IMDb, The White House, NASA, and even the FBI.

Looking ahead, we expect that Google will continue to tweak its algorithms to 'hide' pirate sites. This means that the takedown volume could drop further. In any case, it is not expected to rise drastically. And at the current rate, it will take a year or two before we can add another billion.

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

After Hentai.cafe, Fakku Goes After Owner of Pirate Site HentaiNexus
Andy Maxwell, 06 Feb 11:42 AM

After launching in 2006 as an unlicensed 'pirate' platform, over the years scanlation site 'Fakku' managed to grow into something more legitimate.

After offering scanlations of adult manga comics (hentai) for years without obtaining permission from the original copyright holders, the site is now a fully-licensed affair. As a result, it now has to contend with pirate sites offering its own content for free.

Fakku Uses DMCA Subpoenas To Identify Pirate Rivals

As previously reported, last December Eric Green of anti-piracy company Remove Your Media wrote to pirate platform Hentai.cafe demanding that the site take down a comic to which Fakku holds the license. When that request fell on deaf ears, Fakku's legal representative filed a request for a DMCA subpoena at a court in the Eastern District of Michigan.

The aim of that request is to compel CDN company Cloudflare, which Hentai.cafe uses to keep itself online, to hand over the personal details of its allegedly infringing customer. That doesn't appear to have happened yet but in the meantime, Fakku is lining up another target.

Fakku Also Targeting HentaiNexus.com

Complying with properly-formatted DMCA takedown notices can be a good strategy for keeping copyright holders at bay. However, it appears that HentaiNexus.com, a site with 2.2 million visitors per month according to SimilarWeb, hasn't complied with at least one and probably many more.

On December 1, 2020, Remove Your Media's Eric Green wrote to the site demanding that the comic 'Eroween Panic' be removed from the site, since it infringes Fakku's copyrights. However, despite the notice correctly identifying the offending URL, HentaiNexus appears to have ignored the request. That led to Fakku escalating the matter to court.

In an application for DMCA subpoena filed at the same Michigan court involved in the Hentai.cafe matter, Fakku is demanding that Cloudflare unmasks the operator of HentaiNexus.com, which claims to be "the largest English hentai publisher in the world."

The information requested from Cloudflare includes billing or administrative records that show the "name(s), address(es), telephone number(s), email address(es), IP address(es), account number(s), credit card numbers and any other electronic or physical documents identifying the name(s) and address(es) or contact information of the operator and/or owner of the Infringing Website."

Quite what Fakku intends to do with this information once obtained remains to be seen but it's probably safe to say that the licensed hentai platform's patience is running a little thin when it comes to dealing with the HentaiNexus operation.

According to Google's transparency report, Fakku and anti-piracy partner Remove Your Media have filed requests to have more than 245,000 HentaiNexus URLs removed from Google's search results. While Google rejected more than 35% due to duplicate entries (and another 10% due to content not being in its indexes), that still leaves more than 133,400 URLs on the site that reportedly infringe Fakku's rights.

All of that being said, HentaiNexus has been experiencing other problems recently too. A few weeks ago, users reported the site to be unstable and in some cases inaccessible. That seemed to have prompted some server upgrades which are now being financed by the placing of adverts on the site.

Whether Fakku will go after more site operators in the same way is currently unclear.

However, if we take a look at Google data listing the domains that cause Fakku the most problems, we can see that hentaishark.com, nyahentai.com, nhentai.net, readhent.ai, hentai4manga.com and asmhentai.com have around 18 million complaints filed against them in total. That makes them potential candidates for future action.

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

 
 
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