Friday, August 27, 2021

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ACE/MPA Target Pirate Sites Pulling in 1.3 Billion Visits Per Year, Including EZTV
Andy Maxwell, 27 Aug 09:38 PM

MPAGlobal entertainment coalition Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment is engaged in perhaps one of the most far-reaching anti-piracy operations the internet has ever seen.

The group, which has the key Hollywood studios, Netflix, Amazon and dozens of major content creators as members, has carried out many highly-publicized takedowns. Streaming platforms, IPTV providers, file-hosting platforms and torrent-related entities have all been targeted but that is the tip of a very large iceberg.

At the time of writing, ACE and partners the MPA have seized more than 200 domain names connected to pirate services large and small, a list that is growing every week. These seizures are often proceeded by investigations that involve Cloudflare handing over identifying information after being served with a DMCA subpoena.

As a result, a new pair of subpoenas obtained in the last few days by ACE/MPA may give an indication of which sites and services could soon find themselves in the firing line.

Subpoenas Target Sites With More Than 1.3 Billion Annual Visits

While ACE/MPA regularly target smaller operations, it makes complete sense for larger platforms to get most of the attention. The new pair of subpoenas cover a range of sites and when their traffic is combined, the reason they are being targeted is clear. The 23 domains listed in the subpoenas together pull in more than 1.3 billion visits per year according to SimilarWeb stats.

At the top of the list in pure traffic terms with around 26.5 million visits per month is torrent site EZTV.re. This index grabbed eighth place in our 2021 report of the world's most-visited torrent sites. The TV-focused platform proudly displays the well-known EZTV branding but the original team was forced out following a hostile takeover several years ago. It now appears that ACE/MPA could be planning a takeover of their own.

Had it not witnessed an unexplained plunge in traffic over the past few months, KissAsian.li would've topped EZTV's traffic in this latest batch of ACE/MPA subpoenas. However, after dropping from 46 million visits per month in May, by July the streaming site was pulling in 'just' 24.7 million visits, the majority of that traffic from the Philippines. However, sites of this size are always of interest to the largest producers of movies and TV shows in the world, so this drop in traffic keeps it on the radar.

Another large player, Olevod.com, seems to be on an upwards trajectory. The service appears to cater to a large Chinese audience and was enjoying around 11.2 million visits during February. By July, however, traffic had rocketed to nearer 19 million visits per month, progress that ACE/MPA will be keen to curtail. The same can be said of Dandanzan.com, which also targets a Chinese audience and is currently enjoying around 5.7 million visits per month.

'WatchSeries' branded sites have always been a thorn in the side of movie and TV show companies and Watchseries.ninja is no different. The site appears to be decreasing in popularity over recent months but with 5.7 monthly visits in July, is still a significant player.

Spanish Language and South American Sites

Another highly-trafficked site targeted in the subpoenas is Hackstore.net. It currently enjoys around 10.2m visits per month according to SimilarWeb, with 27% of that traffic coming from Mexico. Somewhat ironically, perhaps, our attempts to access the site were thwarted by a Cloudflare blocking message but with in excess of 125 million visits per year, the site is clearly of interest to the entertainment companies.

With around 8.6 million visits per month, Cuevana2.io is next on the list and provides a clear indication that ACE/MPA want to finish a job they started some months ago. Back in May, ACE announced that it had won a major battle against Cuevana-branded sites, which had dominated the pirate streaming arena in Latin America.

What ACE didn't report, however, is that the most popular Cuevana domains, including Cuevana2.io and Cuevana3.io, were still in business pulling in tens of millions of visits every month. Cuevana3 was targeted in an earlier subpoena against Cloudflare and now Cuevana2 also finds itself in the crosshairs.

Other Spanish-language and South American-focused sites include Assistirseriados.net (4.3m) and Gofilmes.me (2.75m) which are both popular in Brazil and Megadede.se (1.1m), popular in Spain. Fanpelis.org, Repelis24.info, Pelispe.com and Pelismegahd.pe have a few million visits between them and are all popular in Mexico.

Finally there are a few dead or dying domains in the list. Pelisplus.movie did have 20 million visits per month in February but traffic has since fallen off a cliff. Hdfull.cx had 3 million visits in February but has now nosedived to almost nothing. Other sites with low traffic reports include Reboot.tube, Duboku.fun and Embedforfree.co, although the latter may be more significant than reports suggest.

The new ACE/MPA subpoenas against Cloudflare can be found here and here (pdf)

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

Leaseweb Must Share Personal Details of 'Pirating' Customers With Movie Companies
Ernesto Van der Sar, 27 Aug 11:03 AM

pirate-flagHosting providers are generally seen as neutral intermediaries, but some copyright holders believe that these companies should bear more responsibility.

This isn't a new idea. Back in 2015, leaked documents from the Motion Picture Association revealed that the Hollywood group had considered taking legal action against a hosting provider. At the time it mentioned Leaseweb as an example.

The hosting company already entered the spotlight a few years prior. It was one of the hosting partners of Megaupload, which rented 630 servers from the company. This association also triggered a separate lawsuit by magazine publisher Perfect 10, but that was eventually settled.

Movie Companies Sued Leaseweb

Earlier this year, Leaseweb was targeted in a copyright lawsuit once again. This time, a group of filmmakers, including Dallas Buyers Club LLC and Rambo V Productions, accused the hosting company of failing to take action against copyright infringing customers.

These customers are VPN providers such as LiquidVPN that, in turn, have customers who allegedly shared pirated movies. The movie companies argued that they sent thousands of takedown notices to alert Leaseweb of this activity, but the hosting company allegedly failed to take action.

"Leaseweb continued to provide service to the subscribers such as LiquidVPN and DOES 1-10 despite knowledge that its subscribers were using the service to engage and facilitate massive piracy of copyright protected Works including Plaintiffs'," the complaint read.

Leaseweb Must Expose 'Pirating' Customers

This lawsuit is still ongoing and Leaseweb has yet to respond to the allegations in court. However, it appears that the movie studios are keeping the pressure on, as they have just obtained a subpoena that orders the company to hand over customer data.

A few days ago, attorney Kerry Culpepper obtained a DMCA subpoena on behalf of dozens of movie companies. It specifically requests the personal details of Leaseweb customers connected to 456 IP-addresses.

Since it's a DMCA subpoena, the court doesn't have to decide over the request and it was quickly signed off by a court clerk.

leaseweb subpoena

This means that Leaseweb is required to hand over documents that can identify the customers connected to these IP-addresses. That includes all contact information and payment records it has on file.

TorrentFreak reached out to Leaseweb asking how the company plans to respond but we have yet to receive a reply.

More Pressure, More Defendants?

It is likely that the movie companies plan to use Leaseweb's customer data to advance their legal efforts. This could include adding additional VPN defendants to the ongoing lawsuit.

Interestingly, the legal paperwork also sheds some light on the pressure Leaseweb faced before that lawsuit started. It includes a letter the movie companies sent last October, where they offered the hosting company an option to settle the matter outside of court.

This would involve terminating accounts of various customers who are deemed repeat infringers, as well as paying a sum of money to compensate for the piracy damages claimed by the movie companies.

"To do so, we request that: (1) Leaseweb agrees to immediately terminate all Internet service to the subscribers at the above IP addresses; (2) Leaseweb agrees to take the appropriate action to terminate subscriber accounts in response to all further copyright notifications received from my | clients' agent; and (3) Leaseweb agrees to pay a portion of my clients' damages," the letter reads.

Leaseweb apparently declined this offer as the company was sued by the same movie companies a few months later. And with the recent DMCA subpoena, the legal pressure has only intensified.

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

 
 
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