Monday, September 6, 2021

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DNS-Resolver Quad9 Appeals Pirate Site Blocking Injunction in German Court
Ernesto Van der Sar, 06 Sep 08:56 PM

quad9Earlier this year, Germany's largest Internet providers agreed to voluntarily block pirate sites as part of a deal they struck with copyright holders.

These blockades, which are put in place following a thorough vetting process, are generally implemented on the DNS level. This is a relatively easy option, as all ISPs have their own DNS resolvers.

DNS blocking is also easy to circumvent, however. Instead of using the ISPs' DNS resolvers, subscribers can switch to alternatives such as Cloudflare, Google, OpenDNS, and Quad9. This relatively simple change will render the ISPs' blocking efforts useless.

This workaround is widely known, also by copyright holders. As such, it may not be a surprise that a few weeks after the German blocking agreement was reached, Sony Music obtained an injunction that requires DNS-resolver Quad9 to block a popular pirate site.

The injunction, issued by the District Court of Hamburg, requires the Swiss DNS-resolver to block access to an unnamed site that links to pirated music. The name of the targeted site wasn't revealed, but Canna.to is a likely target, as that's already part of the ISPs' voluntary blocking agreement.

Quad9 Appeals Site Blocking Injunction

The Quad9 foundation fiercely opposes the injunction and immediately announced that it would protest it in court. A few days ago, the DNS resolver submitted its appeal to the Court, hoping to overturn the blocking requirements.

The foundation stresses that it doesn't condone piracy. It is sympathetic to the challenges artists and copyright holders face but enforcing blocking measures through third-party intermediaries is a step too far.

"[W]e strongly believe that recursive DNS is the wrong place to try to apply legally mandated controls, and is at best incorrect, and at worst may be contradictory to the safety of end users as well as damaging the stability of and trust in the global internet," Quad9 notes.

Quad9 stresses that it has no direct link to the alleged infringements. The targeted site doesn't even host infringing material. It's a linking site that points to content stores elsewhere.

The opposition brief sums up a variety of legal and procedural arguments. Among other things, it argues that DNS resolvers are protected from third-party copyright infringements under the German Telemedia Act and the EU's E-Commerce directive.

Other Options to Stop Piracy

The DNS resolver also argues that Sony Music has better options to stop the infringements. For example, it could spend more effort in trying to track down the site operator, go after its hosting provider, or approach the domain registrar.

Targeting a single DNS resolver is a targeted measure, the foundation adds. German users can still use several alternatives to bypass the blocking measures, for example. At the same time, Quad9 users in other countries are affected by this German order, which makes it too broad.

"The fact that the respondent cannot implement the requested blocking limited to the territory of Germany means that this order is disproportionate," Quad9 writes.

Quad9 Implemented a Blocking "Hack'

Although Quad9 disagrees with the blocking injunction, it implemented a temporary "hack" to comply with the order. This allows it to limit the blocking measures to German IP-addresses. However, this comes at a significant cost to the non-profit organization.

"The Quad9 platform was not designed for targeted, jurisdictionally based blocking, so this specific blocking causes higher load for those systems. We have brought more resources online to try to offset the costs of the blocking, but this detracts from our stated mission goals," the foundation writes.

After the blocking order was made public, Quad9 received support from various sides, including the Society for Civil Rights (GFF) and the German Internet Industry association eco, which both provided advice and assistance.

Web Browsers Could be Next

Quad9 is open to further support from companies and the public at large. The foundation stresses that this is much more than an isolated case. If the current ruling stands, other companies can be affected too.

In theory, similar claims could be made against other software and services that are involved in accessing websites. This means that web browsers and VPN services could be next.

"Web browsers, anti-virus software, firewalls, spam filters, email clients, VPN providers, and many other intermediate software and infrastructure components too numerous to list are implicated as potential next targets..," Quad9 warns.

A copy of Quad9's full appeal brief is available here (pdf, German), and an English machine translation can be found here (pdf).

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

Sci-Hub Celebrates 10 Year Anniversary By Uploading 2.3m New Articles
Andy Maxwell, 06 Sep 11:19 AM

Sci-HubThere are thousands of pirate sites online today and many more have come and gone over the years. In their own way, most are loved by their specific audiences but few reach achieve truly iconic status.

Due to its colorful history and original ethos that information wants to be free, The Pirate Bay is an obvious outlier but there is another site, one that has managed to capture the imaginations of an even broader audience seeking access to learning and knowledge.

Sci-Hub was never meant to be the giant it is today. In fact, it grew from the personal needs of a single person – researcher Alexandra Elbakyan.

"When I was working on my research project, I found out that all research papers I needed for work were paywalled. I was a student in Kazakhstan at the time and our university was not subscribed to anything," Alexandra told TF.

In order to solve this problem, Alexandra says she began looking for tools and services to bypass the paywalls, information she shared with other researchers who found themselves in the same predicament. Buoyed by the response to papers she shared, Alexandra developed software that could allow anyone to search for and access papers. On September 5, 2011, Sci-Hub was born.

Sci-Hub Celebrates 10 Year Anninversay

Over the past decade, Sci-Hub has grown to become a formidable force. From very humble beginnings it today offers a staggering 87.97m research papers and serves up hundreds of thousands of them to visitors every day. These include many thousands of students but also scientist and academics, who regularly add Sci-Hub DOI links to their publications to make learning easier.

Sci-Hub stats

Yesterday Sci-Hub celebrated its 10th anniversary with an announcement from Alexandra on her personal Twitter account. That's her only outlet these days after the site's official account was banned following yet another intellectual property complaint.

The publishing of more than 2.3m new research papers is perhaps the most fitting way to mark the celebrations but the fact they weren't published sooner is a sign of how unrelenting legal action has affected the site's ability to continue its work. In her tweet, Alexandra references a legal action that may yet prove an important milestone in the site's history.

In December 2020, publishers Elsevier, Wiley, and American Chemical Society filed an injunction application in India to have Sci-Hub and partner site Libgen blocked by ISPs via a so-called 'dynamic injunction'. In the appropriate forum and at the right time, these can be open-and-shut cases but in January, a High Court judge ordered a delay and declared the case "important".

This was in response to intervention applications filed by nineteen scientists, including a virologist and several physicists specializing in multiple research areas, plus the Delhi Science Forum and Knowledge Commons.

Together, they summarized why Sci-Hub has become such a success and why publishers hate it so much. Open access to scientific research is absolutely vital for the advancement of scientific knowledge, they said, but publishers are only interested in making excessive profits by effectively restricting access only to the "elite institutions" that can afford their prices.

The India case is still pending but the judge did see fit to hand down an interim injunction that prevented Sci-Hub from uploading new content to the site. Perhaps surprisingly (or less so, given the importance of the case), Sci-Hub chose to abide by the ruling but according to Alexandra, that order has now expired, something that allowed the massive anniversary data dump.

Sci-Hub Hounded Around the World

While the unique elements of the Indian action may yet provide a surprise and even hope to the open access movement, lawsuits and other legal action affecting Sci-Hub and Libgen in other regions of the world have been predictable if nothing else.

Applications for blocking injunctions requiring ISPs to disable access to the platform have been successful in the UK, Germany, Denmark, France, and Russia, while in Sweden ISP Bahnhof retaliated to a court-order blockade by banning Elsevier's own website.

Back in 2017, a New York District Court ordered Sci-Hub to pay Elsevier $15m in damages and the same year, American Chemical Society won a default judgment of $4.8 million and a broad injunction that required search engines and ISPs to block the platform.

None of these efforts achieved their goals of shutting down the site. Sci-Hub occasionally publishes new domains to help people access the platform but if all else fails, its Tor version remains up. That cannot be censored by ISPs meaning that the show will go on, at least for now.

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

Top 10 Most Pirated Movies of The Week – 09/06/2021
Ernesto Van der Sar, 06 Sep 12:30 AM

don't breathe 2The data for our weekly download chart is estimated by TorrentFreak, and is for informational and educational reference only.

These torrent download statistics are only 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. "Don't Breathe 2" is the most downloaded title.

The most torrented movies for the week ending on September 6 are:

Movie Rank Rank last week Movie name IMDb Rating / Trailer
Most downloaded movies via torrent sites
1 (…) Don't Breathe 2 6.2 / trailer
2 (7) The Protege 6.2 / trailer
3 (2) The Suicide Squad 7.6 / trailer
4 (…) Cinderella 4.3 / trailer
5 (…) Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings 8.1 / trailer
6 (1) Snake Eyes 5.4 / trailer
7 (9) F9: The Fast Saga 5.3 / trailer
8 (3) The Green Knight 6.9 / trailer
9 (6) Jungle Cruise 6.8 / trailer
10 (10) Black Widow 7.0 / 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.

 
 
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