Thursday, November 4, 2021

TorrentFreak's Latest News

 

Police Arrest Six in Connection With Private Torrent Sites & Seedboxes
Andy Maxwell, 04 Nov 08:48 AM

DanishBytesAt the beginning of 2021, anti-piracy group Rights Alliance declared victory over piracy services in Denmark after a major push to wipe out the big players.

In October 2020, private torrent tracker DanishBits went offline after the 33-year-old owner was arrested in Morocco. He was later sentenced to a year in prison.

NordicBits was also taken down after its 69-year-old owner was arrested in Spain. He sadly passed away after an illness but other sites were also in the spotlight. Asgaard quickly opened its doors to new members but then shut down to avoid legal trouble.

ShareUniversity also seized the opportunity to expand but last December announced that it would shut down too. However, it appears that Rights Alliance referrals to law enforcement may now have resulted in the arrest of one or more of its members.

Law Enforcement Announce Raids

In an announcement Wednesday, the Public Prosecutor for Special Economic and International Crime (SØIK) revealed that several people have been arrested following criminal referrals by Rights Alliance relating to torrent sites including ShareUniversity and DanishBytes.

DanishBytes is a new site that appeared in early January 2021. Even in the early days it had a reported database of 3,600 well-seeded torrents covering movies and TV shows, with an emphasis on locally subtitled content.

According to SØIK, searches were carried out at the homes of six men – a 41-year-old from Hedensted, a 27-year-old from Tjele, a 24-year-old from Vojens, a 22-year-old from Silkeborg, plus a 33-year-old and a 34-year-old, both from Aalborg. All were arrested under suspicion of serious copyright infringement offenses and will be released following interrogation.

The searches were carried out by SØIK assisted by IT specialists from the National Police's National Cyber ​​Crime Center (NC3). In addition to seizing computers, phones and other IT equipment, officers also seized DKK300,000 (US$46,700).

Seedboxes

According to the authorities, the money seized thus far is believed to represent the profits from the sale of seedboxes, a BitTorrent-related term for specially-configured servers that allow people to share content remotely.

One of the arrested men is said to have sold access to the servers which were used by a currently unknown number of users to share around 3,800 copyright works on the torrent sites, a number that is very close to the number of torrents on the DanishBytes tracker.

Alleged 'Ringleaders', Central Staff and Users

According to Michael Lichtenstein, acting police inspector at SØIK, the arrested men are believed to be key players at the sites referred by Rights Alliance.

"It is very satisfying that, on the basis of a thorough investigation, we can hold the six detainees, who we believe are the responsible ringleaders or centrally located staff members, to account for their illegal operation of the file-sharing services," Lichtenstein says.

Also of interest is the mention of site users and the possibility that they too could be swept up in the investigation and, at least potentially, face some form of action.

"On the basis of this effective effort, we must review the seized material – and in this respect it can not be ruled out that users can also be held accountable for using the illegal file-sharing services," Lichtenstein adds.

While using a torrent site can leave information behind such as IP and email addresses, users who purchased a seedbox for use on the site may be more exposed. It's unclear how those users paid for their seedbox subscriptions but if straightforward credit card or PayPal payments were used, it may be fairly trivial for the police to map these back to real-life identities.

At the time of writing the DanishBytes site appears to be operational. Whether the same can be said for the tracker and seedboxes is currently unknown.

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

OnlyFans 'Models' Drop Piracy Liability Lawsuit Against Cloudflare
Ernesto Van der Sar, 03 Nov 09:15 PM

pirate sexyLast year, Texas-based model Deniece Waidhofer sued Thothub for copyright infringement after the site's users posted many of her 'exclusive' photos.

Soon after the complaint was filed at the federal court Thothub went offline. This prompted Waidhofer to change priorities.

In an amended complaint Waidhofer shifted the focus to third-party services such as Cloudflare. At the same time, fellow OnlyFans creators Ryuu Lavitz and Margaret McGhee, better known as OMGcosplay, joined the lawsuit looking for retribution.

Cloudflare as Piracy Facilitator?

The trio accused Cloudflare of both direct and contributory copyright infringement. They argued that the company made copies of their copyrighted works on its servers and deliberately marketed its service to pirate sites such as Thothub.

Cloudflare clearly disagreed with these allegations and asked the court to dismiss these claims. A few weeks ago, US District Court Judge Fernando M. Olguin ruled on the matter with a mixed order.

Judge Olguin concluded that the direct copyright infringement claim was ungrounded. Even if Cloudflare temporarily stored the infringing material, there was no evidence that the company committed voluntary acts that caused the infringing activity.

The OnlyFans creators were allowed to amend their complaint with further evidence. The contributory copyright infringement claims also survived the motion to dismiss, which means that the matter could go to trial. However, a new filing shows that this isn't going to happen.

Lawsuit Dismissed

A few days ago the models informed the court that all remaining claims against Cloudflare have been dropped, which means that the case is closed.

"Plaintiffs Deniece Waidhofer, Margaret McGehee, and Ryuu Lavitz, LLC and their counsel of record give notice that the remaining claims in this action are hereby dismissed without prejudice," the filing reads.

onlyfans dismiss

In addition to dropping the claims against Cloudflare, the OnlyFans creators also dismissed their claims against the other defendants. This includes the advertising company MultiMedia, also known as Chaturbate, which was actively used by Thothub in the past.

There is no further information that explains why the case has been dropped. TorrentFreak's request for comment remains unanswered by the plaintiffs' attorney. Cloudflare's press department hasn't responded to our inquiry either.

Settlement?

Without further details, we can only speculate on what happened. One option is that the parties managed to settle the matter out of court. When that happens, the details of the agreement are usually kept out of public view.

A recent court ruling in a similar piracy liability lawsuit may have played a role too. A week before the models dismissed their lawsuit, a California federal court ruled that Cloudflare is not contributorily liable for copyright infringement.

In that case, Judge Vince Chhabria concluded that neither Cloudflare's CDN service nor its IP-address obfuscation system materially contributed to the alleged copyright infringements of its customers.

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

 
 
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