Thursday, December 16, 2021

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This Year's 'Anti-Piracy Award' Goes to the EU Intellectual Property Office
Ernesto Van der Sar, 16 Dec 11:58 AM

EU CopyrightEvery year, the entertainment industries celebrate their stars in various award ceremonies.

From the Oscars, through the Grammys, to the Emmys, there's no shortage of spotlights for the finest performers.

There is even an award for the best anti-piracy achievements. While it's not as established as the aforementioned accolades, the Audiovisual Anti-Piracy Alliance (AAPA) praises those who protect the entertainment industries with its annual "Anti-Piracy Awards".

The group, which counts prominent media players such as BT, Canal+, Fox Networks, Irdeto, La Liga, Premier League and Sky among its members, launched this initiative three years ago.

And The Award Goes To….

The first winner was the Spanish police's anti-piracy unit, which was followed by a Chief Inspector on the Spanish National Police in 2019, and then Italian law enforcement last year. These all helped to shut down illegal IPTV services and other piracy operations.

This year, the honors don't go to Spain or Italy. AAPA handed the award to the European Union Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO). Specifically, the award goes to the Enforcement and SME Service team at the Observatory on Infringements of Intellectual Property Rights, which is led by Blanca Arteche.

EUIPO's achievements were not as visible to the general public as those of the Italian and Spanish police and they didn't directly result in the shutdown of any high-profile piracy networks or services. Instead, the EU body paved the road for future enforcement efforts.

More Effective Anti-Piracy Enforcement

Among other things, EUIPO's team helped raise awareness to get online piracy reinstated as part of the European Multidisciplinary Platform Against Criminal Threats (EMPACT). This puts the piracy problem higher on the law enforcement agenda in several European countries.

"Had the campaign been unsuccessful IP crime would have remained in the law enforcement wilderness until 2025 at least," AAPA notes.

According to AAPA's Executive Vice President Sheila Cassells, Blanca Arteche's team at the EU Observatory played an important role in bringing various stakeholders together. And with piracy and other IP crime being part of the broader international fight against organized crime again, future enforcement efforts can be more effective.

"This is a very successful outcome as it means there is money and other resources to take on operations, provide training, etc. to tackle audiovisual piracy – and countries recognise the importance of doing so," Cassells says.

'Operation Blackout' Awards

In addition to the main award, the anti-piracy coalition also handed out special recognition awards to several Italian law enforcement people, who played a crucial role in Operation Black Out which shut down the largest pirate IPTV in the country.

Operation Blackout, which was carried out last spring, involved over 200 specialists across 11 regional divisions of Italy's Postal Police. The IPTV network was reportedly responsible for 80 percent of illegal IPTV supply in the country and generated around 15 million euros in monthly revenue.

"We are delighted to recognize the commitment and success of the Polizia Postale e delle Comunicazioni in blocking access to such a major illegal IPTV network," AAPA's Co-President Mark Mulready comments.

"The number of specialists and regions involved demonstrates the organizational and technical complexities involved in fighting such illicit activities which are increasingly accessible through social media networks. Activities such as Operation Black Out send a clear message that piracy will not be tolerated."

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

Reddit Bans 'No Way Home Leaks' For Excessive Copyright Complaints
Andy Maxwell, 15 Dec 08:30 PM

no way homeWhen it is released this Friday in the United States, the much anticipated Spider-Man: No Way Home is almost guaranteed to become one of the highest grossing movies in recent years.

To some, however, its many secrets will already be known.

Since July this year, a dedicated discussion forum on Reddit called /r/NoWayHomeLeaks has been a hive of activity, with thousands of fans speculating on every tiny piece of available information that might give an early clue to what the movie has in store.

These discussions have included short video clips of both known and unknown origins, at least some of which have resulted in complaints from copyright holders. But, despite the takedowns, the subreddit's popularity soared this week, as the image below shows.

nowayhomeleaksmetrics

Reddit only has limited room to maneuver under the DMCA when it comes to copyright complaints. Subreddits that don't properly police themselves can expect to be warned but when that makes no difference (or when too many complaints are received to even warrant a warning) strong action can be the end result.

Reddit Bans /r/NoWayHomeLeaks

Perhaps inevitably, given the amount of copyrighted content being posted to the subreddit, a few minutes ago Reddit took the decision to ban the forum entirely. As the image below shows, it appears to have received an unacceptable amount of DMCA copyright complaints.

nowayhomeleaks-banned

Reddit has not made any announcement regarding the specific complaints made against NoWayHomeLeaks, which is not unusual in itself. Such bans aren't usually handed down lightly though and activity over the past few days and hours won't have helped the sub at all.

In addition to posting text-based spoilers, users of the sub also posted video spoilers. At least some of these appear to have been obtained from cinema footage captured with cell phones.

Worse still, several sources on social media report that the majority of the film was recorded in a theater and then posted to Facebook, a post that was subsequently linked in the subreddit and not removed, or at least not quickly enough.

Having the entire film to watch via Reddit would not have gone down well with copyright holders and may have been the final straw. It's possible the full details will never be known but having the $200m movie spoiled with 10th rate cellphone footage was certainly not part of Marvel's plan.

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

 
 
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