Wednesday, December 29, 2021

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MPA/ACE: Dozens More Pirate IPTV & Streaming Domains In The Crosshairs
Andy Maxwell, 29 Dec 11:07 AM

ACE logoThere are lots of pieces of information that can help anti-piracy groups form a strategy to deal with an infringing site or service.

Things like IP addresses, domain details, hosting companies and payment processor accounts all play important roles but of them all, real-life names and physical addresses are considered investigation gold.

With these details in hand, a targeted and strongly-worded cease-and-desist notice may be all it takes to remove a service from the internet. Of course, these pieces of information aren't usually left lying around.

With some luck, they may be available from companies providing services to pirate sites. Domain companies, Cloudflare and similar entities can be forced to supply this information in response to a DMCA subpoena filed by copyright holders. As a result, the studios of the Motion Picture Association and anti-piracy partners ACE regularly go to court in the US to obtain intelligence for use in investigations and legal action.

New DMCA Subpoena – Pirate IPTV

Filed just before Christmas by the MPA and ACE, the first application seeks cooperation from Cloudflare to hand over all information held by the company relating to five domains linked to pirate IPTV operations.

"[Y]ou are required to disclose to the Motion Picture Association, Inc. (on behalf of the ACE Members) information sufficient to identify the infringers. This would include the individuals' names, physical addresses, IP addresses, telephone numbers, e-mail addresses, payment information, account updates and account history," the subpoena reads.

The targeted domains include hypersonic-tv.com which at the time of writing appears to be offline. Whether this is related to an MPA/ACE investigation is currently unknown. What is clear from documentation filed with the court is that the movie companies have accessed Hypersonic's VOD library and confirmed that two movies (2 Fast 2 Furious and Joker) are being offered illegally.

Another target, apollogroup.tv is the domain for provider Apollo Group TV, a rather expensive service that starts at $24.99 per month and claims to offer a "VOD library over 5000 commercial-free movies and tv shows on demand." Once again, MPA/ACE have access to the service and have confirmed that the movies Soul and Fast & Furious 9 are being offered illegally.

Beastiptv.us is the domain for Beast TV, which claims to offer over 9000 channels and a library of 3000 channels on its VOD service. Again, the studios have access to the platform and have informed the court that the Netflix movie Extraction is being made available without permission.

Topdhosting.com is the domain used by IPTV provider Topdog TV and fitiptv.com is operated by FitIPTV. The latter not only sells subscriptions to end-users but also offers reseller accounts in addition to a restream service that can be used to supply streams to an app, for example.

Time will tell whether Cloudflare does indeed have any useful information to hand over but the subpoena is further evidence that VOD services are a magnet for legal action and certainly help the studios prosecute cases more effectively, particularly in the United States.

Supporting document can be found here (1,2,3, pdf)

New DMCA Subpoena – Illegal Streaming Sites

The final DMCA subpoena filed against Cloudflare in the week before Christmas targets more than two dozen domains related to more traditional web-based pirate streaming portals.

Accusing the platforms of breaching copyright law by facilitating access to movies including Godzilla vs Kong, The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It, Tenet, Joker, and The Flash, MPA/ACE again seek the CDN company's assistance to unmask those behind the domains.

Whether any of the sites will be subjected to direct legal action is currently unknown but there is a pattern forming. In certain regions where website blocking injunctions are available, the applicants (the studios) have to show they have made good faith efforts to contact site operators in advance.

Obtaining contact information from Cloudflare could enable them to do that and what we have seen is a trend of site domain names appearing in DMCA subpoenas before they are blocked by ISPs in places such as the UK Australia.

Of course, the information can be used for other purposes too, including full-blown lawsuits, such as the one recently filed against PrimeWire.

The full list of domains is as follows: tvhai.org, motchill.net, watchsomuch.org, flixtor.to, noonoo1.tv, afdah.video, ilgeniodellostreaming.re, ilgeniodellostreaming.si, ilgeniodellostreaming.cat, ilgeniodellostreaming.moe, ilgeniodellostreaming.mba, igds.se, seriesonlineweb.com, pobreflix.online, superflix.plus, torrentdosfilmeshd2.net, seriesflix2.com, cooz.co, assistironline.net, comoeubaixo.com, megaseriesonline.org, amazflixhd.com, temseries.online, filmesonlinehd1.org, pianku.li

Supporting documents available here (1,2 pdf)

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

Court Orders WhatsApp To Block Groups Sharing Pirated Newspapers
Andy Maxwell, 28 Dec 08:16 PM

whattsappSharing copyrighted content online is certainly nothing new but over the years the sharing mechanisms have expanded to incorporate new methods of distribution.

Where once peer-to-peer services were the obvious choice, these days people also utilize platforms such as WhatsApp, Discord and Facebook, which add social elements to the sharing experience by bringing like-minded people together, often around a central topic.

This is proving to be a problem at DB Corp Ltd, India's largest newspaper publishing group. The company publishes five newspapers with 61 editions but when people illegally share its digital content online, its ability to generate revenue comes under threat, the publisher says.

Legal Action Targeting WhatsApp and Pirates

According to DB Corp, part of the problem can be found on WhatsApp where dedicated groups are sharing their newspapers and magazines without permission. As a result, the company has filed for an injunction that would restrain WhatsApp and more than 80 other defendants from infringing its rights via the platform.

DB Corp offers its content via its official websites where a subscription model is deployed to generate income. The subscription allows users to browse publications in a browser but there is no option to permanently download the newspapers and magazines for offline reading.

WhatsApp is the main defendant in the application while defendants 3 to 88 are people who have formed groups on WhatsApp for the purposes of sharing DB Corp's copyrighted works. The company says it has managed to track down the administrators of these groups using their phone numbers but concedes that there might be "many other groups" engaged in the same illegal sharing. At this point they remain unknown, however.

On August 30, 2021, DB Corp informed WhatsApp about the 'infringing groups' and asked for them to be removed. WhatsApp declined the request and informed DB Corp that it would only act in response to a court order.

Court Satisfied That Evidence Warrants an Injunction

After supplying the Delhi High Court with screenshots of messages being exchanged within the groups, the Court found that these indicate the illegal sharing of DB Corp's copyrighted content.

"Thus, Plaintiff has made out a prima facie case and the balance of convenience also lies in favor of the Plaintiff. Further, an irreparable loss would be caused, in case an ex-parte order of injunction is not granted – restraining the infringing Defendants from illegally circulating and distributing the Plaintiff's e-newspaper," Justice Sanjeev Narula's order reads.

With that, the Judge handed down an order requiring WhatsApp to take down or block the WhatsApp groups identified by DB Corp to prevent them from illegally distributing the company's copyrighted works. WhatsApp was given seven days to comply.

The defendants' written statements are due in 30 days and the injunction will remain in place until the case is heard. It is currently listed for May 2, 2022.

The order can be found here (pdf)

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

 
 
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