Monday, January 31, 2022

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Major Manga Publishers Prepare to Sue Cloudflare Over Pirate Sites
Andy Maxwell, 31 Jan 10:48 AM

cloudflare logoCDN company Cloudflare provides its services to millions of websites all around the world, enabling them to stay online with enhanced performance and better protection from attacks.

In recent years pressure from copyright holders has seen Cloudflare labeled a piracy facilitator. The CDN company does cooperate with rightsholders and insists that its services and processes meet the criteria laid out in the DMCA. But for some companies, Cloudflare doesn't go far enough and according to a report coming out of Japan, will soon face a new lawsuit related to manga piracy.

Major Manga Publishers Prepare to Sue Cloudflare

Major manga publishers Shueisha, Kodansha, Shogakukan and Kadokawa are no strangers to legal action against pirate sites and their operators. They were famously linked to the dismantling of Mangamura, a now-defunct site blamed for causing billions of dollars in losses to the Japanese manga industry. In that case, the site's operator was jailed for three years but since then other pirates have moved in to fill the void.

In many cases, these pirate sites use the services of Cloudflare and over the past year we've reported on various DMCA subpoenas obtained by the publishers in the United States that require Cloudflare to reveal the identities of their customers. In the meantime, Cloudflare invariably continues to offer services to pirate sites, arguing that it's a neutral technology intermediary.

It now transpires that assertion will be tested – not in the United States but on Japanese soil.

According to Asahi sources, the publishers will team up to file a lawsuit against Cloudflare in the Tokyo District Court next month, demanding 400 million yen ($3.48 million) in damages and an end to the "delivery" of pirated content to internet users.

The publishers say that their works, including the massively popular "One Piece" and "Attack on Titan", are regularly offered on pirate sites via Cloudflare's services causing them billions of yen in losses. Having previously filed a similar lawsuit in the United States, the fight will now be brought home to Japan.

Pirate Sites Not Yet Formally Identified

Since the lawsuit is yet to be filed, it is currently unclear which pirate sites the publishers are complaining about. However, there are tentative signs that the action could be related to a DMCA subpoena applications filed by Shogakukan, Shueisha, Kadokawa and Kodansha in a California district court in late 2021.

As noted in our report, the publishers asked Cloudflare to hand over the personal details of the operators of manga1000.com and manga1001.com.

At the time, manga1000.com was pulling in around 110 million visits per month, making it the 160th most popular domain in the world and the 17th most popular in Japan. With 180 million visits per month, 92% of them from Japan, manga1001.com was even bigger. Also targeted were manga1002.com and other platforms operating in the same niche.

In early December 2021, we estimated that when combined manga1000 and manga1001 were good for at least 290 million visits per month. The news coming out of Japan indicates that the publishers are targeting a platform with 300 million monthly visits, suggesting perhaps that they consider these domains to be linked.

Will Targeting Cloudflare in Japan Bear Fruit?

According to Asahi, since 2020 the publishers have been asking Cloudflare to stop "delivering" pirated content from unlicensed sites but under US copyright law, that was unsuccessful. Moving the battle to Japan now seems to be the preference since according to the publishers, Cloudflare has servers in Japan to service local users. This angle isn't entirely unexplored, however.

In 2018, the publishers filed a motion at the Tokyo District Court demanding that Cloudflare stop providing services to several pirate sites. That matter was apparently concluded via a settlement, with Cloudflare agreeing to "stop the replication" of the sites on its Japan-based servers, if a court declares them illegal.

Another interesting angle is that Cloudflare traditionally defends itself under US copyright law, something it did successfully last year after being sued by wedding garment companies including Mon Cheri Bridals and Maggie Sottero Designs. In that matter, Cloudflare emerged victorious with the judge noting that a "reasonable jury" would not conclude that "Cloudflare materially contributes to the underlying copyright infringement" carried out by pirate sites.

In this matter, Cloudflare also feels confident in its position.

"Cloudflare's CDN and pass-through security services do not meaningfully contribute to infringement," a statement from the company reads.

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

Spanish ISPs Blocked 869 Domains & Subdomains in 2021 To Prevent Piracy
Andy Maxwell, 30 Jan 04:13 PM

blockedAfter well over a decade of rightsholders using the legal system to compel ISPs to block sites on copyright infringement grounds, thousands of domains are blocked by national service providers.

According to rightsholders, this type of action is necessary to prevent unauthorized access to pirated movies, TV shows and music, thus boosting legitimate consumption. The downside is that the associated court processes are complex, expensive, and not particularly timely.

The answer in some regions has been the introduction of voluntary agreements between rightsholders and ISPs to block allegedly infringing sites without the need for a court process.

Spanish Companies Sign Protocol in 2021

In April 2021, the Coalition of Content Creators and Industries, an association representing the local entertainment sector, plus partners including internet service providers (98% of ISPs in the country), signed a voluntary protocol designed to protect intellectual property rights.

The agreement, which was formulated with oversight from the government's General Directorate of Cultural Industries, Intellectual Property and Cooperation, was the product of meetings that began taking place in March 2020. The final text, reviewed and approved by the National Commission of Markets and Competition (CNMC), was aimed at websites declared to be involved in serious copyright infringements.

The agreement was to block these sites, to prevent internet users from gaining access to them, at least using ordinary means. After nine months of operations, Spain's Ministry of Culture and Sports says that hundreds of domains and subdomains have already been blocked under the protocol.

869 Domains and Subdomains Blocked

According to an earlier report published in September 2021 (pdf), in the first six months of the protocol 500 domains and subdomains, together making available hundreds of thousands of infringing files, were blocked by ISPs. That number has since expanded.

"A total of 172 Internet domains and 697 subdomains have been blocked in 2021 to prevent illegal access to millions of works (books, musical or audiovisual works, video games) protected by intellectual property rights," the Ministry reports.

"The blockades are the result of the work of the Ministry of Culture and Sports, through the General Directorate of Cultural Industries, Intellectual Property and Cooperation, the right holders and the internet service providers that have signed the Protocol for the reinforcement of the protection of intellectual property rights."

The government describes the protocol as operating well and working in favor of a digital ecosystem that respects content creators and telecoms companies, while also benefiting consumers, employment, the economy, plus "society as a whole".

Fast Responses to Complaints, Tackling Mirror Sites

In 2021, the 'Technical Committee' representing the parties to the protocol submitted 32 blocking consultations, almost on a weekly basis. Each time it accurately complied with the submission requirements which involve verification processes. The Ministry of Culture and Sport says that in all cases it responded within 72 hours and in many cases within 36.

In common with other countries implementing blocking, Spain also has a problem with blocked sites reappearing in new locations. According to the Ministry, this is being tackled under the agreement.

"Among other measures, it has been agreed to regulate a global response to judicial and administrative resolutions on offending pages to their 'mirror web' or replicas, created under other domains or subdomains to elude current legislation and judicial blocking orders," the government department adds.

Rightsholders and related groups participating in the agreement include AIE (Artists, Interpreters and Performers), AEVI (Spanish Association of Video Games), AGEDI-PROMUSICAE, SGAE (General Society of Authors and Publishers), CEDRO (Spanish Center for Reprographic Rights), EGEDA (Audiovisual Producers Rights Management Entity), FEDICINE (Federation of Film Distributors) and FGEE (Federation of Publishers Guilds of Spain).

Expanding the agreement to encompass other players in the content industries is also underway.

"At this time, the Ministry of Culture and Sports is promoting other agents in the digital ecosystem to join this Protocol, which makes it possible to realize a great agreement for the reinforcement of the protection of fundamental rights on the Internet that benefits the whole of society," the Ministry concludes.

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

 
 
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