Friday, February 4, 2022

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European Football Leagues Slam "Notice-and-Stay-Up" Provision in DSA
Andy Maxwell, 04 Feb 10:58 AM

footballLast month the European Parliament voted on the final text of the Digital Services Act and it was approved by a broad majority.

An amendment that would've effectively banned 'dumb' upload filters didn't pass, neither did an amendment that could've put an end to court orders that require ISPs to block websites, including pirate sites.

The DSA text adopted by the European Parliament is not final yet and could be further amended in trilogue negotiations with the European Council and European Commission. As far as major European football leagues are concerned, there is at least one aspect of the text that requires urgent attention, one that could help them more effectively deal with live streaming piracy.

Live Streaming Piracy is a Threat

While existing EU law already requires online service providers to remove infringing content in response to a valid takedown request, football leagues and other live sports companies insist that they require extra special treatment. Matches and games are at their most valuable when they are taking place and when enforcement takes too long, live streams can stay up, rendering takedown notices almost futile.

This issue was addressed last year in a draft approved by the European Parliament, which contained provisions that would've required illegal content to be removed immediately and no later than 30 minutes after the event had started.

Football Leagues Unhappy With Current DSA Provisions

The Association of European Professional Football Leagues, which represents the interests of 28 member leagues including Premier League, La Liga, Bundesliga, and Serie A, said this week that it "strongly regrets" that the European Parliament plenary vote on the DSA did not respond to calls to protect live content producers from piracy.

AEPF members

While commending parliament on adopting a position just one year after the European Commission's proposals, the football leagues say that parliament's position fails to properly deliver when it comes to removing illegal live content during live broadcasts.

"The failure to clarify the concept of 'expeditious removal or disabling access' to illegal live content, proposed as part of amendments to recital 22, is a missed opportunity to make enforcement of our rights meaningful and real," says Alberto Colombo, Deputy General Secretary of the European Leagues.

"Article 14.3a Must Be Rejected"

The football leagues are also unhappy with a specific "last-minute" amendment. Article 14.3a states that when a takedown notice is sent to a hosting provider demanding the removal of infringing content, the content must stay online while an assessment of the content's legality is pending.

3a. Information that has been the subject of a notice shall remain accessible while the assessment of its legality is still pending, without prejudice to the right of providers of hosting services to apply their terms and conditions. Providers of hosting services shall not be held liable for failure to remove notified information, while the assessment of legality is still pending.

While that may sound reasonable, especially given the need to ensure that bogus or erroneous takedown notices don't remove legal content, the football leagues insist this will be damaging to them. Live matches necessarily take place in real-time and every second that illegal streams of matches remain up, pirates are able to view them without paying.

"This [assessment period] is really hurting the live content of our Member Leagues, where every second counts and no interpretation or assessment is needed as content is fingerprinted and/or watermarked. To put it bluntly, this new article would unfortunately and literally help piracy of live content spread even more across the European Union," Colombo adds.

In conclusion, the football leagues call for the rejection of Article 14.3a "to make the DSA fit for live content" since without "clear and meaningful action" at the European level, mass infringement of sporting events will continue.

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

MPA, Amazon & Apple Urge Court to Issue Rapid Pirate IPTV Injunction
Andy Maxwell, 03 Feb 08:33 PM

IPTVLast December, movie and TV giants Universal, Disney, Paramount, Warner and Columbia joined Netflix, Amazon, Apple and several other studios in a lawsuit against Texas resident Dwayne Anthony Johnson.

According to the plaintiffs, Johnson (and Does 1-20) are the brains behind pirate IPTV providers AllAccessTV (AATV) and Quality Restreams.

In common with several similar suits, the complaint claims that the services supply infringing movies and TV shows via their IPTV and VOD platforms, with AATV attempting to disguise its service behind the branding of a supposed VPN company, VPN Safe Vault LLC, which Johnson is said to manage.

The studios allege direct copyright infringement, contributory copyright infringement, and inducement of copyright infringement, demanding the standard $150,000 in statutory damages for each willfully infringed work plus an urgent injunction.

In response, Johnson's legal team seems keen to put up a fight.

Defendant: No Injunction is Necessary

In a late January filing, Johnson's legal team cites the plaintiffs' claim that Johnson's alleged customers access infringing content via web-based applications but say that there is no evidence to prove this is the case.

"Plaintiffs' only evidence of this alleged access are screenshots that do not show any URLs whatsoever, i.e., no actual evidence that the websites accused contain the alleged content," they write in their opposition to the motion for injunction, noting that since key domains listed in the complaint are already down, an injunction is not necessary.

Moving on to the content allegedly infringed, the original complaint states that Johnson's platforms make available 600 movie titles and 600 TV series. However, the defense says that since no evidence has been provided, "these are simply bald assertions" by the plaintiffs including the Motion Picture Association.

"Secondary Infringement Claims Will Fail"

In order to prove contributory and inducement of infringement, there must be an underlying direct infringement to base these claims upon. According to Johnson's lawyers, the studios' lawsuit is a "moving target" in this respect, shifting between allegations against viewers of streams, claims that the "unknown source of a restream" of IPTV is the direct infringer, or a combination of both.

"Plaintiffs do not provide evidence to show direct infringement by either the end users or the unknown source of a restream…[and]… Plaintiffs provide no evidence for the Court or Defendant to assess regarding any direct infringement by the unknown source of a restream of IPTV," the response reads.

Proposed Injunction Deficient

The studios' complaint demanded preliminary and permanent injunctions against not only Johnson but also the doe defendants, resellers, and anyone acting in concert with them including "any officers, agents, servants, employees, attorneys.." According to Johnson's lawyer, since there is no proof that his client does business as AllAccessTV or Quality Restreams, there are no officers, agents, servants or employees to target.

The fact that the studios also asked for an injunction against Johnson's attorneys hasn't gone down well either.

"[A]n injunction against Dwayne Johnson's 'attorneys' is completely unsupported and borders on the absurd. Undersigned counsel, for example, has not been and cannot be accused of infringing any of Plaintiffs' copyrights. There is no legitimate argument or assertion in this regard and Plaintiffs' requested injunction as to Dwayne Johnson's 'attorneys' must not be granted," the response adds.

VPN Safe Vault LLC and Evidence Objections

While VPN Safe Vault was mentioned in the complaint, the entity was not named as a defendant in the case. According to the response, this is because the plaintiffs have no evidence to show copyright infringement. Any injunction that targets that business, including its domains, would be "an unlawful restraint on trade", the response states, since it sells "VPN access that is not even arguably copyright infringement."

Jan van Voorn is the Executive Vice President and Chief of Global Content Protection for the Motion Picture Association and in common with other MPA and Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment lawsuits, his testimony supports the allegations against Johnson. However, the defense considers this improper, describing his statements as "inaccurate" and supported by "biased opinions".

"The declarant, Van Voorn, however, cannot be an expert as he is not an independent third-party. He is an investigator with the Motion Picture Association who is not a party to this case but who is admittedly interested in this litigation," the response notes, adding that speculation by the plaintiffs and Van Voorn that Johnson is the owner of several IPTV-related domains isn't supported by evidence.

The response also criticizes a declaration submitted by Steve Kang, Vice President of Creative Content Protection at NBCUniversal Media, for either making claims that are "outside his realm of knowledge" or failing to provide sources for those claims.

Needless to say, the plaintiffs frame things quite differently.

Plaintiffs Say They Are Prepared to Settle

According to the studios, Johnson has twice asked for a hearing date to be pushed back but in the meantime they remain willing to "engage in meaningful discussions" to explore options for resolving the matter entirely. However, they say there is a threat that Johnson will continue to infringe their rights if not restrained.

The studios reveal that Johnson's counsel approached them with a proposal for a stipulated preliminary injunction and negotiations took place in good faith. However, one of the conditions of the proposal was that only Johnson's personal conduct would be enjoined from operating or doing business as AllAccessTV and Quality Restreams.

The studios felt that would be insufficient to prevent further infringement and they say that concern was well-founded.

"Days after Plaintiffs filed their Complaint, the public registry information for one domain that is subject to this lawsuit, allaccessiptv.com, was changed so that it no longer lists Defendant as the registrant, but instead makes all registrant information private," the studios write.

"[P]laintiffs could suffer very real harm in the absence of injunctive relief that applies not just to Defendant, but to those individuals or entities, who, along with him, own or operate AllAccessTV and Quality Restreams or were or are acting in active concert or participation with Defendant and those business entities.."

The studios conclude by repeating their offer to resolve the case with Johnson but insist that a preliminary injunction is warranted to protect their rights.

The related court filings can be found here (1,2, pdf)

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

 
 
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