Monday, April 25, 2022

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EU Reaches Agreement on Digital Services Act, Including New Takedown Rules
Ernesto Van der Sar, 25 Apr 10:14 AM

eu flagIn recent years the European Commission has proposed and adopted various legislative changes to help combat online piracy.

This includes the Copyright Directive which passed in 2019 as well as the Digital Services Act (DSA), which was officially unveiled at the end of 2020.

The new legislation was met with fierce criticism. Some believe that it will lead to more 'dumb' upload filters. At the same time, copyright holders believed that it didn't go far enough, as there's no 'staydown' requirement.

DSA Agreement

After the official adoption by the EU Parliament earlier this year, representatives of the Parliament, the Council and the Commission engaged in trialogue negotiations to flesh out the final details. On Saturday morning, after 16 hours of discussions, the parties reached an agreement.

At the time of writing the final text is yet to be published. It is clear, however, that the main goal is to keep large online platforms and services accountable to stop the spread of harmful, misleading, and illegal content.

"The DSA will upgrade the ground-rules for all online services in the EU. It will ensure that the online environment remains a safe space, safeguarding freedom of expression and opportunities for digital businesses," European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen says.

The DSA is the official successor to the E-Commerce Directive. The new package aims to bring EU legislation into line with the current state of the digital age, which has changed dramatically over the past several years.

Takedown Transparency

The legislation includes new rules for big tech and also touches on some copyright issues. These set out how online services should handle takedown notices, without being held liable for user uploads.

In addition, it will allow "trusted flaggers" to get preferential treatment in the takedown process.

The DSA proposal also strengthens the rights of users with a strong focus on transparency. For example, if platforms or services work with trusted flaggers, the public has the right to know who these are.

Also, if a hosting provider removes content following a takedown notice, users should be informed on what grounds this action was taken, and how they can appeal. On top of that, platforms have to take measures to prevent abusive takedown notices.

According to the DSA drafters, this added transparency is required to safeguard the fundamental right to freedom of expression.

Big Tech

The new rules and requirements don't apply equally to all online platforms and services. The DSA makes a distinction between intermediary services, hosting services, online platforms, and very large platforms. The strictest rules apply to the latter category, which includes "big tech" outfits with more than 45 million EU users.

For example, the DSA requires online platforms and big tech to properly verify the identities of third-party suppliers to tackle the sale and distribution of illegal content. This KYBC requirement does not apply to intermediaries and hosting platforms.

The big tech companies also have to allow for external audits and offer broad transparency into how their recommendation algorithms work. If a company doesn't comply with any of these rules, the EU can issue multi-million euro fines.

It is hard to properly evaluate the final agreement without the final text. However, over the past months, we have seen that both rightsholders and digital rights activists are not completely happy with the DSA, which is an indication that it's somewhat of a compromise.

The new DSA rules will go into effect for big tech platforms later this year. For the other platforms and services, it can take up to 2024 before the changes go into effect.

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

Top 10 Most Pirated Movies of The Week – 04/25/2022
Ernesto Van der Sar, 25 Apr 12:30 AM

the batmanThe data for our weekly download chart is estimated by TorrentFreak, and is for informational and educational reference only.

These torrent download statistics are only meant to provide further insight into the piracy trends. All data are gathered from public resources.

This week we have three new entries on the list. "The Batman" is the most downloaded title.

The most torrented movies for the week ending on April 25 are:

Movie Rank Rank last week Movie name IMDb Rating / Trailer
Most downloaded movies via torrent sites
1 (1) The Batman 8.4 / trailer
2 (…) Uncharted 6.6 / trailer
3 (3) Spider-Man: No Way Home 8.6 / trailer
4 (2) X 6.9 / trailer
5 (…) Ambulance 6.3 / trailer
6 (4) Moonfall 5.2 / trailer
7 (5) The Outfit 7.2 / trailer
8 (9) Death on the Nile 6.5 / trailer
9 (…) 9 Bullets 3.8 / trailer
10 (back) Dune 8.1 / trailer

Note: We also publish an updating archive of all the list of weekly most torrented movies lists.

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

Google Voluntarily Removes More Pirate Sites From its Search Results
Ernesto Van der Sar, 24 Apr 08:26 PM

googleFor more than a decade, various copyright industry groups have called on Google and other search engines to help contain the piracy problem.

Google was initially hesitant to take action, but the company has gradually tweaked its algorithms over the years to accommodate the complaints.

The first step was to demote results for domain names for which it receives many DMCA takedown notices. On top of that, it has also removed several piracy-related terms from its autocomplete feature.

Whole-Site Removals

Behind the scenes, rightsholders and Google also worked on other undisclosed measures. While the company hasn't said much in public, one major change is hard to miss. Starting last year, Google began removing entire domains from its search results.

In the past, Google said that it wasn't in favor of these "whole-site" removals, but this stance has changed. When rightsholders inform the search engine of an order that requires local ISPs to block specific pirate sites, Google voluntarily does the same.

These search results removals are limited to the region where the blocking order applies, usually a single country.

There have been a few of these instances already, including in France, Denmark, and the UK. Most of the requests cite dated court orders; in some cases close to a decade old. However, new information shows that Google responds quickly to new orders as well.

New Dutch Blockades

Last month, a Dutch court ordered local ISP Delta to block access to dozens of domains linked to popular torrent sites such as YTS, RARBG, and 1337x. This second site blocking order in the Netherlands is a big win for local anti-piracy outfit BREIN, which has spent more than a decade on blocking-related cases.

BREIN's efforts also resulted in a covenant, signed last year, where the major Internet providers agreed to voluntarily comply with orders issued against rival ISPs. And they are not the only ones.

A few days after the latest blocking order was issued BREIN notified Google, requesting the search engine to remove these domain names for Dutch visitors. And indeed, after a few days, the domains are completely gone.

"In response to a legal request submitted to Google, we have removed 6 result(s) from this page," Google writes at the bottom of the search results for RARBG, for example.

rarbg-removed

These removals are entirely separate from the DMCA process. It's a big step for Google to do this voluntarily but, given the detailed jurisprudence that's in place, there's a good chance that the search engine would have been ordered to do the same if the matter went to court.

Unused Powers?

While BREIN is certainly on the ball, not all rightsholders are as eager or sharp. For example, in the UK rightsholders have asked Google to remove dozens of domain names. However, some prominent sites still remain in search results.

These 'missed' domains include The Pirate Bay, Nitroflare, NSW2U, and various YouTube-rippers such as Flvto.biz and 2Conv.com. These sites are all blocked by UK ISPs but are still available in search results.

Perhaps some rightsholders are not aware of these new powers. We can't think of any other reason why they wouldn't ask Google to remove the domains. Especially since they send hundreds of regular takedown notices to Google every day.

Google is Silent

Several copyright holder groups, including the MPA and BREIN, have confirmed Google's cooperative stance. They believe the removals are an effective tool to help fight online piracy since they boost the effect of site blocking measures.

Google itself remains quiet. TorrentFreak has sent repeated requests for comment on this matter over the past weeks and months. All requests remain unanswered.

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

 
 
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