Monday, May 23, 2022

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Spanish Police & LaLiga Carry Out Nationwide Pirate IPTV Crackdown
Andy Maxwell, 23 May 09:13 AM

footballIn 2018, top-tier Spanish football league LaLiga caused widespread uproar with a clever yet intrusive anti-piracy tool.

In common with its counterparts overseas, LaLiga's premium content is widely pirated in both homes and commercial premises such as bars and restaurants. Since LaLiga couldn't hope to visit them all, the football league added a new feature to its official app.

Users' phones effectively became spying devices that could listen to their surroundings and, when LaLiga matches were identified, report the GPS locations of the premises back to LaLiga.

A year later, LaLiga was hit with a 250,000 euro fine by Spain's data protection agency AEPD but the company vowed to continue fighting "this very serious scourge that is piracy". LaLiga kept its word and an operation just announced by local police reveals that commercial premises using pirate IPTV and similar services will be prosecuted.

Coordinated Operation Across 13 Regions

Following a complaint filed by LaLiga in January 2022, Spain's National Police launched an investigation into a piracy network supplying bars across the country in breach of copyright law. The infringed content included matches from LaLiga Santandar and the prestigious UEFA Champions League.

The investigation identified locations in more than a dozen regions across Spain including Seville, Malaga, Cordoba, Zaragoza, Valladolid, Murcia, Palma de Mallorca, Gijón, Madrid, Vigo, Las Palmas, Bilbao and Barcelona. Coordinated inspections were carried out by police on a day when LaLiga Santander matches were being played, and 166 bars were identified as being involved in the fraudulent display of copyrighted content.

"As a result of [the operation], the entire infrastructure that allowed the illegal viewing of paid multimedia content was dismantled, with the identification of those responsible and the cessation of the illegal service they provided," a statement from the National Police reads.

Alleged Intellectual Property Crimes

During the operation police seized a large number of piracy-configured devices including Amazon Firesticks, generic Android boxes, and others from unnamed manufacturers. These will be used as evidence in prosecutions against those suspected of intellectual property infringement crimes.

spain seized iptv

According to the authorities, the owners of the bars that used the devices to receive and display pirated live matches will be charged with offenses related to the fraudulent reception and distribution of copyrighted broadcasts accessed from encrypted sources.

"With this they obtained a fraudulent economic benefit since they offered the possibility of watching sporting events, only broadcast through encrypted channels that made them possessors of an extra service that other establishments did not offer," police say.

Economic damage to the rightsholders is currently estimated at €1,066,386 ($1.12m). Police are yet to announce any charges against the operators of the piracy network supplying the bars but that may only be a question of time.

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

Top 10 Most Pirated Movies of The Week – 05/23/2022
Ernesto Van der Sar, 23 May 12:30 AM

everything everywhereThe 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 two new entries on the list. "Everything Everywhere All at Once" is the most downloaded title.

The most torrented movies for the week ending on May 23 are:

Movie Rank Rank last week Movie name IMDb Rating / Trailer
Most downloaded movies via torrent sites
1 (…) Everything Everywhere All at Once 8.5 / trailer
2 (1) The Northman 7.6 / trailer
3 (7) Morbius 5.1 / trailer
4 (…) Memory 5.6 / trailer
5 (5) Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore 6.4 / trailer
6 (2) The Lost City 6.3 / trailer
7 (3) The Batman 8.4 / trailer
8 (4) Uncharted 6.6 / trailer
9 (6) Sonic the Hedgehog 2 6.7 / trailer
10 (9) Spider-Man: No Way Home 8.6 / 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.

Bogus DMCA Notices Sent to Google By Fake Google….To Protect Google?
Andy Maxwell, 22 May 06:39 PM

facepalmDMCA takedown notices give copyright holders the ability to remove copies of their content from websites that have no right to distribute them. Billions of similar notices target search engines that carry links to similarly infringing content.

Numerous scandals over the years have highlighted how sloppy notices have wrongfully targeted legitimate content but more worrying are those that appear to be calculated and malicious. These were once relatively rare but it now appears that some people view DMCA notices as the preferred weapon to silence rivals or disrupt their businesses.

Bogus notice senders sometimes impersonate known companies, Reddit for example, in order to appear more credible. But how far can they push this approach? Into the realms of the ridiculous, apparently.

Hey Google! I'm Google, Here to Protect Your Rights

Early May, Google received a DMCA takedown notice requesting the removal of 76 URLs from its search engine. The vast majority of those links target sites offering Android APK files with most if not all relating to YouTube, including URLs for the popular 'Vanced' and 'NewPipe' apps. But would Google-owned YouTube really target itself with a takedown notice?

google to google dmca1

The information in the image above suggests that might be the case. YouTube is listed as the sender (on behalf of Google LLC), Google LLC received it, and Google LLC submitted it to the Lumen Database. However, moving to the text of the notice it's clear that whoever wrote it doesn't understand that a company owns YouTube's app, not a person.

"The following websites distribute modified, cracked and unauthorized versions of my app 'youtube', which can only be found officially on Google Play," it reads, adding in the official Play link for authenticity.

fake google dmca youtube

Fortunately, Google consulted Google and discovered that the Google DMCA notice it allegedly sent to itself to protect YouTube was actually bogus (Lumen copy here).

None of the links in the notice were removed which is good news for Google (the real one), since the targets include YouTube's official Github repository. Plus an Indian bank, pages on Stack Overflow and XDA Developers, and links to Microsoft.com and Apple.com, for good measure.

Hey Google! I'm Spotify, Meta, Netflix, WhatsApp, Microsoft..

In a sane world that would be the end of the nonsense, but no such luck. Our searches also turned up several additional bogus notices that impersonate entities including Spotify, Meta (on behalf of Instagram), WhatsApp and Microsoft, the latter to prevent Minecraft piracy. They are in the same format and were probably sent by the same person.

These are not isolated incidents but after investigating many similar suspicious notices, a pattern does begin to emerge. While all of these notice senders claim to be protecting companies' rights, their submissions to Google are unprofessional and lack credibility. They also appear to have similar targets, no matter who is listed as the sender or ultimate copyright holder.

Someone Doesn't Like APK Platforms

A 'reporting organization' (listed as 'Bsa') has sent DMCA notices in the names of Google LLC, beIN Sports, TikTok, and Roblox in recent weeks. It even sent a complaint to Google on behalf of Netflix, ostensibly to protect Spotify's rights.

These notices target more than 2,000 URLs based on several claims, including that they offer apps that bypass in-app payments, allow people to view 18+ content, or provide access to unlicensed TV broadcasts.

In common with the notices detailed earlier, these too are unprofessionally presented but seem to have a different author. Google appears to have spotted issues and refused to take down 1,725 links but as the image below shows, some were able to get through.

bsa-rejected

What all of these notices have in common is that no matter who sent them, their main targets are sites that offer Android APK files.

If we rule out the remote possibility that we've stumbled across a group of Good Samaritans acting altruistically to protect the interests of major corporations in the names of others, these notices could be designed to make certain APK platforms less visible, thereby damaging their traffic.

Who might be motivated to do that is open to speculation but at least for once, it is unlikely to be copyright holders.

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

 
 
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