Monday, June 20, 2022

TorrentFreak's Latest News

 

Nitro IPTV Loses $100m Piracy Lawsuit Leaving Hollywood Studios Fuming
Andy Maxwell, 20 Jun 10:42 AM

IPTVIn August 2021, US broadcaster DISH Network plus Sling and NagraStar sued pirate IPTV service Nitro TV.

According to the complaint, Alex, Anna, Martha and Osvaldo Galindo were behind the unlicensed streaming service which obtained its content from DISH satellite broadcasts and Sling's internet-based programming.

Documents obtained by the plaintiffs revealed the sale of at least 100,363 subscriptions ('device codes') which allowed Nitro customers to receive live TV programming and a movie/TV show VOD service at discount prices. Two accounts at Wells Fargo and Chase operated by Alex and Martha received at least $5.5m relating to the IPTV service.

DISH and the other plaintiffs claimed that the defendants were responsible for mass violations of the DMCA's anti-circumvention provisions and the Federal Communications Act (FCA). Since none of the defendants appeared in court, these allegations went unchallenged.

Default Judgment and Massive Damages

In February 2022, DISH, Sling and NagraStar filed a motion for default judgment, demanding over $100m in damages for FCA violations and a broad injunction for violations of the FCA and DMCA.

An order handed down by District Judge Jeffrey Vincent Brown last week acknowledged the defendants' failure to appear and granted the plaintiffs' motion for default, finding the Galindos liable for violations of 47 U.S.C. §§ 605(a), 605(e)(4), and 17 U.S.C. § 1201(a)(1)(a).

DISH and NagraStar were awarded $100,363,000 in statutory damages against the defendants, jointly and severally, for their violations of the Federal Communications Act. Via a permanent injunction, the Galindos were also restrained from infringing DISH and Sling's rights by operating a similar IPTV platform in future, or being involved in the sale of devices or subscriptions that exploit their programming.

The judgment (pdf) appears to give DISH everything it asked for, including a huge damages award that will hurt the defendants, if the broadcaster is able to track them down. That is a big 'if' but DISH has a reputation for not letting such things go.

While these types of piracy awards are usually considered a win for the broader entertainment industry due to the deterrent message they send, the plaintiffs in a separate piracy lawsuit filed against Nitro TV are far from happy. Their irritation in that action is now palpable, with the studios' legal team directing criticism at Alex Galindo's lawyer, much to his consternation.

Lawsuit Filed By ACE Members Against Nitro

In April 2020, around 16 months before DISH filed their lawsuit against the Galindos, a coalition of entertainment companies led by Universal, Paramount, Columbia, Disney and Amazon filed a copyright infringement complaint against Nitro's operators.

Unlike the DISH lawsuit, the action brought by these members of the Alliance for Creativity against Alex and Anna Galindo, YouTuber 'Touchtone', and others, was more complex.

The plaintiffs obtained an injunction against Nitro in May 2020 and later claimed evidence had been destroyed or withheld. The main problem, however, was Alex Galindo's mounting of a defense.

In June 2020, he accused plaintiff Amazon of profiting from pirate IPTV devices sold on its platform and in October the same year, asked the court to dismiss the case in its entirety.

Strained Relations, Short Supply of Patience

Galindo said that he was concerned that the civil lawsuit could later turn into a criminal prosecution and for their part, the plaintiffs refused to rule that out. Therefore, when discovery was supposed to take place, Galindo asserted his Fifth Amendment rights not to self-incriminate. The plaintiffs said this amounted to a discovery abuse so demanded sanctions and a default judgment.

Alex Galindo's attorney Steven Vondran later accused the plaintiffs of allowing the case "to drag on" after they sought additional time to serve Martha Galindo. Vondran also asked for the entire case to be dismissed, noting that Alex had previously agreed to accept a default judgment, a proposal the studios rejected.

The response from the studios pulled no punches. Using terms such as "outright lies" and "frankly laughable" it was clear that the supply of patience was drying up. The plaintiffs had discovered that Nitro had processed $7 million through accounts maintained by Martha Galindo and they Wanted access to that money.

Nitro Boss Stops Paying His Attorney,

After Alex reportedly refused to cooperate with the plaintiffs who were trying to find Martha and get access to the money, he later stopped paying Vondran and ended communications. A "complete breakdown" of the attorney-client relationship ensued so Vondran asked the court's permission to withdraw from the case.

With a hearing scheduled for June 30, the studios say that allowing Vondran to withdraw now would create a risk of "yet further prejudicial delay", hindering their efforts to bring the case to a conclusion. They also believe that it's unlikely that Alex Galindo will appear in person, since he previously missed a court-ordered appearance in April.

But if patience was in short supply late last year, it now appears to have completely dried up. The studios are now suggesting that Vondran is in some way responsible for his client's alleged misconduct – a client that owes him money and isn't returning his calls.

Delays Reduce Chances of Recovering Damages

"While Plaintiffs to date have refrained from seeking sanctions against Mr. Vondran, virtually all of the conduct underlying the Sanctions Motion (e.g., destruction of evidence, false discovery responses provided under oath, failure to produce a single document, and violation of a court order compelling responses and production) occurred under his watch," a studio filing dated June 10 reads.

"Plaintiffs have done everything in their power to bring this matter to a conclusion in a manner that vindicates their rights and does not reward Defendant for his gross misconduct and complete disregard for his obligations to this Court," they continue.

"Importantly, these are obligations that Defendant affirmatively opted to take on by choosing to defend against the allegations against him not once, but twice — and always while represented by Mr. Vondran."

It's at this point the studios make a direct reference to the DISH lawsuit, the relative ease with which it has just concluded in favor of the plaintiffs, and the early jump DISH has on the Nitro money.

"To put a fine point on it, the plaintiffs in the Texas action, who filed suit over a year after Plaintiffs filed this action and after the Sanctions Motion was filed, have obtained a judgment on the same misconduct at issue here, and are now able to start enforcing their judgment against Defendant while Plaintiffs are still awaiting ruling on the Sanctions Motion," a statement in opposition to Vondran's withdrawal reads.

Vondran Doesn't Appreciate Plaintiffs' Tone

In a response filed less than a day after the studios' most recent filing, Steven Vondran describes the allegations against him as "unprofessional and unsubstantiated character attacks" that imply he was somehow involved in discovery abuses.

"There was no need for them to make these unfounded insinuations," Vondran informs the court.

"There is absolutely no evidence anything was done improper by Defense counsel and in nearly 18 years of legal practice and having handled several hundred litigations (mostly federal court) I have never been accused of such abuses as they are now insinuating."

Vondran then references the "very large" DISH judgment, which in his opinion leaves the Hollywood plaintiffs with "no likely way to ever recoup their alleged damages."

He believes this is entirely down to the plaintiff's refusal to clarify the full nature and extent of the infringements at Nitro. If they had done so, the case would've gone to default long ago.

"In other words, it appears they are now upset because they are now in second position due to their prolonged delay."

Vondran concludes by asking the court to grant his motion to withdraw, noting that there would be no way to effectively defend Alex without potentially affecting his Fifth Amendment rights, even if he hadn't abandoned all contacts with Vondran and his company.

Update: After the latest exchange in the case, Judge Gail J. Standish issued a 27-page report (pdf) which recommends the district judge to find that Alex Galindo willfully violated court orders, failed to cooperate in discovery, should be held liable for infringement, and should pay $181,080 in attorneys' fees and costs to the plaintiffs.

Source documents can be found here (1,2, pdf)

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

Top 10 Most Pirated Movies of The Week – 06/20/2022
Ernesto Van der Sar, 20 Jun 12:30 AM

dumbledoreThe 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. "Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore" is the most downloaded title.

The most torrented movies for the week ending on June 20 are:

Movie Rank Rank last week Movie name IMDb Rating / Trailer
Most downloaded movies via torrent sites
1 (2) Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore 6.4 / trailer
2 (1) The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent 7.2 / trailer
3 (3) Morbius 5.1 / trailer
4 (6) The Batman 8.4 / trailer
5 (7) Everything Everywhere All at Once 8.5 / trailer
6 (…) Spiderhead 5.5 / trailer
7 (4) The Northman 7.6 / trailer
8 (5) Top Gun: Maverick 8.7 / trailer
9 (…) Jerry and Marge Go Large 7.0 / trailer
10 (8) Downton Abbey: A New Era 7.6 / 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.

Torrent Site Blockades Don't Change Old Piracy Habits Right Away
Ernesto Van der Sar, 19 Jun 02:56 PM

blockedIn March, a Dutch court ordered local ISP Delta to block access to the torrent sites 1337x, LimeTorrents, YTS, RARBG, Kickasstorrents and EZTV.

In addition to the main domains, a long list of proxies and mirrors are included as well. And if new domains pop up, these can be swiftly blocked too.

This is the second site blocking order in the Netherlands and a big win for local anti-piracy outfit BREIN. The anti-piracy group has spent more than a decade getting a Pirate Bay blockade in place and is now pushing through with new requests.

With help from a covenant, signed last year, all major Dutch Internet providers agreed to voluntarily comply with orders issued against rival ISPs. On top of that, Google also helps by removing blocked sites from its search results.

Does Site Blocking Affect Torrent Activity?

The wave of enforcement efforts must be frustrating for local pirates but does this means that they simply give up their old habits?

To find out how the March blocking order affected local torrent traffic, we used the torrent monitoring service IKnow, which provides a daily overview of how many people download files on BitTorrent. In this case, we only looked at Dutch activity[*].

The data in question has nothing to do with website visits. It's simply a representation of how many Dutch file-sharers show up in public torrent swarms on any given day, irregardless of where the .torrent files come from.

The blocking order was issued on March 24 and Delta had five days to implement it. It's not clear when each ISP started blocking, but the major ISPs followed soon after. KPN already had its blockade in place before the end of that month.

No Visible Blocking Impact

If the blocking measures impacted torrenting activity there should be a noticeable change in Dutch activity around the end of March. However, the data doesn't reflect this at all. Between March 14 and April 24, the torrent activity remained relatively stable and there is no visible decline.

Torrent Activity Before and After Blockades

dutch downloads

These numbers suggest that people still know where to find torrents, likely through alternative sites that are still available. Or they found a way to bypass the blockades via a VPN, generic proxy, or any other tool.

It's simply not realistic to expect that people will kick year-long habits from one day to another. That said, the blocking measures may reduce the number of people who start using these sites for the first time.

More Blockades Needed?

The lack of an instant effect may be a disappointment for rightsholders but it is not entirely unexpected. Academic research from Carnegie Melon University has shown that blocking only starts to be effective when a large number of sites is targeted. The more sites blocked, the bigger the impact is.

BREIN Director Tim Kuik is aware of this as well and previously highlighted this study, partly as a motivation to continue the blocking efforts.

"If an illegal source is made inaccessible, some of the traffic will move to other illegal sources, but in practice, this waterbed effect becomes less and less if more sources are blocked. In combination with sufficient legal supply, illegal use decreases when you act against illegal providers," Kuik said.

This is also why BREIN has already started work on additional site-blocking orders. The anti-piracy group hopes that, when enough sites are included, pirating activity will eventually start to decline.

*Note: The location data is based on IP addresses. The number of unique addresses per swarm is counted by Iknow. It's possible that foreign VPN subscribers with a Dutch IP address are included. While this would overestimate the number of Dutch IPs, this overestimation is constant so that does not change the conclusions.

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

 
 
Powered by Mad Mimi®A GoDaddy® company

No comments: