Friday, August 19, 2022

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Z-Library: 98m Articles & Books Blocked in India to Protect 10 Books About Tax
Andy Maxwell, 19 Aug 09:52 AM

zlibraryAbsorbing knowledge online is essentially free but those who curate that knowledge may have their own plans on where, when, and at what price their work is made available.

For millions of website publishers the problem mostly solves itself, but for those who have more restrictive offerings in mind, such as physical book sales or a digital subscription offer, the wider internet can prove to be a disruptive competitor.

Millions of scientific papers, novels, textbooks, and magazines are now just a couple of clicks away, making unlicensed sites like Sci-Hub and Libgen both wildly popular and prime candidates for anti-piracy enforcement. The platforms have proven impossible to close down, so publishers regularly obtain court injunctions that require ISPs to implement blocking.

Sci-Hub is fighting one such case in India and receiving support from both students and academics. But while everyone focused on Sci-Hub's landmark standoff, seen by some as pivotal for educational equality in a nation of almost 1.4 billion, another lawsuit targeting a similar site slipped into court unnoticed and walked out with a significant prize.

Z-Library Suddenly Becomes Unavailable

A few days ago, Aroon Deep at Entrackr contacted us with an interesting finding. When attempting to access Z-Library, a Libgen-related platform that offers close to 100 million articles and ebooks, something else appeared instead.

"The website has been blocked as per direction/order of Hon'ble Court," the message read.

Deep found that the same text appeared when accessing Z-library from ISPs including ACT Broadband and Reliance Jio, but which court had ordered the ISPs to block the site and on whose behalf was unknown. The ongoing Sci-Hub/Libgen case has been heavily reported around the world, yet it appears that nobody saw this Z-Library case coming, despite obvious relevance to Sci-Hub and the wider access-to-knowledge debate.

Publisher Targeted Z-Library in a West Delhi Court

The Z-Library blocking mystery was solved yesterday when the Department of Telecommunications disclosed the blocking order and Deep published a link on Twitter.

The document confirms that a judge sitting at a court in Delhi ordered local ISPs to start blocking Z-Library in response to a complaint filed by publisher Taxmann Publications Pvt Ltd. The background to the case laid out in earlier filings shows that at least 12 parties are named as defendants.

Copyright Infringement Allegations

Defendant #1 is listed as z-lib.org and joined by three additional domains – 1lib.in, booksc.org and booksc.eu. Defendants 2 to 10 are internet service providers, including Vodafone, Reliance Jio, Tata Teleservices and Bharti Airtel. Defendants 11 and 12 are Indian government departments, the Ministry of Communications and IT and the Ministry of Electronics & Information Technology (MEITY).

In April 2022, the court heard that Taxmann Publications Pvt Ltd is a reputable company that has spent a "huge amount of money" developing its business. Taxmann, a publisher of books about tax and corporate law, views Z-Library as a "rogue website" engaging in piracy on a grand scale, including by offering pirated copies of ten books for which it owns the rights.

Counsel for the plaintiff said that Z-Library has no physical address where any notice could've been served but having reviewed its claim, the court was satisfied that the publisher had a case.

Court Issues Injunction

In an order dated May 12, 2022, District Judge Dinesh Bhatt wrote that since Taxmann owns the rights to the ten books and Z-Library is offering them in electronic format for free, an interim injunction to restrain any future infringments was appropriate.

"In view of the above, defendant no. 1 is restrained from offering the plaintiff's books (ten books as mentioned in the plaint) for downloading in the PDF format or any other mode on its website," the order reads.

Two other orders, dated May 21 and August 1, 2022, are currently unavailable for viewing on the court website but in Indian blocking cases, the pattern is well known. Following an order from the court, the two government ministries named as defendants instruct the named ISPs to implement blocking, to prevent their subscribers from accessing the 'rogue site' in question.

Compliance with the final blocking order (linked below) will be reviewed in September. Two or three of the ISPs didn't immediately block the Z-Library domains, which raised warnings from the other ISPs that if they didn't block together, Z-Library would remain accessible. All ISPs will have to do so now.

Given the scope of the injunction and the limited domains listed, Z-Library is likely to remain accessible via other domains at its disposal. A number of these were temporarily suspended last year by a Chinese registrar following copyright complaints from Harvard, but the decision was later reversed.

The blocking order (Case Number: CS (COMM)/221/2022) can be found here (pdf)

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

Manga Piracy: New Shueisha U.S. Court Action Indicates Complex Investigation
Andy Maxwell, 18 Aug 06:44 PM

network-roundIn recent years, publishers of Japanese manga comics have been sending a sustained and clear message that content piracy will not be tolerated, wherever it takes place in the world.

The problems faced by companies including Shueisha, Kadowaka, Kodansha, and Shogakukan, are easy to describe but much more difficult to counter.

Japan-based pirate site operators serving a domestic audience face experienced local investigators, law enforcement agencies, and a relatively high prospect of criminal sanctions. Those based overseas still have the ability to reach Japanese users but identifying them presents new legal challenges for the publishers. That's also the case when sites are administered from Japan but utilize international infrastructure.

As a result, cross-border investigations and accompanying jurisdiction issues are now common in piracy cases. Thousands of pirate sites use the services of American companies, so whether they have connections to Cloudflare or process payments in the U.S., the risk of the publishers seeking assistance from local courts is now high, as the successful prosecution of MangaBank's operator showed.

Shueisha Seeks Assistance from U.S. Court

Following the playbook deployed in the MangaBank case, Shueisha has just filed another ex parte application at the same California district court seeking discovery of information for use in a foreign proceeding (28 U.S. Code § 1782).

Shueisha is investigating several manga piracy sites, listed in the application as follows:

mangagohan.com, mangapro.top, gokumanga.com, doki1001.com, manga1001.in, comick.top

The publisher's legal team says that the sites published infringing copies of Shueisha's copyrighted works soon after commercial release, adding that this constitutes infringement under both Japanese and Vietnamese laws.

The reference to Vietnam is based on information provided by Cloudflare. Shueisha previously obtained a DMCA subpoena requiring the CDN company to hand over the personal details of those being the sites. The disclosed information doesn't identify individuals but does link them to IP addresses belonging to a pair of telecoms companies – 'Vietnam Posts and Telecommunications Group' and 'Vietname Telecom National'.

Vietnam doesn't allow third-party companies to obtain internet users' identifying information based on copyright infringement allegations so Shueisha's plan is to act on other information provided by Cloudflare. PayPal, Visa, Mastercard, Google, Braintree and/or Stripe accounts are linked to the site operators and since the companies are based in the United States, Shueisha wants them to hand over whatever they hold.

The endgame is to file lawsuits against the site operators in Japan or Vietnam, presumably on copyright infringement grounds, and Shueisha says that courts in both countries would appreciate assistance from the United States. There's no explanation of why these sites are of particular interest to the publisher out of the hundreds online, but potential clues in the application open up interesting avenues of research.

Does Investigation Encompass Many More Sites?

Studying the domains reveals that they all target consumers of pirated manga in Japan, with no less than 88% and as many as 94% of their visitors coming from the country. Another interesting aspect is that traffic to the sites is either trending downwards (in some cases off the edge of a cliff) or behaving in unnatural ways.

For example, mangagohan.com enjoyed around 1.9m visits in May, the same in June, but less than half that in July. From 1.6m visits in May, visits to mangapro.top suddenly jumped to 3.6m in June before dropping to 2.4m in July. Visits to gokumanga.com in May topped out at around 2m but traffic was less than a quarter of that in July.

The other sites show similarly strange patterns, but doki1001.com stands out as a particularly big mover. In May it had around 13.1m visits according to SimilarWeb stats, versus just 1.7m in July, so what lies behind these wild fluctuations?

Redirections and Connections

According to Shueisha, both mangagohan.com and gokumanga.com redirected themselves to mangagohan.me at some point, but that site's traffic has gone down instead of up in recent months.

However, scratch just below the surface looking for other redirects and a whole new world of potential links appears between the domains in the application and many others, some of which Shueisha is already investigating.

– Mangagohan.com (down): Outbound redirect: mangagohan.me (down)
– Gokumanga.com (down): Outbound redirect: mangagohan.me (down)

– Mangapro.top (down): Inbound redirects: comick.to, mymangaraw.com, mixmanga.com, 3xmanga.com, upmanga.com, picmanga.com, overmanga.com, padmanga.com, loadmanga.com, mangaair.com, mangatweet.com, mangamenu.com, mangano1.com, mangarip.com. Oubound redirect: comick.top

– Doki1001.com (down): Inbound redirect: manga-1001.com (existing Shueisha target)
– Manga1001.in (up) – Outbound redirect: manga9.co (zero traffic in May, 6.4m July)

– Comick.top – (up) – Inbound redirects: padmanga.com, mangano1.com, mangapro.top, mangamenu.com, mangarank.com, mangaair.com, mangatweet.com, mangarip.com, manga1001.top, loadmanga.com. Outbound redirect: mangapro.top

The limited domain information above suggests that if the U.S. companies provide useful, actionable material to Shueisha, a gateway to even bigger things may lie ahead. Most obviously, there may be an opportunity to eliminate many pirate sites, for beyond the handful listed in the application.

Shueisha's application for discovery can be found here (pdf)

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

 
 
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