Friday, September 30, 2022

TorrentFreak's Latest News

 

France Claims it Has Cut Live Sports Piracy By 50% in Six Months
Andy Maxwell, 30 Sep 09:33 AM

ballsFor more than a decade the Hadopi agency (High Authority for the Distribution of Works and the Protection of Rights on the Internet) was seen as the solution to BitTorrent-style peer-to-peer piracy in France.

Hadopi's goal was to change the behaviors of the majority of French pirates. Ultimately, a preference among pirates for different technologies ended up taking the credit for that. With pirates drawn towards easy-to-use (but still illegal) streaming sites, Hadopi's BitTorrent-focused anti-piracy toolkit had little chance of making an impact.

On January 1, 2022, France launched the Audiovisual and Digital Communication Regulatory Authority (ARCOM), which swallowed Hadopi and took on a number of challenges, fighting piracy being just one of them.

Arcom and Rightsholders Waste No Time

With Arcom supporting their every move, various rightsholders stepped up to take advantage of new legislation designed to make pirate site blocking more efficient, to combat mirror sites and proxies, and to further punish sites by restricting appearances in search engines and curtailing advertising opportunities.

A particular emphasis has been placed on protecting live sports such as football, with beIN obtaining the first new-style blocking order in January. European football association UEFA and broadcaster Canal+ later helped to maintain the momentum.

Arcom Reports Constant Success

Big things are expected from Arcom so it was no surprise when the agency reported immediate successes, especially on the site-blocking front.

In April, Arcom reported that 250 sports piracy sites had been blocked, together serving more than 60% of live sports piracy market in France. That certainly didn't mean that blocking had wiped out more than 60% of the sports piracy market, it just meant that France had blocked some domains operated by 250 of the biggest sites.

In May, another announcement revealed that an additional 150 domains had been targeted, including an unspecified number that attempted to circumvent previously-imposed ISP blocking. The new law was designed with these countermeasures in mind and according to Arcom, things were going as planned.

Blocking Sites is Not Shutting Them Down

There's no doubt that aggressive site blocking measures are a major inconvenience to pirate site operators. Some may conclude that countermeasures are no longer worth the effort, which in turn could deter others from getting into the piracy game. But there are some harsh realities too.

Site blocking is extremely easy to circumvent. By switching to a DNS provider outside the country (Cloudflare or Google, for example), French users can unblock sites in a couple of minutes, completely free of charge. An Arcom report published earlier this year noted that 19% of internet users had changed their DNS settings.

That figure from Arcom is worth repeating – 19% of internet users changed their DNS settings, not 19% of pirates changed their settings. That's on top of an estimated 7% of French internet users who operated VPNs in 2021 and as a result are completely unaffected by site-blocking measures.

Perhaps even more importantly, site blocking does not take pirate sites offline. Indeed, site blocking is a direct response to anti-piracy groups being unable to take pirate sites offline, at least in any significant numbers. Nevertheless, Arcom mostly chooses to focus on big numbers and in some cases, incredibly big numbers.

France Achieves More in Six Months Than Any Country, Ever

After a relatively slow start when compared to Italy or the UK, by 2015 France had blocked 18 sites and has steadily added large batches ever since. However, since January 1, 2022, success rates have reportedly gone through the roof.

In April, Arcom reported (pdf) that France's site-blocking efforts meant that the audience for the top 14 blocked sites could now be reported at -100%. In addition, site-blocking measures had caused piracy of Europe's prestigious Champions League football competition to plummet by 76% in France. But more was to come.

In a speech this month to the French Senate's Committee for Culture, Education and Communication, Arcom president Roch-Olivier Maistre noted that piracy of cultural and sports content costs France a billion euros per year. However, the new and "highly responsive" legal framework has new procedures to combat the threat, including those that accommodate the inherent urgency of blocking live sports piracy streams.

As a result, more than 700 sites have been blocked in France since January, with incredible effectiveness. According to Maistre, in the first six months of 2022, piracy of all live sports in France via the internet was slashed by 50% (pdf).

To put that into perspective, both the UK and Italy are engaged in some of the most aggressive site-blocking programs ever seen across Europe yet can't get anywhere near the results reported by France. Live sports piracy is up in the UK and since 2019, consumption of live sports has increased by half in Italy.

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

Indie Record Label Leads Crackdown on YouTube Downloaders
Ernesto Van der Sar, 29 Sep 08:56 PM

because musicThree years ago, the RIAA began targeting YouTube ripping sites by sending relatively rare takedown requests to Google.

Instead of the usual DMCA copyright notices, the music group asked the search engine to remove various URLs for alleged violations of the DMCA's anti-circumvention provision.

The sites in question are accused of circumventing YouTube's rolling cipher, a technical protection measure that attempts to protect audio and video from being copied without permission. As such, the RIAA argues that the sites should be removed from Google's search results.

Shortly after the RIAA started this campaign, its British counterpart BPI began sending similar requests. These groups represent the broader music industry, including many of the major labels, and both have in-house anti-piracy teams that handle these takedowns.

Indie Label's Takedown Spree

These industry groups have no shortage of firepower but this year their activities have been largely overshadowed by a newcomer. After sending its first anti-circumvention takedown notice in February, an independent record label from France is setting the pace.

The label in question is Because Music and it has just a few dozen signed artists. That didn't stop the company from sending more than 2,800 takedown requests asking Google to remove over 10,000 links to YouTube ripping sites.

"Tool to bypass YouTube security measures allowing users to illegally download our copyrighted content," the identical notices inform Google, requesting various stream-ripper URLs to be removed.

because music takedown

To put this number into perspective, the RIAA sent just over 100 anti-circumvention notices this year, while the BPI is stuck at roughly 180. This means that the indie label submitted roughly ten times as many takedown requests in the same period.

36% of All Circumvention Notices

The French label is by far the most prolific sender of DMCA anti-circumvention notices. According to Google's transparency report, it's responsible for more than one-third (36%) of all notices submitted to the search engine.

Because Music's DMCA's anti-circumvention notices are also sent on behalf of another indie label, Yonea and Willy, and all list just one track: "Dans ma ruche" from the rapper Guizmo. With over 3 million views on the YouTube video, it's clear to see why the label is trying to protect it from unauthorized downloads.

Google has removed many thousands of stream-ripper URLs in response to these takedown requests. An exact figure is more difficult to establish as the number of URLs varies per notice, but the efforts are definitely having an impact.

At the same time, the YouTube rippers themselves aren't sitting still either. They are actively countering the takedown notices by continuously using new URL structures.

For example, Because Music asked Google to remove mp3y.download/en/youtube-converter-v180 from its search results this week. That takedown worked for a while, but the site swiftly moved to mp3y.download/en/youtube-converter-v181 in response.

It's pretty much a perpetual game of cat and mouse.

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

 
 
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Thursday, September 29, 2022

TorrentFreak's Latest News

 

Danish Pirate Site Blocking Updated, Telecoms Group Publishes All Domains
Andy Maxwell, 29 Sep 09:15 AM

holeAs pirate site blocking programs expand around the world, Denmark already has more than 15 years of experience in this branch of copyright protection.

After blocking Russian MP3 site AllofMP3 in 2006, Danish rightsholders haven't looked back. The big drive now is how to streamline the site-blocking process so that piracy platforms can be hit as quickly and as comprehensively as possible.

Part of the problem is that to have pirate domains blocked, rightsholders need to have authorization from the court. This can be obtained by obtaining an injunction against an ISP but when a single ISP is the target, other ISPs are not legally required to do anything.

In 2014, rightsholders and ISPs solved these problems by signing a Code of Conduct which ensures that when one ISP is ordered to block, others follow voluntarily. But in the world of site-blocking, there's always more to be done.

Dynamic Blocking….And Beyond

Since blocking pirate sites is a commitment rather than a one-off effort, Denmark's site-blocking regime also tackles domain switches and proxy sites. This so-called 'dynamic blocking' doesn't require a new court process. Anti-piracy group Rights Alliance has the authority to identify any new domains and forward them to ISPs for blocking, a process that will now be accelerated.

The Conduct of Conduct (CoC) that provides the framework for blocking has been revised over the years, to accommodate the changing piracy landscape. Earlier this month it was updated again, hoping to shut down domains more quickly than before.

"[T]he illegal market on the Internet is constantly and rapidly developing, which is why it has been necessary to carry out a slight revision of the CoC agreement," Rights Alliance explains.

"This implies greater flexibility and automation of the processes in the agreement, which should make it easier for both the Rights Alliance and the members of the Telecom Industry to block illegal websites."

The plan is for ISPs to block new domains within seven days, using automation to retrieve updated lists before carrying out the usual DNS blocking.

How Will The System Work?

Both Rights Alliance and Teleindustrien (Telecommunications Industry Association in Denmark) have published copies of the new Code of Conduct but neither explain how the new system will work. Indeed, the CoC contains a paragraph that explains that a section detailing the individual steps, procedures and criteria, has been withheld "in order to achieve the purpose of the agreement."

Given that Denmark's blocking program is DNS-based, it's trivial for ISPs to modify local DNS entries to redirect pirate site visitors to Share With Care (SWC), a portal designed to encourage pirates back on to the legal path of authorized content services.

Somewhat intrigued by the apparent need for secrecy, we took a closer look at Teleindustrien and to our surprise, found the complete opposite.

Complete Blocking Transparency

It appears that when ISPs are ordered to block domains for any reason, Teleindustrien goes public with three things: the laws under which the blocking was ordered, who ordered the blocking, and which domains were blocked in response.

For example, the telecoms industry group details recent blocks associated with the Ukraine conflict (including RT.com and sputniknews.com) and publishes the domains to an easily downloadable .csv file – perfect for ISPs looking to implement DNS blocking.

Another .csv file is published for gambling site domains deemed illegal in Denmark, 183 according to the latest batch

The data relating to Denmark's pirate site blocking program reveals how quickly it has expanded over the years. In 2017, Danish ISPs were blocking around 100 pirate sites, a figure that jumped to 478 in 2020.

The latest .csv file containing the list of blocked piracy domains is dated September 27, 2022. It contains 892 URLs – some of them domains in their own right and others representing sub-domains on various sites dedicated to unblocking.

It's unclear how the new streamlining provisions in the revised Code of Conduct can beat pulling a plain text file from a website but Teleindustrian also provides the data in PDF format for the Adobe fans out there.

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

Liverpool and Manchester United Team Up to Beat Counterfeiters
Ernesto Van der Sar, 28 Sep 09:55 PM

england jerseyThe rivalry between Liverpool and Manchester United goes back more than a century. It even has its own Wikipedia entry.

The football teams and their fans often go head to head but on neutral territory, the clubs have recently formed an unusual partnership.

Football Rivals Team Up in Court

This week, the clubs filed a complaint at a U.S. federal court in Chicago. Together with a third Premier League team, Tottenham Hotspur, they accuse dozens of online stores of selling trademark-infringing products.

complaint

These counterfeit items, including jerseys, are openly sold online. Not just through standalone shops but also on some of the largest e-commerce platforms such as Alibaba, Amazon, eBay, and Wish.

"In recent years, Plaintiffs have identified many fully interactive, e-commerce stores offering counterfeit Plaintiffs' Products on online marketplace platforms such as Amazon, eBay, AliExpress, Alibaba, Wish.com, Walmart, Etsy, and DHgate, including the e-commerce stores operating under the Seller Aliases," the complaint reads.

At this point, we would like to give some examples of these infringing stores. However, the document where they're listed is currently sealed, most likely to prevent the defendants from relocating before the court rules on the matter.

Counterfeiters Evade Enforcement

The unauthorized stores are well aware of their controversial nature and actively look for ways to avoid getting caught. Behind the scenes, the sellers discuss evasion tactics through chat rooms and dedicated websites.

"[Defendants] regularly participate in QQ.com chat rooms and through websites such as sellerdefense.cn, kaidianyo.com and kuajingvs.com regarding tactics for operating multiple accounts, evading detection, pending litigation, and potential new lawsuits," the football clubs allege.

These tactics can be as simple as setting up new aliases and shops. However, store operators also have off-shore bank accounts where they move money, so it remains outside of the jurisdiction of US courts.

"Indeed, analysis of financial account transaction logs from previous similar cases indicates that off-shore counterfeiters regularly move funds from U.S.-based financial accounts to off-shore accounts outside the jurisdiction of this Court."

Previous Lawsuit

As the above suggests, this isn't the first lawsuit the football clubs have filed. Earlier this year, Liverpool, United and Tottenham filed a similar case against 138 stores. These included jerseygoal.co, soccish.com, and various Amazon, DHGate and Aliexpress vendors.

shops example

Without a response from any of the store operators, the football clubs requested a default judgment. The clubs asked for $200,000 damages from each unique defendant, which was granted by the federal court in Chicago last month.

In this case, the clubs also request compensation for the losses they allegedly suffered. Damages could reach $2 million for each trademark infringement, per defendant.

The complaint further asks for an order that effectively prohibits the stores from offering counterfeit products. In addition, the e-commerce platforms used to sell the products should stop advertising the products as well.

While it may be hard to shut down all counterfeit operations indefinitely, the lawsuits appear to have some effect. Many of the defendants listed in the earlier lawsuit have ceased operating, at least under their old aliases.

In addition, Liverpool, United, and Tottenham settled their dispute with two of the 138 stores. These paid an undisclosed damages amount.

The football clubs are not the only ones taking against counterfeiters in US courts. Over the past several months, we've seen similar complaints from Nike, Toyota, Ubisoft, Swarovski, PopSockets, Universal Music, Burberry and many others.

A copy of the latest complaint filed at the federal court by Liverpool, United and Tottenham is available here (pdf)

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

 
 
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Wednesday, September 28, 2022

TorrentFreak's Latest News

 

Teen's Destiny 2 Cheat Strategy Gifts Bungie Unlimited Lawsuit Ammo
Andy Maxwell, 28 Sep 12:00 PM

Destiny 2After being sued by Bungie in a Washington court during the summer, a teenager accused of cheating in Destiny 2 and being abusive towards Bungie staff decided to fight back.

The core of Bungie's lawsuit is that L.L. repeatedly breached the terms of its Limited Software License Agreement (LSLA) by using third-party cheating software, getting banned by Bungie, and then repeatedly signing back up to breach the LSLA's terms once again.

L.L. is further accused of selling Bungie emblems on third-party platforms and using cheating software that modifies the Destiny 2 game, violates the DMCA's anti-circumvention provisions, and creates infringing derivative works.

In a recent and spirited motion to dismiss, L.L. fought back against the developer but, rather than backing down, Bungie seems to have found new angles of attack. Indeed, the company's response suggests that L.L.'s defense tactics are so flawed they have actually weakened his position.

Teen Voids LSLA, Bungie Says 'Gotcha'

L.L.'s motion to dismiss doesn't hide the fact that he cheated in Destiny 2 and streamed his cheating to the world using Twitch. It doesn't deny that he publicly mocked Bungie's inability to stop him as he signed up for new accounts. Instead, it notes that as a minor, L.L. was able to tear up Bungie's LSLA to free him from its shackles and, as a result, three of Bungie's causes of action.

In its opposition motion filed this week, Bungie agrees that by disaffirming the LSLA, L.L. has indeed rendered the contract void ab initio. Having no legal effect from the outset means there can be no future contractual obligations under the LSLA or any liability for past breaches.

As a result, Bungie says the court should go right ahead and dismiss all of its claims for breach of contract. The downside for L.L. is the nature of LSLAs. On the one hand, they prohibit a number of actions – cheating, for example. But on the other, they also grant permission – a license – for other actions too. Notably, simply playing the game.

"[T]he LSLA was a license agreement, and its mere existence was the only thing that rendered L.L.'s repeated downloads and plays of the Destiny 2 software and audiovisual work non-infringing," Bungie's response reads.

"By disaffirming the LSLA and rendering it void ab initio, L.L. has affirmatively
conceded Bungie's claims that he infringed its copyrights in the Destiny 2 software and
audiovisual work, because he never had a valid license to do anything with them."

No LSLA? Stronger Copyright Claims Coming Right Up

Bungie says that L.L.'s decision to void the licensing agreement will lead to the developer filing an amended complaint. It will contain additional copyright infringement claims that take all of the Destiny 2 player's unlicensed activities into consideration.

"[B]ungie intends to amend, after the Court's decision on the remaining branches of the motion, to assert that all of L.L.'s downloads, uses, and streams of Destiny 2 were infringing, including his initial download, uses, and streams prior to his first violation of the LSLA," Bungie's response reads.

The claims could be significant. Bungie owns the copyrights to Destiny 2 as a software program and as an audiovisual work, meaning that every time L.L. played the game without a license, he created an infringing copy when he loaded it into RAM and infringed again when the game's story played out on screen. Bungie says that if L.L. hadn't torn up the LSLA, these activities could've been permitted.

Cheat Software and Derivative Works

Whether or not L.L. had the protection of the LSLA, any use of the cheat software would've constituted copyright infringement, Bungie says. According to the developer, the software in question adds a graphical overlay to Destiny 2, meaning that the game's output as an audiovisual work is modified, effectively creating an unlicensed derivative work.

This assertion was previously rejected by the defendant by citing a 1992 case involving Nintendo and the Game Genie cheating device. In that matter, the court found that the Game Genie was incapable of producing images and anything that appeared on screen was produced by the NES console. In addition, the device did not manipulate the data stored in Nintendo game cartridges.

"Here, as Bungie has plead in its complaint, the cheat software L.L. used not only modifies the contents of Destiny 2 data structures in memory but also 'creates visual elements.' These novel visual elements are readily apparent in the video clips L.L. recorded and posted to his Twitter," the company adds.

DMCA Anti-Circumvention Provisions

Bungie says that L.L. circumvented five types of technological protection measures (TPM) and in various public comments, including on Twitter, he identified some of them by name including account bans, BattlEye and hardware ID bans.

"7 bans in and still going strong @Bungie battleye is shit took me 30 seconds to get around your silly hardware ban," one declared.

Bungie also challenges claims made in L.L.'s motion to dismiss regarding the DMCA's anti-circumvention provisions. The defense claimed that since Bungie's code was resident on L.L.'s PC and not on Bungie's server, he was "perfectly free to examine and see what files, data, programs, etc.," because they were on his computer.

The developer disagrees, adding that the motion confuses the DMCA with the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act so incorrectly focuses on which computer contained the protected data.

"But where the data resides is irrelevant to a DMCA anti-circumvention claim. Unlike the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, which criminalizes unauthorized access to protected computers, 18 U.S.C. § 1030(a)(1), the DMCA bars users from circumventing TPMs that control access to copyrighted works. That is true regardless of where the work resides," Bungie adds.

Bungie Didn't Know L.L. Was a Minor

We now know that L.L. is just 17 but Bungie didn't know that when it sued since the Destiny 2 player claimed to be in his 20s online. Bungie accepts that the defendant is protected from contractual liabilities but says the law provides minors with no right to defraud licensors, infringe copyrights, or circumvent TPMs.

"Moreover, the law does not provide minors with a special haven from civil liability that may arise or be exacerbated when, through and perhaps in reliance on the advice of experienced counsel, they choose to disaffirm any number of license agreements that may otherwise have authorized infringing conduct," an acerbic concludes.

Bungie's opposition to L.L.'s motion to dismiss can be found here (pdf)

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

AnyStories Drags Cloudflare to the Copyright Claims Board Over Pirate Site
Ernesto Van der Sar, 27 Sep 09:49 PM

anystoriesIn June, the US Copyright Claims Board was launched.

Through this venue, hosted at the US Copyright Office, rightsholders can try to recoup alleged damages outside the federal court system.

More than one hundred and fifty cases have been filed thus far. Some of these have been dismissed for administrative reasons or opt-outs, but the board has yet to issue its first verdict.

A few days ago a new case was added to the growing pile of claims. It features popular reading app AnyStories, which allows independent authors to share their writings in public and earn revenue from them, going up against Cloudflare.

Like any type of content that's published online, AnyStories' content is easily copied. This is a thorn in the side of the app's creators, Singapore company READ ASAP LTD, which has taken action in response.

From Google to Cloudflare

The company sent DMCA takedown notices to Google which removed hundreds of infringing links from its search results in response. The pirate sites themselves typically remained online, so further action was needed.

Hoping for a breakthrough, AnyStories also sent DMCA notices to Cloudflare, calling out Infobagh.com as a pirate site. While Cloudflare provides CDN services for that site, it's not the hosting company. This means that Cloudflare generally doesn't intervene.

Instead, Cloudflare shared the name and contact information of the site's hosting company (24xservice) and asked 'READ ASAP' to follow the issue up with them.

Cloudflare's reply

cloudflare

AnyStories tried, but says that the email address provided for the hosting company didn't work. The company wasn't pleased with Cloudflare's handling of the case and, on several occasions, asked the company to do more.

"As a network service provider, you have the obligation to provide us with information to help us defend our rights. You have not provided us with valid information. Our infringement is ongoing and if you do not take any action now, we will take action to protect our rights."

Copyright Claims Board Threats

The app's creators asked Cloudflare to contact the host on its behalf to ensure the infringing content was removed.

"Pls deal with this matter immediately, pls contact the hosting provider immediately and ask them to remove the infringing web!!!!" READ ASAP wrote.

"If you do not deal with this matter now, based on the DMCA, we have informed you several times, but you did not do your duty of care, we will directly file a claim against you at Copyright Claims Board."

Respond ASAP

cloud asap

Cloudflare has no legal obligation under the DMCA to contact its customers' hosting companies but it does forward takedown notices. However, that wasn't enough for AnyStories, which followed up on its threats by filing a complaint at the Copyright Claims Board.

Apology Please

The claim lists one infobagh.com URL where a copy of a story titled "The Silver Hope" by David Travilla Tacadena is made available. However, READ ASAP stresses that infringements are causing a decline in revenues for other authors too.

With its complaint the company hopes to stop the piracy. In addition, an apology would be appreciated as well.

"We hope that the pirated websites will apologize to us and immediately remove our exclusive works. We tried many ways to leave messages often without contacting the infringing website. Finally, we tried to find the service provider, but they cannot give the invalid message and don't deal with it," the claim reads.

Interestingly, there is no request for monetary damages. Also, the literary work that's listed is not yet registered at the U.S. Copyright Office, which is required before the Copyright Claims Board can take on the case.

The above means that AnyStories still has some work to do before the case can continue and Cloudflare can still choose to opt out of the proceeding. If that's the case, the app's creators will need to hire an attorney and go to federal court to pursue their claim.

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

 
 
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