Wednesday, September 28, 2022

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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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