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Piracy Relic 'Putlocker.com' Auctioned Off For $102,499
Ernesto Van der Sar, 24 Nov 12:55 PM

dollarsRoughly a decade ago, the online piracy landscape was fairly straightforward and easy to navigate.

There were a dozen or so household names that drew most of the traffic, including KickassTorrents, Torrentz, YTS, EZTV, Rapidshare and Putlocker.

All of these sites have long since disappeared, but interestingly their brands live on. Opportunistic copycats often use these familiar names to build their own piracy empires, something seen more recently with 123movies, Cuevana, and other icons.

It's perhaps fitting that sites that relied heavily on copying are being copied themselves; the original operators can hardly complain about that. But for unwitting users, the landscape can be quite confusing, especially when scammers and malware peddlers jump on board to make a quick buck.

Putlocker.com

A few days ago we saw one of these classic piracy names go up for auction at Namejet. The domain in question, Putlocker.com, enjoyed its heydays roughly a decade ago.

In 2011 the file-hosting service was added to Hollywood's list of notorious pirate sites and subsequently featured in the U.S. Government's notorious markets report. Not just once but two years in a row.

The Old Putlocker.com

putlocker

Putlocker wasn't happy with these allegations and stressed that it took aggressive measures to take pirated content down. The owners eventually decided to let go of the name and in 2014 rebranded as Firedrive.

$102,499 Auction

Even though Putlocker.com hasn't been in use for years, there was plenty of interest in the domain at auction.

After a bidding war, a lucky buyer going by the name of "pantaloons" scooped up Putlocker.com. This person ended up paying $102,499 for the domain name, a massive sum for an ancient piracy relic. Who in their right mind would pay that much for a controversial domain and why?

putlocker auction

At first, we thought it might be a pirate with deep pockets plotting to restore the old file-sharing juggernaut but there is absolutely no evidence that's the case. On the contrary, a domain broker, who prefers to remain unnamed in this article, offered a more down-to-earth explanation.

"The domain putlocker.com is valuable because it receives a large amount of targeted type-in traffic," the broker says.

"A vast majority of this traffic comes from people mistakingly typing putlocker.com into their browsers while searching for one of the 75 or so clones across other TLDs and ccTLDs," he adds.

Serving Ads

According to various estimates, Putlocker.com still has roughly 4,000 visitors per day. That isn't a lot, but these are all people searching for something specific, which makes them more likely to click on advertising feeds.

Indeed, soon after Putlocker.com was auctioned off, it was monetized by a Zeroclick ads feed. This is basically a list of links with terms such as "Watch Movies Free" and "Free Full Movies" that may look rather appealing to confused pirates.

The 'New' Putlocker.com

putlocker ads

These ads point to other advertising pages that ultimately lead people to streaming services such as Crackle, Pluto TV, and SkyShowtime. There's also a link to Chilimovie.com which looks like a pirate site, but isn't. Instead, it tries to convert visitors into new customers for Amazon Prime Video.

These ad feeds have been abused by dubious and scammy services in the past but we didn't see any of these on Putlocker.com when we checked.

It's hard to tell how much revenue this advertising model delivers but it must take a while to recoup a $100k investment. According to our source, the buyer may have overpaid based on the ad-revenue potential alone.

Pirate Domains Have Wild Lives

Putlocker.com is not the only domain with a pirate history to be auctioned off recently. Moviesjoy.net was sold a few days ago for $15,800 and Primewire.ag, targeted in an MPA lawsuit last year, sold at auction for a few thousand dollars.

These domain names are not typically sold by the original owners. Instead, they end up at auction after the original registrants forgets or chooses not to renew them

The same happened to Thepiratebay.com which was actioned off for $35,150 two years ago and now points to an adult site. Around the same time, Piratebay.org brought in $50,000. The latter briefly promoted a mysterious film project and is currently redirecting to a non-operational proxy domain.

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

Google Ordered to Remove Pirate Site Domains From U.S. Search Results
Andy Maxwell, 23 Nov 08:24 PM

Pirate FireLegal action filed last week by two Arizona-based companies aims to prevent pirate sites distributing their content. That's not unusual in itself but the case is far from ordinary.

Founded in 2005, CP Productions, Inc. produces adult entertainment media and uses its own website for distribution. Fornix Holdings, Inc. handles intellectual property matters for CP Productions and to date has registered 157 videos at the U.S. Copyright Office.

Both companies are owned by Arizona resident David Graves who appears to manage everything from production to his companies' anti-piracy efforts.

At a district court in Arizona on November 15, Fornix Holdings and CP Productions filed an ex parte application for a temporary restraining order (tro) and preliminary injunction. The goal was to quickly end infringement on several pirate websites where CP Productions' videos were offered illegally for free.

Piracy is a common issue in the U.S. affecting thousands of content-producing companies. What stands out in this case are the far-reaching demands on extremely short notice. That the court authorized strict anti-piracy measures in a matter of days is noteworthy too, especially given some of the unusual features of the case.

Declaration in Support of TRO

The core of the TRO application is straightforward. As laid out in David Graves' declaration, the website DaftSex.com links to 1,734 pirated copies of CP Productions videos. Two other domains, daftsex.tv and daftsex.porn, redirect to DaftSex.com.

A second website, Pornwild.com, began offering CP Productions' videos around May 2022, again without permission. Graves says the site links to 1,339 infringing videos while two other websites, Pornwild.to and Pornwild-to.nicepornproxy.com, redirect to Pornwild.com.

Through content-monitoring companies, Graves sent over 1,700 takedown notices to DaftSex.com, to an email address that used to appear on the site but no longer does. The 1,600 takedowns sent to Pornwild.com were sent to a withheldforprivacy.com address listed in the domain's WHOIS records. Graves says no responses from the sites were ever received.

Application for TRO/Preliminary Injunction

In their preliminary statement, Fornix and CP note that since the operators of DaftSex.com and Pornwild.com concealed their identities, they are listed as Doe #1 and Doe #2 in their application. There's no reference in the application but PornHub owner MindGeek actually made Doe #1's identity public in September.

To overcome their identification problems, the applicants named EasyDNS, Namecheap and Cloudflare as defendants in the case. And since it "provides a search service that returns Defendant John Does' sites" in response to certain searches, Google was also named as a defendant.

At this point readers will recall that MG Premium, a subsidiary of Pornhub-owner MindGeek, won a $32 million judgment against the operator of Daftsex.com on November 7, 2022.

Fornix and CP's application for a temporary restraining order against DaftSex and Pornwild was filed on November 15. That's more than a week after MG Premium won its own case against DaftSex and an injunction requiring Verisign to hand over the DaftSex.com domain to MG Premium.

Already under new ownership, DaftSex.com now redirects to RedTube, another platform owned by MindGeek.

Applicants Demand Everything – and More

To prevent the operators of DaftSex and PornWild from knowing about the case, Fornix and CP requested an ex parte restraining order in the face of "willful and ongoing infringing conduct." Their demands included the following:

  • Deactivate and cancel the DaftSex and Pornwild domains and prevent re-registration
  • Deactivate the websites at daftsex.com, daftsex.tv, daftsex.porn, pornwild.com, pornwild.to, pornwild-to.nicepornproxy.com and delete all copies of infringing works
  • Delete all copies of plaintiffs' works uploaded by DaftSex and Pornwild to third-party sites
  • Cease provision of all internet services to DaftSex and PornWild including domain name registration, hosting, security, content delivery, and reverse proxy services
  • Compel Google to remove all DaftSex and Pornwild websites from search results

After the application was filed on November 15, Judge Diane J Humetewa responded by ordering a telephone hearing on November 17. In the meantime, summons were reportedly issued to Cloudflare EasyDNS, Google, and NameCheap. What happened during the telephone hearing isn't revealed in the docket but it was subsequently reset for November 21.

Google Appears, Dismissals Begin

An entry dated November 18 shows that Fornix and CP Productions voluntarily dismissed their case against EasyDNS. Hoping to learn more about this fast moving case, TorrentFreak contacted EasyDNS with some questions. CEO Mark Jeftovic told us that he knew nothing about it.

"We have never been served any papers regarding this case. Your email was the first I've ever heard about any of this," Jeftovic informed TF.

After consulting their systems, EasyDNS did manage to find some related information. One ticket related to a copyright removal request forwarded to a customer and later confirmed as complete by the complainant. Another contained a notice from Verisign advising that a domain was being moved onto the EuroDNS registrar tag to comply with the MG/DaftSex injunction. That left one more.

"[The third ticket] was an email thread amongst several lawyers asking if we will participate in some hearing five days ago, received the day of the hearing. Our agent responded 'What is our involvement with this case?' and we never heard back," Jeftovic explained.

Jeftovic then offered a theory on EasyDNS' dismissal from the case. "My guess is one of Google, Namecheap or Cloudflare did attend the hearing, pointed to Section 230 or other safe harbour provisions, and got all of the ISPs dropped from the defendants," he said.

Coincidence or probably not, an appearance was made on behalf of Google on November 18. The very next day, Namecheap, Cloudflare, and Google were voluntarily dismissed too.

Temporary Restraining Order Granted

Following a telephone hearing this Monday, Judge Humetewa granted the plaintiffs' request for a temporary restraining order, minimal details as follows:

"Plaintiffs are not required to post a bond. Defendants are to disable infringing domain names, suspend service to those infringing domain names, and prevent transfer," the entry reads, adding:

"Google shall, to the extent necessary, remove the infringing domain names from search results."

The preliminary injunction will be handled separately.

Related documents can be found here (1,2,3,4,5, pdf)

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

 
 
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