Monday, December 12, 2022

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MPA Wins $20.7m Damages Against Former Piracy Giant PrimeWire
Andy Maxwell, 12 Dec 11:13 AM

mpaWhen several major studios filed a copyright lawsuit against PrimeWire last year, it shouldn't have come as much of a surprise. It did nonetheless – it was a long time coming.

More than a decade ago, a successful pirate streaming site called LetMeWatchThis reportedly ran into domain issues, and after a swift rebranding exercise, returned as 1Channel. What prompted the site to change its name yet again isn't clear but, after adopting the name PrimeWire, traffic poured in from all over the world.

Due to Hollywood legal action, PrimeWire was among the first 30 sites to be blocked in the UK back in 2013, but that was just the beginning. Similar blocking injunctions followed in Australia, Ireland, Norway, Denmark, Portugal and beyond.

Despite being given the opportunity to protest at least some of these blocking measures, PrimeWire never appeared in court to mount a defense, even by email. When the MPAA reported the site to the USTR in 2013, it was hoped PrimeWire would fold but, despite additional reports over subsequent years, it carried on regardless.

Becoming a permanent fixture on the Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit's 'Infringing Website List' was meant to increase the pressure. However, as far as we're aware, Hollywood never filed a lawsuit. Roughly nine years ago the MPA believed PrimeWire's servers were in Estonia but, while access to hardware can be useful, hard drives can't be sued.

Movie and TV Giants Sue PrimeWire

Then, out of the blue in December 2021, Paramount, Universal, Warner, Columbia, Disney, and Netflix filed a lawsuit against PrimeWire in the U.S. They demanded millions in damages and an all-important injunction, the first of which was granted early 2022.

Maintaining its long-held traditions, PrimeWire immediately moved to neutralize potential domain seizures while carrying on as normal, in defiance of the injunction.

Just weeks after that, PrimeWire suddenly 'went legal' by removing all links to pirated movies and TV shows, and then pledged to install upload filters to prevent any more piracy. There was even some email correspondence with the plaintiffs which, if anything, was even more surprising.

Traffic Tanks, Hollywood Piles on the Pressure

After removing pirated content, PrimeWire's traffic immediately collapsed by more than 60%, but the studios weren't impressed. Based on past behavior patterns, they believed that PrimeWire could make a comeback, so they pressed for a default judgment and permanent injunction.

The court agreed and awarded a partial default judgment with damages to be decided at a later date. PrimeWire was ordered to shut down – whether or not any pirated content was still available via the site. Some registrars still hadn't complied with the terms of the preliminary injunction, meaning that PrimeWire still had domains and a web presence.

PrimeWire didn't officially appear in the lawsuit so was never likely to win. Importantly, it didn't shut down either and in July attempted a comeback but that was soon thwarted by the MPA's investigators.

Filings in the case during October revealed that the MPA had gone to extraordinary lengths to track down PrimeWire's operator but had ultimately run into shell companies, various obfuscation measures, and eventually a dead end. Specifically, a small but notorious property in the UK linked to international crime, money laundering, and fried chicken.

MPA Could Not Prove PrimeWire's Actual Profits

Despite the studios' best efforts to quantify PrimeWire's profits, the odds were always stacked against them. Instead, they requested a judgment of $20.7m, which in the scheme of things was pretty reasonable. Earlier this year PrimeWire was allegedly offering 10,000 titles owned by the plaintiff studios and in October 2021, received 20 million visitors from the United States alone.

The studios aimed low by listing just 138 infringed works, but with maximum statutory damages of $150,000 available for each work, that can soon add up. In his judgment dated December 9, Judge Mark C. Scarsi agrees that the anonymous PrimeWire defendants were well aware that their conduct was unlawful.

Particularly Egregious Infringment, Maximum Damages

"The Court finds that Defendants committed willful infringement, meriting an award of enhanced damages. Defendants' conduct is particularly egregious. Despite Plaintiffs' repeated attempts to hale Defendants into court, Defendants have either ignored Plaintiffs' emails or anonymously denied any wrongdoing," Judge Scarsi's judgment reads.

"Further, Defendants have evaded the Court's injunctions by transferring operations to different domain names, citing 'recent legal action' on their now-defunct webpage. Additionally, the substantial web traffic Defendants gained from illegally streaming Plaintiffs' copyrighted works has likely created a heavy windfall in advertising revenue at Plaintiffs' expense."

Noting that the defendants' conduct "leaves little doubt" that maximum statutory damages are warranted, Judge Scarsi highlights the value of the studios' copyrights, the revenue lost through PrimeWire's actions, and in particular the negative effect on the legitimate streaming market.

"Defendants' unauthorized and uncompensated use of the copyrighted works causes significant revenue loss because illegitimate streaming sources, like Defendants', divert potentially millions of dollars of paid viewership away from licensed sources contributing to Plaintiffs' revenue streams," the judgment continues.

"The high value of Plaintiffs' copyrights also supports a finding that Defendants' infringement causes significant revenue losses. And finally, maximum statutory damages would serve the purpose of deterring Defendants and others from infringing Plaintiffs' valuable works."

In line with the studios' request, the court awarded maximum statutory damages of $150,000 per work, a total of $20,700,000 for the 138 works in suit. The court also awarded $417,600 in attorneys' fees, an amount described as "reasonable and appropriate."

The proposed judgment, final judgment, and minutes can be found here (1,2,3, pdf)

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

Top 10 Most Pirated Movies of The Week – 12/12/2022
Ernesto Van der Sar, 11 Dec 11:30 PM

black adamThe 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 three newcomers on the list. "Black Adam" is the most downloaded title.

The most torrented movies for the week ending on December 12 are:

Movie Rank Rank last week Movie name IMDb Rating / Trailer
Most downloaded movies via torrent sites
1 (1) Black Adam 7.1 / trailer
2 (…) Emancipation 5.6 / trailer
3 (…) Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio 7.9 / trailer
4 (…) She Said 7.3 / trailer
5 (2) Troll 5.9 / trailer
6 (5) Top Gun: Maverick 8.6 / trailer
7 (6) Bullet Train 7.4 / trailer
8 (7) Black Panther: Wakanda Forever 7.3 / trailer
9 (3) Spirited 6.6 / trailer
10 (4) Triangle of Sadness 7.8 / 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.

Unofficial YouTube App 'ReVanced' Hit With DMCA Takedown Notices
Andy Maxwell, 11 Dec 06:20 PM

revanced-logoYouTube is an incredible site with an unbelievable amount of content covering every conceivable topic. But it's certainly not perfect.

Most complaints relate to the volume of advertising on YouTube, which seems to know when to interrupt a video at the most inappropriate time. Background play isn't available as standard either, unless users pay for a subscription, which many prefer not to.

These problems and more were solved by an unofficial YouTube project called 'YouTube Vanced', or simply 'Vanced' for the trademark aware. Since users didn't need to root their phones or pay out any money, the app developed a considerable audience but in March 2022 and for mostly unspecified legal reasons, Vanced shut itself down.

ReVanced: The Second Coming

When 'ReVanced' burst onto the scene to pick up the torch, former Vanced users were delighted. Readily accessible on Github and via its own domain, ReVanced wasted no time filling the gap in the market with a widely appreciated end application.

Importantly, it also avoided the legal issues that killed off its predecessor but in the space of just 48 hours this week, ReVanced was hit with not one, but two DMCA notices. A knee-jerk reaction might pluck YouTube out of the air as an obvious sender, but that certainly isn't the case here.

First DMCA Notice Sent to Github

The first notice dated December 6 was filed by the developer of the Android app 'AnyTracker'. The app detects changes on websites and at least officially, is only available on Google Play.

According to the developer, ReVanced's patch repository contained a patch that enables users to access AnyTracker's premium functions, but without having to pay.

revanced-dmca-1

The complaint alleged breaches of the DMCA's anti-circumvention provisions but based on the information provided, GitHub could not determine a valid circumvention claim. However, GitHub did find grounds for other copyright claims so processed the notice anyway.

Second DMCA Notice Sent to Github

In a DMCA takedown notice dated December 7, German companies Garzotto GmbH and Kachelmann GmbH made similar claims. They own a weather app called "Pflotsh ECMWF" and subscriptions can be purchased via Google Play.

Tools available in the ReVanced repo bypass the need for payment, the companies said.

revanced-dmca-2

This notice also alleged infringement due to unauthorized circumvention but GitHub processed the claim based on other copyright infringement(s). GitHub's responses to both notices also contain the following text:

One or more repositories in this DMCA takedown notice has been processed in accordance with GitHub's prohibition on sharing unauthorized product licensing keys, software for generating unauthorized product licensing keys, and/or software for bypassing checks for product licensing keys.

GitHub responded by removing the repo containing the patches, entirely as expected. The main ReVanced repo was left intact but the removal of the patch repo still represents a setback.

ReVanced Patch Repository Disabled

The ReVanced patch repo contained software (patches) that modify YouTube's official Android app in specific ways. The image below shows just a small sample (another list here) but these are the modifications that define ReVanced's functionality.

revanced-patches

None of this means the end of ReVanced. An announcement by the project explains that GitHub won't be used for patches in future but the show will go on.

"ReVanced will stop distributing patches on GitHub for the time being until the current situation has been evaluated properly. Everything is subject to revision in the future and we will inform you of any further updates.

"ReVanced is always available at revanced.app," it concludes.

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

 
 
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