Tuesday, December 27, 2022

TorrentFreak's Latest News

 

'Strike 3' Filed a Record Number of Piracy Lawsuits This Year
Ernesto Van der Sar, 27 Dec 12:52 PM

By now most BitTorrent users should be well aware that their IP-addresses and downloads can be easily monitored.

This has resulted in hundreds of thousands of lawsuits against alleged video pirates, both in the U.S. and abroad.

In the U.S., most of these cases are filed by Strike 3 Holdings. The company produces adult entertainment videos made available via the Blacked, Tushy, and Vixen websites. When the videos are shared on pirate sites, Strike 3 takes action.

More Pirates, More Lawsuits?

These lawsuits can be a lucrative business, especially when targeted defendants opt for quick settlements of a few thousand dollars. The money comes on top of the deterrent factor, which is often cited by copyright holders as one of the main reasons to take action.

These lawsuits deter many alleged pirates and maybe some of their neighbors too, but the copyright-infringement problem is rather persistent, as is exemplified by Strike 3's own track record.

This week, we decided to take a look at the number of file-sharing lawsuits filed in the United States in 2022. The data shows that one company has been particularly active: Strike 3 Holdings.

New Record!

From January 1 to today, Strike 3 submitted 2,788 complaints in various courts around the U.S., targeting "John Doe" subscribers. This is a record-breaking statistic. Never before has a copyright holder filed this many lawsuits against alleged file-sharers in a single year.

strike cases

For comparison, in 2017 all rightsholders combined filed 1,019 file-sharing cases. In the following years, this number increased mostly thanks to Strike 3, which set the previous record at 2,094 in 2018.

Strike 3 filed its first case in 2017 and since then has submitted over 9,000 complaints at federal courts.

Strike 3 Lawsuits per Year *

strike record

Strike 3 is currently responsible for most legal action against file-sharers in the U.S. Other independent movie studios also file piracy-related lawsuits, but these are limited to a few dozen at most.

With this level of workload, it's no surprise that most cases are resolved relatively swiftly. Of all lawsuits filed in the first half of the year, more than 90% have already been closed. This happens when the parties reach an out-of-court settlement or if Strike 3 drops a complaint for other reasons.

Edge Cases

There are also instances of defendants simply ignoring Strike 3 lawsuits. When that happens, Strike 3 often requests a default judgment from the court, which can go either way depending on the circumstances.

A massive award for damages is one potential outcome. Last year a federal court in New York ordered a local resident to pay $108,750 in damages for sharing 145 pirated videos via BitTorrent. Other courts have denied similar default judgment requests.

Due to the costs involved, it's rare for accused pirates to fight back and then secure a win, but when Strike 3 filed a lawsuit against a "John Doe" who turned out to be a 70+-year-old retired police officer, the tables were turned.

Another "Doe" is putting up a spirited fight in a separate case, one that's currently heading to trial. If that goes ahead, it will only be the second time that's ever happened.

Overall, we assume that Strike 3 must be quite pleased with the results of its legal campaigns. If it was a money-losing operation, they probably wouldn't file thousands of complaints every year.

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

ACE Expands to Become a Lean and Mean Anti-Piracy Machine
Ernesto Van der Sar, 26 Dec 09:25 PM

ace logoFive years ago, several of the world's largest entertainment industry companies teamed up to create a brand new anti-piracy coalition.

The Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment (ACE) brought together well-known Hollywood companies including Disney, Warner Bros, NBCUniversal, media giants such as Sky and BBC, as well as streaming-based newcomers Amazon, Netflix, and Hulu.

In the years that followed several other media companies were added to the roster. This year alone, 18 new members were announced, bringing the total count to 52. Perhaps more importantly, the coalition's scope and reach expanded too.

A major event in 2022 saw Qatari media company beIN join the coalition and with it, a new focus area for ACE – live sports streaming protection. Elsewhere, the global nature of the alliance was strengthened with new members from Asia, Latin America, and Europe.

Explosive Growth

Looking back at the progress made over the past 12 months, ACE head Jan van Voorn highlights "explosive growth" as a key achievement. He believes that a broad coalition, with tentacles all over the globe, increases the overall effectiveness of its anti-piracy efforts.

"This growth dramatically increases ACE's global network, including key partnerships with local law enforcement and other authorities, and its ability to shut down illegal piracy operations around the world," Van Voorn tells us.

"Piracy is a global challenge that requires a global approach, so bringing members from all over the world into one coalition makes us more effective and impactful at hitting the right targets."

Some of ACE's Members

ace members

Adding more members doesn't magically increase the group's effectiveness, of course. What it does, however, is open the door to collaboration with intermediaries, governments, and law enforcement agencies in other countries. This has been a key driver of many recent successes.

Collaborating with Governments and Law Enforcement

Confidential agreements with domain registrars and registries, for example, help to efficiently take down domain names. In addition, advertising companies and payment processors help to cut off revenue to pirate sites and services, when appropriate.

"We continue to expand our impact through voluntary agreements with domain registries and registrars, fast-track procedures with social media companies, ad companies, payment processors, online marketplaces, etc., all over the globe. So, we work with all parties in the internet ecosystem," Van Voorn says.

The same strategy applies to governments and law enforcement. ACE has partnered with Interpol and Europol, for example, and also has full-time team members embedded within the City of London Police and the U.S. Government's National Intellectual Property Rights Coordination Center.

Forging these relationships takes time but they eventually start to pay off. These collaborations are the key to unlocking the true potential of its alliance, ACE believes. This is a two-way street, as ACE also assists governments in local enforcement efforts.

"Collaboration enables ACE members and the local content industry to speak to government officials with one voice about the need to better prioritize copyright enforcement. And governments are beginning to listen," Van Voorn notes.

Lean and Mean

A larger organization doesn't automatically make an alliance more effective, especially if interests and priorities begin to conflict. From the outside, however, it appears that ACE, which is led by the Motion Picture Association, is running a tight ship.

Van Voorn believes that growing the alliance will make it more streamlined and effective. In the past, the anti-piracy efforts of media companies were siloed, even though the piracy threats they face are very similar.

ACE's overall strategy is to collaborate, share knowledge and resources, and then target the piracy problem as a united front.

"There was a lot of duplication of effort, for many companies around the world, and we saw that we needed to do more together to avoid that duplication and build a global collation to deal with these issues in a much more cost-effective, but more importantly, in an impactful way."

ACE global

This global approach helps to expand the alliance's reach. It can easily shift focus between continents and share information back and forth.

"ACE's global network enables us to access pirate operators' information quickly and escalate and streamline any new workstreams from a specific country or region to the rest of the world," Van Voorn says.

ACE typically starts by identifying and locating targets, and then prioritizing the big fish – larger piracy players ideally. The next step is to determine when and where to carry out potential enforcement actions, often with help from authorities.

"The hierarchical nature of the piracy ecosystem means that when we take down the world's largest piracy services, the ripple effect ensures that the lower-tier piracy services are also impacted."

A good example of an enforcement effort with a broad impact was the shutdown of HDFoxCDN, a Brazil-based pirate video CDN that offered access to a broad library of pirated content. With minimal effort, pirate sites could use its API to embed tens of thousands of titles.

ace

Piercing the Anonymity Veil

Looking ahead to 2023, Van Voorn says that ACE will continue where it left off by adding more members in the new year.

"ACE will continue its expansion, both by adding global members and expanding our focus on live sports content. Our enforcement actions will be designed to obtain the most significant impact by grouping actions by tactic, time, region, or language."

New enforcement actions against "Piracy as a Service" (PaaS) targets are already in the works. Taking down illegal streaming services also remains a priority.

The key objective is to identify the 'anonymous' people behind these illicit operations. To do so, ACE will call on investigators and lawyers all over the globe to force breakthroughs.

"Piracy operators use various technologies in an attempt to create anonymity. These people do business online and try to hide their identities. And as they can enlist the support of intermediaries from anywhere in the world, they can reside anywhere in the world.

"So, breaking that anonymity and going after these operators is a challenge we fight daily. We will continue to expand our toolkit to break this anonymity and go after illegal services," Van Voorn says.

Attack Vectors

ACE has filed several lawsuits over the years but that appears to be less of a priority now. ACE doesn't confirm this as an intentional choice, but might be focusing more on immediate impact instead of drawn-out and expensive court battles.

The coalition chooses its strategy on a target-by-target basis using a holistic approach, Van Voorn says. In other words, it chooses the enforcement option that is likely to have the most impact and success.

"This can include engaging in open discussions by way of cease-and-desist notices on pirate operators, ensuring that illegal enterprises are voluntarily shut down, and criminal referrals to international and local law enforcement agencies.

"We will also pursue litigation, where it is known to be effective in reducing piracy and increasing legitimate consumption of content," Van Voorn concludes.

Putting a Number on It?

Interestingly, ACE has collected some large damages payments through its legal actions and many confidential settlements too. Unfortunately, the alliance wasn't willing to share the total settlement amount or how gets distributed.

This isn't a surprise as the alliance carefully weighs the information it shares with the public. This also means that, in addition to the many reported successes, major setbacks may exist as well.

When we asked ACE how many sites and services were shut down, we were informed that this data isn't public either. Our own investigations show that at least 270 domain names have been taken over by ACE

ace seized

It is certainly possible that some of these sites returned under new domains or brands. At the same time, many of the largest pirate sites remain online, so ACE still has plenty of work left to do.

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

IPTV: Anti-Piracy Coalition Reveals 'Offshore Hosting' Challenges
Andy Maxwell, 26 Dec 01:03 PM

An awful lot has changed in the online piracy world over the last decade, but key fundamentals still underpin the entire ecosystem.

Many platforms depend on IP addresses, domain names, and a functioning DNS, but none can exist without some kind of hosting facility.

Numerous options are available, but service operators who value consistent uptime and a reduced chance of being linked to a piracy-facilitating server, tend to make their choices more carefully than others.

Offshore Hosting

One option is so-called 'offshore hosting' but what that actually means is open to interpretation. At a base level, it can mean that a server is based in a country that differs from that of the operator, but that in itself is nothing unusual.

When that second country has a lax attitude to infringement and when third, fourth or fifth countries enter the mix in various ways, 'offshore hosting' takes on a whole new character, one of particular interest to pirates hoping to stay both online and unidentified.

Of course, anything that helps pirates necessarily irritates those trying to stop them.

Internet Governance Forum – IGF 2022

The Internet Governance Forum (IGF) held this year's meeting in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Under the overarching theme 'Resilient Internet for a Shared Sustainable and Common Future' the event spanned five days from November 28, 2022, reportedly attracting more than one thousand speakers and visitors from 160+ countries.

The Audiovisual Anti-Piracy Alliance (AAPA) and beIN Sports, who together hold a key interest in tackling pirate IPTV providers, presented at IGAF 2022. AAPA described itself as a group that "lobbies for better antipiracy legislation and enforcement" while building "private and public partnerships to achieve more efficient and effective enforcement."

aapa members 2022

The AAPA/beIN presentation centered on the challenges of offshore hosting, and as the above image shows, multiple billion-dollar businesses are seeking solutions.

Legitimate use of an ASN or a Subterfuge?

"The hosting provider landscape continues to evolve and has become proliferated with companies using the term 'offshore' hosting," the presentation's introduction reads.

"AAPA aims to highlight that many of these companies have become synonymous with cybercrime activities. Promoting safety for illicit activities in the knowledge they do not have to comply with national or international laws."

According to AAPA and member beIN, an offshore host is an entity that is likely to own no physical hardware itself while operating from "fake or questionable" headquarters in countries with poor intellectual property legislation.

AAPA further notes that offshore hosts lease IP addresses from outside ASN-registered territory, while operating servers in the UK, EU and US. This topic warrants an article in its own right but AAPA's example – an operation with a RIPE ASN, headquarters in Hong Kong, Seychelles IP addresses, and rented servers in the Netherlands – suggests significant challenges.

DMCA Notices Are Ignored

Another claimed feature of offshore hosts is their tendency to absorb DMCA notices rather than do much about them. An AAPA slide provides an example of how this feature is marketed to potential customers, and while they don't mention the service by name, it wasn't difficult to find.

An operation known as Koddos is featured in the recent Counterfeiting and Piracy Watch List published by the European Commission. According to the report, it has "office locations in Hong Kong (China) and Seychelles. It is reported by rightholders to consistently ignore their takedown notices."

dmca messages forwarded

So how do offshore hosting providers manage to deflect DMCA notices when other platforms are expected to respond to them quickly, or else? The answer to that its relatively straightforward once a few terms are understood.

DMCA > RIR > LIR > ASN > AS > Hosts

The internet is not just a network, it's a network of networks. Some very large internet networks (or groups of networks) are given the label Autonomous System (AS) since they serve the same assigned IP addresses and share a common list of other Autonomous Systems to which they connect.

IANA, the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority, assigns an ASN (Autonomous System Number) to an AS so that it can be identified online. Cloudflare's 'post office' analogy explains the system perfectly.

"Imagine an AS as being like a town's post office. Mail goes from post office to post office until it reaches the right town, and that town's post office will then deliver the mail within that town. Similarly, data packets cross the Internet by hopping from AS to AS until they reach the AS that contains their destination Internet Protocol (IP) address. Routers within that AS send the packet to the IP address," the company explains.

cloudflare asn

In respect of offshore hosts, AAPA's example sees 'Host Company 1' applying for an ASN number via a Local Internet Registry (LIR), which in turn is a member of a Regional Internet Registry (RIR).

Once the ASN is assigned to Host Company 1, it shares the same ASN with Host Company 2, and Host Company 3….and Host Company 4. From there they work as a team, behind a single ASN, as AAPA's presentation shows.

aapa-asn-peer

The real stinger here is that any DMCA notices have to be sent to the email addresses registered with the RIR and they have a tendency to go unanswered. Physical addresses registered to the companies are "fake or PO boxes" AAPA says, meaning that identifying who owns them can be difficult or even impossible.

From an enforcement perspective, that's less than ideal. AAPA reports that during the first six months of the football season, only 10% of the DMCA notices sent to one offshore hosting company were actioned.

"There is no repeat infringer policy. Outreach is ignored and legal action cannot be taken because no one knows where this company is or who the owners are. One company hosts almost 50% of a broadcaster's infringing streams," AAPA's presentation reads.

Whether anything can be achieved in the short term is unknown but by delivering its presentation and "call to action" at the Internet Governance Forum, which operates under a United Nations mandate (pdf), the chances of connecting with powerful ears seems relatively high.

If nothing else, an anti-piracy group venturing this far into 'enemy' territory, seeking to disrupt ASNs rather than simple IP addresses, adds a new dimension to this evolving battle.

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

Top 10 Most Pirated Movies of The Week – 12/26/2022
Ernesto Van der Sar, 26 Dec 12:30 AM

The 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. "Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery" is the most downloaded title.

The most torrented movies for the week ending on December 26 are:

Movie Rank Rank last week Movie name IMDb Rating / Trailer
Most downloaded movies via torrent sites
1 (…) Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery 7.4 / trailer
2 (…) Violent Knight 6.9 / trailer
3 (2) Black Adam 7.1 / trailer
4 (1) The Fabelmans 7.9 / trailer
5 (9) Avatar: The Way of Water 8.1 / trailer
6 (3) The Banshees of Inisherin 8.0 / trailer
7 (4) Emancipation 5.6 / trailer
8 (8) Bullet Train 7.4 / trailer
9 (10) Black Panther: Wakanda Forever 7.3 / trailer
10 (…) Spirited 6.6 / 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.

 
 
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