Friday, February 17, 2023

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Sci-Hub Founder's High Court Creativity Fails to Dismiss Publishers' Lawsuit
Andy Maxwell, 17 Feb 10:39 AM

Sci-HubFor more than 15 years, rightsholders have been obtaining injunctions that require internet service providers to block pirate sites. With no clear roadmap, early blocking applications met one complication after another. Today, most run relatively smoothly.

From a cold, legal perspective, a 2020 blocking application filed by publishers Elsevier, Wiley, and American Chemical Society should've been straightforward. Benefiting from the experiences of the High Court in London and the adoption of U.S-penned terms such as 'rogue site', Indian judges had readily embraced blocking injunctions as a reasonable response to rampant infringement.

Applications for 10,000+ domains to be blocked within days are now routinely approved by India's courts. In Sci-Hub's case, the clock has already been running for more than two years. The reasons for that are both straightforward and complex.

On one hand, unauthorized mass copying and distribution of movies, TV shows, and music is widely recognized as copyright infringement. When scientific papers and academic articles enter the equation, the ground suddenly starts to shift. Underpinned by the widespread belief that publishers exploit academic works, to sustain a monopoly that restricts access to information in favor of profit, all bets are suddenly off.

Even among those who view other types of piracy as immoral, access to education for those unable to afford it is increasingly considered the new moral standard. Perhaps more than anywhere else, people in India are prepared to stand up and fight for an education.

Alexandra Elbakyan: This Case Should Be Dismissed

Unlike most pirate site operators, Sci-Hub founder Alexandra Elbakyan has become an accessible public figure. Supported by millions of students, academics and scientists, when Elbakyan takes on the 'greedy' publishers, a win for her is seen as a win for all.

The general consensus is that copyright law favors the publishers, but in a recent motion to dismiss, Elbakyan had other things on her mind too.

As Justice Sanjeev Narula at the High Court of Delhi explains in a recently published order, Elbakyan called for the entire case to be dismissed for failure to state a claim. Based on the assertion that the assignment agreements relied upon by the publishers do not confer ownership of copyrights relating to the allegedly infringed works, Elbakyan declared them void.

"Reliance is placed upon Section 16 and 19 of the Copyright Act, 1957, to argue that agreements relating to copyrights must specify royalty or some other form of consideration, failing which, they cannot affect the assignment of copyright," Justice Narula writes.

"Section 25 of the Contract Act is relied upon to contend an agreement without consideration is void."

Mandatory Economic Component Absent

Mr. Gopal Sankaranarayan, Senior Counsel representing Elbakyan, informed the court that the publishers are required by law to "pay royalty and other consideration" to the authors of scientific articles in exchange for the exclusive right of distribution.

Examination of the agreements showed that the authors have not been compensated, Sankaranarayan said. Not only is the mandatory economic component absent from the agreements, they are also irrelevant. The agreements pertain to the publication of books; Elbakyan is accused of distributing articles.

Plaintiffs Own The Copyrights

Before addressing these matters directly, the Judge turns to a statement previously submitted to the Court.

"Ms. Elbakyan [defendant no.1], in her written statement, has categorically admitted that Plaintiffs are owners of copyright in subject works," the Judge notes. "This admission was attempted to be withdrawn by way of an application [..] which was dismissed by this Court by way of a detailed order dated 3rd November, 2022."

Statement excerpt and court's commentssci-hub admission

The November order also contains a statement by the judge: (edited for clarity)

By virtue of agreements between the Plaintiffs and authors of the various literary works published by the Plaintiffs, the Plaintiffs have been assigned and thus are the owners of, inter alia, the exclusive rights to (a) issue copies of the literary works to the public, (b) to reproduce the literary works in any form including the storing of it in any medium by electronic means, and (c) communicate the work to the public. The Plaintiffs are thus the owners of the copyright.

Since the application to withdraw Elbakyan's admissions failed last November, those admissions will remain on record, Justice Narula says. Having asserted copyright ownership via assignment agreements and presented evidence that Elbakyan infringed their copyrights, the plaintiffs demonstrated a cause of action.

On that basis, the Judge finds no grounds for dismissing the plaintiffs' blocking application. The next hearing is scheduled for July 2023. In the meantime, Sci-Hub has received some unexpected news.

After suspending Sci-Hub's .SE domain in January, The Swedish Internet Foundation has now restored it following what appears to have been a successful "ownership verification process."

The February 9, 2023 and November 2022 orders can be found here (1,2, pdf)

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

Egypt Shuts Down Massive Movie and TV Show Piracy Site
Ernesto Van der Sar, 16 Feb 08:48 PM

pirate-flagFor most people living in the West, MyCima may not ring a bell. In Arabic-speaking countries, MyCima was the second-largest piracy ring in the region.

The site offered downloads and streams of roughly 12,000 pirated copies of movies and 26,000 TV shows. These streams were embedded and utilized third-party hosting services such as Uptostream and Userload.

Free Movies and TV

MyCima was most popular in Egypt where it was among the ten most-visited sites in the country. The site also generated a lot of traffic from neighboring countries, including Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia.

The true purpose of the site was obvious and its operators publicly advertised it as the best way to watch entertainment without paying.

"Our website is the most prominent free movie site, meaning that it enables you to follow your favorite shows and movies for free without the need to pay in order to subscribe to the site," MyCima wrote on its website.

mycima

This free-for-all approach generated serious advertising revenues for the site. Behind the scenes, copyright holders were hard at work trying to bring the platform to its knees.

Egypt Shutters MyCima

The Alliance of Creativity Entertainment (ACE), which includes Netflix, Disney and other prominent players, took on the task and reported the MyCima piracy ring to law enforcement in Egypt.

Intelligence has shown that the operation was headquartered in Alexandria. Based on the referral from ACE, Egyptian authorities managed to shut down the operation this week. As a result, myciiima.autos and roughly 70 other domain names have stopped working.

It appears that the authorities hit the hosting facility of the piracy ring as most domain names are still active. However, instead of showing the usual links to pirated movies and series, visitors see a Cloudflare error stating that the host is unreachable.

mycima cloudflare error

'You Can't Hide'

ACE boss Jan van Voorn, who is also the Motion Picture Association's Global Content Protection Chief, notes that pirate site operators will face the consequences of their actions, regardless of where they operate.

"The latest shut-down in the Middle East reinforces the fact that no matter where in the world they are, criminal distributors of pirated content can't hide," Van Voorn says.

Van Voorn is pleased with the actions Egypt has taken and he explicitly thanks the Prime Minister and the Ministry of Internal Affairs for their help.

"We applaud the action taken by the Egyptian authorities and look forward to supporting them in further actions. We would also like to thank the Prime Minister and the Ministry of Internal Affairs for their work in the investigation and protection of intellectual property rights."

ACE has its roots in Hollywood but has been expanding all over the globe in recent years. This includes the Middle East where two of its newest members, OSN and MBC GROUP, proved to be instrumental in the MyCima investigation.

To give the successful anti-piracy operation more weight, ACE stresses that MyCima was the second-largest piracy operation in the Middle East region. The number one isn't mentioned, probably for a good reason.

#1 Survives?

Egybest has traditionally been the top pirate site in the region. This download and streaming platform appeared to shut down in 2019 following an enforcement effort that also involved the Motion Picture Association (MPA). However, that didn't last.

Through various copycat sites and redirects, the brand managed to survive. The original Egy.best domain also made a comeback as a dominant piracy player in Egypt and elsewhere.

Earlier this month, the U.S. Trade Representative called out Egybest as one of the oldest movie piracy portals in the region. According to the MPA, the site had well over 130 million monthly visits.

Interestingly, the main Egy.best domain became unreachable again last December. The recent disappearence is shrouded in mystery but there are plenty of copies and clones still in operation. Whether ACE still sees it as the leading piracy operation is unknown.

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

 
 
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