Thursday, March 2, 2023

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Reddit Asks Court to Protect Users' Anonymity in Third-Party Piracy Lawsuit
Ernesto Van der Sar, 02 Mar 11:49 AM

reddit-logoThe "repeat infringer" issue remains a hot topic in U.S. courts, with ongoing lawsuits against several ISPs.

Internet provider RCN is one of the companies targeted. In 2021, the ISP was sued by several film companies, including the makers of The Hitman's Wife's Bodyguard, London Has Fallen, and Hellboy.

The movie companies alleged that RCN wasn't doing enough to stop subscribers from pirating on its network. Instead of terminating the accounts of persistent pirates, the Internet provider turned a blind eye, the companies argued.

The stakes are high in these liability lawsuits. Internet providers face damages claims reaching hundreds of millions of dollars, while tens of thousands of Internet subscribers risk having their accounts terminated.

Redditors as Evidence

The two camps are currently in the discovery phase where they gather evidence to support their arguments. In this quest, the filmmakers stumbled upon several comments from Reddit users which they believe could be useful.

fairly lax

A few weeks ago the movie companies obtained a subpoena asking Reddit to share the personal details of these users, including IP-address logs. The filmmakers believe that the commenters can provide evidence to show that RCN didn't have a proper repeat infringer policy, among other things.

Reddit was unhappy with the subpoena and characterized it as overbroad. According to Reddit's lawyers, the subpoena was more akin to a fishing expedition than regular evidence gathering. As such, Reddit only handed over the details of one user whose comment mentioned RCN, denying other 'less relevant' ones, citing the users' First Amendment right to anonymous speech.

Reddit Opposes Motion to Compel

Reddit's rejection prompted the filmmakers to file a motion to compel. They argued that the targeted comments are relevant, proportional, and may help to back up their legal arguments in court.

In court this week, Reddit filed its official response. According to the discussion platform, courts have repeatedly protected people's First Amendment right to anonymous speech.

If a party wants to unmask users through the court, it has to meet a stringent standard, which isn't the case here.

"That standard requires the requesting party to establish that it is an 'exceptional case' where a 'compelling need' for the discovery outweighs the users' First Amendment rights," Reddit's attorneys write.

"Plaintiffs are far from meeting that strict standard here. First, they cannot overcome the Reddit users' First Amendment rights because the users' posts Plaintiffs have identified as the basis for this subpoena are completely irrelevant to Plaintiffs' lawsuit."

Irrelevant & Unneeded

Reddit writes that the targeted posts are "completely irrelevant" to the lawsuit against RCN. In fact, four of the comments don't even mention the provider by name, and simply refer to "my provider".

Other comments are not about piracy or are too old to be relevant, including one comment published nine years ago. A summary of these irrelevancy factors is shown in the table below, which accompanied Reddit's objection.

irrelevant

Reddit further argues that the type of information the filmmakers seek can be obtained elsewhere. If the companies want to know more about RCN's repeat infringer policy, they could get this information from the company directly, instead of targeting anonymous third parties.

"Most obviously, Plaintiffs could seek discovery directly from RCN. That would be far more efficient than taking wild guesses about which Reddit users might be RCN customers or might have engaged in copyright infringement at some point in the last decade.

"And, more importantly, it would not involve setting aside the fundamental First Amendment rights of uninvolved third parties," Reddit adds.

Redditor Responds

The filmmakers previously argued that the Redditors didn't seem to have any objections, as they didn't respond in court. However, we later learned that Reddit didn't inform the eight remaining users until after the motion to compel was submitted.

TorrentFreak spoke to one of the targeted Redditors, who wasn't aware of the filmmakers' request until it hit the news. This person, who wants to remain anonymous for obvious reasons, expects Reddit's opposition to be succesful.

"My attorney and I are both under the assumption that the court will side with Reddit, and that the motion to compel will be denied," the Redditor says, warning that the alternative will set a dangerous precedent.

"Granting the motion would set a precedent, allowing other companies to do the same. That would be a huge violation of everyone's privacy and, in my opinion, Reddit would take action and ban the piracy subreddit."

Whether Reddit would take such drastic action is unknown. The company informs TorrentFreak that it is committed to protecting our users' privacy" and that it will oppose legal requests when appropriate.

At the same time, history has shown that the filmmakers don't give up easily either. They will likely counter Reddit's arguments, so it will eventually be up to the court to decide which party is right.

A copy of Reddit's opposition to the motion to compel, filed at a federal court in California, is available here (pdf)

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

Pirate IPTV: Police & Sky Nationwide Crackdown, Four Arrested
Andy Maxwell, 01 Mar 07:39 PM

iptvIn an effort to make ends meet, many people in the UK are cutting back on luxuries. Fewer nights out or perhaps none at all. Downgrading Netflix or even dumping it altogether.

Subscription television is even more expensive and often demands longer-term commitments people simply can't afford. To some, cheap but illegal streaming services might prove tempting but it appears that Sky TV and police in the UK are working hard to limit supply.

Police & Sky Conduct Raids

A statement by the Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit (PIPCU) says that in partnership with Police Scotland and subscription broadcaster Sky, officers have executed a series of raids around the UK as part of an illegal streaming crackdown.

Officers reportedly searched four premises in London, Glasgow, Edinburgh and Stoke. Four people were arrested on "suspicion of involvement" in the illegal streaming of premium content, including channels belonging to Sky. During these operations, computer equipment, laptops and phones were also seized.

'Disrupted' Services / 500K Customers

Given that the names of the services have not been announced by police, it's impossible to say what effect the raids may have had on the targeted services. That being said, the announcement itself carries enough information to cautiously assess a few things.

"Officers believe that the illegal streaming services disrupted by the operation had more than 500,000 customers."

The word 'believe' obviously removes a level of certainty here and use of the word 'disruption' could mean that no services were actually shut down. No doubt some media reports will take the '500,000 customers' comment and run with it but nowhere here does it say that 500,000 lost access to one or more services.

That being said, beginning around February 20/21 until around February 25/26, social media 'chatter' showed a significant increase in people from the UK, particularly in the Midlands and further north, complaining about IPTV services going offline.

Police Delivered Cease and Desist Notices

In addition to the four arrests, police say that more than 200 'cease and desist' notices were delivered to individuals "suspected of running illegal streaming services around the country."

The definitions of 'running' and 'service' aren't made clear, but on the basis that 200 physically separate IPTV services are unlikely to exist in the UK alone, this may be a reference to people who act as resellers.

If that's the case, 200 is a completely believable number, and depending on how many customers each reseller has, the number of connections at stake if the cease-and-desist notices do their job could be significant.

Organized Crime, Malware Warnings

According to Matt Hibbert, Director of Anti-Piracy at Sky, these nationwide actions "made a significant impact against individuals involved in serious organized crime."

PIPCU Detective Chief Inspector Gary Robinson says that "organized criminal groups often view the distribution of illegal streaming services as a low-risk, high-reward crime," that can "expose end users to the risks of data theft, fraud and malware."

These types of statements are certainly not unusual and there's no doubt that, depending on the contact point, IPTV subscription buyers face at least some element of risk. The problem is getting people to believe that the threats are real and not just another deterrent message that only applies to other people.

Vultures Move In

What was glaringly obvious to us during the period IPTV downtime was being reported in February, was the number of 'people' posting on social media offering IPTV services with a billion channels and billions of movies as a good replacement.

Just like the people who send bogus delivery or banking alerts by SMS, fraud is the endgame and there is no service. People can try and report them, but that rarely works out.

Police say that of the four arrested in February, one person has been charged in relation to intellectual property theft and three people have since been released under investigation.

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

 
 
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