Thursday, April 13, 2023

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Anti-Piracy "Mega-Firewall" Could Render Italian ISPs Liable For Over-Blocking
Andy Maxwell, 13 Apr 10:34 AM

Pirate FireLast month a bill crafted to crack down on pirate IPTV services was unanimously approved by Italy's Chamber of Deputies.

If passed by the Senate, broadcasters through telecoms regulator AGCOM will have new powers to compel internet service providers to block pirate streams in a matter of minutes, potentially seconds. Site-blocking measures to deal with piracy are nothing new in Italy, but by narrowing the blocking window, the window for correcting errors is narrowed too.

Italy's 'Mega-Firewall'

The Association of Italian Internet Providers (AIIP) represents the interests of small to medium-sized ISPs in Italy. Given that ISPs are already required to implement AGCOM's blocking instructions under the current regime, it follows that they will also have key responsibilities under the proposed rapid blocking system.

AIIP recently revealed that it had sent a memorandum to the authorities detailing its concerns over the current proposals, which are already in the final stages before becoming law.

President of AIIP, Giovanni Zorzoni, says that the objective appears to be the creation of a "mega-firewall" managed by AGCOM which will have the legal authority to compel internet service providers to implement it, regardless of the inherent risks.

"The creation of a homogeneous infrastructure based on a synchronous filtering system, capable of interfacing simultaneously with the operators offering access to the Internet, with the CDNs and with the Cloud operators, constitutes a single susceptible 'point of failure' to undermine the security and resilience of national networks," Zorzoni warns.

Critical Need to Protect Critical Infrastructure

AIIP says it has always been in favor of copyright protection but says the speed at which the blocking proposals are being pushed through is a cause for concern. AIIP says that in advance of the Senate's forthcoming examination, it is seeking a reassessment to ensure an adequate balance between the protection of intellectual property on one hand, and the protection of the internet ecosystem on the other.

AIIP reports progress in the form of a government commitment to evaluate the preparation of a "whitelist" of IP addresses and servers for the root zone of the Domain Name System (DNS) that can not be included in the blocking program. Since this would minimize the risks of "erroneously disabling critical systems," AIIP hopes the government will fully implement the proposal.

Who Pays to Enforce Copyrights?

According to AIIP, internet service providers will be required to implement the new blocking system. It will entail "significant costs" that will fall first on ISPs, but ultimately trickle down to their customers.

"Precisely with respect to costs, the association highlights the unreasonableness of downloading them to access operators, third parties without any responsibility for the offenses, and therefore indirectly to Italian users, rather than to the subjects who will directly benefit from the new tool, i.e the rights holders," AIIP says.

Not only are ISPs concerned that their customers will end up footing the bill for blocking, they're also worried about who pays when it all goes wrong.

"We have asked the politicians to add an article to the text of the provision which excludes the legal liability of service providers in the event that they find themselves slavishly executing the Authority's order," Zorzoni says.

"Let's imagine, for example, that while executing the filtering operation, the operator blocks IP addresses that carry not only illegal traffic but also legal traffic; or that what had been indicated as illegal in reality is not; here, in all these cases, it could be the service operators who get involved, for which we ask for the necessary protections."

Precise Blocking to Date Doesn't Eliminate Future Disasters

As reported last month, Italy's blocking program currently covers more than 3,200 domains. Our analysis of those domains reveals legitimate reasons for blocking, all of which can be cross-referenced with transparency reports published by AGCOM.

The big question is what happens to that methodical and transparent system when decisions are made on the fly in an attempt to block access to more mobile pirated streams of live events.

Will AGCOM commit to publishing the details of servers and IP addresses that are subjected to blocking in the way that it currently does for domains? Will it publish the names of the companies who requested those online locations to be blocked so there's complete transparency when something goes wrong?

The indication from AIIP that ISPs face potential liability suggests that both costs and risks are already being pushed down the line, in a direction that favors those who stand to benefit most from the new blocking regime.

That Italian internet users seem destined to indirectly pay for site blocking comes as no real surprise. If the project works as planned and pirate services do indeed become more difficult to access, it will be no surprise to see the prices of legitimate TV subscriptions rise either.

After all the hard work, why would any broadcaster that has paid for exclusivity not seek to maximize profits in a market with no competitors? Only time will tell if Italians will effectively get to pay for blocking twice, but it certainly can't be ruled out.

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

Operators of Movie & TV Piracy Giant 8maple Sentenced to Prison in Taiwan
Andy Maxwell, 12 Apr 05:09 PM

Pirate KeyPirate sites with tens of millions of visits each month are large enough to consider themselves global players yet some achieve these levels in a tighter geographic niche.

Founded in 2014 by two Taiwanese software engineers, movie and TV show piracy site 8maple is a prime example. Initially, the site was promoted as a commercial advertising platform but soon transformed into a full-blown piracy portal pulling in millions of visitors each month and generating large sums in advertising revenue.

Spending an estimated US$9,800 on server hosting in the United States, Canada, Ukraine, France and Romania each month, early estimates suggested the men behind 8maple may have been generating around US$65,600 in monthly revenues. By early 2020, the site's main domain at 8maple.ru was pulling around 35 million visits per month, generating around US$133,000 per month in revenue.

Investigation and Shutdown

Following an investigation carried out by the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment, the Asia-Pacific division of the Motion Picture Association (MPA-APC), Japan-based Content Overseas Distribution Association (CODA), and local TV network Sanli TV, Taiwan's Criminal Investigation Bureau (CIB) shut down 8maple.ru late March 2020.

Two men in their early thirties (Chen Su, 33, and Zhuang Su, 32) were arrested and around $1.9m in illegal gains were seized from their bank accounts. Domains including 8maple.ru, 8maple.com, 8drama.com, 8drama.ru, 8duck.ru, 8video.tv, eyny.is, and eyny.tv, were shut down.

The suspects were arrested for copyright infringement offenses with Taiwan's Telecommunications Investigation Corps estimating that 8maple caused around NT$1 billion (US$33.2m) in damages to the entertainment industries.

Court Sentences Men in Taiwan

More than two years after their arrest, the Taoyuan District Court has now sentenced the two men to serve 18 months in prison for "jointly committing the crime of infringing copyright property rights under Article 92 of the Copyright Law."

TorrentFreak obtained a copy of the official verdict from Taiwan prosecutor Harris Chen. It reveals a highly complex case and what appears to be the involvement of other suspects in mainland China who assisted Chen Su and Zhuang Su but are yet to be identified.

The convicted men are described as "highly educated" but possessing a "weak sense of the rule of law."

"They failed to respect the intellectual property rights of the copyright owners who spent a lot of money to make the films, which were reproduced without authorization and transmitted in public," the verdict reads.

The men not only damaged the economic interests of the copyright holders but also damaged Taiwan's international reputation for the protection of intellectual property rights, the document adds.

ACE Welcomes Verdict

A statement by the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment welcomes the sentencing of the men, which includes the confiscation of NT$ 58.8 million (US$1.97 million) in illicit gains.

"I'd like to congratulate the Criminal Investigation Bureau and the Taoyuan District Prosecutor's Office for the successful prosecution of the 8maple operators," says Jan van Voorn, Executive Vice President and Chief of Global Content Protection for the Motion Picture Association and Head of ACE.

"The deterrent sentence is testament to the seriousness of the crime. The 8maple prosecution is another example of ACE's effective partnerships with the local video industry and law enforcement and strengthens our commitment to reducing piracy and protecting the global legal ecosystem for creative content."

Other Sites Attempt to Exploit Gap in Market

Since the shutdown of 8maple, other sites with similar branding have attempted to exploit the gap in the market. Two apparently connected platforms, 8maple.biz and 9maple.org, currently attract just under four million visits per month and appear to be the most significant players.

Several others, operating under imaple and imaple8 branding, appear to be part of a ring. They currently receive around three million visits per month but even if the traffic of both sets of sites are combined, their exposure comes nowhere near that of the original 8maple platforms, representing success for the movie and TV studios and authorities in Taiwan.

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

 
 
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