Wednesday, June 28, 2023

TorrentFreak's Latest News

 

The Pirate Bay Reopens its Doors to New Members After Four Years
Ernesto Van der Sar, 28 Jun 12:49 PM

pirate bayWhen The Pirate Bay launched nearly 20 years ago, its main goal was to become a bastion of free and uncensored information.

The site categorically rejects takedown requests from copyright holders and allows anyone to upload almost anything.

Since its early days, The Pirate Bay has always been free to use and open to the public at large. Those who wanted to share files only had to register an account, which was easy enough.

Registrations Closed to Stop Spam

The last sentence is in the past tense, as user registrations were effectively disabled four years ago. The last 'new' user was added to the torrent site on May 22, 2019, and, after that, there were no signs that registrations would reopen anytime soon.

The TPB team initially said that registrations had been closed to stop floods of malware torrents. This type of abuse was a major problem for the site's moderators who asked the main operator to temporarily disable registrations.

The plan was to address the problem by putting a limit on the number of torrents users could upload in a given timeframe. That would prevent hundreds of spam torrents from being uploaded at once, so TPB could accept new users again and continue business as usual.

This temporary fix stayed in place for four years but this week, registrations were opened once again. The recent closure of 'rival' torrent site RARBG played a major role in this development.

RARBG's demise took out a major supplier of new torrents. There are currently only a few public torrent sites where users can register, so the TPB moderators were concerned that a generation of potential uploaders would be lost.

Manually Approved Registrations

The team shared their concerns with TPB operator "Winston" who came up with a solution that was officially deployed a few hours ago.

New Pirate Bay registrations are not completely automated. TPB administrator Spud17 informs TorrentFreak that new users must apply for an account at the official SuprBay forums, where moderators will manually create accounts using a new tool.

This hands-on approach will help to prevent scammers and spammers from flooding the site. Users will be able to register directly in future but all accounts will still have to be approved before they are activated.

"For those who have waited years to upload, they now have the chance to get an account," Spud17 says, pointing to the SuprBay thread.

"Whether they want to upload niche stuff every now and again, or be one of the next big scene uploaders – all are welcome. Except for the nitwits who flood the site with crap, but we'll just nuke their arses."

Limited # Uploads

The Pirate Bay has shown signs of deterioration in recent years. In addition to closed registrations, the comment sections under each torrent have been disabled for years and are not expected to come back anytime soon.

Whether new users will trigger an inflow of more content has yet to be seen. New accounts are limited to 50 uploads per day but those who plan to be more active than that can request an exception.

"Should anyone have designs on becoming a prolific scene uploader, you can request the limit be lifted once your account is established," Spud17 writes.

After years of legal trouble, it appears that The Pirate Bay has entered calmer waters. There haven't been any prolonged outages like we have seen in the past. That said, the site will always remain a top target for law enforcement and rightsholders, so a sudden storm is not unthinkable.

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

Major Labels Need an Anti-Piracy Sleuth to Probe Pirate Apps
Andy Maxwell, 27 Jun 10:16 PM

piracy encryptOn the surface there's a world of difference between the crisp-suited executives of international corporations and the internet-dwelling swashbucklers intent on reappropriating their copyrighted content as swiftly as possible.

In reality, the closer one gets to the piracy front lines, the more difficult it is to tell the factions apart. They use similar tools and obfuscation techniques, need to innovate to stay ahead of the game, and even participate in the same discussions. Earlier this year a group of 'pirates' on Reddit obtained all kinds of information on at least a dozen pirate apps using ancient lost arts; opening accounts months earlier, pretending to be almost clueless, and then just blatantly asking.

Totally unsurprisingly, there was zero shortage of helpful pirates willing to answer, but these kinds of efforts are only useful in limited circumstances and can only yield so much useful intelligence. Technical information needs to be obtained methodically before being meticulously documented, potentially for use in future legal action against pirates themselves or intermediaries – or both.

IFPI – Content Protection & Enforcement

ifpi-london-sizeGlobal recording industry trade group IFPI has a sophisticated anti-piracy team tasked with mitigating threats, gathering evidence for use in legal action, and staying on top of the latest piracy trends.

In a job listing posted Monday, the group called out for a new technical investigator to join the team at IFPI's impressive headquarters in London.

"The ideal candidate will have well-rounded technical knowledge and be capable of analyzing and testing infringing services and producing written reports in a clear and concise manner. The candidate will work closely with the technical investigators and analysts within the team, developers, operational staff, and lawyers, as well as law enforcement professionals," the listing reads.

Responsibilities

While prosecutions are still carried out in the UK, most music pirates have moved on from selling pirate CDs at the local market. The role at IFPI seems to be a thoroughly digital affair, with investigations focused on pirate apps, social media platforms, and online streaming services.

The successful candidate will also have knowledge of ancillary technologies, including blockchain, decentralization, metaverse and gaming platforms, and of course, Artificial Intelligence. They will also have a blemish-free past, which IFPI will confirm via an enhanced background check. These checks go beyond convictions and include any information the police may have on record that's considered in some way relevant.

OSINT & Technical Investigations

While techniques and tool availability have developed significantly in recent years, the basic questions requiring answers in any piracy investigation remain the same; how does the infringing service or platform deliver content to end users, where does that content come from, what type of infrastructure supports it, and who are the humans involved and what roles do they play.

Investigations can be triggered when a new app appears online. Whether iOS or Android (mostly the latter), the process is the same; find out how the app functions, and then determine where the content comes from and how. The IFPI job listing gives little away on the specifics but does state that the successful candidate will have experience with three specific tools – Wireshark, Charles, Postman.

In Your App, Sniffing Your Traffic

wireshark-youtube-sizeThere's no doubt that Wireshark is the best-known tool of the three. Launched in the late 1990s and originally called Ethereal, Wireshark is the leading network protocol analyzer by far and is used by millions of people worldwide.

Wireshark is also completely free of charge but for most novices, completely overwhelming too, at least in the beginning.

For those who persevere, Wireshark offers a window into the hidden world of protocols, packets and networking, and is as proficient at monitoring the communications behavior of a regular browser accessing YouTube, as it is monitoring a mobile piracy app, or sniffing out unauthorized BitTorrent traffic on a network.

Wireshark is an extremely powerful tool and as likely to appear in a pirate's toolbox as it is an anti-pirate's. In most aspects Wireshark is more powerful than Charles, or Charles Proxy as it's often known, but sometimes a more focused piece of software is preferable to all-out overkill. Charles has some interesting tricks up its sleeve.

Charles cited in a piracy investigationcharles-proxy-cric

While Charles also monitors traffic, it's a web-debugging tool rather than a packet analyzer. In a typical scenario where an investigator wants to know how a new Android music streaming app works, the smartphone running the app (or an emulator) can be made to connect to Charles before it goes about connecting to external sources to stream music or obtain covers etc.

Meanwhile, Charles acts as a 'man-in-the-middle' silently listening and logging all activity, even when pirate app traffic is otherwise 'protected' by encryption. Charles can decrypt SSL/TLS connections, obtain cookies and grab passwords.

It sounds like the kind of behavior pirates might enjoy but on the piracy war frontlines, the sides have more in common than either would like to admit.

IFPI's job listing can be found here

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

 
 
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