Monday, August 7, 2023

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Premier League Wins 2-Year Pirate IPTV Blocking Order as Sky Targets Identified
Andy Maxwell, 07 Aug 12:22 PM

iptvLast week the Financial Times reported that UK pay-TV broadcaster Sky had obtained a novel blocking injunction at the High Court in London.

The report claimed that the country's leading ISPs will be required to block pirate IPTV services nominated by Sky, to protect its "best selling" football games and content broadcast on linear channels including Sky Atlantic.

Premier League Also Obtains IPTV Blocking Order

While Sky attempting to protect its linear content seems like an entirely logical progression, the mention of Sky protecting the most popular football games from piracy seemed somewhat redundant. The most popular games on Sky are Premier League fixtures and since the football body obtains and executes its own blocking injunctions, doubling up wouldn't make much sense.

With no announcements from Sky or the Premier League, and the associated court orders not yet in the public domain, the scope of the Sky order remains unclear. What we can confirm today is that just days after Sky's injunction win, the Premier League also obtained an injunction at the High Court. Given the pattern established a few years ago, this seems likely to be an extension and upgrade of a previously obtained order.

An order covering the 2019/2020 season ran out on July 27, 2020, but was quickly followed by a "sealed order" covering the 2020/2021 season. While that timed out on July 27, 2021, blocking continued during the 2021/2022 and 2022/2023 seasons under the authority of the High Court.

With zero transparency now a feature of these orders, information is harder to come by. What we can confirm is that the Premier League obtained a blocking injunction/extension during the last week of July, just days after Sky obtained its own IPTV blocking order. The injunction allows the Premier League to block pirate IPTV services during the 2023/24 season and then the 2024/2025 season after that.

New Details on Sky's IPTV Blocking Order

The new injunction obtained by Sky and revealed last week wasn't the broadcaster's first foray into the world of ISP blocking orders. Sky previously teamed up with the MPA in 2022, but in the July order the broadcaster seems to have acted alone.

We still can't explain why Sky would block Premier League games already subject to blocking, so for now we're going to assume that isn't the case and a more plausible explanation will appear in due course. In the meantime we understand that the order obtained by Sky may only be valid for a relatively short period; August, September, October, and November 2023.

Another unusual aspect is the provisional blocking information made available to the major ISPs. As far as we're aware, existing orders are very flexible and not especially restricted in respect of which IPTV providers are eligible for blocking. Whether that's the case here is unknown, but Sky will be homing in at least six named brands linked to the supply of infringing streams; BunnyStream, Enigma Streams, GenIPTV, CatIPTV, GoTVMix and IPTVMain.

Messy Market, Little Respect for 'Trademarks'

Given that copycat branding is commonplace in all piracy markets and registered trademarks aren't really a thing, identifying the exact providers targeted here isn't straightforward. Existing information may help to narrow things down, however.

Operating from various domains, the brand GenIPTV has been a target for rightsholders for some time. Under instructions from Italian regulator AGCOM, geniptv.com and its 'portal' subdomain have been DNS blocked in Italy for several years. Genip.tv, which is linked to geniptv.com, appeared in the MPA's submission to the USTR's Notorious Markets report 2021. The studios claimed that, at least in part, the service was operated out of the UK.

BunnyStream-branded variations exist in forms from .com through to .co.uk, and in plural as BunnyStreams. With no obvious way to shorten the odds, moving on to IPTVMain is much more productive.

A short trawl through the Lumen database shows that Sky has taken significant interest in iptvmain.com (1,2,3), iptvmain.co.uk (1,2) and iptvmain.live (1). The service was also mentioned a lot on Twitter back in May, with comments along similar lines to this recent review we spotted on Google Maps.

iptvmain

Why Sky may be interested in these services above all others isn't immediately obvious. One thing that does stand out is the disproportionate use of .co.uk domains among the targets, which may suggest a focus on the UK. But of course, these consumer-facing websites aren't the most important targets, their streaming server IP addresses are, for the next few months at least.

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

Positive Cues Make Online Piracy Confessions More Honest, Research Finds
Ernesto Van der Sar, 06 Aug 03:09 PM

sharing is caringPiracy is a complicated phenomenon but most consumer research surveys on the topic are relatively straightforward.

Since most pirates don't like to have their online activity monitored, piracy studies generally rely on self-reported data instead.

These types of surveys are very common in all sorts of areas but they tend to come with several inherent biases. That's particularly true if respondents are asked about behavior that's against the law, which applies to piracy in most parts of the world.

One can imagine that some people, consciously or not, will downplay how often they use pirate sites and services. The opposite could be true for more defiant personality types, of course.

Making Piracy Confessions More Honest

Most researchers take these biases for granted and assume that comparisons over time will still be able to spot important trends. However, a new working paper from University of Portsmouth researchers suggests a simple way to make pirates more 'honest' in their reporting.

honest pirates

In a series of two studies, Kate Whitman and colleagues asked respondents to fill out a survey on a variety of subjects. This included a question where they had to estimate how many times they downloaded or streamed pirated content over the past week; if they pirated at all.

This is a basic question that regularly appears in piracy surveys. The researchers, citing the social desirability bias, assume that the average respondent will underreport their piracy activity by default. However, it also predicts that this tendency can be manipulated with a simple trick.

Psychology research has shown that using certain filler questions to 'cue' or 'prime' people towards positive or negative behavior can impact their follow-up answers on unrelated topics.

Priming Pirates

In the first study, the research applies this principle to see if these cues can change people's piracy answers by contrasting them with control groups where no cues are used. Since men and women tend to respond differently to these cues, gender is taken into account as well.

The researchers used these cues in the form of questions where respondents were asked to answer on a 5-point scale whether they agreed or not. Both positive and negative attitudes and behaviors were used as primes, but positive attitudes only had a significant impact.

study cues

These cues asked respondents to indicate to what degree they support the creative industries, by paying for Spotify or Netflix or going to the movies, for example.

Positive Cues Boost Piracy Confessions

These cue questions were eventually followed by piracy estimates. When analyzing the results, the researchers found that pirates estimated higher piracy usage after completing these positive behavior cue questions.

A likely explanation for this finding is that the cues make people more honest. After pirates have the opportunity to display support for the creative industries, it is apparently easier to rationalize piracy.

Men tend to pirate more and this 'rationalization' effect is somewhat stronger for them as well. That finding is in line with earlier research, which showed that men are more likely to use these types of rationalizations to overcome cognitive dissonance.

Social Desirability & Gender

The second study aimed to confirm these findings. In this case, the researchers only used positive behavior cues and the control group. Because they expected people's tendency to show socially desirable behavior to be an important factor, that was also measured through the survey.

The findings of this follow-up showed that, overall, respondents who scored high on the social desirability scale reported lower piracy 'consumption'.

Interestingly, the positive cues also increased people's self-reported piracy but that effect wasn't found for respondents who have a lower social desirability score.

The positive cues appear to work best for men, as the first study also suggested. The cues increase the reported piracy volume regardless of the social desirability bias level. For women, however, the cues only worked for respondents with a high social desirability bias.

The Implications

The main takeaway of the studies is that survey design and the framing of questions can steer people's reporting. That's important for researchers and applies to marketing and communication fields as well.

"Overall, the research underscores the significance of positive cues in increasing honest reporting of undesirable behaviors and sheds light on gender differences in response to survey primes," the paper notes.

"We estimate that the positive cues treatment increases the amount of piracy participants are willing to report by 42%."

cues

By taking these findings into account, researchers can potentially obtain more honest responses, also when people are asked about activities that are more criminal in nature.

"This intervention is easily adopted by market researchers and may extend beyond improved past behavior reporting to include attitudes and intentions. Moreover, the method may have broader implications for eliciting truthful responses from individuals involved in more serious criminal or sensitive activities."

Future research will have to show how these results hold up in other populations and whether other variables also play a role.

Currently, the researchers assume that people are underreporting their piracy habits by default, but that may warrant follow-up research too. Ideally, researchers should measure piracy directly, but for some reason, we think that pirates will change their habits if they know they're being monitored.

A copy of the working paper is available here.

Kate Whitman & Zahra Murad & Joe Cox, 2023. "Confessions of a pirate: Gender difference in survey prime to increase honest reporting," Working Papers in Economics & Finance 2023-05, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth Business School, Economics and Finance Subject Group.

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

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