Wednesday, December 20, 2023

TorrentFreak's Latest News

 

'Transnational' Pirate IPTV Operation Targeted By Italian Law Enforcement
Andy Maxwell, 20 Dec 11:43 AM

polizia-postalePirate IPTV services are a major cause for concern among broadcasters globally. In Italy, illegal streaming has grown in relevance to become part of a nationwide conversation.

Fueled by a national passion for top-tier football matches, viewable only by those who can afford a subscription, pirate IPTV services and other illegal streaming platforms found fertile ground in Italy.

New law passed during the summer, which increased penalties for piracy while supporting a new automated blocking system, sent the clearest possible message. Regardless of cost, fans will find money for legal subscriptions, but only when illicit access no longer exists.

Police Announce Major Action Against IPTV Operation

Law enforcement agencies shared information with the press on Tuesday revealing a "vast operation" against audiovisual piracy in Italy. State Police, on the orders of the Anti-Mafia Directorate at the Public Prosecutor's Office in Catania, executed nationwide search and seizure actions against members of a "transnational criminal organization."

Investigations directed by the Prosecutor's Office in Catania, and initiated by the Catania Cyber ​​Security Operations Center in coordination with the Postal Police of Rome, are said to have confirmed the existence of a criminal organization involved in the illicit supply of premium TV and on-demand video.

By offering illegal access to content owned by Sky, Mediaset, Amazon Prime, and Netflix, Postal Police say the group generated profits (not turnover) of several million euros per month.

The operation revealed yesterday targeted 21 suspected members of the organization active in Catania, Messina, Siracusa, Cosenza, Alessandria, Napoli, Salerno, Reggio Emilia, Pisa, Lucca, and Livorno e Bari. The Prosecutor's Office accuses these individuals of various offenses, including transnational criminal association, damage/corruption of information (anyone who destroys, deteriorates, erases, alters or suppresses data or computer programs), unauthorized access to an IT system, and computer fraud.

IPTV Piracy Pyramid

Police say the organization was found to be organized in a 'hierarchical manner' with members fulfilling "distinct and very precise" roles. Promotors of the service were stationed throughout Italy and abroad.

"In order to evade investigations, the suspects made use of encrypted messaging applications, fictitious identities and false documents; the latter were also used for the registration of telephone accounts, credit cards, television subscriptions and server rental," an announcement from the Postal Police reads.

"The presence on various social platforms of channels, groups, accounts, forums, blogs and profiles, were found to advertise the sale, on the national territory, of streams, panels and monthly subscriptions for the illegal viewing of audiovisual content which can also be used through numerous illegal 'live streaming' sites."

Broadcasters, Anti-Piracy Groups, Welcome the Action

Broadcaster Sky Italia congratulated Italy's Postal Police on a "new and important" anti-piracy operation.

"The police have our full support in their law enforcement activity, which over the years has become increasingly valuable to guarantee legality, to protect all those who legitimately use their favorite content," said CEO Andrea Duilio.

"Countering this criminal phenomenon is a commitment that involves us all and now, thanks to the new anti-piracy law, we can do it even more effectively."

Federico Bagnoli Rossi, President of anti-piracy group FAPAV, also welcomed a "very important" operation, describing it as a "hard blow towards those criminal mentalities that manage illegal IPTV and illicit live streaming platforms, whose revenues finance criminal acts of various types."

What Wasn't Announced

For reasons that aren't immediately clear, press releases issued by various police forces made no mention of any arrests Tuesday. The only thing reported in respect of the 21 people allegedly targeted is that they're currently under investigation. For comparison, a Postal Police statement following an unrelated operation clearly reported 28 arrests in that matter.

Among the information that was made available to the public, police noted that the group used false documents to rent servers. Other than that, however, there are no reports of servers or any other devices being seized. While it's possible that for operational reasons details are being withheld, based on the available information it seems more likely that the 21 'under investigation' are subscription sellers and/or resellers, rather than those actually running a pirate IPTV service.

"Inhibiting the Flow of Illegal Streams"

Claims that the authorities were reportedly able to block or "inhibit the flow" of illegal streams are further detailed in a La Sicilia report. The publication says that officers of the Postal Police were able to "seize 13 control panels" servicing "over 50 thousand users". This appears to be a reference to reseller panels and would explain how police were able to disconnect subscribers serviced through those interfaces.

Finally, it's worth highlighting how the group's earnings are being reported. La Sicilia reports that given the vast audience serviced by the platform, this "guaranteed 'six-figure' earnings to the managers of the illegal online piracy network." In a statement issued by the Postal Police, it's alleged that the group generated profits (not turnover) of "several million euros per month."

However, a separate statement published on the website of the State Police (Polizia di Stato) claims an even bigger amount. According to that report, the group generated monthly profits of tens of millions of euros.

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

PornHub Sister Company Seeks Piracy Blocking Order & $21m Damages
Ernesto Van der Sar, 19 Dec 10:41 PM

dollarsThe name 'Aylo' might not ring a bell with many people but it is one of the leading players in the adult entertainment industry.

Formerly known as MindGeek, and Manwin before that, the company conquered the online adult market over the past decade by offering free porn to the masses.

With help from user-uploaded videos, the company built massive databases of adult entertainment, much to the frustration of incumbent adult industry companies that, in the past, often found pirated copies of their content on MindGeek-operated sites.

This bold business model paid off with billions of visits that provided a sizable revenue stream through sites such as Pornhub, YouPorn, Redtube, Tube8, and dozens of others. And as MindGeek's stature rose, the company transformed into a major rightsholder which today operates under Aylo branding.

This imperium also controls a lot of copyrighted content. Aylo subsidiary MG Premium, for example, which owns various brands including Brazzers, has more than 40,000 works registered at the US Copyright Office which it actively protects.

Aylo's subsidiary regularly files lawsuits against 'pirate' tube sites and users of peer-to-peer networks. The most impressive numbers come from its DMCA takedown campaign, targeting close to 900 million URLs through Google alone.

Goodporn Lawsuit

One stand-out lawsuit targets the tube site Goodporn. MG Premium sued the platform for widespread copyright infringement, hoping to shut it down, but after two years that is yet to happen.

Instead, Goodporn owner Amrit Kumar fought back hard. Among other things, he allegedly signed a contract to obtain the rights to MG Premium's content in 2019, leading him to accuse his accusers of copyright infringement.

This counterclaim was eventually dismissed by the court during the summer. In addition, the court granted MG Premium's motion for summary judgment for inducement of copyright infringement and contributory copyright infringement.

It's almost impossible to summarize the entire case, which comprises hundreds of filings. For example, it also includes Lizette Lundberg and Emile Brunn as defendants, who stood accused of working with Kumar and submitting inaccurate DMCA counternotices.

Ultimately, however, the court entered summary judgment and a default for inducement of copyright infringement and contributory copyright infringement against all Goodporn defendants.

$21 million damages

With the default in hand, MG Premium is hoping to finalize the case. A few days ago it submitted a motion for default judgment, pointing out that Kumar continues to profit from the infringing activities to this day.

"As this case has proceeded for two years, Defendant 'Amrit Kumar' continued to reap profit from this scheme," MG Premium writes.

"Operating covertly behind proxy internet protocol addresses, anonymous email servers, and fake physical addresses, Kumar adopted the guise of a 'pro per' litigant while engaging ghostwriters, dodging depositions, eschewing telephone or video communication with counsel, and submitting falsified evidence of copyright ownership."

MG Premium claims to have lost many millions of dollars and seeks substantial damages as compensation. At the maximum of $150,000 per work, it can request up to $216 million. However, following the lower bar set in the Yespornplease case, a tenth of that is sufficient; $21.6 million.

21m

Proposed Blocking Order

In addition to damages, MG Premium also requests a broad permanent injunction, ordering domain registries and registrars to sign over all infringing Goodporn domain names.

While these targeted requests are not uncommon, the proposed injunction goes further than that. It also requires search engines, hosting and Internet service providers, domain registrars, domain registries and other service providers to block the site's domain names.

According to MG Premium, these companies should be ordered…

"To block or use reasonable efforts to attempt to block access by United States users of the Goodporn Websites by blocking or attempting to block access to all domains, subdomains, URLs, and/or IP Addresses that have as its sole or predominant purpose to enable to facilitate access to the Goodporn Websites"

block

Not Over Yet…

The motion for default judgment has yet to be signed off by the court. The blocking measures are targeted at services that act "in concert or participation" with Goodporn. It's not clear against which companies it will be enforced.

It's clear that Pornhub's sister company is eager to get this case over with. However, history has shown that nothing in the proceeding is straightforward.

Earlier this week, Defendant Kumar submitted a motion to set aside the default judgment, citing Visa restrictions, limited familiarity with U.S. legal proceedings, and other reasons for his earlier lack of appearance. Whether that will be granted remains to be seen.

A copy of MG Premium's motion for a default judgment is available here (pdf) and the proposed order can be found here (pdf)

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

270x90-blue

Are you looking for a VPN service? TorrentFreak sponsor NordVPN has some excellent offers.

 
 
Powered by Mad Mimi®A GoDaddy® company

No comments: