Major file-sharing bust in Europe targets P2P admins

Found on Ars Technica on Monday, 06 September 2010
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For two years, Belgium has been looking into the online operations that obtain, crack, and distribute software, games, and media, operations collectively referred to as The Scene.

Beyond Ingblad and his work in Sweden, 14 other countries were involved, including Norway, the UK, Germany, and Italy.

Sweden's Pirate Party, which is facing elections in the next two weeks, was "highly critical" of the raids and blasted the decision to "criminalize an entire generation."

Like so many raids before, this won't really affect filesharing in the long run. "The Scene" will just move deeper into the underground and releases will still surface all around the world. This was basically nothing more than an awful waste of money and police force that would have been better used on something that really matters.

Anti-Piracy Group Stuns The World With Torrent Site Massacre

Found on TorrentFreak on Wednesday, 14 July 2010
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According to BREIN, which works mainly on behalf of the Hollywood studios but has branched out to work for other rights holders in recent times, during the first half of 2010 it shut down a staggering 422 "illegal websites".

We were told that they aren't releasing the URLs of the sites since they only detail those that they take to court and naming them would only give them increased traction and popularity.

We didn't notice, but strangely neither did anyone else.

They probably just shut down their honeypots and fake trackers. Nobody really noticed a decline in filesharing and without a list of URLs to check, the numbers are pretty useless.

Pirate Bay sees 'Iron Man 2' ahead of U.S. debut

Found on CNet News on Sunday, 02 May 2010
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According to comments by users, the copies available were recorded by people sitting in the theater who videotaped the movie off the screen using handheld cameras.

"This sort of theft is intensely disrespectful and damaging to those who pour their creativity and capital into movies and television," said a spokesman for Viacom, parent company of Paramount Pictures. "It is time responsible governments put an end to it."

Law enforcement authorities have traced the video-cam recording and bootlegging of movies to organized crime.

It is also so easy to trace weapon sales to organized crime. Also blund objects, sticks, pointy objects. Everything you want to make look shady can be traced to it. Money too. There is no need for governmental control; laws are in place already. It is time that the industry changes the way it deals with the new generation of fans; because they will download the movie and still go to the movies.

Researchers spy on BitTorrent users in real-time

Found on The Register on Thursday, 29 April 2010
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Researchers have devised a way to monitor BitTorrent users over long stretches of time, a feat that allows them to map the internet addresses of individuals and track the content they are sending and receiving.

The researchers said the information leak is built in to the very core of most BitTorrent systems, including those used by ThePirateBay and IsoHunt.

The insecurities baked into BitTorrent allowed the researchers to discover IP addresses even when they were hidden behind the Tor anonymity service.

Not much rocket science here; the Bittorrent protocol was designed for fast distribution of data, not for anonymity. A quick glance at the protocol specifications tells the reader that during the connection to the tracker, the client can send its true IP address in case it's behind a proxy which would negatively affect the transfer; and Tor is nothing much more than a proxy. So those who don't care about the Tor network and abuse it to get the latest Lady Gaga album are not as anonymous as they would like to be.

Ubisoft's Despised DRM Continues To Annoy, Fail

Found on Techdirt on Thursday, 22 April 2010
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Ubisoft's latest game to carry this DRM, Assasin's Creed 2, has also now been cracked, with hackers sending a personal message to Ubisoft in the pirated copy's .nfo thanking them for the challenge.

This latest title lasted all of a month before being fully cracked (there was an earlier crack that worked, but only for certain localized versions), and while the crackers may not be the best spellers, they apparently understand that Ubisoft leeches value from their products by layering them with obnoxious DRM solutions.

Ubisoft not only wasted tons of programming hours, but also annoyed customers on a massive scale, causing a PR nightmare. Well, you get what you deserve.

Feds raise questions about big media's piracy claims

Found on CNet News on Monday, 12 April 2010
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The GAO said most of the published information, anecdotal evidence, and records show that piracy is a drag on the U.S. economy, tax revenue, and in some cases potentially threatens national security and public health.

The accountability office even noted the existence of data that shows piracy may benefit consumers in some cases.

Some media outlets have reported that counterfeit goods can be traced to organized crime and groups that support terrorism.

Same old claim that piracy is the evil reason for everything. So old that nobody actually believes that anymore. Pirates affect public health (not as much as politicans who mess up healthcare) and are the secret supporters of organized crime and terrorism (unlike Lockheed-Martin, Glock, Walther or HK).

ISP Stands Up For Torrent Site Owner's Privacy

Found on TorrentFreak on Monday, 18 January 2010
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The Swedish ISP TeliaSonera is refusing to comply with a court ruling ordering the company to hand over information identifying the owner of SweTorrents.

In its appeal, the ISP argues that IPRED is in direct violation of the EU’s data retention directive, under which the privacy of the SweTorrents owner would be protected.

TeliaSonera further notes that in its ruling the District Court speaks of "the material that is uploaded on the website," even though there is no copyright material on SweTorrents, only torrent links.

A court that has obviously not the least understanding of the involved technology should at least take the time to learn a little before making rulings. No wonder lobbyists have quite a success when it comes to introducing draconian laws to protect a dying business.

Founder of Oink file-sharing site had £20,000 savings

Found on BBC News on Tuesday, 12 January 2010
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A Teesside man received $18,000 (£11,000) a month in donations from people using his pirate music website, a court has heard.

Peter Makepeace, cross-examining the defendant for the prosecution, said: "The money was rolling in, wasn't it?

Mr Makepeace said: "You were a wealthy man for someone who had only been working a few months."

I don't know how much Makepeace earns, but I wouldn't consider someone who has £20,000 sitting in his bank accounts a wealthy man. Perhaps they forgot a zero or two somewhere.

Ignoring P2Pers costs music biz dear - survey

Found on The Register on Saturday, 31 October 2009
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The Demos report, sponsored by Virgin Media, suggests file sharers aren't the wreckers of civilization they're painted to be - but failing to convert them into paying punters has cost the industry dear.

Two important strands emerge. Most of the population (74 per cent) pay for their music, and a majority - almost two thirds - never download unlicensed music.

This makes it harder to argue that P2P Pirates have brought the industry to its knees, rather than other factors such as unbundling or failing to innovate.

That's what everybody outside the industry has said since the beginning, but what has been ignored. So they all can go bankrupt, I don't care at all. If they are out of business, music will not vanish; instead, fans and artists will get closer together.

Nicolas "Copyright" Sarkozy mass-pirates DVDs

Found on Boing Boing on Thursday, 08 October 2009
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The same French president who has for the second time brought in three strikes to France has for the second time been caught infringing copyright on a large scale. The presidential audiovisual services have produced 400 unauthorized copies of the 52-minute documentary 'A visage decouvert: Nicolas Sarkozy.' This is quite impressive as the producer of the documentary has only shipped 50 copies.

Seems those weren't just simple copies, but criminal engery was put into it. Various people report that the original copyright notice had been removed from the copied covers.