September 6th, 2010
Filmmakers Release Clip from Pirate Bay Documentary

Release first of three clips from The Pirate Bay: Away From Keyboard (TPB: AFK) that they plan to release periodically through the month of September. Last week I mentioned how a pair of Swedish filmmakers are working on a documentary about The Pirate Bay. Titled The Pirate Bay: Away From Keyboard (TPB: AFK), the film

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September 6th, 2010

According to yet another leaked draft of the highly controversial Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA), participating countries will no longer be obliged to impose secondary liability on Internet Service Providers for copyright infringements carried out by their customers. Other harsh measures to counter copyright infringement are still in place. The level of secrecy which surrounds ACTA, the developing international agreement that aims to target piracy and counterfeiting globally, is unprecedented. It took nearly two years for negotiators to release a heavily redacted draft to the public, but by that time citizens were already fairly well informed having gathered information from previously leaked documents. Bypassing U.S. opposition to the release of an official text, last night yet another draft leaked out, published by Knowledge Ecology International

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September 5th, 2010
SOS-HADOPI Blasted By HADOPI and Says There’s Currently No Mandatory Spyware

HADOPI, France’s three strikes law and organization that oversees the enforcement of this law, has taken quite a beating on the PR front. Now they seem to be trying to push back by denying that they are forcing users to install spyware to prove innocence. They also called the initiative SOS-HADOPI – a commercial service

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September 5th, 2010

In recent years, technical anti-piracy enforcement has taken a less aggressive approach to that previously demonstrated by the infamous MediaDefender. But now, according to a company being hired to protect Bollywood blockbusters, if BitTorrent sites don’t cooperate by taking down torrents when asked, they will have denial of service attacks launched against them and material taken down by force. While anti-piracy actions had grown steadily more aggressive, it still came as a bit of a surprise when it was revealed in 2008 that a DoS-style attack had been launched against Revision3′s BitTorrent tracker. Founded by Kevin Rose and Jay Adelson of Digg fame along with David Prager of TechTV, Revision3 serves up around 6 million downloads per month. However, their whole operation was turned upside down two years ago when the now-defunct MediaDefender abused Revision3′s tracker for their own ends and when denied access “ threw an epic tantrum ” which took down the whole site

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September 4th, 2010
300 Alleged BitTorrent Users Targeted By Porn Industry

It seems that the porn industry is currently ramping up its anti-piracy efforts after filing lawsuits against 300 individuals accused of copyright infringement. The lawsuits were filed by Millennium TGA, Lightspeed Media Corporation and Hard Drive Productions in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois Eastern Division. The news was first

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September 4th, 2010

Inspired by their flagship site The Pirate Bay, file-sharers across Sweden continue to share files using the BitTorrent protocol largely unhindered and unconcerned by possible legal action. Those that choose to use certain other methods are not quite so safe, as police arrest yet another man for sharing large quantities of files. Swedish police have been making relatively small but regular arrests of individuals they can prove are sharing large numbers of tracks all at once. On Friday they targeted yet another

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September 4th, 2010
Major Coalition Pushes to Legalize File-Sharing in Brazilian Copyright Consultation

Brazil is wrapping up a consultation and it is apparently going out wit a bang. A coalition of 28 academic, educational, consumer, musical and digital cultural organizations have called on the government to legalize file-sharing through a blanket licensing system. Brazil is making headlines today because of a large push to legalize file-sharing. It’s thanks

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September 3rd, 2010

The RIAA may have given up on lawsuits targeting P2P users, but other companies have stepped into their shoes. There are many ways to detect P2P users and collect evidence of their behaviors for use in lawsuits. The simplest way needs nothing more than a BitTorrent client. We’ve covered some of the more exotic ways people can be tracked or monitored in the past (including some that don’t work) but the lawsuits, abandoned by the record industry as bad for business, have been adopted by a group of lawyers who don’t let a little hypocrisy stand in their way. There’s a lot of misinformation about which companies and agencies can do what, and how they do it

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September 3rd, 2010
Netflix Polls BitTorrent Habits of Leaving Customers

With over 10 million customers, Netflix is a huge player in the online DVD rental business in the United States. Aside from sending out DVDs by mail, customers can also stream movies directly to a wide variety of devices. Despite these services, there are still plenty of people who cancel their accounts.

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September 3rd, 2010
Netflix Polls BitTorrent Habits of Leaving Customers

With over 10 million customers, Netflix is a huge player in the online DVD rental business in the United States. Aside from sending out DVDs by mail, customers can also stream movies directly to a wide variety of devices. Despite these services, there are still plenty of people who cancel their accounts. Just for the record, Netflix wants to know through a survey if they are perhaps ‘pirates’. Hollywood often blames BitTorrent sites and other file-sharing platform for billions of dollars of annual lost revenue.

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