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      Police Website Offers Pirated Live Sports Streams as IPTV FOIA Requests Denied

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Friday, 26 January - 12:38 · 6 minutes

    police-uk-foia For the past few years, regional police forces in the UK have shown a growing interest in cracking down on those involved in the supply of illegal streams.

    With regional organized crime units now part of the mix, joint press releases featuring police, the Premier League, Sky, and the Federation Against Copyright Theft, report enforcement action on a fairly regular basis. The importance of protecting copyright holders from criminal groups is the overriding message but for the last 12 months in particular, emphasis has shifted to include those who consume pirated content too.

    A see-saw of deterrent messaging warns consumers not to become a victim of crime , through malware, fraud, and identity theft, for example. As that pushes pirates down on one side, the journey back up sees the same people warned of potential convictions for fraud, in this case for obtaining services dishonestly.

    Baseless Threats or Genuine Intent?

    Recent coordinated amplification of these threats in the tabloids has certainly raised awareness. Unfortunately, however, massive revving of the engine not only came too soon, but has left deterrent messaging with almost nowhere to go. Casual pirates are asking more questions than they did before. That may be considered a plus but, when it comes to weighing up risk, the lack of information weighs in favor of pirates , not against.

    The big question, then, is whether there’s any real intent behind the stark warnings. Since history has a habit of predicting the future, knowing what has been happening on the enforcement front could prove informative. Two Freedom of Information requests published this week asked two regional police forces to fill in the gaps.

    The first, dated December 19, 2023, was directed at Wiltshire Police. It asked the following questions, all related to live sports streaming piracy, for the years 2019 to 2023 inclusive. (Questions edited to remove repetition)

    1. How many people were cautioned for viewing illegal streams?
    2. ….. were given penalty notices for viewing illegal streams?
    3. ….. were arrested for viewing illegal streams?
    4. ….. were cautioned for distributing / supplying illegal streaming services?
    5. ….. were given penalty notices for distributing / supplying illegal streaming services?
    6. ….. were arrested for distributing / supplying illegal streaming services?
    7. For questions 4, 5 & 6, how many were supplying illegal streams digitally?
    8. For questions 4, 5, & 6, were supplying illegal streams through dodgy boxes/firesticks?

    Since any convictions of note are extremely well-publicized for deterrent purposes, ballpark figures are more readily available for distribution-related offenses. Question 7 appears somewhat redundant and only the person who asked the question would know the purpose of number eight.

    It would be interesting to know the specific figures for 3, 4 and 5, while the answer to 6 would be much more valuable if placed against the number people actually prosecuted, rather than simply arrested.

    No Information Provided, Too Expensive to Process

    Of most interest, in our opinion, are the questions relating to those who faced action for simply viewing streams. The answers to those might inform those who remain undecided about the nature of recent warnings. Unfortunately, Wiltshire Police provided nothing of value.

    The key points from the Force Disclosure Decision Maker’s response read as follows:

    The information that you are requesting is not stored in a way which permits easy retrieval. This is because illegal streaming does not have a specific crime code on our system. Therefore, in order to ascertain whether a caution was given due to illegal sports streaming, we would have to go into each individual occurrence on our system to determine whether this is related to the matter in question.

    Under the circumstances I am absolutely confident that to locate, retrieve and extract the information you seek would by far exceed the time obligations upon this authority to comply, and in so doing would exceed the fees limits. This is set at £450 calculated at a flat rate of £25 per hour for those work activities comprising of confirming the information is held, locating it, retrieving it and extracting it.

    Ordinarily under our Section 16 duty to provide advice and assistance, we would advise you how to refine your request to a more manageable level. However, due to the difficulties outlined above, I cannot see how this can be achieved in this particular case.

    The questions sent to West Yorkshire police were broadly similar. This time, however, the decision to suggest specific keyword searches such as ‘set-top box’, ‘top box piracy’, ‘Kodi’, ‘IPTV’, ‘firestick’, ‘dodgy box’ & ‘internet TV media box’, plus ‘sports streaming’, ‘sports piracy’, ‘illegal streaming’, and ‘football streaming’, may have unintentionally captured other offenses.

    “Between 01/01/2019 and 18/12/2023 there were 1,287 crimes recorded based on the offenses and/or keywords provided. In order to provide a response to the full question set would involve a manual review of each crime. At an estimate of 1 minute per record this would take 22 hours to provide. In addition to this there were 1,939 arrests for the aforementioned offenses taking a further 65 hours at 2 minutes each,” the response reads.

    “Unfortunately, West Yorkshire Police are unable to provide you with the information requested.”

    Yorkshire Police note that a revised request may be considered but even then, reasons exist for not providing the requested information.

    “We may be able to provide you with information based on crimes classified as an offense under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 and specifically related to illegal streaming. Please note however any information held is subject to exemptions under the Freedom of information Act,” the rejection notice adds.

    It’s worth noting that viewers of illegal streams have been advised of a potential offense under the Fraud Act.

    Lack of Access to Information

    That the requests were unsuccessful doesn’t come as an especially big surprise. We’ve had our own narrow requests rejected in the past, and we’ve seen other requests handled in the same way. What does seem remarkable is that scant police resources are being deployed to tackle a very specific type of crime, as part of a national campaign that has government support, yet readily accessible figures are simply unavailable.

    That raises the question of whether deterrent and enforcement measures undergo evaluation for efficacy within the force, or if rightsholders supply that information for the guidance of the police. If that’s the case, even in part, history shows that the problem is perpetual, rarely improves for very long, and only responds to changes in the market that are non-reliant on force.

    Avon & Somerset Police Has Its Own Pirate Website

    While trying to determine whether additional FOIA requests had been filed with other forces in the UK, something rather bizarre caught our attention.

    The website of Avon & Somerset Police is usually available at avonandsomerset.police.uk and indeed still is, as the image below (left) shows.

    On the right is the website as it appears on the ‘opcc-maintenance’ subdomain of avonandsomerset.police.uk. The small text on the left, whatever it means, was enlarged by us. That doesn’t look like a standard police-issue font.

    police-domain

    More significant concerns appear in search engines where at least hundreds of police URLs containing the ‘rogue’ subdomain now advertise pirate streams of live sporting events.

    It’s possible the subdomain started life as a staging area for web development but as the image below shows, the current situation goes way beyond that.

    click to zoom

    On the left of the image is a small sample of the modified URLs as listed in search engines. In the middle, a small selection of the hundreds or thousands of links claiming to offer pirated live streams. On the right is a screenshot of where people end up after clicking any of the police links containing the subdomain.

    Mindful of all the malware stories lately, we progressed no further, even though the Australian Open was apparently on offer. Those visiting that portal via the links in search engines proceed at their own risk; anyone with the nerve to do this to a police website wouldn’t think twice about doing almost anything else, to anyone else, should the opportunity arise.

    Avon & Somerset Police have been informed via the regular ‘report a crime’ system, but this may have been going on for quite some time already. There are no URLs listed on the Wayback Machine, but publicly-listed subdomain scans show that the problematic subdomain existed back in the summer of 2020.

    The Freedom of Information requests can be found here and here (pdf)

    Crime reported, delays expected reported

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

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      beIN Sports’ Football Piracy Blitz Adds Blocking to Domain Seizures

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Wednesday, 24 January - 14:09 · 5 minutes

    beIN Sports Perhaps more than any other broadcaster, beIN Sports understands the potential for piracy to spin out of control.

    When a diplomatic crisis between Qatar and other Arab countries led to Saudi Arabia blocking the beIN service in 2017, beoutQ – a full-blown piracy platform – stepped in as a comprehensive but illegal beIN replacement.

    Over the next two years, the political fallout spread beyond the Middle East to the United States and European Union, leading to a World Trade Organization report and ultimately the closure of beoutQ’s satellite service in August 2019.

    Protecting the Africa Cup of Nations

    Over four years later, beIN is still battling commercial-scale piracy. After obtaining exclusive broadcasting rights to Africa’s most prestigious football tournament, the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON), tackling piracy of the month-long event would necessarily become a key component of the company’s overall strategy.

    According to a report published by L’Informé this week ( paywall ) , beIN’s plan to curtail piracy of AFCON in France had been in the planning for some time.

    Early 2022, the broadcaster became the first rightsholder to take action under Article L. 333-10 of the Sports Code, legislation introduced by the French government that provided accelerated access to anti-piracy measures such as site blocking.

    According to L’Informé, on December 15 under the same system, beIN served a writ of summons on the main ISPs in France – Bouygues Télécom, Free, Orange, Outremer-Télécom, Société Réunionnaise du radiotéléphone (SFR), and SFR Fibre. On January 9, 2024, the Paris judicial court upheld beIN’s application for blocking measures against 56 illegal streaming sites, to be implemented by the ISPs, to protect the AFCON tournament.

    Pirate Sites Were Likely to Air AFCON Matches

    To support the blocking application, beIN presented evidence showing that the pirate sites had systematically infringed its rights in the past.

    Last November, one of the domains on the list – Ishunter.net – was illegally broadcasting matches from Germany’s Bundesliga, Spain’s La Liga, and Serie A matches from Italy to which beIN holds French broadcasting rights. At the time of writing, the domain returns a parking page rather than live football streams; as a result, takedown notices filed with Google are mostly attempting to take down content that doesn’t exist , at least at the specific URLs listed.

    Three other domains – ipcover.tv, maxsmart.pro and pythonlived.com – reportedly service pirate IPTV apps. Maxsmart.pro is the only domain obviously functional today, serving pearls of wisdom from the likes of Mahatma Gandhi rather than football matches, however.

    Current Status of Domains

    While ISP blocking measures can be evaded when injunctions are static (i.e. targets are fixed) the order obtained by beIN Sports is dynamic. This means that if the listed pirate sites use subdomains, entirely new ones, or any other measures, if beIN is confident the new locations relate to the old ones, blocking can go ahead.

    Speaking with L’Informé, Caroline Guenneteau, Deputy General Secretary of beIN Media Group and Legal Director of beIN Sports France, said that 70 domains have already been blocked to protect this competition alone

    “It’s very important to be proactive at the start of the competition, when there are a maximum number of illicit streams,” Guenneteau added.

    Even though the blocking measures shouldn’t affect those who visit the sites from outside France, tests carried out by TorrentFreak on the specific domains as they appear in the order (full list below) suggest some have made changes.

    Around 25 are still operational from their previous locations while a small number redirect to their own subdomains or new/alternative domains. Others display ‘domain parking’ style pages while others prefer to offer up their own blend of humor instead.

    One of the pirate domains currently suggests involvement with the insurance and travel business, another claims to be a fitness promotion platform. At least two redirect to new domains before asking for money to keep things going.

    A handful of others show Cloudflare error messages but as these above show, perhaps not all messages appearing on these domains are authentic.

    In any event, finding alternatives through search engines may be more difficult than it was before. The order obtained by beIN allows it to serve court orders on companies such as Google, requiring the domains to be delisted from search results.

    The domains listed in an order published on the Lumen Database are broadly similar to those present in the original order, but additional notices will likely be sent as new domains are reported.

    The blocking action in France complements the action we reported here on Monday . Dozens of domains linked to sites previously showing live football matches, to which beIN owns the rights, began redirecting to the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment.

    Among those domains were 7kora.mpokora-online.com and 7koora.mpokora-online.com, both of which currently show the ACE domain seizure banner.

    Since they’re also on beIN’s ISP blocking list, visitors to those domains in France shouldn’t be able to access the sites, so in theory will be spared the bad news.

    The domains/URLs to be blocked by ISPs in France:

    Kooora4lives.net
    Ishunter.net
    Sportp2P.com
    Rojadirect1.pro
    Aflam4you.org
    Kora-star.online
    Yallalive.id
    360kora.net
    Live-koora.live
    Yalla-live-tv.io
    Sporttv123.xyz
    Wholewellnesswhirl.live
    Sporttvls.com
    Top.crackstreamfree.com
    Top2.crackstreamfree.com
    Top3.crackstreamfree.com
    Top4.crackstreamfree.com
    Top6.crackstreamfree.com
    Stad.livehd7s.live
    V3.sportonline.so
    Shoot.yallashoote.com
    W1.yalla-shoot-tv.io
    Futbolandres.xyz
    360kora.tvem.net
    Aleexsportz.online
    Yalla-live.org
    Sa.yalla-live.com
    Lkooora.live
    Livehd72.com
    Kora-yallashoot.com
    Kora.live-kooora.io
    Goalarab.org
    Go.livehd72.livve
    Ar.new-yallashoot.com
    10koora.livekooora.online
    Totalsportek.pro
    Kooralivs.com
    7kora.mpokora-online.com
    7koora.mpokora-online.com
    Tv.yalla-shoot2day.com
    Tv.yacine-tv.app
    Spie.livehd7.io
    Dotsport1.com
    Yala-shoot.live
    Streams.lc
    Beinmatch1.com
    Beinmatch.motorcycles
    365kora.com
    Ma.360kora-live.com
    Kora.live-koora.net
    Gogolion.xyz
    Ipcover.tv
    Maxsmart.pro
    Megahdtv.xyz
    Pythonlived.com
    Smart-prott.xyz

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

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      ACE Shuts Down Huge Football Piracy Ring, Total Destruction TBC

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Monday, 22 January - 18:19 · 4 minutes

    ace logo Despite MPA/ACE having enough investigators to field both teams in a football match, while players argue with an in-house referee in multiple languages, the state of piracy in North Africa and the Middle East presents a considerable challenge.

    At the time of writing, over 150 deliberately confusing domains and subdomains, linked to around three dozen illicit football streaming sites, are redirecting to the ACE anti-piracy portal. The domains started to redirect on Saturday, still hadn’t finished on Sunday, and may not even be finished now.

    No Announcement From ACE Just Yet

    Faced with a risk of sudden domain suspensions, ISP blocking, or domains being penalized in search results due to persistent copyright complaints, it’s common for pirate sites to have a few domains at their disposal. There’s also a growing trend of sites with common ownership operating from dozens of confusingly-similar domains by design.

    This strategy has the potential to complicate enforcement, including a not-insignificant chance of sites continuing under the guise of different ownership, even when on paper an entire operation has already been shut down. There are signs that some overseas site operators are finding opportunities by generating chaos on the surface, while remaining completely organized behind the scenes.

    None of this provides immunity from enforcement measures, but confirming compliance becomes more complex.

    The Football Piracy Ring

    For the sake of clarity, subdomains and other distractions have been stripped from this sample of domains currently redirecting to the ACE portal.

    livehd7.club, livekooora.tv, livekoora.io, live-koora-online.tv, live-kooora-tv.com, live-kooora-tv.net, live-koora.tv, kingshoot.club, kingfoot.live, kooora4.us, kooragoal.club, koora4live.club, koora2day.net, kora365.online, kooralive.io, kooora365.live, kora-tv.online, kora-online-tv.com, koraextra.club, koratvonline.net, kora-live.plus, kora-star-tv.live, kora-goal.net

    One of the above domains, kooora4.us, shows how small changes can help to muddy the waters. The word ‘kura’ is Arabic for ball while ‘koora’ is broadly understood as relating to football; in this case, an extra ‘o’ appears in the mix while other domains contain one or two.

    kooora4.us

    SimilarWeb data shows that traffic increased for kooora4.us during October at a time when traffic for a similarly-named domain was in steep decline.

    Similar behavior can be seen across dozens of similar domains, although not always under common ownership or even in direct response to enforcement measures. Now redirecting to ACE, kooora4.us received 277.6K visits in December 2023, a peak now unlikely to return.

    Kooragoal.club, another domain that began redirecting over the weekend, also increased its traffic in October before a decline set in the following month.

    A quarter of kooragoal.club’s traffic came from Egypt, which along with Saudi Arabia and UAE, appears regularly in traffic reports for similar domains.

    kooragoal-club2 Most also receive traffic from countries including the United States, but the clear focus is North Africa and the Middle East, putting the sites firmly the crosshairs of ACE member, beIN Sport.

    In November 2022, ACE settled with the operator of a series of websites with similar names, appearance, and functionality, to those that began redirecting this weekend.

    While their operator agreed to shut them down, ACE acknowledged the existence of additional sites, noting that enforcement actions would continue.

    Mirrored Fortunes & Those That Can Slip Away

    At the time of writing, kooragoal.club (above) and kora-goal.net (below, right) are both redirecting to the ACE portal, having generated 1.16 million and 120.5K visits respectively during the period Oct 2023 to Dec 2023.

    kora_mixed_fortune The chart to the right also includes kora-goal.com, which is currently operational and showing progress that closely mirrors the decline of kooragoal.club.

    Both domains display a shift in fortune in early November before meeting in traffic terms in December, with kora-goal.com taking over as kooragoal.club prepared itself for redirection to ACE. Whether kora-goal.com is destined for new anti-piracy ownership or will go on to further boost its traffic is unclear.

    Kooralive.io Had Significant Traffic

    Between October and December 2023, kooralive.io received almost 2.1 million visits, so ACE will be pleased that its growth has already been curtailed. The interesting thing here is that kooralive.io had around 250K visits in October and then, almost if someone had simply flicked a switch , in November its traffic suddenly skyrocketed to around 1.8 million visits.

    In at least some cases, this was achieved by redirecting traffic from other domains/subdomains operated by the same owner, to other domains/subdomains also owned by the same owner, which then redirected to subdomains on kooralive.io. Similar behavior can be observed on other domains which, unsurprisingly, are also operated by the same owner.

    Getting Rid of the Roots

    In addition to the domains listed as redirecting at the start of this article, it remained a question whether other domains with common ownership would also suffer the same fate, even if some had fallen out of use.

    While ultimately it could prove impossible to weed out every last domain, showing links between the domains was surprisingly straightforward, and as far as we can see (a handful of outliers aside) all currently redirect to ACE.

    Whether any agreement reached with the operator of the sites has enough teeth to prevent a resurgence is unknown.

    At least for now, however, the removal of dozens of domains seems significant enough for a quick celebration before getting back to the job, which apparently never ends.

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

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      ISP Linked to Premier League & La Liga Piracy Arrests Clears Up App “Confusion”

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Saturday, 23 December - 21:58 · 4 minutes

    Partners Against Piracy The exact nature of ‘Partners Against Piracy’ (PAP) can be a little disorientating at times.

    In March 2020, the Kenya Copyright Board announced that it had launched the ‘Partners Against Piracy Campaign’ describing it as a “multi-stakeholder” awareness program.

    The Copyright Board said that pirates “don’t pay for the goods or services that they utilize” and “hardly pay taxes and/or employ staff.” Broadly speaking, pirates were having a detrimental effect on the economy and that needed to change.

    With legislation being tightened up, the campaign’s initial goal was to “ sensitize the public on the changes in the law that support enforcement in the online environment.

    The sensitization program was supported by several PSA-style videos, including the one embedded directly below. “This is a collaboration of like minded corporate Industry associations and individual right holders to help fight piracy,” the Copyright Board added .

    In 2022, after fighting unfavorable amendments to copyright law, then introducing site-blocking to Kenya to protect MultiChoice and indirectly the Premier League , some elements of Kenyan media were calling PAP a “lobby group” instead.

    Given the alleged multi-billion annual losses to piracy, it’s hardly surprising that every possible tool was on the table.

    PAP Targets Local ISP

    PAP describes itself on social media platforms as a “multi-sectoral Coalition, of local and international Associations, Societies & Companies, representing Thousands of Creatives in Kenya and the World.” In common with its international counterparts – other anti-piracy groups fighting the same enemy – physically cracking down on illegal content suppliers is part of the overall strategy in Kenya.

    According to local media reports , this week an operation headed by PAP, with assistance from the Kenya Police Cybercrime and Crime Scene Forensic Units, targeted a local internet service provider.

    “This intervention has disrupted the illegal services provided to approximately 3,000 subscribers in the Kasarani-Mwiki- Santon areas, who were illegally accessing premium content, such as English Premier League (EPL), WWC and La Liga live sports through the WeCast App,” PAP said in a statement.

    “The investigations revealed that the WeCast App is installed on the client’s mobile phone or digital television upon subscription to Lime Fiber internet, where login details are provided by the perpetrators.”

    What’s the WeCast App and What Does it Do?

    The term ‘WeCast’ is often associated with Chromecast/Miracast-style HDMI dongles, which allow users to cast images and videos from phones and tablets to bigger screens. Media statements and reports this week offer no further detail beyond ‘WeCast App’ but a WeCast-branded product does exist that could be an ideal fit for the described scenario.

    WeCast for Android is described as a companion app for the WeCast Media content server API and on Google Play is helpfully named WeCastKe, KE being the country code for Kenya. On its own the app is legal but useless; couple it with a remote server configured to provide content, it’s ideal for receiving IPTV streams and VOD library playback.

    This WeCast product was marketed towards the hotel market at some point but regardless of location or content, functionality doesn’t change. Whether it’s the product referenced in the Lime Fiber case remains to be seen, but software isn’t the key issue. Copyrighted content being distributed without a license appears to be the root of the allegations facing Lime Fiber.

    Two People Arrested

    lime fiber ad According to a statement released to the media, two people “linked” to Lime Fiber were arrested at its Nairobi County office on suspicion of providing illicit streams.

    Citing Kenya’s Copyright Act, one publication notes that copyright infringement can be a criminal offense punishable by a fine of up to 800,000 Kenyan Shillings (around US$5,100) and up to 10 years in prison.

    In a statement published Thursday, Lime Fiber said there had been “some confusion” regarding its association with the WeCast App. The ISP said it is “not directly involved in providing content through the WeCast App” and it does not “control or manage” content available on third-party applications.

    Coincidences

    A company called Lime Emerging Solutions operates Lime Fiber and public records (including domain name records) link a person called Kahenya Kamunyu to both.

    Whether there are one, two, or more people who share the same name in Kenya’s developing internet space, a specific Kahenya Kamunyu stands out as particularly interesting.

    A publicly identifiable figure for over a decade, his internet development work – and what can only be described as a mission to disrupt the pay-TV market – has resulted in one Kahenya Kamunyu attracting a lot of attention.

    In 2022, an article described him as a techpreneur who had successfully carved out a niche in the pay-TV sector. CNN listed him as one of Africa’s ’15 tech entrepreneurs to watch in 2014′ for his internet-based content streaming startup, Able Wireless.

    Described as a “home-grown Netflix” it’s reported that the service was accessed via a Raspberry Pi-powered TV box. That’s a little different from the system allegedly offered by Lime Fiber but nevertheless, it appears that the Mr. Kamunya at Able Wireless wanted to bring a streaming service to Kenya a little more quickly than some had anticipated.

    While a few years old by now, an interview with Mr. Kamunya about his Able Wireless business plan is available on YouTube. In brief, the idea was to go ahead with the streaming service regardless of content licensing, to prove to the content companies that a market they didn’t believe existed, actually did exist.

    “We are already putting money aside for content so if anybody wants to come suing us we’ll tell them that their money is sitting in an account somewhere. We have an open platform for open statistics, they can come get the money,” he said.

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

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      Canal+ Demands €7,000,000 From Streaming Pirate, Court Awards €60,000

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Friday, 22 December - 14:04 · 2 minutes

    canal+ logo Those who stream content illegally online are regularly portrayed as generating huge profits at the expense of legitimate content owners. In broad terms it’s an accurate summary; pirates invest nothing in the creative process and therefore risk none of their own time or money.

    What pirates do risk, in some cases for surprisingly little profit, is legal action in both civil and criminal courts. It’s a roll of the dice a surprising number are still prepared to take, a French farmworker from Vienne, for example. Between 2019 and 2020, the man illegally streamed content owned by Canal+ which attracted 1.495 million visits, the broadcaster claimed.

    Criminal Conviction, Civil Action

    In May 2023, these streaming activities (mainly live football matches) earned the man a three-month suspended prison sentence in a criminal case. Suspension meant the defendant didn’t lose his freedom but with a civil case to answer, still faced losing money, probably on a massive scale.

    Canal+ didn’t disappoint predictions. Maintaining a long tradition of filing a telephone number-sized claim, the broadcaster took the estimated 1.495 million visits to the platform, multiplied by a monthly legitimate subscription cost of €109, then weighted by 15%, the estimated audience penetration rate of Canal+.

    Arriving at an amount just over €7,177,000, the broadcaster tacked moral damages on top and demanded all advertising revenue generated by the man during the 2019-2020 period; roughly €29,900, give or take.

    French Court Hands Down its Decision

    This week the Poitiers Judicial Court ( Tribunal judiciaire de Poitiers ) handed down its decision.

    According to La Nouvelle Republique , the court awarded Canal+ just €56,500, comprised of €50,000 compensation for loss, the requested moral damages amount divided by ten, plus just €5,000 of the €29,937 generated from advertising.

    A note in the judgment indicates that formulating an accurate potential losses claim was unachievable.

    “It appears that carrying out a mathematical calculation of SA Canal Plus’s loss of opportunity proves impossible,” the judgment notes.

    More Risk: To Appeal or Not

    The only remaining question is whether either party will appeal. On balance, an appeal by the defendant would make little sense. For Canal+ there’s a deterrent component to consider, hence the huge initial claim.

    In practical terms, if a €60,000 award doesn’t deter would-be pirates, double the amount probably won’t either. Nobody ever goes into these things expecting to get caught.

    However, if an appeal went on to uphold the €60,000 award, some might consider that helpful. After being scrutinized twice, the amount could be seen as a more predictable guideline, rather than the unpredictable outlier one-off it currently is.

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

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      Premier League Targets Dozens of Illegal Streaming Sites in U.S. Court

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Monday, 18 December - 07:58 · 4 minutes

    premier league Early December the English Premier League announced a new broadcasting rights deal worth a staggering £6.7 billion (US$8.5 billion).

    Running for four seasons from the 2025-26 campaign, the deal will see broadcasters Sky and TNT take the live games and the BBC continue with its popular highlights package.

    Amazon, which has been licensing Premier League games since 2019, hoping to drive customers towards its Prime service, wasn’t awarded a single match. In parallel, UK tabloid Daily Mail has taken a sudden and unusual interest in Amazon Firestick devices during the last two weeks.

    firestick-mail Published every few days with a similar theme, the goal appears one of piracy deterrence. Unfortunately, regularly associating a legitimate brand with negative imagery is unlikely to have much effect on the pirate market and won’t boost sales of legitimate products either.

    Since piracy rarely responds to negativity but loses market share as legal offers become more attractive, the Premier League’s decision to allow transmission of 270 fixtures in the new package instead of the current 200, is a step in the right direction. Still no matches available during the ‘3pm blackout’ or adjustments to pricing in the consumer direction, but the BBC now has a license to show highlights for all 380 matches.

    Other ‘broadcasters’ will show all 380 matches in full, with no license at all.

    All Matches, No Licenses: Premier League Targets Pirate Sites

    Sky’s deal with the Premier League means the broadcaster now pays £5.95 million per match . Pirate streaming sites, meanwhile, pay the Premier League absolutely nothing and since that has a devaluing effect on the matches already sold, enforcement is the inevitable outcome.

    In a letter dated December 14, 2023, Texas law firm Hagan Noll & Boyle informed Cloudflare that users of its “system or network” are infringing the Premier League’s copyrighted works, through dozens of websites, using an even greater number of domain names. Where relevant, the list also includes ‘backend URLs’ from where actual streams may (or may not) be served.

    A small sample of the pirate domains premier league-domains

    The list includes the popular crackstreams.me, which according to SimilarWeb data enjoyed 8.6 million visitors in the three-month period of September, October and November 2023.

    In common with many other domains in the list, a second domain is listed alongside crackstreams.me, indicating that visitors are redirected after visiting the initial domain.

    For crackstreams.me, the secondary ‘redirect’ domain is ronaldo7.io, which had around 750,000 visits during the same three-month period. While that’s significantly lower than crackstreams.me, visitors from the UK account for 75% of ronaldo7.io’s traffic, versus 25% for its redirection ‘partner’.

    Screenshots similar to those shown below form part of the evidence presented to Cloudflare, 103 pages in total.

    crackstreams.me (left), ronaldo7.io (right) crackstreams-premier

    Judging by the volume of gambling advertising on some domains, coupled with signs that sites are targeting countries including Thailand and China, the Premier League clearly has challenges ahead. Some may even be solvable in the United States, if it gets lucky with Cloudflare.

    Notification Under 17 U.S.C. § 512

    There are two reasons for sending a notification to Cloudflare under 17 U.S.C. § 512 . As a first step, the Premier League would like Cloudflare to take the infringing content down.

    “Cloudflare is asked to remove or disable access to Premier League’s copyrighted works, which, based on the infringement that has occurred to date through the websites and domain names identified above, will continue to be infringed in this same manner throughout the Premier League season,” the letter reads.

    Whether Cloudflare can or will comply in some or all cases is unclear. However, until Cloudflare is sent a compliant DMCA takedown notice, Premier League can’t follow up with the next step.

    DMCA Subpoena Application Filed at U.S. Court

    Through the same Texas law firm, on December 14 the Premier League filed an application for a DMCA subpoena. This allows a copyright owner (or a person authorized to act on their behalf) to request a clerk of any United States district court to issue a subpoena to a service provider (in this case Cloudflare) for the purpose of identifying an alleged infringer.

    The notification sent to Cloudflare identifying the alleged infringers and locations of the infringing content, a proposed subpoena, and a sworn declaration that the subpoena will only be used to protect Premier League’s rights, is usually enough for the clerk to sign off on a request.

    Kids’ presents and turkey or gambling with strangers? premier-gambling

    When that happens, Cloudflare will be required to hand over the following information for the domains listed below, and/or the ‘backend URLs’ listed in the notification to Cloudflare (not listed below).

    Information sufficient to identify the alleged infringers of the matches described in the attached notification, which would include the individuals’ names, physical addresses, IP addresses, telephone numbers, email addresses, payment information, account updates, and account history.

    The deadline in the proposed subpoena is December 29, 2023

    The list of domains and redirection domains reads as follows:

    88zhibo.me
    222live.net
    720pstream.me
    720pstream.nu
    7mscorethai.live
    bestsolaris.com
    bgibola5.xyz
    bgibola77.live
    cakhia51.tv
    cakhia22.live
    crackstreams.me
    ronaldo7.io
    dooball168-hd.com
    dooball2you.com
    dooballx.com
    duball356.com
    futebolplayhd.com
    futemax.app
    futemax.la
    livenettvapk.live/android/
    livehd7.cc
    as.livehd72.live
    mmfootballgroup.com
    mmfootball.cryptken.com
    multicanais.fans
    pawastreams.top
    pawastreams.info
    rakhoi4.tv
    rapidstreamz.tv
    rojadirectaenvivo.club
    rojadirectaenvivo.nl
    soccerlive.app
    nbastreamlinks.net
    soccerstreamlinks.com
    soccertv4k.com
    socolive.news
    socolive.fan
    sportsurge.club
    streamonsport.ru
    strims.top
    tvmob.net
    tvron.net
    tvtap-pro.net
    vertvenvivo.net
    weakstream.org
    weakspell.org
    xn--l3clbuukk5c4d8a3e5d.com
    crichdplayer.xyz
    crichd.com
    hd.cricfree.io

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

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      France: Streaming & DDL Piracy Fall But Cloud & Usenet Boosts Wipe Out Gains

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Wednesday, 13 December - 14:03 · 4 minutes

    Arcom For more than a decade, the French government has produced a report detailing the digital content consumption habits of French internet users.

    Currently produced by telecoms regulator Arcom, the content consumption barometer report quantifies consumption of major content categories including movies, TV shows, live sports broadcasts, music, video games, software, and audiobooks, among others. It aims to profile consumers of content, map changes in consumption habits and sources, and gauge public perception of legal content availability. Arcom published the report’s 2023 edition yesterday.

    Overall Exposure to Cultural Content

    In terms of overall exposure to digital cultural and sporting content, the report estimates that 87% of internet users aged 15 and over, around 45 million people, were consumers in 2023. That’s up from 86% in 2022.

    Of the dozen content categories covered in the report, movies were consumed by 55%, music by 50%, and TV series by 49%, meaning no change in the most popular content categories consumed in 2023 versus last year.

    Paying (And Not Paying) For Content

    For 2023, Arcom reports that 61% of consumers or 27.5 million people, paid to consume digital content online. This year the average monthly spend was €38.00 ($41.00) per month, a significant increase from the €32.00 ($34.50) reported in 2022. The report notes that this is the biggest increase in average spending in recent years, with Arcom describing the uplift as “remarkable” in the context of price inflation.

    One of Arcom’s key responsibilities is to reduce piracy rates. In 2021, around 27% of internet users consumed at least one piece of pirated content, a figure that reduced to 24% in 2022.

    Arcom introduces 2023’s overall piracy rate as follows: “The fall observed in 2022 in the proportion of illegal consumption of digital cultural and sporting content has continued this year,” while later adding, “..this continues the decline seen in 2022.”

    While this year’s figures are provided, the “fall observed in 2022” was actually the difference between an overall rate of 27% in 2021 and 24% in 2022, in other words a three percentage point reduction in the overall piracy rate, aka success. Perhaps a less ambiguous statement would’ve been more helpful to describe the state of play this year.

    In 2023 there was zero reduction in the overall piracy rate, i.e. the rate is static year-on-year. In common with 2022, in 2023 around 24% of internet users still consumed at least one piece of pirated content. The report describes this as illegal content consumption “leveling off.”

    Appetite For Piracy Wanes With Age

    In common with most other studies conducted in Europe, piracy rates are higher among younger people in France and lower among the older generations.

    “The 15-24 and 25-39 age groups are the biggest consumers of illegal digital cultural and sporting content (46% and 36% respectively). Conversely, only 16% of 40–59-year-olds and 7% of 60+ year-olds are involved,” the report notes.

    When drilling down into content categories, the report says that a drop in illegal consumption was observed in a quarter.

    “This is particularly the case for films and music, two of the three content categories with the highest levels of illegal consumption by internet users in 2022 (-1 point each, to 12% and 6% of internet users respectively),” Arcom reports.

    “While illegal consumption of TV series, the second most pirated content in 2022, remains stable in 2023 within the internet user population (9% illegal consumption), there has been a slight fall among those who consume it (18%, -1 point).”

    Consumption of Illegal Streams & Downloads Fall

    The two most popular methods of obtaining infringing content in France are streaming and direct downloading, often referred to as DDL. However, this year’s report from Arcom finds that both methods experienced declining popularity in 2023.

    While remaining the most frequently used method among consumers overall (49% and 38% respectively), streaming fell two percentage points and downloading four percentage points versus rates in 2022.

    Arcom says that these declines in two key categories demonstrate “the positive effects of the anti-piracy measures implemented in 2022 and 2023.” While that may well be the case, if overall piracy rates remained static this year, something else must’ve taken up the slack.

    As the Arcom graph shows, remarkable gains are on display in two categories. In 2022, services in the ‘Usenet and newsgroups’ category were used by 11% of French internet users but in 2023, that figure has increased to 16%. The other category climbing quickly, Cloud services, reached a peak of 21% in 2020 and then fell to 19% and 16% in 2021 and 2022 respectively.

    In 2023, improved privacy versus other illicit content access methods may have contributed to Cloud services’ 2020-equalling usage rate of 21%.

    Illegal Access Rates Overall

    Arcom reports a “stabilization” in illicit consumption of live sports broadcasts for 2023. This year’s rate of 4% is identical to that reported in 2022, but still an improvement over 2021 where 6% of internet users consumed liver sports from illegal sources.

    In summary, illegal streaming was used by 49% of internet users in 2023, direct downloading (DDL) by 38%, social networks by 32%, with peer-to-peer networks such as BitTorrent hanging on to around 26% of users.

    The surprise package of Usenet (16%) and Cloud services (21%) returning to rates not seen since 2020 might be the trend to watch since Arcom has much less control over these methods. Deterring the use of streaming and downloading services may be considered a success, but that could be tempered if more complex issues are encountered further down the road.

    Arcom’s 2023 Barometer report is available here (pdf, French)

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

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      Police Arrest Pirate Site Operators Following 3-Year Investigation

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Thursday, 9 November - 13:19 · 3 minutes

    Ogladaj.to down s A study published in September by the European Union Intellectual Property Office found that by late 2022, each internet user in the EU accessed websites offering pirated content at a rate of around 10 times per month .

    Estonia and Latvia were called out as Europe’s most prolific infringers with around 25 accesses per user per month. German citizens and their Italian counterparts were highlighted as among the best behaved; 7.5 accesses per user per month, or roughly one pirate site visit every four days.

    Yet when it comes to overall piracy rates and movie piracy in particular, no country in Europe can match the level of restraint shown in Poland. Not only do the Poles pirate less overall than any other country in the bloc, its citizens lead Europe on exposure to legal services.

    The European average for buying from the internet or a pay TV platform in 2022 was just over four people in every ten ( pdf ) . Poland managed almost six in ten (59%), the best in Europe. All France had to show after 15 of years of monitoring, fining, and trying to reeducate pirates, was just three out of ten, the worst rate in Europe.

    Poland Steps Up Piracy Crackdown

    Last November, officers from Poland’s Central Bureau for Combatting Cybercrime (CBZC) arrested a then-28-year-old man on suspicion of connections to local platform, Zaukaj.vip. In January 2023, a 33-year-old believed to be the site’s founder was arrested and charged with fraud offenses dating back to February 2020.

    A separate investigation began in May 2020 and ran until June 2023. The Department for Combating Economic Crime in Kraków, under the supervision of the District Prosecutor’s Office in Lublin, targeted the operators of Ogladaj.to (Watch.to) for illegally distributing movies and TV shows online.

    According to information provided by police this week, the service was well organized and utilized content obtained from suppliers in Russia and Ukraine. Ogladaj’s outward appearance was somewhat typical of a web-based streaming service and the content itself appears to have been embedded in a YouTube-style player.

    With just 25,000 visits per month, on face value Ogladaj’s traffic levels seem a little low to warrant three years’ worth of investigation resources, at least when compared to other locally-significant platforms.

    For perspective, Poland-focused streaming site CDA-HD.cc receives around 1.7 million visits per month while Filman.cc, a site that claims to be registered as a legal business in Poland ( 1 ) , receives over 10 million.

    Huge Losses to Rights Holders

    Despite what appears to be a somewhat limited audience, police claim that Ogladaj caused losses to rightsholders in the region of PLN 15 million ($3,615,777).

    Customers reportedly paid for subscriptions by redeeming vouchers bought online, although just days after police wrapped up their investigation (and seemingly before any arrests were made) customer complaints about an inaccessible service had already begun to appear online .

    Interestingly, the streaming service also accepted cryptocurrency payments. Police say these were processed through a crypto exchange office allegedly operated by one of the suspects.

    In October police arrested a 36-year-old man, described as the founder of Ogladaj, at an apartment in Gdynia, northern Poland. On the same day, a 38-year-old IT specialist was detained in Lower Silesia. Both men were subsequently charged with crimes in connection with the unlawful distribution of copyrighted content.

    There was some other stuff too.

    “Internet portal with erotic advertising”

    The report released by Małopolska police says that officers became aware that the alleged founder of Ogladaj was also responsible for creating an “internet portal with erotic advertising.” The arrested 38-year-old provided technical support for both websites, police say.

    “During a search of the suspects’ places of residence, the electronic equipment they used was seized. In addition, money in various currencies, funds in accounts, luxury cars, as well as high-quality sports equipment, silver bars and gold collector coins were seized from the suspects for future fines,” the report reads.

    The total value of the seized property is estimated at PLN 1,000,000, around $240,700, but whether all of that is attributable to the piracy operation becomes unclear when other potential crimes enter the equation.

    “[The suspects] will also be held responsible for deriving financial benefits from prostitution,” police add, with no further detail.

    Suspects Must Not Flee

    A third suspect in the case is described as a 30-year-old man who sold Ogladaj vouchers on his own website. If found guilty, police says the suspects face up to five years in prison.

    The men were released and placed under police supervision, which includes a ban on them leaving the country. Given the rather unusual events of 2020, which saw one of the world’s most wanted pirates suddenly vanish into thin air , that doesn’t come as a surprise.

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

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      Brazil Regulator Claims “80% of Pirate TV Boxes” Were Blocked Last Week

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Monday, 30 October - 07:35 · 3 minutes

    blocked-tvset Authorities and rightsholders in Brazil appear determined to disrupt, restrict, or completely deny access to the illegal TV market enjoyed by millions of local citizens.

    From taking on pirate IPTV services to the outlawing of non-certified set-top boxes, to blocking illegal streaming websites and the removal of pirate apps, no target is off limits. One of the agencies at the forefront of this anti-piracy activity is the National Telecommunications Agency, better known as Anatel.

    Earlier his year, Anatel and Brazil’s National Film Agency (Ancine) announced a new anti-piracy partnership. In addition to mass seizures of non-certified Android-type devices, Anatel said that blocking would continue to play a key role in the fight against seven million pirate set-top devices (local term ‘TV Box’) said to be active in the country.

    New Anti-Piracy Lab Unveiled

    Early September saw the official unveiling of Anatel’s brand new Anti-Piracy Laboratory in Brasília. Capable of conducting technical analysis of equipment and the methods used to distribute pirated content, the lab boasts 12 large screens for monitoring purposes, six workstations for in-house use, and remote access for workers elsewhere.

    The New Lab (Image credit: Anatel ) Anatel-AP-Lab

    During the inauguration ceremony last month, Anatel revealed that 29 operations had resulted in the seizure of 1.4 million uncertified devices. The telecoms agency added that 1,400 IP addresses that “enabled the operation of pirate TV Boxes” were subjected to blocking.

    Anatel Claims Massive Progress

    According to an Anatel announcement last Thursday (October 26), over 3,000 servers enabling millions of pirate ‘TV Boxes’ have been blocked in Brazil since the start of 2023. That’s more than double the figure Anatel reported last month, but an even bigger surprise came via reports of an Anatel operation carried out on Thursday.

    Based on data supplied by the agency, local media reports ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) stated that Anatel had somehow managed to either block 80% of all TV boxes currently active in Brazil, or had blocked servers supplying 80% of TV boxes.

    Big Claim: A paragraph from just one of many publications AnatelBlocks80

    Whatever the approach, if Anatel had somehow managed to prevent 80% of all TV boxes receiving pirated content in the space of a year, that would be an extraordinary achievement. Even a week would be astonishing but the claim of millions in a day seems either incredible, non-credible, or entirely dependent on more important information or nuance that isn’t being reported.

    Another angle is that disruption on a large scale tends to register in search results and Google data on various related search terms doesn’t seem to reflect millions of TV boxes suddenly going dark in Brazil last week. At least, not for any significant length of time.

    Google & Cisco Are “Obstacles” in Fight Against Piracy

    On the first day of the PAYTV Forum in São Paulo early August, Anatel’s Moisés Moreira strongly suggested that in order for blocking to be more effective, ‘tech giants’ (including one starting with ‘G’) should assist in the fight against piracy.

    “I have already determined a period of one week for them to manifest themselves and if that does not happen, we will escalate the enforcement, even judicialization by the agency,” Moreira said.

    A media report dated September 22 described both Google and Cisco as thorns in Anatel’s side and accused them of turning a blind eye to piracy. It was alleged that when the companies receive blocking requests from rightsholders, the companies ignore them.

    While both companies declined to comment, it’s still unclear what they’re being asked to do. On the one hand the dispute appears to focus on the companies’ public DNS services, the use of which enables users to circumvent local DNS blockades when domains are subjected to blocking. On the other, Anatel’s Moisés Moreira also spoke about the importance of blocking IP addresses.

    That leads back to Anatel’s apparent ability to block 3,000 servers thus far in 2023, the claimed blocking of 80% of all TV boxes last week (and what that really amounted to in practical terms), and whether Anatel is now receiving help, and if so, from whom.

    Certainly not the clearest of pictures, unlike those of the new lab, which are pretty impressive.

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