Decline in US BitTorrent traffic, says study

Found on BBC News on Tuesday, 12 November 2013
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The report, from broadband measurement firm Sandvine, shows a sharp decrease in the bandwidth taken up by BitTorrent traffic, some of which is associated with the downloading of illegal music and movies.

Torrent-based peer-to-peer file sharing is on the decrease, partly because people are turning to other ways to swap material.

The use of "dark nets" such as Tor and encrypted digital lockers is growing in popularity.

That was pretty much expected. After all the useless efforts from the entertainment industry, filesharing just evolves.

Jail For File-Sharers Does Nothing to Increase Music Sales

Found on Torrentfreak on Sunday, 06 October 2013
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One year ago Japan introduced a tough new law that was warmly welcomed by the music industry. From October 1 2012, those downloading copyrighted material without permission faced a potential two year jail sentence. But while users of Japan’s favorite P2P networks plummeted, sales have not been positively affected. Total music sales this year so far are down 7% on the same period last year, but digital sales are even worse – down 24% since the law was introduced.

“The new law has been effective in increasing the amount of CD rentals, but seems unconnected to the number of people who are actually buying music,” RIAJ chief Kenji Takasugi told NHK.

After years of crying wolf the reality has proved what was already known: pirates don't steal. Maybe people also got fed up enough from all that and changed their interests, away from music to other hobbies where you aren't instantly labeled as some evil terrorist who tries to kill the entertainment business.

MPAA’s Court Ordered Piracy Filter Censors Many Legitimate Files

Found on Torrentfreak on Friday, 20 September 2013
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Following a US court decision BitTorrent search engine isoHunt was ordered to implement a site-wide keyword filter provided by the MPAA. At the time, isoHunt’s founder voiced concerns that this would lead to overfiltering, and it appears that he is right. Aside from Hollywood blockbusters, the broad filter also censors thousands of Creative Commons and public domain files.

As with most filtering systems, it is hard for the public to evaluate its performance when the list itself is secret. Perhaps it’s an idea to open up both the filtering source code as well as the list of banned keywords so the public can help spot abuse?

The biggest problem and threat for entertainment is the industry behind it.

Ofcom: Piracy accounts for one in four downloads

Found on BBC News on Wednesday, 11 September 2013
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Just 2% of UK internet users accounted for almost three-quarters of online piracy over a year, the report Ofcom indicated.

It also said pirates spent more on legal downloading and streaming than those who never access illegal content.

The company processed 21,475 responses to four surveys over the year to research the report.

Seems like pirates are the better consumers.

Tor Books UK Says Ditching DRM Showed No Increase In Piracy

Found on Techdirt on Thursday, 02 May 2013
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It doesn't stop infringement, because the DRM is always cracked, and the crack always leads to a clean version. And once you have a clean version, it's available everywhere. Those who want to infringe will do so.

"As it is, we've seen no discernible increase in piracy on any of our titles, despite them being DRM-free for nearly a year."

There will always be piracy, but without DRM more users will consider to actually pay for something that's not locked down in the most annoying ways imaginable.

New Pirate Bay Greenland Domains (About to be) Seized

Found on Torrentfreak on Thursday, 11 April 2013
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In anticipation of having their Swedish domain name seized, this week the crew of The Pirate Bay took evasive action. In the early hours of Tuesday morning they switched to two Greenland-based domains, but already the plan is starting to unravel. The telecoms company in charge of the .GL TLD says it will now block the domains after deciding they will be used illegally.

“Tele-Post has today decided to block access to two domains operated by file-sharing network The Pirate Bay,” the company said in a statement received by TorrentFreak.

Greenland sure gave in quickly.

Pirate Party Threatened With Lawsuit for Hosting The Pirate Bay

Found on TorrentFreak on Thursday, 21 February 2013
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Today the Pirates announced that they have received a letter from the Swedish “Rights Alliance,” who are threatening legal action against the party and its representatives if they don’t stop servicing TPB within a week.

“Unfortunately, the fact that an activity is legal is not a guarantee that you will get a fair trial. This is precisely why the Pirate Party and is needed more than ever,” Troberg concludes.

If only the entertainment industry would use all its resources to adapt to what users want.

Dotcom’s Mega Removes Legal Files Citing Bogus DMCA Requests

Found on Torrentfreak on Friday, 01 February 2013
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TorrentFreak has received reports from people whose perfectly legal files were locked in their Mega accounts for alleged copyright violations. In all cases this happened after these users published links to the files elsewhere on the Internet.

The censored content includes copyrighted music and movies, but also free to share software such as Ubuntu and copies of Kim Dotcom’s very own music.

To test how quickly a file is removed by Mega we decided to post some previously uploaded legal content to Mega-search.me ourselves.

Quite shockingly, the files were pulled down by Mega in a matter of minutes, claiming they had received copyright infringement notices for each of them.

This brings up quite a few questions. First of all why thousands of legal files vanish while Dotcom claims that Mega only received a couple of takedown notices. Judging from the speed of the takedowns, the process is pretty much automated without any review process what makes it way too easy to exploit. Sure, Mega can point at their ToS which say that they can pretty much do what they want, but that will only make users run away from an unreliable service. Pirates expect takedowns, but if you upload a Linux distro you of course expect it to stay online. Even if Mega restores those files, people will wonder why deleted files were not really deleted.

Anti-piracy site claims small, 40 percent victory in anti-Mega campaign

Found on Ars Technica on Sunday, 27 January 2013
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StopFileLockers.com is an anti-piracy group that attempts to take down file-hosting services by attacking their finances.

Mega isn't the only file locker currently in the SFL crosshairs either—Hotfile saw its relationship with PayPal end this week after a lengthy campaign from SFL.

Paypal has enough bad press already, thanks to enforcing an old Cuba embargo, randomly locking accounts (which it now tries to fight) and faces a growing competition. I don't really mind, because someone else will step in who has a bit more of a spine.

Kim DotCom's 'Mega' goes live

Found on CNet News on Saturday, 19 January 2013
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"Site is extremely busy. Currently thousands of user registrations PER MINUTE." And indeed, as of this writing the site was difficult to access at times, perhaps because of heavy traffic.

DotCom's earlier cyber storage locker, MegaUpload, was launched in 2005, only to be shuttered by U.S. federal agencies, which argued that it was a service pirates were using to facilitate copyright infringement.

"You have companies like Dropbox and Google with Drive with materially similar technologies," Rothken said. "and they are in business and they're thriving -- and Mega adds encryption."

One year passed, and the US has still not made a single successful accusation; only one embarrassing failure after another came to light, showing how much influence the entertainment industry seems to have on the US political and legal systems. They picked Kimble because of his past, assuming he would make a perfect target and serve as a prime example of a piracy mastermind. Turns out they were wrong.