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Thursday, August 20th, 2015

    Time Event
    8:32a
    Indonesia Blocks The Pirate Bay, IsoHunt, Others

    tpbAfter being accused of doing little to stop piracy both on and offline, in 2009 Indonesia was placed on the USTR’s Priority Watch List for failing to protect US intellectual property rights.

    In 2011 the Indonesian government announced that it would begin to take tough measures, including having local ISPs block the most-visited sites.

    “The plan is to block famous sites, like 4shared for example,” Communication Minister Tifatul Sembiring said at the time.

    Four years later (and after blocking sites including Reddit, Imgur and Vimeo on decency grounds) Indonesia is finally taking action against sites that infringe copyrights.

    Following the signing last month of a Joint Ministerial Decree intended to protect film producers, the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology has ordered almost two dozen domains to be blocked at the ISP level.

    While there is a nod to U.S. concerns with a blockade of both ThePirateBay.se and Isohunt.to, the remainder (list below) are sites frequented mainly by locals. 4shared is not among them.

    Certainly, the tone of the government’s announcement during a press conference this week indicated that local producer interests are behind the blocking order. Famous (and outstanding) martial arts movies The Raid and The Raid 2 were mentioned specifically.

    “What is offered in the virtual world is not according to the law. In order to protect the intellectual property rights of our art we must block these sites,” said Rudiantara, Minister of Communications and Information Technology.

    “The government wants to protect the work of artists in Indonesia. The damage suffered by the creators of content in Indonesia has been great.”

    According to Director General of Intellectual Property, Ahmad M. Ramli, future complaints will be sent to him and will be actioned within 24 hours. Protection of movies will be the priority.

    “The most at risk of piracy and violations of intellectual property rights on the internet are movies. If songs are heard [people will listen to them again], but if a downloaded movie is viewed, then people won’t watch them anymore,” Ramli said.

    Minister of Human Rights and Justice, Yasonna Laoly, said that action needed to be taken but due to the elusive nature of site owners, blocking was the only solution.

    “It’s really not good for industrial development and innovation in the film industry, music industry, and with respect to copyright. This is our creative economy,” the minister said.

    “We are taking care of the websites because finding the people behind the websites is complicated. We do not know where to find them.”

    Some of the domains on the blocklist are now down internationally too, although the reasons for that remain unclear.

    In the meantime (and alongside Algeria, Argentina, Chile, China, Ecuador, India, Kuwait, Pakistan, Russia, Thailand, Ukraine, and Venezuela), Indonesia remains on the USTR’s Priority Watch List 2015.

    The full list of blocked domains is: Ganool.com, Nontonmovie.com, Bioskops.com, Ganool.ca, Kilasan.to, Thepiratebay.se, Downloadfilmbaru.com, Ganool.co.id, 21filmcinema.com, Gudangfilm.caa.im, Movie76.com, Isohunt.to, Cinemaindo.net, Bioskop24.net, Ganool.in, Unduhfilm21.net, Bioskopkita.com, Downloadfilem.com, Comotin.net, Movie2k.ti, Unduhmovie.com and 21sinema.com.

    Source: TorrentFreak, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

    5:42p
    Dallas Buyers Club Wants to Interrogate Suspected Pirates

    dallasThe makers of Dallas Buyers Club have sued hundreds of BitTorrent users over the past year.

    Many of these cases end up being settled for an undisclosed amount. This usually happens after the filmmakers obtain the identity of the Internet account holder believed to have pirated the movie.

    Not all alleged downloaders are eager to pay up though. In fact, many don’t respond to the settlement letters they receive or claim that someone else must have downloaded the film using their connection.

    In a recent court filing (pdf) at a Washington District Court the filmmakers explain the efforts they undertake to ensure that the right person is accused. This includes gathering information from Facebook, LinkedIn and even Google Maps.

    “Google address mapping and county records were investigated to confirm ownership/rental status of and residence at the property associated with the IP address, as well as observe the physical makeup and layout of the house and neighborhood to anticipate possible claims that a wireless signal was highjacked by someone outside of the residence,” the filmmakers explain.

    The router security settings and download history of a specific connection are used as additional pieces of information to ensure that the alleged copyright infringements are systematic.

    “Further, given the standard security measures imposed by ISPs to prevent unauthorized use of an IP address, the volume of piracy demonstrated over the extended observation period could not be the result of someone driving by, a temporary house guest or a hacker sitting in a car on the street.”

    While the methods above are already quite invasive, Dallas Buyers Club now aims to take it up a notch.

    In order to pinpoint the true pirates the movie studio wants to depose 15 account holders. This means that they will have to testify under oath for up to two hours and face a grilling from the studio’s legal team.

    This is the first time that we’ve seen a request for a deposition in a Dallas Buyers Club case. Needless to say, a testimony under oath can be quite intimidating, and is highly unusual in these type of cases.

    The account holders of IP-addresses linked to the pirated downloads have already been identified by the ISP. However, they failed to respond to the movie studio or denied that they had shared the film illegally.

    Through a testimony under oath, the movie studio hopes to identify the true pirates, so they can be named in the lawsuit.

    “DBC believes that further discovery is warranted to confirm which of any possible occupants of the physical address assigned the infringing IP address is the proper Doe defendant to be named in the case,” they note.

    The filmmakers suspect that some of the subscribers are the actual infringers, but it’s possible that they’re covering for someone else, such as a roommate or spouse.

    “A subscriber should not be allowed to shield, immunize and anonymize those they allow to use their Internet service from liability for intentional torts. The subscriber is the single best and perhaps only source of information as to the responsible party using its IP address.”

    According to the filmmakers the depositions will result in a reduction of legal expenses while guaranteeing the anonymity of the defendants.

    However, more critical observers may also note that it is an optimal tool to pressure ISP subscribers who choose to ignore settlement requests and other threats.

    At the time of writing the court has yet to rule on the discovery request.

    Source: TorrentFreak, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

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