US - BitTorrent Crackdown Center Prepares to Punish Pirates!

Discussion in 'Industry News' started by light59, Apr 3, 2012.

  1. light59

    light59 Member

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    THIS DOESN'T [DIRECTLY] AFFECT US! THOUGH SOMETIMES, HOWEVER, I DO USE TORRENTS WHEN FILES FROM FILE-SHARING SITES ARE DOWN (THIS IS HOW I GOT MY WIN 7 ULTIMATE 64 BIT AVERAGING 1.8MEG/SEC SPEED). ANYWAY, THOSE OF YOU USING VERIZON, AT&T, COMCAST AND THE REST, YOU KNOW WHAT TO DO! LET'S HIT THEM IN THE PLACE WHERE IT MOST HURTS - THEIR POCKETBOOKS. HE HE :rofl: - MAKE COMMENTS!


    BitTorrent Crackdown Center Prepares to Punish Pirates!

    TorrentFreak, April 2

    In a few months millions of BitTorrent users in the United States will be actively monitored as part of an agreement between the MPAA, RIAA and all the major ISPs. Those caught sharing copyright works will receive several warning messages and will be punished if they continue to infringe. Today the center responsible for administering the scheme announced its Executive Board, which surprisingly enough doesn’t include any neutral executives.

    Starting this summer, the Center for Copyright Information (CCI) will start to track down ‘pirates’ as part of an agreement with all major U.S. Internet providers.

    Last year the parties agreed on a system through which copyright infringers are warned that their behavior is unacceptable. After six warnings ISPs may then take a variety of repressive measures, which includes slowing down the offender’s connection and temporary disconnections.

    The new plan was announced under the name ‘Copyright Alerts‘ last year and will be implemented by all parties by July 12, 2012. As this deadline nears, the CCI today unveiled several key players who are going to lead the group.

    Surprisingly, the Executive Board is exclusively made up of representatives from the RIAA, MPAA and the ISPs.

    RIAA’s Steven Marks has been appointed as Vice Chairman and General Counsel, MPAA’s Marianne Grant is the Senior Vice President, Comcast’s Alan Lewine is Senior Counsel, Verizon’s Thomas Dailey is Chairman, Viacom’s Daniel Mandil is Associate General Counsel and AT&T’s Brent Olson is Vice President of Public Policy.

    However, the Advisory Board does include public rights advocates including Jerry Berman, the Chairman of the Internet Education Foundation and founder of the Center for Democracy and Technology, and Gigi Sohn, co-founder of Public Knowledge.

    The latter says it wasn’t an easy decision to accept the position. Sohn is especially worried about the threat of Internet disconnections.

    “I still have concerns about some of the points in the agreement. One of the most prominent is the threat that consumers could have their access to the Internet cut off,” he says.

    “I will ask at the appropriate time for the ISPs to promise not to interpret the agreement’s ‘temporary restriction’ provision as allowing for suspension of user Internet accounts. This provision is most troubling because an individual could lose access to the Internet just on the basis of suspicion alone.”

    The CCI will be headed by copyright and consumer protection expert Jill Lesser, who will serve as Executive Director. Unlike some members of the advisory board, Lesser is delighted with her appointment and is eager to start sending out the first batch of alerts.

    “I am excited to lead CCI as it begins this constructive effort to reduce and deter online copyright infringement in a way that is centered on education and deterrence, not punishment,” she said. “This unprecedented collaboration demonstrates that when content providers and distributors work together we can protect copyright and empower consumers at the same time.”

    As expected, CCI is mainly focusing on the educational component of the scheme, but in essence it’s deterrence through punishment.

    While we now know a little bit more about the people who will lead CCI, the organization has yet to announce the company that will be responsible for tracking down millions of BitTorrent pirates. Last year sources told TorrentFreak that DtecNet got the lucrative contract, but that was the last we heard of it.

    One thing’s for certain, the company that gets the contract will have to be reviewed by an independent expert to see if their evidence gathering techniques pass the scrutiny test. But even when the end-stage tracking evidence is solid, there will always be many wrongful accusations, not least because people run unsecured Wi-Fi networks and ISPs make mistakes.

    Those wrongfully accused Internet subscribers have the right to call for an independent review at the cost of a $35 filing fee. These disputes will then be handled by the American Arbitration Association, CCI announced today.

    While the CCI is confident that the alerts are an effective way of deterring online piracy we have our doubts. For one, the monitoring system is relatively easy to bypass through a proxy or VPN. Secondly, the multi-million dollar plan only covers a few of the many sources of online piracy.

    The millions of U.S. Internet users who download via cyberlockers and streaming portals are not affected by this agreement at all, as these downloads are impossible for third parties to track.

    Time will tell who’s right.
     
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  3. SAiNT

    SAiNT Creator Staff Member phonometrograph

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    this is such a idiocracy... :(
     
  4. caspertheunholyghost

    caspertheunholyghost Newbie

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    This is already going on is a way because I do not know how many letters I have received and I always explain to them that I do not know how to block my router and they just say ok and let it go. I know for a fact I have had at least 6 letters and none of them amounted to anything except one time they shut my service off for an hour lol. When will these idiots learn that they need to either change the way they do business i.e. drop prices and make them readily available instead of having to wait 6 months for the dvd after the initial release in theaters. I have personally bought over 1,000 movies and cds but the product has to be good or I just watch and throw out (delete off computer). I guess I will be getting some more letters soon but as some people might say "BRING IT ON"!!!!!
     
  5. studio5599

    studio5599 Producer

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    This has been going on for yrs any way! where just hearing more about it, Hell there was a case last year where a couple 5 miles away from me, where prosicuted for there
    16 old son downloading mp3 files!! Unknowingly seeding he had over 3,000 illegal downloaded songs and the parents where Fined 15,000 Us Dollars in a Superior Court.
    to be set as a example? what a bunch of Horse shit ! but its true. Be-ware on torrent sites
     
  6. danfuerth

    danfuerth Kapellmeister

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    When will these idots learn that whole purpose and countless hours and countless sleepless nights tinkering how to transfer data packets over large distances ( TCP Protocol) was to share data packets between 2 distance machines, when the media whore companies got into the "Shit we can control what they watch online" internet business I seen the ending coming of free data sharing.

    I don't know about you but this day would come, I realized it when the media companies started to get involved in internet services. The internet as I see is now a movie distribution network that's about it

    Well we do have new wifi hacks for WPA and WPA2 lurking around around so what will these ISP/media companies do switch all the clients routers =$$$

    This is only way we can get back to telling these fools enough is enough.
     
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