European Rights Holders Drastically Increase Borderline Extortion Pre-Settlement Letters
from the this-won't-last dept
We've covered in great detail how DigiProtect purposely seeds files of content from its copyright holding partners, in order to send anyone who downloads the content a "pre-settlement" letter that seems not very different from the traditional extortion "protection" rackets ("pay us, or we'll sue.") Those who don't pay are actually discovering that the pre-settlement letters may be handed over to collections agencies despite no agreement to pay nor a court order requiring payment. It turns out this shakedown business is quite profitable but of very questionable legality.A new report in Germany is suggesting that DigiProtect and a few similar firms in Europe may have sent out 450,000 such letters last year. Unfortunately, NewTeeVee, in reporting on this, claims that each of these are "P2P lawsuits," but that's not true (and a large part of the problem). Nearly every one of these letters are sent without any corresponding lawsuit. The whole idea is to shake people down by threatening a lawsuit, but never having to go through the expense of filing one (or the trouble of actually proving the infringement -- which is a big deal since many, many, many bogus letters have been generated, snaring many innocent users). But, with little in the way of penalties for such bogus pre-settlement letters, there's simply no reason not to keep sending them. Apparently, enough people just pay up to make this an incredibly profitable business.
However, with the massive increase in such letters, and increasing scrutiny about the whole practice, you have to wonder when European governments will start to crack down on this behavior. It's difficult to see anyone defending these actions with a straight face. They clearly have nothing to do with preventing file sharing or unauthorized use of content, but are very much about just getting people to pay up under the threat of a lawsuit.
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Filed Under: collections, europe, pre-settlement
Companies: acs:law, davenport lyons, digiprotect, logistep
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I don't know about Europe, but in the US this would be considered fraud.
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mike is against rights enforcement
1) send them a nastygram telling them they've violated your rights and that you're going to sue them if they don't pay up.
2) go out and file the lawsuit.
since #1 is usually cheaper for both parties, it's considered a common courtesy (and EVERY US court now has at least 1 phase where both parties have to sit down in a room and try to negotiate a settlement). i don't see what the problem is. yes, there are a handful of people who didn't actually do it, but that's exactly what the court is for -- to figure out the facts. what do you want rights holders to do? not enforce their rights?
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Re: mike is against rights enforcement
Well not trying to extort money from innocent people would be a start.
Have a look at these stories and see if you think they are behaving ina civilised way.
http://beingthreatened.yolasite.com/your-stories.php
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Re: mike is against rights enforcement
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Re: mike is against rights enforcement
It has nothing to do with rights enforcement.
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Re: mike is against rights enforcement
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Still Confused
Have there even been any lawsuits (US or Europe) that involved downloading copyrighted material? I know the high-profile cases in the US were for uploaders.
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Re: Re: mike is against rights enforcement
If you receive a notice saying "you owe us $500", you have two courses of action: Ignore it, or send back a "I don't owe you a thing". If you fail to act, the bill can be given to collection without needing a lawsuit. Heck, companies do it all the time.
The people sending out the notices must feel they have enough proof to support their invoices, or have enough backing information to support their claims.
I have to say that I don't think we are getting the whole story here.
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Companies send bills to customers and if not paid to collection Agencies. But if a company you have no official dealings with sends you a legal threat and then without having proved that you owe them anything sends a collection agency after you, that is GROSSLY illegal.
If you really believe it's OK, make sure you transfer $5K to my account by Friday for using one of my products without being authorized to by me. If you don't I'll be sending a collection agency after you.
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Re: Re: Re: mike is against rights enforcement
Now, I suspect that this happens in other countries PRECISELY for the reasons that hev been stated here before - if they tired this in the US, they would be sued into oblivion.
Even if we're not getting the whole story here, can you at least try to be lees obviously a shill?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: mike is against rights enforcement
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Re: Re: mike is against rights enforcement
It's so damn irritating to look for real comments in cesspool of troll comments.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: mike is against rights enforcement
There is no contract, no matter how much you might insist there is. This is pure extortion and fraud, no matter how much you insist it is not.
Careful, your affiliations are showing (like we hadn't figured them out).
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: mike is against rights enforcement
you had me on your side until you made this post. unauthorized copying does not create a contract. no mutual consent and no consideration = no contract.
however, i don't practice debt collections law (i'm an IP guy) and don't have the time to look it up. you're clearly not required to possess any sort of judgment before you report some collections... people/companies send others to collections pre-judgment all the time. i suspect that all you need is merely a good-faith basis to claim that the target entity owes you money. unless there's some statute saying you can't do it for alleged torts (or that you can only do it for lending/credit disputes), there's no reason why you can't legally do it for alleged copyright infringement.
what this really comes down to is the copyright liability and whether stings are legal evidence of infringement (thus forming a good-faith basis of debt). in the US, stings are valid, admissible evidence for criminal infringement cases, but no cases have ruled on [downloader] stings for civil infringements (uploader stings are the making available debate, and that's still unsettled). the downloader will argue that the rights holder made the file available in a black market channel with every expectation that people would download it... and thus it would be authorized/noninfringing. the rights holder will argue that private stings are authorized for criminal, and civil should be no different.
a lot of people in this thread are saying "it's illegal" and only say that because they either heard it from a friend or don't like the sound of what's going on. people make up law like this all the time. when you were in high school, you probably heard that you can drive above the speed limit as long as 3 other cars are also driving above the speed limit in the vicinity... or other stupid non-laws.
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Re: Re: Re: mike is against rights enforcement
what if i made an account name "Shmanonymous Shmoward"? all three of us would still be just as anonymous.
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Re: Re: Re: mike is against rights enforcement
That seems to be your reply to every article that details bad industry behavior that can't reasonably be defended by anyone who isn't a sociopath.
You've set yourself up as "the Anti-Mike", so you feel obligated to be contrary for its own sake. If Mike claimed that water is wet, you'd feel perversely compelled to argue the point. But at the same time, you can't actually defend the idea of sending out extortion letters by the thousands to innocent people, so we get your standard canned response of "I don't think we are getting the whole story here".
This allows you to implicitly criticize Mike and live up to your namesake without having to actually defend the indefensible.
Neat trick if you can find someone stupid enough to fall for it.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: mike is against rights enforcement
> act that starts the process.
You must have gone to a different law school that I did, because that's not the standard for a valid contract under any definition I've ever seen.
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Re: mike is against rights enforcement
1) send them a nastygram telling them they've violated your rights and that you're going to sue them if they don't pay up.
2) go out and file the lawsuit.
First off, you make the assumption that you have to sue. Why?
But the bigger point is that this not the company "going to sue someone." It's the exact opposite. They haven't sued. They're sending HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS of letters with NO INTENTION of ever suing all but a handful of them.
So your entire premise is flat out wrong.
since #1 is usually cheaper for both parties, it's considered a common courtesy (and EVERY US court now has at least 1 phase where both parties have to sit down in a room and try to negotiate a settlement). i don't see what the problem is
Again, this was not a nastygram telling people to stop -- in which case you might (sorta, but not really) have a point. It was a demand for money. Do you really not see the difference?
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It is Fraud
People get all sorts of crackpot mail every day. They should not be subjected to collections harassment just because they threw away some bogus letter.
If this starts here, it will certainly attract the attention of some DA and or AG.
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governments want..
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So the ISP gave them Name and Physical Address that corresponds to the IP-address ...
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I actually have one of these letters
Firstly I was in fact downloading the alleged file illegally. Now i don't care about the moral implications, it is in fact illegal to make copies of someone elses intellectual property.
The company that is serving these letters is actually a law firm called ACS-LAW who are working for DigiProtect. Sending a pre-lawsuit settlement letter is in fact standard practice in these situations.
According to information from ACS-LAW website 80% of people when threatened with legal action opt to settle. It also states that they have never taken a single case to court. This means there is no precedent set and a court battle could go either way. I myself intend to attempt to take this through the courts.
The evidence that is collected by DigiProtect is not planted as that would require trojan horse viruses to send results at the end of each download. That would be illegal.
Instead the company are using a bit of software called Logistep which accesses the bittorent peer to peer networks and then searches for files that DigiProtect have been told to search for. When found the program attempts to download. If it is succesful it will log the IP address and time.
ACS then went to the European High Court and got a court order for the eight largest ISPs to release details of account holders matching the gathered IP addresses at the times noted. These details were then sent back and are being held as "Evidence" of the infraction.
Because the software used attempted to download off of the user they can actually be held to of been "using p2p protocol(s), specifically for the purpose of being provided to third parties".
They are asking for the user to sign a document stating that they will never do this again and will pay a £400 settlement.
The legal grounds being stated are sections 16(1)(d) and 20 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents act 1988. These refer to broadcasting copyrighted work or inclusion in a cable program service.
This is actually very shaky legal ground as there is no precedent and some very ambiguous wording in sections 8 and 9(2)(a) mean that you can actually say that the copyrighted material is neither being broadcast or included in a cable program service. This means that you would have to be tried under section 18 which covers providing copies to the public. In this case you are covered by section 18(2)(a) which states that you are only infringing copyright if you are introduing these copies and not if you are in fact several copies down the line.
TO RIXQUE
There was a court order unfortunately. However according to the citizens advice bureau the account holder should be made aware of this. I was not and this is another area I will hopefully be taking to court.
Wish me luck in defending the rights of the common internet user. Now all i need is a solicitor who will take my case.
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Re: I actually have one of these letters
I have no idea what to do, but certainly can't afford to pay £400 within 21days. I just don't have that kind of money!
I'm desperate for more information, but can't seem to find much concrete stuff, just conjecture.
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