Dutch Collection Society Found To Be Source Of Infringing Content
from the everyone's-a-pirate dept
Remember the story about the composer who found his music featured in anti-piracy ads and had a difficult time getting paid out, triggering a corruption scandal at collection society Buma/Stemra? It was obviously a bit ironic that the music in question was used in anti-piracy ads, but it appears the irony truck forgot to unload a package - filled to the brim with humiliation.Using YouHaveDownload, a tool that tracks torrent transfers on various public torrent trackers and matches them with IPs, a popular Dutch weblog has uncovered piracy at that aforementioned collection society. They scanned the IP range of Buma/Stemra's HQ and among the pirated material they found:
- An episode of Entourage (whois).
- A copy of the game Battlefield 3 (whois).
If anything, this scandal really shouldn't be a scandal. Anti-piracy lobbying and campaigning has led to sharing becoming a taboo, while the money spent could have been used to facilitate sharing and to build sustainable business models on top of that. Despite pirates among their own ranks, organizations like Buma/Stemra feel that the Dutch policy of downloading from unauthorized sources for personal use being legal should be altered (read their statement). Even though the Dutch parliament disagrees, the Dutch government is trying to get exactly such laws altered citing EU pressure, even though the Digital Agenda Commissioner, Neelie Kroes (herself Dutch), has stated opposite goals. With people in parliament who do not know "what or who is a torrent," it's not entirely unlikely that the govt actually manages to get the law changed after all.
Buma/Stemra was quick to respond and acknowledge that IPs are not reliable to determine infringers. Apparently the IP addresses used for piracy (ending in .246 and .248) cannot be used by employees to access the
Sure, this scandal is humiliating, but it's not as embarrassing as the war against innovation. You can use this moment to better understand the human nature of sharing, to understand that downloads don't translate directly to lost sales, and to rethink your lobbying strategy to push for a more sane framework. Or, you know, you can continue to upset fans whilst amusingly tumbling from one scandal into the next.
Meanwhile, it will be interesting to see if there are more pirates in disguise amongst hardline politicians, RIAA & MPAA folks, and other classic opponents of more flexible copyright legislation. You all know where to find the tool now, so perhaps it can happen through a lesson about crowdsourcing. That is, have fun and see what you can find...
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Filed Under: caught, copyright, europe, netherlands, piracy, youhavedownload
Companies: buma/stemra
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Fair enough. Will they be extending the same opportunity for defence to private entities accused of piracy, I wonder?
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This is also consistent with the email originating from an address in that range. SMTP is not "the web".
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But, yes, depending on how they have their systems set up they could certainly be blocked from "the web" on those IPs and still be able to run other protocols including BitTorrent.
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Fail.
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It claims I live in another county, and that I DLd the entire Lil Wayne discography.
I don't steal music, and if I did, it sure as fuck wouldn't be Lil Wayne.
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The privacy policy, the contact us page — it’s all a joke. We came up with the idea of building a crawler like this and keeping the maintenance price under $300 a month. There was only one way to prove our theory worked — to implement it in practice. So we did. Now, we find ourselves with a big crawler. We knew what it did but we didn’t know how to use it. So we decided to make a joke out of it. That’s the beauty of jokes — you can make them out of anything.
However, if you have a better idea — don’t hesitate to contact us."
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It shouldn't be shocking, these are humans. Each of them has the individual ability to think, and they don't give that up when the come in the door.
It's a nice attempt to slam, but really just shows that some people will pirate not matter what, even if their job depends on the opposite.
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You draw the conclusion that "[it] really just shows that some people will pirate not matter what", the rest of the world draws the conclusion that "even their own employees think the company is wrong and piracy is not a bad thing"
Funny how that works :)
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The issue isn't that people within the organisation download illegally, although anyone who does so while working for an "anti-piracy" body is at least a hypocrite if not worse. But, every organisation will contain at least a few such people.
No the real problem is that while these organisation try to force through draconian laws, insisting that sites like YouTube and MegaUpload should be able to accurately filter days of content every second, they can't even keep their own house in order. Add the icing on the cake that they're trying the same defence they would deny to anyone else in their "cut off first, allow due process later" schemes.
(Yes, I'm aware that this Dutch agency is not directly linked to the RIAA or SOPA in theory, but they're essentially singing from the same hymn sheet)
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If someone takes a job at a collection agency, it doesn't mean that they also swallow the company kool-aid every morning on the way in. People have free will, and they will do what they like.
Do you expect the agency to filter all of it's web traffic looking for people using a legal protocol?
Fuck me, you are dense.
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Indeed. But, if the company can't even police their own offices, how do they expect 3rd parties to do the same for the rest of the world?
The people employed there are representatives of that system. They should be held to a higher standard, not allowed to get away with breaking the same rules they purport to defend.
"Do you expect the agency to filter all of it's web traffic looking for people using a legal protocol?"
They seem to expect ISPs, on-line service providers, web hosts and internet cafes to do so, why the hell shouldn't they?
"Fuck me, you are dense."
I'll explain in single syllable words if you like, adult discourse is still difficult for you it seems.
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You missed the point as usual. There are two key points in this article whatever your interpretation is.
If you agree that the IPs were spoofed then you also agree that laws such as HADOPI and the Digital Act (UK) as well as their offsprings around the world (NZ and so on) are both useless and unfair because you can have your IP spoofed and used for infringing material. And since we are at the new fashion trends of child porn, you might be accused of child porn without ever having downloaded anything.
If you disagree and believe that their employees really downloaded the stuff it shows that file sharing is so wide-spread that it's even inside their ranks. Maybe, just maybe /the solution is a better business model/ and not laws that the majority doesn't agree with (ootb, that /part/ was special for you).
And to close with a golden key:
Do you expect the agency to filter all of it's web traffic looking for people using a legal protocol?
Funny, that's exactly what MAFIAA is trying to make the ISPs do around the world. I'd guess that since an ISP being a much larger scale operation should fall under that same question.
Amusing how the pro-copyrights make fools of themselves over and over.
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I didn't agree to that at all. Rather, I have a feeling that it's the old "rogue employee" thing, people probably bypassing security to run their torrent deals, possibly done intentionally to get caught by this project.
"Funny, that's exactly what MAFIAA is trying to make the ISPs do around the world."
I didn't see anyone asking an ISP to filter anything. However I have seen ISPs asked to follow court orders and stop providing simple access to certain sites. Would you care to show what I missed?
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I have a feeling that it's...
I have the feeling Chris Dodd is a passive homossexual but I can't prove anything. I also have the feeling that the MAFIAA inflates file sharing numbers and does some number scramble with their accounting to make the problem seem worse. Oh wait, my second feeling has been proven already.
And the fact that you don't agree with the spoofing doesn't mean it doesn't happen. A lot. I've been a victim of spoofing already that got me glined from an irc network. Thankfully I'm there for a whole lot of time now and the ircops saw that the activity was too suspicious to be from me and the spoofing defense got me out of the ban list.
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Also, Chris Dodd (RIAA executive and former Senator) has actually said this in the last few weeks.
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I doubt it.
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PR Guy #1: We'll just claim our IP was spoofed.
PR Guy #2:What? No, that would allow too many victims of our extortion campaigns a reasonable defense.
PR Guy #1: Well we can just tell them it's not possible to filter out every possible instance of potential infringement.
PR Guy #2: No way, if we do that, how can we argue organizations 100 times our size can easily do it.
PR Guy #1: Well, that doesn't leave many options. Perhaps we could claim we were infiltrated by those damn pirates who managed to get a rogue agent hired into our organization to intentionally download illegal content in order to get "busted" by his cronies.
PR Guy #2: Yes, yes. We had a plant who set us up. Brilliant!!
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Why not? If they, and other likes them, are trying to tell youtube and the lot that they have to filter all their content for illegal uploads why shouldn't the collection agency have to keep an eye on its own employees while they are at work?
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Re: "... filter all of it's web traffic ..."
I know I am making generalizations about supporters of tighter copyright but the point stands.
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Yes.
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Of course not! You wouldn't expect ISPs to filter all their customers' traffic to see if what they do is legal? Or Youtube to filter all content that users upload to their page, right? Oh, wait...
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Sure, we should ridicule them, but the most favourable outcome is this organisation paying more attention to the digital natives among their ranks.
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Then you might "view" your world differently and maybe actually listen.
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It shows the hypocrisy of those who live by the mantra "Do as I say, not as I do"
And as "attempts to slam" go, it's pretty damn effective!
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They say that this is immaterial, the owner of the connection is responsible and should be responsible for everything that happens in it, there should be no defense, well there you have it.
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Where are the dopes making all those marvelous analogies trying to demonstrate that everybody should be liable even in the face of flimsy evidence of any wrong doing.
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According to you, we have here a Dutch collection agency that should not be held accountable for the infringement done by its employees using company resources.
Yet with the same breath, the SOPA supporting groups and people claim that Youtube, Flicker, Facebook, Twitter etc should be held accountable for the infringement done by their users?
Hows does that make sense?
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> shows that some people will pirate not matter what
And when companies doing this get caught, they should be subject to the same draconian punishments they would like to have imposed on the rest of us, along with the same "no excuses accepted" attitude from law enforcement.
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Secret weapon
It may not be enough, but I think hypocrisy will be a secret weapon against stupid copyright laws. Given our current laws, much less the draconian laws being proposed now, it's impossible to not infringe on some IP on an almost hourly basis. So anyone or any organization which is a vocal supporter of IP maximalism is just setting themselves up for the scandal-ready hypocrisy outlined in this post. You can bet that there will be more of these kinds of discoveries. Let's here it for crowdsourcing.
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Ammunition
Talk about handing ammunition to the enemy. Next time they try to push for a three strikes law they are going to find that comment coming right back to bite them.
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Mr. Mike Masnick could you please, please run some of the IP addresses you collect from the people who call you a liar and say you are a pirate so we can see what they pirated?
Pretty please, no need for the IP's, just the list of files that were downloaded.
I want to have a laugh, please, did I mentioned it is xmas?
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hold off on the US crowdsourcing
Then run the scan and report them for filesharing.
I do love the smell of irony in the morning. Smells like ... karma.
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A correction
You should really replace piracy with the word theft or stealing. That is, after all, what they insist on calling it isn't it?
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They are not in disguise.These folks have been thieving us for to long.They have declared War on us in the USA with their SOPA/PIPA.I am hoping for an appropriate response should these be passed.
1.National boycott of all RIAA & MPAA Releases I MEAN A REAL BOYCOTT that will mean sacrifices need to be made just like in a War.
2.War of the Internet where smarter than me people call out for taking down their Corporate Websites on a regular basis.
3.Using the lawyers and suing for our freedom
4.Investigation and calling out to see the financial records of all who sign these toilet paper bills.
I am a DIY Artist and I will not take krap from any bully.That is how I have to live.I have been picked on many times for my religion or dress or music/style I love.This is just another assault on my lifestyle/music/Art I do.I give all my Art out for free.These arses will shut down the public sites I use to give out my Art.And it will effect every DIY ARTIST out there who would never ever sign with these Big Label ripofff Arses.
I am getting so angry over this.I hate my Government.We must plan a massive March on Washington in 2012.
The Government is nothing but a wing of Corporate USA.It is very nearly all been corrupted.There are very few real people there at this point.
We are in need of some big help.
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Except when they're doing the accusing, then it doesn't matter. They state the owner of the ip address is the responsible party. So by these groups own logic they are guilty of infringement.
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Ethics and Law Don't Apply to "Them"
Not mentioned at all in this trailer is the ever increasing assertions that the content industry has ever greater rights to how content is used, that they are "stealing" from the public domain, that they are changing the law to give them further privileges, the broken-window fallacy, that they are depriving you of your civil liberties to protect their so-called rights.
Only one-sided propaganda. No fair and balanced in that Time-Warner trailer.
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https://torrentfreak.com/busted-bittorrent-pirates-at-sony-universal-and-fox-111213/
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youhavedownloaded.com is a scam
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http://yro.slashdot.org/story/11/12/12/1832229/site-offers-history-of-torrent-downloads-by- ip
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They want you to login to Facebook VERY BADLY, for some reason. I smell a phishing scam.
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I've spot-checked a few dozen IP addresses under my control -- static and dynamic -- and there appears to be no correlation whatsoever between what traffic has actually involved those addresses and what traffic this site says has involved those addresses.
(And yes, I know for certain what's really happened: as I said, those addresses are under my control -- so you may safely presume they're firewalled (both directions) and that I have comprehensive logs on them.)
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I've read similar feedback about the tool though, and I wonder why some people (with static IPs) are getting completely random results and others are getting accurate results.
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web != bittorrent
Awesome, except bittorrent != the web.
The web is a collection of content and media exchanged over http protocol (conventionally port 80) and http over ssl protocol (conventionally port 443). Bittorrent is a distributed file exchange protocol, and while typically associated with ports 6881 - 6999 it can operate over any port.
Having those ips "blocked for the web" has nothing to do with having them blocked for bittorrent.
"Sir, your car t-boned that bus!"
"But that's impossible, because my car isn't a submarine!"
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Sounds like those Dutch-boys need a 25 pound gouda
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A few weeks ago a boardmember (Jochem Gerrits) of Bume/Stemra apraoched an artist personaly. An music componist (Melchior Rietveld) who's music is uses internationaly for anti-piracy spots on DVD's (how ironic). Legaly he can claim a milion euro.
Jochem Gerrits told him he would take care of it and get him his money, but for 33% of the profits. (333.000 euro)
Lucky this rat resigned or got fired but I, as a Dutchman, dont have any trust in this organisation anymore.
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