Rightscorp Rings In The New Year By Vowing To Find New Ways To Lose Money In 2017

from the penny-stock-that-could! dept

Rightscorp is doing some aggressive whistling in the dark. The company that thought it could tackle piracy with threatening letters, threatening robocalls, and suing ISPs for contributory infringement has been bleeding money since its inception.

By the middle of 2015, Rightscorp's letter-writing campaign to torrenters had led to nothing resembling a viable business model.

According to 10-K documents filed with the SEC earlier this month, the total loss from Rightscorp operations for 2014 was $3,398,873, with revenues of just $930,729 for the year. "As of December 31, 2014, our accumulated deficit was approximately $7,093,377," states the filing, adding that the company lacks the revenue to allow it to "continue as a going concern." Rightscorp stock price, meanwhile, similarly isn't much to write home about. Not so viable for a company that on a recent earnings call declared itself "one of the only viable solutions to the multi-billion dollar problem of peer-to-peer piracy."

One year later, Rightscorp itself was finally questioning its own viability.

The company, which monitors and targets repeated copyright infringers with extralegal payment notices, reported an operating loss of $784,180 during the three months ended March 31, a slight improvement from the $930,000 loss a year earlier. Rightscorp only generated revenues of $68,283, a 78 percent drop from 2015 Q1’s $307,904, and its services accrued only $49,142 due to copyright holders -- a third of the $153,952 gathered during the first three months of 2015.

There's another 10-K from the company due in March. Chances are there will be nothing in it to reassure whatever investors the company has left. Its stock price is lower than it's ever been… which isn't really saying much as it's spent the last couple years south of the 25-cent mark.

With more bad news on the near horizon, perhaps that's why it appears to be acting as its own cheerleader ahead of its eventual mandated disclosures. Its December 26 press release contains some questionable assertions, not the least of which is that it's the "content creator's champion."

In the notice of infringement, Rightscorp offers a choice between paying a small settlement fee of $30 facing a possible lawsuit for damages of around $150,000 USD under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), the current law.

It's a false choice. Rightscorp and the artists signed to it aren't going to sue individual infringers for $150,000 in statutory damages. (Instead, Rightscorp has intervened in questionable lawsuits against ISPs for contributory infringement.) The RIAA found out long ago that dragging people IP addresses to court generated more antagonism than revenue. There are a few copyright trolls out there milking porn/terrible films with speculative invoices filed in federal court against fistfuls of Does, but none of them have shown this reliably generates revenue, much less deters piracy.

So far, Rightscorp is only chasing down music pirates. That plan of attack has worked so poorly the company can barely keep its doors open. Naturally, it's decided it isn't wasting its limited funds fast enough. (All grammatical/spelling errors in the original.)

A small growing company with modest revenue, Rightscorp has by no means conquered the problem of Internet piracy. But with proven technology, a unique way monetize digital loss prevention, and an astute management team at the helm, investors should take a serious look at Rigthscorp. In 2017, the Company is pursuing an aggressive growth strategy in focused on expanding its reach in the film and television arenas.

"Modest revenue." That's an understatement.

Rightcorp's statement is accurate when it says it hasn't conquered internet piracy. The next sentence, however, is filled with assertions so blatantly wrong, the only way they could possibly be made with a straight face is via this exact form of communication: a self-congratulatory press release.

The only thing "proven" about its "technology" is that it's able to uncover IP addresses. This is where its form of speculative invoicing originates, with letters going to ISPs, which are then asked to forward them to the subscribers at the listed IP addresses. Rightscorp doesn't know who the alleged infringers are, so there's not a lot technical wizardry going on here.

And yes, Rightscorp has found a "unique way [to] monetize" its anti-piracy effort. It all depends on how you choose to define "unique." And "monetizaton." "Hardly at all" seems to be a fairly accurate summation of its "unique monetization." "Doesn't make much money at all, actually" is another tagline that could be applied to it.

As for the "astute management" at the helm? I don't know. Rightscorp has already seen what isn't working and wants to do more of it for more forms of content. That's the definition of "insanity," not astuteness.

I don't think Rightscorp has much left in the tank. Its decision to build its business model on something that has failed for many others was never a good idea, even if it routed its demand letters through ISPs, rather than federal courtrooms. Once you've suckered in the easily-intimidated and the poorly-informed, you're faced with the considerably more-uphill battle of talking file sharers out of $30 per alleged infringement using nothing more than boilerplate and the ethereal threat of statutory damages. It hasn't worked so far for Rightscorp. Adding movies and TV shows to the mix isn't going to fix what's fundamentally wrong with its strategy. It's only going to give Rightscorp new ways to fail.

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Filed Under: copyright, copyright trolling, piracy
Companies: rightscorp


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  1. icon
    Roger Strong (profile), 3 Jan 2017 @ 6:18pm

    When the music industry gives inflated figures regarding losses to piracy, they may be inflating those figures with losses to anti-piracy scams. DRM, Rightscorp, etc.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  2. identicon
    Mononymous Tim, 3 Jan 2017 @ 6:22pm

    With basic things like grammar and spelling (Rigthscorp.. really? Their own name? At least they got it "right" the first time!) escaping their grasp, it's no wonder they don't see anything wrong with something as complex as a business model. It's tooo haaard.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  3. icon
    TechDescartes (profile), 3 Jan 2017 @ 6:40pm

    Maybe if they made it a monthly subscription…

    link to this | view in thread ]

  4. icon
    That Anonymous Coward (profile), 3 Jan 2017 @ 7:56pm

    So you've tried all of the 'experts' who tell you they can save you (for 80% of the tale)... perhaps maybe listen to the guy with trendy avatar this time.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  5. This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it
    identicon
    Psiphon for windows 8, 3 Jan 2017 @ 11:45pm

    Internet

    Use internet beyond the limits using Psiphon on your PC

    link to this | view in thread ]

  6. icon
    Ninja (profile), 4 Jan 2017 @ 3:14am

    Re:

    Fail in light, monthly portions then?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  7. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 4 Jan 2017 @ 4:37am

    Banking on Liam O'Grady seems to be their only somewhat solid strategy at this point.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  8. identicon
    NoneOne, 4 Jan 2017 @ 6:19am

    Good riddance RightsCorp

    Can't wait for RightsCorp to go out of business, with how much money they're losing it'll be soon.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  9. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 4 Jan 2017 @ 8:22am

    Nah. We won't go out of business! We're gonna make it all up in VOLUME!!!

    link to this | view in thread ]

  10. icon
    JustMe (profile), 4 Jan 2017 @ 8:23am

    I think you are all missing the bigger picture

    They don't WANT to make money. They are consistently around the negative $3.2 - 3.4m figure each year. This probably isn't a large operation with hundreds of employees and multiple locations. I'm guessing there are a handful of executives pulling in $300k and some worker bees. They take the tax write-off and put in just enough effort to convince the IRS and the stock market they are a real company.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  11. icon
    pouar (profile), 4 Jan 2017 @ 9:38am

    How I imagine their stock certificates now look like

    link to this | view in thread ]

  12. identicon
    Chris Brand, 4 Jan 2017 @ 10:52am

    "astute" could just be a typo

    "obtuse", perhaps ?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  13. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 4 Jan 2017 @ 1:09pm

    Rightscorp Rings In The New Year By Vowing To Find New Ways To Lose Money In 2017

    It's good to have goals.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  14. identicon
    James Gh, 5 Jan 2017 @ 3:23pm

    Verizon/Frontier transition problems

    I was just told that your magazine wrote an article about how horrible the transition experience has been for former Verizon cable customers, who suddenly became Frontier cable customers without any notice from either company. Frontier is the worst company I'very ever dealt with. Please point me toward your article.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  15. identicon
    Rightscorp sucks, 13 Jan 2017 @ 5:24pm

    Rightscorp are frauds

    Rightscorp are anti-american

    link to this | view in thread ]

  16. identicon
    Tarun Jaitley, 15 Jul 2017 @ 7:02pm

    Maybe if they made it a monthly subscription…

    link to this | view in thread ]

  17. identicon
    Michelle Sanchez, 29 Jun 2018 @ 9:42pm

    Rightscorp's letter-writing campaign to torrenters had led to nothing resembling a viable business model.
    https://soundcloudtomp3.io

    link to this | view in thread ]


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