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BitTorrent Gives Hollywood a Headache

fudgefactor7 writes "Although the MPAA and the RIAA, and practically anyone else who has an interest in protecting their intellectual property rights online, are fighting against P2P programs like EDonkey, Morpheus, and Napster, BitTorrent is coming under even greater scrutiny, albeit with less actual success so far, and that is giving Hollywood a headache, since they really don't know what to do about it and they can't go to Cohen and moan. Once he let the genie out of the bottle there was no way to put it back in. And with the likes of PeerGuardian, et. al., it only gets harder for the corporations to put the virtual, and legal, smackdown on file sharing."

3 of 694 comments (clear)

  1. Re:I don't think BitTorrent will be much of a prob by mowler2 · · Score: 5, Informative

    In some countries, like sweden, bittorrent trackers are legal. Since they do not spread copyrighted material but just link to where one can find copyrighted material.

    Also there is a court ruling from the BBS-time that says that the BBS administrators is NOT responsible for what the users do on the BBS (such as trading warez). It is argued that the same reasoning can be done for a torrent tracker. However if there are copyrighted material transferred without the copyrightholders approval, people that USE the tracker is still doing something illegal.

    The industry has tried to remove torrents from piratebay.org, which is the biggest torrent tracker in sweden, with limited success. (they have even gotten calls from Microsoft when Halo 2 was up for downloading) :)

  2. Re:PeerGuardian by TheRealJFM · · Score: 5, Informative

    happily:

    PeerGuardian is based around the idea of an open list of blocklists collected from known fake files/scaners etc.

    The **AAs are not very sophisticated in their searching - man scans come from a very small number of ranges.

    The ranges are found by:

    1) Whois searching, If we know the name of the company we can easily find them by scanning whois databases. They *have* to give their company name (eg BayTSP) so they are easy to find.

    2) Log comparison. PG collects a log of every ip you connect to against the time. If someone gets a letter we get them to cross-reference the time the infringement is said to be on the letter (this must legally be included) with the ips in their log. 9/10 it is an obvious IP doing the scanning that can be found.

    see our forum on this topic here:
    http://methlabs.org/forums/forumdisplay.php ?f=41

    PeerGuardian is simply a low level firewall that blocks these ips. PeerGuardian 2 will be open source, and will update automatically.

    We're also trying to make the database more open, by adding a system where all the ranges can be viewed on a webpage, and users can comment, report bad ranges, and vote on how useful a range is.

    See the reviews of PG2 *closed beta* here:

    http://www.afterdawn.com/guides/archive/peerguar di an_2_review.cfm
    http://www.p2private.org/review/

    I expect PG2 to be out before the new year, but it will be out when its ready, not beforehand.

    Thanks :)

    Joseph Farthing
    Administrator & News Editor
    Methlabs.org

    --
    Joseph Farthing
    http://josephfarthing.com
  3. Re:Peerguardian by TheRealJFM · · Score: 5, Informative

    This is very simple:

    collecting the IP addresses of people connected to a tracker does not ammount to proof of infringement. You have to actually recieve some data from them to prove they are illegally transmitting copyrighted material. :)

    Joseph Farthing
    Administrator & News Editor
    Methlabs.org

    --
    Joseph Farthing
    http://josephfarthing.com