Leaked IFPI Report Details Anti-Piracy Strategy
hypnosec writes "IFPI has inadvertently made available its own confidential internal report, penned by none other than IFPI's chief anti-piracy officer, which details its strategy against online piracy for major recording labels across the globe. The document, 30-pages long, talks about file sharing sites, torrents, cyberlockers, phishing attacks, expectations from Internet service providers, mp3 sites and a lot more. The document is a global view representation of IFPI's 'problems,' 'current and future threats,' and the industry's responses to them."
A few tactics: shutting down music services, requiring file lockers filter uploads or be shut down (interesting, since the DMCA's one good provision is the safe harbor, and proactive filtering could mean losing that protection), lobbying for DNS blocking legislation, pressuring ISPs into extra-legally enforcing their will, disrupting payment processing for pirate sites through blacklists, and providing "training built around 'real world' experiences and challenges rather than focusing on theory" on copyright law to judges and legal bodies.
I believe it's this PDF.
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I don't think it is that PDF. The one you link to doesn't show any of the data in the report.
.pdf" [sic]
The title of the leaked report appears to be "online_piracy_global_perspective_and_trends_mumith_ali
It was hosted at the following location: www.ifpi-la.org/panama2012 which has been ripped down sharpish, but at the time of writing is still in Google's cache.
Anyone found the original yet?