Netflix, Amazon, Movie Studios Sue Over TickBox Streaming Device (arstechnica.com)
Movies studios, Netflix, and Amazon have teamed up to file a lawsuit against a streaming media player called TickBox TV. The device in question runs Kodi on top of Android 6.0, and searches the internet for streams that it can make available to users without actually hosting any of the content itself. An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: The complaint (PDF), filed Friday, says the TickBox devices are nothing more than "tool[s] for mass infringement," which operate by grabbing pirated video streams from the Internet. The lawsuit was filed by Amazon and Netflix Studios, along with six big movie studios that make up the Motion Picture Association of America: Universal, Columbia, Disney, Paramount, 20th Century Fox, and Warner Bros.
"What TickBox actually sells is nothing less than illegal access to Plaintiffs' copyrighted content," write the plaintiffs' lawyers. "TickBox TV uses software to link TickBox's customers to infringing content on the Internet. When those customers use TickBox TV as Defendant intends and instructs, they have nearly instantaneous access to multiple sources that stream Plaintiffs' Copyrighted Works without authorization." The device's marketing materials let users know the box is meant to replace paid-for content, with "a wink and a nod," by predicting that prospective customers who currently pay for Amazon Video, Netflix, or Hulu will find that "you no longer need those subscriptions." The lawsuit shows that Amazon and Netflix, two Internet companies that are relatively new to the entertainment business, are more than willing to join together with movie studios to go after businesses that grab their content.
"What TickBox actually sells is nothing less than illegal access to Plaintiffs' copyrighted content," write the plaintiffs' lawyers. "TickBox TV uses software to link TickBox's customers to infringing content on the Internet. When those customers use TickBox TV as Defendant intends and instructs, they have nearly instantaneous access to multiple sources that stream Plaintiffs' Copyrighted Works without authorization." The device's marketing materials let users know the box is meant to replace paid-for content, with "a wink and a nod," by predicting that prospective customers who currently pay for Amazon Video, Netflix, or Hulu will find that "you no longer need those subscriptions." The lawsuit shows that Amazon and Netflix, two Internet companies that are relatively new to the entertainment business, are more than willing to join together with movie studios to go after businesses that grab their content.
Diluted services start making it more expensive to legally stream content and people will go back to piracy.
Netflix found the magic cost-to-benefit ratio
I'd never heard of tickbox before, now the lawsuit is being reported in the media and drawing attention i expect their sales to go up.
Eventually they will lose the case and go under, but not before the owners have run off with a decent profit.
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There are already hacks/cracks/side-loads, whatever you want to call it, for Fire stick that do the same thing. They just made it easy for the masses. It won't be long before you can get an image and boot it to a small Linux box for free.
I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
Quit artificially limiting my access to media! Whether it's simply not making it available at all, or by forcing me to subscribe to 12 streaming services to get access to the content they are forcing the population back to piracy.
I realize that while there are some major douches out there who would pirate a movie if it cost only a dime, there are many of us who would happily pay if you stopped screwing us over.
Mike @ The Geek Pub. Let's Make Stuff!
I'll have to pick up one of these Tickboxes.
Since they aren't hosting any of the infringing content, isn't this still legal in Canada? ie. You can download but not upload content. That's what the blank CD/DVD media tax was supposed to address. Note: I'm not a lawyer, this isn't legal advice.
Netflix and Amazon still don't sell standard files, so pirating is the only reasonably-convenient way to watch their content. The big fuckup is here:
They need to change their marketing. Those companies' customers need ways to more easily watch the shows, but once you suggest piracy as a replacement for the subscription, rather than as a replacement for the broken service, I can see how that smells infringey.
shows? https://www.tickboxtv.com/
by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
Acting as a smart directory for pirated films is not illegal. Such is the case with many websites that embed pirated content online hosted by third parties.
this seems like going after a low hanging fruit to get the results you want and set a precedent.
by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
The write up states that the system scans the internet to find feeds. So the content producers go after the people who might scan for those feeds? Why not go after the people who are providing the feeds in the first place? Stop the signal at the source, not at the receivers... But that would mean the music industry must sue themselves because they have been caught seeding content to collect infos on the pirates... What an odd world we have created... :)
> The device in question searches the internet
So does google. Note that Justice is depicted in a blindfold because she applies law to all equally. Or used to.
Same shit, new headline. Oh well, doesn't matter, the lawyers and bean counters are fighting a rising tide. Technology keeps slipping away from their ancient leeches and chains, it's just too fast, too dynamic, too disruptive.
They don't give a fuck about enforcing squat, they just move to action when too many people have a method that's too easy. It's not about Imaginary Property or artists or creative innovation or muh patriotic freedom, it's literally just dollars. Those of you reading this are generally too far along the curve to care, they only hunt the casuals.
Thanks for drawing our attention to this product in such a kind display of altruism.
It would have been even more considerate if your 'complaint' contained a 'Where to buy' section.
Best regards,
B Streisand.
Requiem for the American Dream
Prefer it to what?
Requiem for the American Dream
If you don't want me to watch it or listen to it, don't make it available on the wires coming into my house. Once it's on my premises, I consider it to be fair game for decoding, cracking, spoofing, or any other means of making use of the signal you freely gave me.
'The Economy' is a giant Ponzi scheme whose most pitiable suckers are the youngest among us and the yet-unborn.
First impressions: ...). Seriously?
There is a typo on the homepage. (Turn you TV into a content filled home theatre system enjoying thousands of
It won't tell me how much the thing costs until I enter my email address, which makes me suspicious. Also I need to act fast, as the 40% discount won't last long, which just sounds like one of those late night shopping channel hucksters.
Apart from that, it looks like any one of hundreds of cheap Chinese Kodi boxes I can buy from Aliexpress or Banggood.
I actually built myself something similar for about $60 using an old Atom powered Acer box I bought second hand. It runs LibreElec and works pretty well.
and go fuck yourself.
Screw them on this, I hope they lose to Tickbox. The content is out there, this is just a more easy way to find and access it....like you can do with any android TV box
"Tom's heart ached to be free, or else to have something of interest to do to pass the dreary time. His hand wandered into his pocket and his face lit up with a glow of gratitude that was prayer, though he did not know it. Then furtively the percussion–cap box came out. He released the tick and put him on the long flat desk. The creature probably glowed with a gratitude that amounted to prayer, too, at this moment, but it was premature: for when he started thankfully to travel off, Tom turned him aside with a pin and made him take a new direction."
The best way to put TickBox out of business is to buy their product, then shut down every stream they find. TickBox is doing the studio's work FOR THEM, finding infringing content with no effort from the studios at all.
Really. Only a lawyer would pursue this path. An executive with half a brain would simply starve TickBox of content.
To claim "What TickBox actually sells is nothing less than illegal access to Plaintiffs' copyrighted content" _is_ prejustice.
Download whatever somone offers you to download always is legal.
The judge should drop the case simply based on this biased claims of the lawyers, insisting that they never use 'illegal' or 'copyright infringement' for anything that's only download or streaming.
(of course, uploading is a totally different case)
Should police stations be suing automakers?
They just catch whatever signals are out there, same with this box
There are several of these ready-made android based Kodi stream boxes out there. In fact, you can turn a Pi 3 into a kodi box in about 20 minutes. The key is finding the right plugins for kodi and those are changing all the time.
In fact, you can put Kodi and all the plugins on linux, windows, android, really any platform.
Kodi is just a multimedia juke box platform for the local machine and your LAN, the internet streaming stuff is all by plugin.
This lawsuit will widely publicize the stream box phenomenon and only serve to hurt the content creators more. And make the lawyers rich. THAT'S IT.
Flappinbooger isn't my real name
It says "without downloading" which is bullshit, you cannot view it without downloading it. It may not save the download, so torrenting may be better, but it is very disingenuous to say it doesn't download. That being said, I really need to install kodi on my firesitck :)
So let me get this straight. Content providers want to sue TickBox for creating a device that roots out contraband. Seems to me that content providers would be buying a TickBox themselves so they could more easily find the infringing content and then issue take-down orders.
Here is a perfectly cromulent explanation of what the expression means, and where it came from: https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/34793/what-is-the-origin-of-the-phrase-cut-and-dried
The use of past tense is important to the explanation in that 'dried' implies completion where 'dry' does not.
Hmmm. Your ideas are intriguing to me and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.