BitTorrent Expert Report Slams Movie Piracy Evidence

In California, a copyright case between adult movie studio Malibu Media and a John Doe is heating up in court. The alleged downloader discredits the actions and technical evidence provided by the makers of the “X-Art” series, using a very detailed expert opinion from a former BitTorrent Inc. employee to back up his claims.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

In recent years many people have accused so-called ‘copyright trolls’ of using dubious tactics and shoddy evidence, to extract cash settlements from alleged movie pirates.

As the most active copyright litigant in the United States, adult entertainment outfit Malibu Media has been subjected to these allegations as well.

The company, widely known for its popular “X-Art” brand, has gone after thousands of alleged offenders in recent years earning millions of dollars in the process. While many of its targets eventually pay up, now and then the company faces fierce resistance.

This is also true in the case Malibu launched against the Californian Internet subscriber behind the IP-address 76.126.99.126. This defendant has put up quite a fight in recent months and invested some healthy resources into it.

A few days ago, the defendant’s lawyer submitted a motion (pdf) for summary judgment, pointing out several flaws in the rightsholder’s complaint. While this kind of pushback is not new, the John Doe backed them up with a very detailed expert report.

The 74-page report provides an overview of the weaknesses in Malibu’s claims and the company’s evidence. It was put together by Bradley Witteman, an outside expert who previously worked as Senior Director Product Management at BitTorrent Inc.

In common with other aspects, Malibu’s file-sharing evidence was also carefully inspected. Like many other rightsholders, the adult company teamed up with the German outfit Excipio which collects data through its custom monitoring technology.

According to Witteman’s expert analysis, the output of this torrent tracking system is unreliable.

One of the major complaints is that the tracking system only takes 16k blocks from the target IP addresses, not the entire file. This means that they can’t prove that the defendant actually downloaded a full copy of the infringing work. In addition, they can’t do a proper hash comparison to verify the contents of the file.

From the expert report

That’s only part of the problem, as Mr. Witteman lists a range of possible issues in his conclusions, arguing that the reliability of the system can’t be guaranteed.

  • Human error when IPP enters information from Malibu Media into the Excipio system.
  • Mr. Patzer stated that the Excipio system does not know if the user has a complete copy of the material.
  • The Excipio system only take 16k blocks from the target IP addresses.
  • There has not been any description of the chain of custody of the IPP verification affidavits nor that the process is valid and secure.
  • IP address false positives can occur in the system.
  • The user’s access point could have been incorrectly secured.
  • The user’s computer or network interface may have been compromised and is being used as a conduit for another user’s traffic.
  • VPN software could produce an inaccurate IP address of a swarm member.
  • The fuzzy name search of file names as described by Mr. Patzer could not have identified the file kh4k52qr.125.mp4 as the content “Romp at the Ranch.”
  • Proprietary BitTorrent Client may or may not be properly implemented.
  • Claim of “zero bugs” is suspect when one of the stated components has had 5 over 431 bugs, 65 currently unresolved.
  • Zero duration data transfer times on two different files.
  • The lack of any available academic paper on, or security audit of, the software system in question.

In addition to the technical evidence, the expert report also sums up a wide range of other flaws.

Many files differ from the one’s deposited at the Copyright Office, for example, and the X-Art videos themselves don’t display a proper copyright notice. On top of that, Malibu also made no effort to protect its content with DRM.

Based on the expert review the John Doe asks the court to rule in his favor. Malibu is not a regular rightsholder, the lawyer argues, but an outfit that’s trying to generate profits through unreliable copyright infringement accusations.

“The only conclusion one can draw is that Malibu does not operate like a normal studio – make films and charge for them. Instead Malibu makes a large chunk of its money using unreliable bittorrent monitoring software which only collects a deminimus amount of data,” the Doe’s lawyer writes.

Stepping it up a notch, the lawyer likens Malibu’s operation to Prenda Law, whose principals were recently indicted and charged with conspiracy to commit fraud, money laundering, and perjury by the US Government.

“Malibu is no different than ‘Prenda Law’ in form and function. They cleverly exploit the fact that most people will settle for 5-10K when sued despite the fact that the system used to ‘capture’ their IP address is neither robust nor valid,” the motion reads.

Whether the court will agree has yet to be seen, but it’s clear that the expert report can be used as a new weapon to combat these and other copyright infringement claims.

Of course, one has to keep in mind that there are always two sides to a story.

At the same time the John Doe submitted his motion, Malibu moved ahead with a motion (pdf) for sanctions and a default judgment. The adult entertainment outfit argues that the defendant destroyed evidence on hard drives, concealed information, and committed perjury on several occasions.

To be continued…

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

Handful of “highly toxic” Wikipedia editors cause 9% of abuse on the site

New study of Wikipedia comments reveals most attackers aren’t anonymous.

Hoshi Ludwig

We've all heard anecdotes about trolling on Wikipedia and other social platforms, but rarely has anyone been able to quantify levels and origins of online abuse. That's about to change. Researchers with Alphabet tech incubator Jigsaw worked with Wikimedia Foundation to analyze 100,000 comments left on English-language Wikipedia. They found predictable patterns behind who will launch personal attacks and when.

The goal of the research team was to lay the groundwork for an automated system to "reduce toxic discussions" on Wikipedia. The team's work could one day lead to the creation of a warning system for moderators. The researchers caution that this system would require more research to implement, but they have released a paper with some fascinating early findings.

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Deals of the Day (2-10-2017)

Deals of the Day (2-10-2017)

Sure, the biggest smartphone show of the year is coming up at the end of the month, and we can expect many of the major phone makers to show off new models. But that means it’s a good time to score a great deal on some of last year’s best phones. Case in point: Newegg is […]

Deals of the Day (2-10-2017) is a post from: Liliputing

Deals of the Day (2-10-2017)

Sure, the biggest smartphone show of the year is coming up at the end of the month, and we can expect many of the major phone makers to show off new models. But that means it’s a good time to score a great deal on some of last year’s best phones. Case in point: Newegg is […]

Deals of the Day (2-10-2017) is a post from: Liliputing

Charter wrongly charged customers $10 “Wi-Fi Activation” fee, gets sued

Charter admits billing mistake in former Bright House area but faces a lawsuit.

Enlarge / But we already have Wi-Fi. (credit: Getty Images | Jose Luis Pelaez Inc.)

Charter admits that it accidentally charged a "Wi-Fi Activation" fee to some customers, and the company is now facing a lawsuit over the charges.

The wrongful charges hit customers of Bright House Networks, a company that Charter purchased last year. A complaint filed on January 31 in the Sixth Judicial Circuit of Florida by customer Sharon Memmer seeks class-action status for all customers who were charged the "Illegitimate Wi-Fi Activation Fee."

Charter offered no comment on the lawsuit but acknowledged the mistake and says it intends to make things right.

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Valve says goodbye to Steam Greenlight, hello to “Direct” publishing

Soon, anyone with paperwork and a fee payment will be able to sell on Steam.

Steam Greenlight as it looked at launch in 2012. (credit: Steam)

Nearly five years after it was first announced, Valve said today it is doing away with Steam Greenlight, the controversial system that let users vote on which games they thought should be sold on the popular PC digital distribution service. The service will be replaced with something called Steam Direct, providing developers with more straightforward access to the platform for an unknown fee. Direct will be starting in the Spring.

Greenlight was Valve's first attempt to significantly open the Steam store beyond its original, tightly curated list of games selected by a small group of Valve staffers. Valve says it considers that effort a qualified success, which has led to over 100 Greenlight games that have grossed at least $1 million on the platform. "Many of those would likely not have been published in the old, heavily curated Steam store," the company notes in its press release.

That said, Valve now sees Greenlight as "the largest remaining obstacle" to developers having a direct path to the Steam audience. "Our goal is to provide developers and publishers with a more direct publishing path and ultimately connect gamers with even more great content."

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Have we finally spotted an intermediate-mass black hole?

Previously undetected, these black holes could be the seeds of supermassive ones.

Enlarge / Hubble Space Telescope image of 47 Tucanae, also known as NGC 104, the second-brightest globular cluster in the night sky after Omega Centauri. (credit: ESA/Hubble)

A team of researchers has turned up evidence for an intermediate-mass black hole, one that weighs in between the remains of exploded stars and the supermassive giants that sit at the center of galaxies. Although a number of objects have been put forward as intermediate-mass black holes over the years, we've never conclusively identified one.

Black holes, in theory, can exist at any mass—there's no limit on how big or small a black hole can be. In practice, however, they must be created by a natural process (so far, the Large Hadron Collider hasn’t seemed to make any). Stellar-mass black holes, the most common type, are formed in the wreckage of collapsed stars, and most have just a few times the mass of the Sun (Solar masses). At the other end of the scale are supermassive black holes, which usually have hundreds of thousands or even millions of Solar masses. They reside in the cores of galaxies. Although we’re not clear how they form, their existence is not in question.

There’s a big gap between the stellar-mass and supermassive black holes, or between about 100 and 100,000 Solar masses. While we've never confirmed the existence of anything in that gap, intermediate-mass black holes are expected to exist in certain environments-such as globular clusters.

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Prince’s music will be on Spotify and other services starting Sunday

When you’re facing a $100M tax bill, it’s time to make a deal.

Enlarge / Prince performing on stage during the 1984 Purple Rain tour. (credit: Richard E. Aaron/Redferns)

While he was alive, Prince was notable for being a skeptic of online music. Those who manage his estate, though, have chosen to finally embrace it.

The records Prince produced during his time with Warner Bros., which include albums like 1999 and Purple Rain, will be available on Spotify and other streaming services starting Sunday.

The news was broken by Napster, formerly known as Rhapsody, which confirmed to NPR that it would start streaming the Prince classics this Sunday. Spotify told the BBC it will have the same material, and it's generally expected that Apple Music will have the goods as well.

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No more superglued USB ports: Surface hardware can be locked down in firmware

Windows Hello biometrics come to regular domain-joined systems in the Creators Update.

Enlarge / No longer do these ports need to be defiled with glue. (credit: Casey Johnston)

Windows 10 and Surface hardware are now good enough for government work, even when dealing with classified data. The operating system and the Surface Pro 3 and 4, Surface Book, and Surface Studio have all been added to the NSA's Commercial Solutions for Classified Programs (CSfC) list. This means that, when properly configured and used in a properly designed layered deployment, the hardware and software all provide adequate security for classified data.

To further increase the appeal of the Surface in constrained enterprise environments, today Microsoft is announcing Surface Enterprise Management Mode (SEMM) for Surface Pro 4, Surface Book, and Surface Studio. SEMM enables administrators with physical access to the hardware to lock out integrated peripherals such as webcam, microphone, and USB ports. This locking out is done by the firmware, disabling the devices in question, rendering them wholly inaccessible to the operating system. It's intended as a much more elegant alternative to supergluing the ports or drilling out the cameras.

SEMM is designed to allow not just static configuration, wherein the devices are disabled permanently, but also dynamic configuration that responds to the environment. For example, a SEMM system could be configured so that when it was on a classified network the USB ports and camera were disabled, but when on an open network they were re-enabled. The system uses digital signatures and certificates to manage the configurations, preventing end users from re-enabling devices that they shouldn't have access to.

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Reports: Xiaomi is working on its own line of smartphone chips, dubbed “Pinecone”

Reports: Xiaomi is working on its own line of smartphone chips, dubbed “Pinecone”

Chinese phone maker Xiaomi also produces a whole bunch of other things, including TVs, rice cookers, and self-balancing scooters. And according to several recent reports, it looks like the company is also starting to make its own processors. The Wall Street Journal reported this week that Xiaomi will be the second major Chinese smartphone maker […]

Reports: Xiaomi is working on its own line of smartphone chips, dubbed “Pinecone” is a post from: Liliputing

Reports: Xiaomi is working on its own line of smartphone chips, dubbed “Pinecone”

Chinese phone maker Xiaomi also produces a whole bunch of other things, including TVs, rice cookers, and self-balancing scooters. And according to several recent reports, it looks like the company is also starting to make its own processors. The Wall Street Journal reported this week that Xiaomi will be the second major Chinese smartphone maker […]

Reports: Xiaomi is working on its own line of smartphone chips, dubbed “Pinecone” is a post from: Liliputing

Überwachung: Microsoft kämpft gegen Gag-Order

Microsoft darf die US-Regierung verklagen, wenn diese geheime Überwachungsanordnungen erlässt und es dem Unternehmen verbietet, seine Kunden darüber zu informieren. Während Microsoft öffentlich mit der Regierung streitet, spendete der Konzern eine erhebliche Summe für Donald Trumps Amtseinführung. (Microsoft, Datenschutz)

Microsoft darf die US-Regierung verklagen, wenn diese geheime Überwachungsanordnungen erlässt und es dem Unternehmen verbietet, seine Kunden darüber zu informieren. Während Microsoft öffentlich mit der Regierung streitet, spendete der Konzern eine erhebliche Summe für Donald Trumps Amtseinführung. (Microsoft, Datenschutz)