A Million ‘Pirate’ Boxes Sold in the UK During The Last Two Years

The Federation Against Copyright Theft, in conjunction with the police and Intellectual Property Office, has released a new report on the state of Internet piracy in the UK. Estimates suggest that at least a million set-top devices providing access to pirated material have been sold over the past two years, with 25% of the public consuming illicit content overall.

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

With the devices hitting the headlines on an almost weekly basis, it probably comes as no surprise that ‘pirate’ set-top boxes are quickly becoming public enemy number one with video rightsholders.

Typically loaded with the legal Kodi software but augmented with third-party addons, these often Android-based pieces of hardware drag piracy out of the realm of the computer savvy and into the living rooms of millions.

One of the countries reportedly most affected by this boom is the UK. The consumption of these devices among the general public is said to have reached epidemic proportions, and anecdotal evidence suggests that terms like Kodi and Showbox are now household terms.

Today we have another report to digest, this time from the Federation Against Copyright Theft, or FACT as they’re often known. Titled ‘Cracking Down on Digital Piracy,’ the report provides a general overview of the piracy scene, tackling well-worn topics such as how release groups and site operators work, among others.

The report is produced by FACT after consultation with the Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit, Intellectual Property Office, Police Scotland, and anti-piracy outfit Entura International. It begins by noting that the vast majority of the British public aren’t involved in the consumption of infringing content.

“The most recent stats show that 75% of Brits who look at content online abide by the law and don’t download or stream it illegally – up from 70% in 2013. However, that still leaves 25% who do access material illegally,” the report reads.

The report quickly heads to the topic of ‘pirate’ set-top boxes which is unsurprising, not least due to FACT’s current focus as a business entity.

While it often positions itself alongside government bodies (which no doubt boosts its status with the general public), FACT is a private limited company serving The Premier League, another company desperate to stamp out the use of infringing devices.

Nevertheless, it’s difficult to argue with some of the figures cited in the report.

“At a conservative estimate, we believe a million set-top boxes with software added
to them to facilitate illegal downloads have been sold in the UK in the last couple
of years,” the Intellectual Property Office reveals.

Interestingly, given a growing tech-savvy public, FACT’s report notes that ready-configured boxes are increasingly coming into the country.

“Historically, individuals and organized gangs have added illegal apps and add-ons onto the boxes once they have been imported, to allow illegal access to premium channels. However more recently, more boxes are coming into the UK complete with illegal access to copyrighted content via apps and add-ons already installed,” FACT notes.

“Boxes are often stored in ‘fulfillment houses’ along with other illegal electrical items and sold on social media. The boxes are either sold as one-off purchases, or with a monthly subscription to access paid-for channels.”

While FACT press releases regularly blur the lines when people are prosecuted for supplying set-top boxes in general, it’s important to note that there are essentially two kinds of products on offer to the public.

The first relies on Kodi-type devices which provide on-going free access to infringing content. The second involves premium IPTV subscriptions which are a whole different level of criminality. Separating the two when reading news reports can be extremely difficult, but it’s a hugely important to recognize the difference when assessing the kinds of sentences set-top box suppliers are receiving in the UK.

Nevertheless, FACT correctly highlights that the supply of both kinds of product are on the increase, with various parties recognizing the commercial opportunities.

“A significant number of home-grown British criminals are now involved in this type of crime. Some of them import the boxes wholesale through entirely legal channels, and modify them with illegal software at home. Others work with sophisticated criminal networks across Europe to bring the boxes into the UK.

“They then sell these boxes online, for example through eBay or Facebook, sometimes managing to sell hundreds or thousands of boxes before being caught,” the company adds.

The report notes that in some cases the sale of infringing set-top boxes occurs through cottage industry, with suppliers often working on their own or with small groups of friends and family. Invetiably, perhaps, larger scale operations are reported to be part of networks with connections to other kinds of crime, such as dealing in drugs.

“In contrast to drugs, streaming devices provide a relatively steady and predictable revenue stream for these criminals – while still being lucrative, often generating hundreds of thousands of pounds a year, they are seen as a lower risk activity with less likelihood of leading to arrest or imprisonment,” FACT reports.

While there’s certainly the potential to earn large sums from ‘pirate’ boxes and premium IPTV services, operating on the “hundreds of thousands of pounds a year” scale in the UK would attract a lot of unwanted attention. That’s not saying that it isn’t already, however.

Noting that digital piracy has evolved hugely over the past three or four years, the report says that the cases investigated so far are just the “tip of the iceberg” and that many other cases are in the early stages and will only become known to the public in the months and years ahead.

Indeed, the Intellectual Property Office hints that some kind of large-scale enforcement action may be on the horizon.

“We have identified a significant criminal business model which we have discussed and shared with key law enforcement partners. I can’t go into detail on this, but as investigations take their course, you will see the scale,” an IPO spokesperson reveals.

While details are necessarily scarce, a source familiar with this area told TF that he would be very surprised if the targets aren’t the growing handful of commercial UK-based IPTV re-sellers who offer full subscription TV services for a few pounds per month.

“They’re brazen. Watch this space,” he said.

FACT’s full report, Cracking Down on Digital Piracy, can be downloaded here (pdf)

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

Zukunft des Autos: “Unsere Elektrofahrzeuge sollen typische Porsche sein”

Vernetzung, neue Antriebe, fahrerlose Autos: Die Autobranche, hierzulande eine Leitindustrie, ist im Umbruch. Wie geht es weiter mit dem Auto? Wir haben auf der IAA Porsche-Entwicklungschef Michael Steiner getroffen und ihn gefragt, was Elektromobilität, vernetztes und autonomes Fahren für Porsche bedeuten. Ein Interview von Werner Pluta (IAA 2017, Interview)

Vernetzung, neue Antriebe, fahrerlose Autos: Die Autobranche, hierzulande eine Leitindustrie, ist im Umbruch. Wie geht es weiter mit dem Auto? Wir haben auf der IAA Porsche-Entwicklungschef Michael Steiner getroffen und ihn gefragt, was Elektromobilität, vernetztes und autonomes Fahren für Porsche bedeuten. Ein Interview von Werner Pluta (IAA 2017, Interview)

PC-Wahl: CCC patcht Wahlsoftware selbst

Nach mehreren fehlgeschlagenen Anläufen will der CCC nicht länger warten und schreibt die Patches für die Wahlsoftware selbst. Die gespendeten Codefragmente liegen bei Github, unklar ist, ob der Hersteller das Geschenk annimmt. (CCC, Internet)

Nach mehreren fehlgeschlagenen Anläufen will der CCC nicht länger warten und schreibt die Patches für die Wahlsoftware selbst. Die gespendeten Codefragmente liegen bei Github, unklar ist, ob der Hersteller das Geschenk annimmt. (CCC, Internet)

Neuronales Netzwerk: Algorithmus erstellt 3D-Gesichtsmodell aus einzelnem Foto

Wissenschaftler haben einen neuen Algorithmus programmiert, der aus einem einzelnen Bild ein 3D-Modell eines Gesichts konstruiert. Über ein Web-Interface kann die Methode ausprobiert werden – mit stellenweise bereits guten Ergebnissen. (KI, Stereoskopie)

Wissenschaftler haben einen neuen Algorithmus programmiert, der aus einem einzelnen Bild ein 3D-Modell eines Gesichts konstruiert. Über ein Web-Interface kann die Methode ausprobiert werden - mit stellenweise bereits guten Ergebnissen. (KI, Stereoskopie)

Cloud: AWS stellt einige Dienste auf Abrechnung pro Sekunde um

AWS will seine EC2-Plattform auf ein neues Bezahlungsmodell umstellen. Die Abrechnung pro Sekunde spare Kosten bei kurzen automatisierten Jobs und Big-Data-Analysen. Die Umstellung ist aber auch eine Reaktion auf die Konkurrenten Microsoft und Google. …

AWS will seine EC2-Plattform auf ein neues Bezahlungsmodell umstellen. Die Abrechnung pro Sekunde spare Kosten bei kurzen automatisierten Jobs und Big-Data-Analysen. Die Umstellung ist aber auch eine Reaktion auf die Konkurrenten Microsoft und Google. (AWS, Google)

Dateiaustausch: Chrome 63 erklärt FTP-Verbindungen für unsicher

Wer mit künftigen Chrome-Versionen FTP-Ressourcen ansteuert, bekommt wegen der unsicheren Verbindung eine Warnung. Zuvor hatten in diesem Jahr schon wichtige Projekte die Abkehr von FTP angekündigt. (FTP, Linux-Kernel)

Wer mit künftigen Chrome-Versionen FTP-Ressourcen ansteuert, bekommt wegen der unsicheren Verbindung eine Warnung. Zuvor hatten in diesem Jahr schon wichtige Projekte die Abkehr von FTP angekündigt. (FTP, Linux-Kernel)

Parkplatz-Erkennung: Bosch und Siemens scheitern mit Pilotprojekten

In zwei Pilotprojekten haben Bosch und Siemens die automatische Parkraumüberwachung getestet. Die Ergebnisse sind bislang nicht überzeugend. Neue Startups springen in die Lücke. Ein Bericht von Friedhelm Greis (Cebit 2016, Technologie)

In zwei Pilotprojekten haben Bosch und Siemens die automatische Parkraumüberwachung getestet. Die Ergebnisse sind bislang nicht überzeugend. Neue Startups springen in die Lücke. Ein Bericht von Friedhelm Greis (Cebit 2016, Technologie)

Uber: driver pay plan puts a “significant risk” on ride-hailing service

Contracts allow rider fares to be higher than what is known and paid to drivers.

Enlarge (credit: Bloomberg/Getty Images)

Uber is fighting a proposed class-action lawsuit that says it secretly over charges riders and under pays drivers. In its defense, the ride-hailing service claims that nobody is being defrauded in its "upfront" rider fare pricing model.

The fares charged to riders don't have to match up with the fares paid to drivers, Uber said, because that's what a driver's "agreement" allows.

"Plaintiff's allegations are premised on the notion that, once Uber implemented Upfront Pricing for riders, it was required under the terms of the Agreement to change how the Fare was calculated for Drivers," Uber said (PDF) in a recent court filing seeking to have the class-action tossed. "This conclusion rests on a misinterpretation of the Agreement."

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The United States Air Force turned 70 today

We put together a collection of planes to celebrate the occasion.

Enlarge (credit: Aurich / Getty)

The United States' position as the sole remaining superpower on Earth is in large part thanks to its air force. That organization—the United States Air Force, or USAF—turns 70 years old today, and since we know there are plenty of plane spotters and aviation geeks here at Ars, we thought we'd assemble a gallery of some of our favorite USAF planes to celebrate.

Of course, the US military had access to air power before September 18, 1947. The Army started playing around with planes a few short years after the Wright brothers took to the skies and proved heavier-than-air flight was possible, getting its first airplane—a Wright Flyer, naturally—in 1909. Around the same time, the US Navy also started getting into the flying business, but since today isn't the Navy's birthday, that's the last we'll say about naval aviation here.

By World War II, the US Army had its Army Air Forces, which flew combat missions in the European and Pacific theaters. The USAAF even brought the war to a close when a pair of B-29s dropped atom bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. In the aftermath of WWII, Congress decided that the country required a dedicated air force and created a new branch of the military with the National Security Act of 1947. The United States Air Force was born.

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TVAddons: A Law Firm is Not Spying on Our Kodi Users

Earlier this year, domains owned by third-party Kodi addon platform TVAddons were transferred to a law firm. This prompted concerns, in what was then an information black hole, that something nefarious was underway. While it’s clear today that isn’t the case, some users refuse to be convinced while others seem happy to throw fuel on the fire.

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

A few months ago, TVAddons was without doubt the leading repository for third-party Kodi addons.

During March, the platform had 40 million unique users connected to the site’s servers, together transferring a petabyte of addons and updates.

In June, however, things started to fall apart. After news broke that the site was being sued in a federal court in Texas, TVAddons disappeared. It was assumed these events were connected but it later transpired the platform was being used in Canada as well, and that was the true reason for the downtime.

While it’s easy to be wise after the event, in hindsight it might’ve been better for the platform to go public about the Canadian matter quite a bit sooner than it did. Of course, there are always legal considerations that prevent early disclosure, but when popular sites disappear into a black hole, two plus two can quickly equal five when fed through the web’s rumor machine.

Things weren’t helped in July when it was discovered that the site’s former domains had been handed over to a Canada-based law firm. Again, no official explanation was forthcoming and again, people became concerned.

If this had been a plaintiff’s law firm, people would’ve had good reason to worry, since it would have been technically possible to spy on TVAddons’ users. However, as the truth began to filter out and court papers became available, it soon became crystal clear that simply wasn’t the case.

The bottom line, which is backed up by publicly available court papers, is that the law firm holding the old TVAddons domains is not the law firm suing TVAddons. Instead, it was appointed by the court to hold TVAddons’ property until the Canadian lawsuit is brought to a conclusion, whenever that might be.

“They have a legal obligation to protect our property at all cost, and prevent anyone (especially the law firm who is suing is) from gaining access to them,” says TVAddons.

“The law firm who is holding them is doing nothing more than protecting our property until the time that it will finally be returned after the appeal takes place.”

Unfortunately, assurances provided by TVAddons and information published by the court itself hasn’t been enough to stop some people fearing the worst. While the facts have plenty of support on Twitter and Facebook, there also appears to be an element who would like to see TVAddons fail in its efforts to re-establish itself.

Only time will tell who will win that battle but in the meantime, TVAddons has tried to cover all the bases in an update post on its blog.

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