Two Las Vegas Men Plead Guilty in U.S. Criminal Streaming Piracy Case

Two defendants have pleaded guilty for their role in the operation of two streaming services that offered access to pirated movies and TV-shows. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, ]iStreamItAll and Jetflicks were among the biggest illegal streaming services in the US. The platforms used torrent and Usenet sites to source thousands of pirated videos for their platforms, which were offered to the public for a monthly subscription fee.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN reviews, discounts, offers and coupons.

Earlier this year a federal grand jury charged eight men for their involvement with the streaming services Jetflicks and iStreamitAll.

The platforms, which were headquartered in Las Vegas, offered a wide range of pirated videos that could be accessed in exchange for a monthly subscription fee.

This week, two of the defendants pleaded guilty. The first is Las Vegas resident Darryl Julius Polo, aka djppimp, who was involved in both services through which he earned over a million dollars in revenue.

In a plea agreement, Polo admits the various counts of criminal copyright infringement and well as a money laundering charge. The copyright offenses carry a maximum penalty of five years in prison and money laundering is punishable by up to 20 years incarceration.

Polo both owned and operated iStreamitAll (ISIA) which he launched after being involved with Jetflicks. In a signed statement, he admits that ISIA offered access to 118,479 different TV episodes and 10,980 individual movies.

Between September 2014 and December 2016 the streaming service processed at least 18,551 successful credit and debit card charges. The associated subscription fees ranged from $19.99 per month up to $179.99 per year.

According to the agreed statement of facts (pdf), Polo pitched his service to potential clients by pointing out that it offered more content than competing legal services such as Netflix, Hulu, Vudu, and Amazon Prime.

“In fact, the defendant sent out emails to potential subscribers highlighting ISIA’s huge catalog of works and urging them to cancel Netflix, Hulu, and similar services, and subscribe to ISIA instead,” it reads.

The various movies and TV-shows were sources from Usenet and torrent sites. Polo had set up an automated system where software including SickRage, Sick Beard, and
SABnzbd scoured the Internet for pirated content which was then stored by the service so it could be streamed to subscribers.

“These tools allowed the defendant to search for pirated movies and television shows available on some of the most popular torrent sites in the world, such as The
Pirate Bay, RARBG, and TorrentDay, as well as some of the largest Usenet NZB index sites,” the statement of facts reads.

The streaming service was not the first piracy operation Polo was involved in. He further admits that he operated the NZB indexer SmackDownOnYou, BoxBusters.TV, Jailbreakingtheipad, and the music piracy site MixtapeUG.

In addition to Polo, 40-year old Luis Angel Villarino from Las Vegas also pleaded guilty. He admits his involvement as a programmer for Jetflicks from December 2016 to at least June 2017.

Villarino agreed to be charged with one count of conspiracy to commit criminal copyright infringement, which carries a maximum prison sentence of five years.

Jetflicks used many of the same sources as the ISIA streaming service. It was tailored towards TV-show content and listed thousands of shows that could be accessed through a subscription. Both services worked in regular browsers and through various apps, including a Kodi-addon.

According to Villarino’s signed statement of facts (pdf), he mostly worked as a programmer to optimize the scripts that fetched the pirated TV-shows.

“The defendant mostly worked on solving problems with the Jetflicks’ computer scripts that co-defendants Darryl Julius Polo, Peter H. Huber, and Vaillant had written or refined and that were designed to help locate, download, process, store, stream, and make available for downloaded pirated television shows.”

In exchange for the guilty pleas, both defendants can expect a lower sentencing recommendation. They agree to cooperate fully in any further investigations and may have to provide information on and testify against the remaining six defendants, who go to trial in February 2020.

Polo and Villarino will be sentenced a month later. Both men must pay restitution to their victims while their criminal proceeds will be forfeited. In Polo’s case, that’s at least $1 million.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN reviews, discounts, offers and coupons.

Ridiculous in the right way: Unmatched: Battle of Legends

What if Sinbad, King Arthur, Medusa, and Alice started a fight club?

Ridiculous in the right way: Unmatched: Battle of Legends

Enlarge

Welcome to Ars Cardboard, our weekend look at tabletop games! Check out our complete board gaming coverage at cardboard.arstechnica.com.

The full name of this game is Unmatched: Battle of Legends, Volume One. That last bit is important because there is more Unmatched coming. This first set allows us to answer important questions like: who would win in a fight between King Arthur and Sinbad? What if Alice ventured out of Wonderland to carve up Medusa? The matchups in this absurdist fight club are bonkers, and we’re only getting started.

A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away...

Restoration Games is the noteworthy publisher that has brought us new editions of classic games like Fireball Island and Stop Thief! Those designs were given a few nips and tucks, a couple of injections of Botox, and a new wardrobe. They’re fresh, but they’re also grounded in the past, and they know how to put nostalgia to good use.

Read 17 remaining paragraphs | Comments

A sobering message about the future at AI’s biggest party

AI leaders say that simply throwing more computers at a problem isn’t sustainable.

A sobering message about the future at AI’s biggest party

Enlarge (credit: EFF)

More than 13,000 artificial intelligence mavens flocked to Vancouver this week for the world’s leading academic AI conference, NeurIPS. The venue included a maze of colorful corporate booths aiming to lure recruits for projects like software that plays doctor. Google handed out free luggage scales and socks depicting the colorful bikes employees ride on its campus while IBM offered hats emblazoned with “I ❤️A👁.”

Tuesday night, Google and Uber hosted well-lubricated, over-subscribed parties. At a bleary 8:30 the next morning, one of Google’s top researchers gave a keynote with a sobering message about AI’s future.

Blaise Aguera y Arcas praised the revolutionary technique known as deep learning that has seen teams like his get phones to recognize faces and voices. He also lamented the limitations of that technology, which involves designing software called artificial neural networks that can get better at a specific task by experience or seeing labeled examples of correct answers.

Read 12 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Datendiebstahl: Facebook warnt eigene Mitarbeiter erst nach zwei Wochen

Nach dem Diebstahl von Festplatten mit unverschlüsselten Gehaltsabrechnungen und persönlichen Daten hat sich Facebook laut einem Medienbericht offenbar sehr viel Zeit gelassen, die betroffenen Mitarbeiter zu informieren. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)

Nach dem Diebstahl von Festplatten mit unverschlüsselten Gehaltsabrechnungen und persönlichen Daten hat sich Facebook laut einem Medienbericht offenbar sehr viel Zeit gelassen, die betroffenen Mitarbeiter zu informieren. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)

Ultimate Rivals: Apple Arcade eröffnet Sportspielreihe mit Hockey

Eishockeylegende Wayne Gretzky gegen Fußball-Weltmeisterin Alex Morgan oder andere Sportstars: Das ist die Idee hinter einer neuen Sportspielserie auf Apple Arcade. Nach dem Hockey-Auftakt namens The Rink geht es im Frühjahr mit Basketball weiter. (App…

Eishockeylegende Wayne Gretzky gegen Fußball-Weltmeisterin Alex Morgan oder andere Sportstars: Das ist die Idee hinter einer neuen Sportspielserie auf Apple Arcade. Nach dem Hockey-Auftakt namens The Rink geht es im Frühjahr mit Basketball weiter. (Apple Arcade, Apple)

T-Mobile: John Legere warnt US-Richter vor Scheitern von Fusion

Mehrere US-Bundesstaaten kämpfen gegen die Fusion von Sprint mit T-Mobile in den USA. Dessen Chef John Legere hat sich jetzt bei der Gerichtsverhandlung zu dem Thema geäußert – aber die Aktionäre verlieren offenbar die Geduld. (John Legere, Telekom)

Mehrere US-Bundesstaaten kämpfen gegen die Fusion von Sprint mit T-Mobile in den USA. Dessen Chef John Legere hat sich jetzt bei der Gerichtsverhandlung zu dem Thema geäußert - aber die Aktionäre verlieren offenbar die Geduld. (John Legere, Telekom)

THQ Nordic: Demo von möglichem Gothic-Remake spielbar

Rund zwei Stunden lang können sich Fans des Rollenspielklassikers Gothic in Kämpfe stürzen und Quests lösen – und anschließend einen Fragebogen beantworten. Die Entwickler wollen wissen, was die Kundschaft von einer Neuauflage hält. (Gothic, Rollenspie…

Rund zwei Stunden lang können sich Fans des Rollenspielklassikers Gothic in Kämpfe stürzen und Quests lösen - und anschließend einen Fragebogen beantworten. Die Entwickler wollen wissen, was die Kundschaft von einer Neuauflage hält. (Gothic, Rollenspiel)

Blu-ray, Ultra HD Blu-ray sales stats for the week ending November 30, 2019

The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending November 30, 2019, are in. It’s Black Friday week and sales are through the roof, but there was also a new release in the form of this third installment in a relat…



The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending November 30, 2019, are in. It's Black Friday week and sales are through the roof, but there was also a new release in the form of this third installment in a relatively new franchise. Find out what movie it was in our weekly DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales stats and analysis feature.

Apple and Spotify bring podcasts to Amazon Echo devices (and other Alexa-enabled gadgets)

Amazon’s Echo line of products may have introduced the world to the idea of smart speakers that respond to your voice, answer questions, and play music among other things. But one thing Amazon’s Alexa voice service hasn’t been great a…

Amazon’s Echo line of products may have introduced the world to the idea of smart speakers that respond to your voice, answer questions, and play music among other things. But one thing Amazon’s Alexa voice service hasn’t been great at until now is playing podcasts. While you could ask Alexa to play a podcast, by default […]

The post Apple and Spotify bring podcasts to Amazon Echo devices (and other Alexa-enabled gadgets) appeared first on Liliputing.

Jumanji: The Next Level is less fresh this time around but still lots of fun

It’s worth the price of admission just to watch The Rock channel Danny DeVito.

Jack Black, Kevin Hart, Dwayne Johnson, and Karen Gillan star in <em>Jumanji: The Next Level</em>.

Enlarge / Jack Black, Kevin Hart, Dwayne Johnson, and Karen Gillan star in Jumanji: The Next Level. (credit: Sony Pictures)

The intrepid gang of teens who played their way out of a video game two years ago is back and facing a new in-game adventure in Jumanji: The Next Level, the latest installment in the popular franchise that originated with the 1995 film Jumanji. It's a solid sequel, following the same winning formula that made its predecessor such a big success.

(Spoilers for 1995's Jumanji and 2017's Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle; mild spoilers for Jumanji: The Next Level.)

The franchise has its roots in a 1981 fantasy children's book by Chris van Allsburg, about two children who discover a jungle adventure board game with the ominous warning, "Do not begin unless you intend to finish." The original 1995 film adaption followed the basic premise pretty closely, although it added several characters, most notably Robin Williams as a grown Alan Parrish and his childhood friend Sarah Whittle (Bonnie Hunt). As a young boy in 1969, Alan finds a supernatural board game called Jumanji and begins to play with Sarah.

Read 11 remaining paragraphs | Comments