YouTube Rippers Have to Face Piracy Claims in US Court, Appeals Court Rules

The copyright infringement case between several major record labels and the YouTube-rippers FLVTO.biz and 2conv.com is back on. The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the District Court’s ruling, which dismissed the case for a lack of jurisdiction. The record labels will celebrate this as a win but the legal battle is far from over.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

flvtoIn 2018, a group of prominent record labels sued two very popular YouTube rippers, FLVTO.biz and 2conv.com.

The labels, including Universal, Warner Bros, and Sony, accused the sites of copyright infringement and hoped to shut them down quickly. But that didn’t go as planned.

The Russian operator of the sites, Tofig Kurbanov, fought back with a motion to dismiss. He argued that the Virginia federal court lacked personal jurisdiction as he operated the sites from abroad and didn’t target or interact with US users.

The district court agreed with this assessment. In a verdict released early last year, Judge Claude M. Hilton dismissed the case. The Court carefully reviewed how the sites operated and found no evidence that they purposefully targeted either Virginia or the United States.

The record labels and the RIAA were disappointed with the outcome and swiftly announced an appeal.

Appeals Court Reverses the Dismissal

Today, the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals decided on the matter. In a unanimous decision, it reversed the District Court’s ruling. This means that the motion to dismiss is off the table and that the case will be revived.

The Fourth Circuit Court found that there are more than sufficient facts to conclude that Kurbanov purposefully conducted business in the US, specifically, the state of Virginia. That the site doesn’t charge users is not seen as being crucial.

“To start, his contacts with Virginia are plentiful. In the relevant period, between October 2017 and September 2018, more than half a million unique visitors went to the Websites, totaling nearly 1.5 million visits. These visits made Virginia one of the most popular states in terms of unique visitors as well as number of visits,” the Appeals Court notes.

“In addition to the volume of visitors, we also find the nature of the repeated interaction between the Websites and visitors to be a commercial relationship,” the order adds, stressing that the “mere absence of a monetary exchange does not automatically imply a non-commercial relationship.”

On top of that, the decision also weighs in the fact that the sites have a registered DMCA agent, worked with US-based advertisers, and used US-based servers and domain registrars at some point.

Contrary to the District Court, the Appeals Court also finds that FLVTO.biz and 2conv.com targeted Virginia users, as the websites were globally accessible. No attempts were made to block Virginia visitors while the site did profit from the data that was harvested from these people.

“In sum, we conclude Appellants’ copyright infringement claims arise out of Kurbanov’s activities directed at Virginia,” the Court concludes.

The result of the ruling is that the District Court dismissal is off the table, so the lawsuit at the lower court can continue. This doesn’t mean that Kurbanov has lost that case though, but he will have to defend himself and his sites against the record labels’ copyright infringement claims.

‘A Dangerous Precedent’

The record labels will be pleased with this decision but according to Kurbanov and his legal team, it sets a dangerous precedent. Counsel Evan Fray-Witzer informs us that, if this ruling stands, it will have a broad impact on foreign site operators.

“The idea that a website operator could be subject to personal jurisdiction because the site has a DMCA agent would be a horrible precedent if allowed to stand: all it will mean is that foreign website operators will forgo having a DMCA agent, something that is beneficial to content producers,” Fray-Witzer.

“If Mr. Kurbanov – who has never once visited the United States – can be haled into a U.S. Court simply because he created a website that turned out to be popular in the U.S., then any American who creates a website can expect to be subject to personal jurisdiction in China, Russia, and every other country in the world,” he adds.

Kurbanov and his legal team are still considering their options at this time but they don’t expect this to be the end of the jurisdictional battle, where further appeals are still possible.

A copy of the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals’ decision is available here (pdf).

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Amazon pays $1.2 billion for self-driving startup Zoox

Zoox aimed to create its own self-driving software, vehicle, and taxi service.

People examine a Zoox test vehicle in 2019. The company has yet to show off the custom-designed vehicle it plans to use for its commercial service.

Enlarge / People examine a Zoox test vehicle in 2019. The company has yet to show off the custom-designed vehicle it plans to use for its commercial service. (credit: Andrei Stanescu / Getty)

Zoox, one of the most lavishly funded independent self-driving startups, has been acquired by Amazon, the companies announced on Friday.

Venture capitalists, hungry for a stake in the much-hyped self-driving industry, poured hundreds of millions of dollars into Zoox between 2016 and 2019. But as self-driving companies have failed to hit self-imposed milestones over the last couple of years, investor enthusiasm has cooled.

Zoox's own plans were breathtakingly ambitious. The company planned to not only develop self-driving software, but to build its own vehicles and create a ride-hailing service. As recently as 2018, the company was aiming to launch a fully self-driving taxi service by 2020.

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Daily Deals (6-26-2020)

The Steam Summer Sale is underway, which means you can save money on thousands of PC games. But if you’d rather curl up with a good book (or eBook), Amazon’s still offering Kindle Unlimited 2-month subscriptions for free. You can also save …

The Steam Summer Sale is underway, which means you can save money on thousands of PC games. But if you’d rather curl up with a good book (or eBook), Amazon’s still offering Kindle Unlimited 2-month subscriptions for free. You can also save money buying paying for individual eBooks — a bunch of popular titles are […]

FCC helps Charter avoid broadband competition

FCC helped Charter but denied Frontier bid to block funds in parts of 29 states.

A Charter Spectrum service van used by a cable technician.

Enlarge / A Charter Spectrum van in West Lake Hills, Texas in April 2019. (credit: Tony Webster )

The Federal Communications Commission is helping Charter avoid broadband competition in New York State with a decision that will block government funding for other ISPs in locations where Charter is required to build.

The FCC plans to award ISPs up to $16 billion over 10 years from the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF) in a reverse auction scheduled to begin in October. The FCC said in an announcement yesterday that it "granted Charter Communications' waiver request to exclude 2,127 census blocks in New York from the eligible areas list because the company will deploy broadband in those locations pursuant to a settlement reached with the State of New York."

Separately, the FCC denied a Frontier Communications request to exclude nearly 17,000 census blocks in parts of 29 states from the auction.

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FCC helps Charter avoid broadband competition

FCC helped Charter but denied Frontier bid to block funds in parts of 29 states.

A Charter Spectrum service van used by a cable technician.

Enlarge / A Charter Spectrum van in West Lake Hills, Texas in April 2019. (credit: Tony Webster )

The Federal Communications Commission is helping Charter avoid broadband competition in New York State with a decision that will block government funding for other ISPs in locations where Charter is required to build.

The FCC plans to award ISPs up to $16 billion over 10 years from the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF) in a reverse auction scheduled to begin in October. The FCC said in an announcement yesterday that it "granted Charter Communications' waiver request to exclude 2,127 census blocks in New York from the eligible areas list because the company will deploy broadband in those locations pursuant to a settlement reached with the State of New York."

Separately, the FCC denied a Frontier Communications request to exclude nearly 17,000 census blocks in parts of 29 states from the auction.

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Microsoft’s “new approach” to retail stores: closing them forever

Microsoft designed its retail stores to be cool like Apple’s. It didn’t work.

Ironically, this boarded-up Microsoft Store location in New York City, seen on June 8, is one of the four in the world that <em>will</em> reopen—but as an "experience center" where you can't buy anything.

Enlarge / Ironically, this boarded-up Microsoft Store location in New York City, seen on June 8, is one of the four in the world that will reopen—but as an "experience center" where you can't buy anything. (credit: Kena Betancur | VIEWpress | Getty Images)

Microsoft's retail stores, like many retailers throughout the nation, have been closed for months due to the novel coronavirus pandemic. If you were hoping to visit one again as restrictions in your state ease up, however, you're out of luck: the Microsoft Store is done for good.

The company announced the closure today, amusingly, as the Microsoft Store taking "a new approach to retail," by which it means "not actually operating retail stores." Although four locations—in London, New York City, Sydney, and Microsoft's Redmond, Wash. campus—will remain open, they will become "experience centers," where one can see, touch, and play with Microsoft products but not actually purchase any.

Microsoft naturally hailed the "strategic change" as a win, saying that online sales have grown and the product portfolio "has evolved to largely digital offerings," which, 2020 being what it is, is no doubt true. But Microsoft's stores, which began opening in 2009, were never able to escape the comparison to rival Apple's retail stores.

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Tiny pendulum may reveal gravity’s secrets

Gravity and quantum mechanics may influence each other as tiny pendulum swings.

Tiny pendulum may reveal gravity’s secrets

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images/Christoph Burgstedt/Science Photo Library)

Gravity is, at heart, a mystery. Yes, we can talk about curvature of space-time and perhaps make analogies with stretched rubber sheets. But we don’t know why mass causes space-time to curve.

To put it another way, in our theory of gravity, matter is the scenery and space-time is both cast and stage crew. But matter's behavior is described by quantum mechanics, which takes space and time as givens. For quantum mechanics, space and time are the stage in which matter puts on the best show ever. How do we get these two theories to put on just one play?

Perhaps this is why the two theories simply do not get on—no show can have two lead actors, right? We may finally get to find out thanks to a new experimental device that may make it possible for both gravity and quantum mechanics to play lead roles.

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Lenovo Yoga Carbon laptop with Intel Tiger Lake leaked

Another day, another leak from Lenovo. Yesterday we learned the company is working on a previously unannounced dual-screen Lenovo Yoga computer. Now we have our first look at a new Lenovo Yoga Carbon laptop with a 13 inch display and support for &#8220…

Another day, another leak from Lenovo. Yesterday we learned the company is working on a previously unannounced dual-screen Lenovo Yoga computer. Now we have our first look at a new Lenovo Yoga Carbon laptop with a 13 inch display and support for “up to an 11th-gen Intel Core i7” processor. In other words, there’s a strong chance […]

SpaceX scrubs Friday launch attempt Starlink of satellites [Updated]

“The visor prevents light from reflecting off of the diffuse antennas.”

1:45pm ET Friday Update: SpaceX has scrubbed its Starlink launch attempt for Friday. No details of why were immediately available.

Original post: SpaceX is preparing for its 10th launch of Starlink satellites on Friday afternoon. The launch on board a Falcon 9 rocket from Kennedy Space Center in Florida is scheduled for 4:18pm ET (20:18 UTC). The weather outlook for Friday's launch attempt is favorable.

On this 10th launch, it's worth stepping back to realize that, in addition to developing reusable rockets, two different Dragon spacecraft, and working on its ambitious Starship project, SpaceX has also built 600 satellites in the last couple of years. And these are not small CubeSats—each of the Starlink satellites weighs 260kg and has its own on-board propulsion system. This is a pretty remarkable new production capability.

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The Kia Telluride is the most surprising SUV of the year

Kia’s biggest SUV can do it all, both off-road and on.

Let's get this out of the way: if you're in the market for a three-row SUV, you need to look long and hard at the Kia Telluride. It is legitimately the best three-row SUV I've driven since... ever. No wonder it won the 2020 World Car of the Year award.

When I first laid eyes on the Telluride at the 2019 Chicago Auto Show, my first reaction was "this doesn't look like a Kia." There are no quirky design aesthetics like the Kia Soul. Instead, the Korean automaker has gone for the classic SUV look, swapping out whimsy for gravitas. Instead of the cartoonishly large grille and tiny Kia badge of the Soul, the front of Kia's new flagship SUV has a more restrained-looking grille with "Telluride" spelled out in large block letters à la Range Rover. The Telluride exterior is all clean lines and gentle curves, with the B and C pillars blending into the windows and metal trim around the windows going from front to back.

Designed with the US market in mind, the Telluride starts at $33,690 for the LX trim. Priced at $46,860, our review model was a top-end Telluride SX with the $2,000 Prestige Package (heads-up display, Nappa leather trim, and heated/ventilated back seats) included. Fully loaded, it's an impressive beast of an SUV.

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