Illegal Free Streams of Alexander Povetkin vs Dillian Whyte Will Be Blocked

The High Court of England and Wales has handed down a new dynamic ISP blocking order aimed at preventing boxing fans from obtaining free illegal streams of boxing matches. The major upcoming target is the Alexander Povetkin vs Dillian Whyte rematch scheduled for November 21, which will be blocked by the country’s major ISPs.

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

boxingAfter the Premier League obtained a 2017 blocking order compelling ISPs including BT, Sky, TalkTalk and Virgin Media to block unauthorized soccer streams under Section 97a of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, an early template was available for other live content owners to follow.

Sure enough, around 18 months later, Matchroom – the owner, manager, and promoter of various sporting events – joined in on the action, going to the High Court in an effort to prevent boxing fans from viewing the 2018 bout between Anthony Joshua and Alexander Povetkin via illegal online streams.

Bell Sounds on Existing Order, New Round Begins

The order handed down by the High Court in Matchroom’s favor was extended and modified by a sealed order on May 22, 2019. It required ISPs Sky, BT, Virgin Media, TalkTalk, EE and Plusnet to block the IP addresses of pirate servers in much the same way as the orders previously obtained by the Premier League had pioneered. However, it also had a so-called “sunset clause” which meant it ceased to have effect on October 1, 2020.

Anticipating the bell, Matchroom filed a new application on September 28, 2020, which reached Justice Birss in the High Court in the week of October 12, 2020. Given that Matchroom had a boxing event scheduled for October 17, the promotion requested a two-year extension which would expire on October 1, 2022.

None of the named ISPs objected to the application and Sky actually filed evidence in support of it, as it had done previously with similar Premier League blocking orders.

However, the Judge wasn’t prepared to grant an extension and instead treated it as a brand new application, broadly along the lines of the secret website blocking system deployed by the Premier League that gained court approval back in July 2020.

Judge Was Satisfied With Expert Opinions on Blocking

In considering the Matchroom application, Judge Birss noted that Robert Kiessling, Head of Cloud Engineering at Sky, reported that “blocking has worked smoothly in practice” and has not resulted in the “blocking of access to any legitimate content”. This latter claim was made on the basis that no customer made any complaints to Sky about restricted access to legal content.

Interestingly, Sky also presented ISP traffic map evidence to show that blocking made a “significant contribution to reducing unauthorized streams of Matchroom Content transmitted to customers using Sky’s broadband network.” This appears to add yet more weight to the theory that Sky does indeed appear to be watching its customers’ piracy consumption habits.

Temporary Blocking Order Handed Down October 15, 2020

Given the urgency, Judge Birss handed down an order to help protect the event scheduled for October 17 but he wasn’t prepared to hand down a two-year order without a more careful examination. The temporary order timed out on October 30, the day before the Oleksandr Usyk vs Derek Chisora fight at Wembley on Halloween.

During a hearing on October 23 to consider the new application, the Judge informed counsel for the applicants that he was satisfied that an order along the lines of the one sought could be handed down. However, there was also the matter of which parts of the order should remain confidential, to prevent interested third-parties from attempting to circumvent its measures.

The Judge determined that the list of target IP addresses belonging to ‘pirate’ servers should not be made public. Furthermore, after initially believing that there would be no harm in publishing a broad outline of the “detection conditions and requirements which an IP address must satisfy in order for that IP address to be notified so that it will be blocked”, he later changed his mind. Disclosure “bears a tangible risk” of undermining blocking and assisting infringers, he argued.

New Blocking Order Handed Down to Expire October 1, 2022

The new order allows for Matchroom and its agents to block IP addresses when they are being used to transmit Matchroom footage during events or during a “pre-monitoring period” immediately preceding those events.

Affected hosting providers must be sent a notice explaining that their IP addresses have been blocked due to a court order and given the opportunity to discharge or vary that order. If any website, video streaming service, or ISP customers are adversely affected by the order, they too have the same rights to complain.

Since the order was handed down by the High Court before being published this week, the bout between Oleksandr Usyk v Derek Chisora on October 31 was already covered by the order. The upcoming rematch between Alexander Povetkin and Dillian Whyte scheduled for November 21, 2020, will be the next test for the new and improved court-sanctioned blocking efforts but coverage will continue for additional bouts beyond that.

ISP Blocking System Names Revealed

Finally, a note about the systems being deployed by the various ISPs involved in the blocking action.

According to the High Court order, BT and Plusnet are currently using systems known as Hawking/Cleanfeed. EE deploys a blocking system known as Wolf, Sky’s system is called Hawkeye, Virgin has Web Blocker 3, and TalkTalk’s system has no specific name beyond IP ‘blackholing’.

The High Court order can be found here

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

Automobilindustrie: Flucht nach vorne

Der Arbeitsplatzabbau in der Autoindustrie ist brutal: Gleichzeitig wird IT-Personal umgeschult oder eingestellt. Wir haben nachgefragt, wie Hersteller und Zulieferer vorgehen. Eine Analyse von Peter Ilg (Auto, Elektroauto)

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Why Biden tapped several Big Tech staffers for his transition team

A number of Obama staffers got tech jobs during Trump’s term. Now they’re back.

A older man in a suit and face mask walks past an American flag.

Enlarge / Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden arrives to speak at a "Build Back Better" Clean Energy event on July 14, 2020, at the Chase Center in Wilmington, Delaware. (credit: Olivier Douliery | AFP | Getty Images)

On Tuesday, President-elect Joe Biden announced a roster of policy experts who will help ensure "a smooth transfer of power" and enable the new Biden administration to "hit the ground running."

The list has more than 500 members, and technology companies are well-represented on the list. It includes current employees of Airbnb, Amazon, Dell, Dropbox, LinkedIn, Lyft, Salesforce, Stripe, and Uber. It also includes employees from the philanthropic organizations of three tech moguls: the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg), the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (former Microsoft CEO Bill Gates), and Schmidt Ventures (former Google CEO Eric Schmidt).

The list also includes one representative from a technology-focused non-profit group: Gene Kimmelman of Public Knowledge will be part of the transition team for the Department of Justice.

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England faces a proper “argy-bargy” in Pennyworth S2 trailer

S1 now available for streaming on Amazon Prime, so it’s the perfect time to catch up.

Jack Bannon reprises his role as former British SAS soldier Alfred Pennyworth for the second season of Pennyworth on Epix.

An alternate London is once again threatened by a sinister society aiming to take over the British government in the trailer for the second season of Pennyworth, a crime drama/prequel series based on the character of Alfred Pennyworth, aka Bruce Wayne/Batman's loyal butler. Like Doom Patrol and the cancelled Swamp Thing series, which languished in the hinterlands of the DC Universe streaming service—Doom Patrol has since moved to HBO Max—Pennyworth being aired on Epix limited S1's audience reach. And that's a shame because it's a solid series, even if it only has a passing connection with the DC Comics characters who inspired it.

(Spoilers for S1 below.)

The series is set in an alternate London circa the 1960s. Jack Bannon stars as the titular Alfred Pennyworth, aka "Alfie," a former working-class British SAS soldier who has found work as a bouncer at an exclusive club and hopes to start up his own security firm.  Among his potential clients: an American businessman named Thomas Wayne (Ben Aldridge), who is secretly a CIA agent working undercover with a group called the No Name League. Among the league's other American agents: Martha Kane (Emma Paetz), Batman's future mother.

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