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Luca Bonissi wollte 42 Euro für das vorinstallierte Windows 10 auf einem Lenovo-Gerät zurückhaben. Er sollte etwa 20.000 Euro mehr bekommen. (FSF, Lenovo)
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A federal court in Texas has granted a default judgment against a local resident who sold pirate streaming boxes through Facebook. The man, who was identified following an undercover operation, has to pay $1.6 million in damages claim to the Philippine media giant ABS-CBN.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
ABS-CBN is the largest media and entertainment company in the Philippines but it also has a strong presence in the US.
This reach isn’t just limited to its online news and media outlets, the company is active in the courts as well.
In recent years the company has singled out dozens of streaming sites and services that offer access to ‘Pinoy’ content without permission, demanding substantial damages.
The defendants are often ‘John Doe’ site operators but in December 2018 ABS-CBN identified a very specific target; a Texas man named Anthony Brown. According to a complaint filed at a US federal court, Brown sold pirate streaming boxes through Facebook.
Some pirate box sellers take extreme measures to conceal their identities. In this case, however, the defendant was easily identified through an undercover operation on Facebook.
The complaint alleged that Brown didn’t just sell pirate boxes to the ABS-CBN representative. On Facebook Messenger, chatting as “Ann Ong,” he also shared the name and address of his company, which matched the information tied to his PayPal account.
At some point, the man even offered the undercover investigator a piece of the action for referring new clients.
Despite the damning accusations, Brown didn’t put up a defense in court. This prompted ABS-CBN to request and obtain a default judgment, granted by Texas District Court Judge Jeffrey Brown last week.
The court agreed that the man sold at least ten pirate TV boxes via Facebook, which he didn’t hide from the public at large.
“Screenshots of the defendant’s Facebook profiles for his business show that he has boasted about selling the TV boxes to eight different customers, and ABS’s investigator ordered and received the TV boxes from the defendant twice,” Judge Brown writes.
These devices allowed buyers to stream copyrighted content without permission. However, ABS-CBN didn’t ask for piracy-related damages. Instead, it asked for damages under the Communications Act and Lanham Act.
The Communications Act prohibits “the unauthorized decryption of satellite cable programming,” with a maximum of $100,000 per offense.
The court agreed that Brown’s conduct was willful and likely damaged the reputation and revenue of ABS. However, it found the minimum damages of $10,000 per sold pirate box sufficient.
“The minimum penalty of $10,000 for each of the defendant’s ten violations—for a total of $100,000—is just and reasonable to achieve the statutory goals of compensating ABS, punishing the defendant, and deterring others from engaging in such misconduct in the future.”
The largest damages amount comes from the trademark infringements, which violate the Lanham Act. ABS-CBN requested a total of $1,500,000 in statutory damages, which the court deemed reasonable as well.
This brings the total damages amount to $1.6 million, which is non-dischargeable, meaning that it can’t be eliminated through a bankruptcy proceeding.
“In sum, ABS shall recover from the defendant $1,600,000 in statutory damages, consisting of $100,000 in damages under the Communications Act and $1,500,000 in damages under the Lanham Act,” Judge Jeffrey Brown concluded.
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A copy of the default judgment signed by US District Court Judge Jeffrey Brown is available here (pdf)
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Everyone seems to be having a blast in Joe Carnahan’s over-the-top sci-fi thriller.
Frank Grillo is stuck in a time loop in which he is being hunted by dozens of assassins in Boss Level.
A man is stuck in a time loop and doomed to repeat the same day over and over again, all while being hunted by a group of deadly assassins, in Boss Level. We've been deluged with time loop-centric fare the last few years, with Happy Death Day (2017), Happy Death Day 2U (2019), Russian Doll (2019), and Palm Springs (2020) representing the best of the recent offerings. Add Boss Level to that list, not because it's particularly deep or because it boasts an innovative new twist but because everyone on-screen is clearly having a blast, and their enthusiasm is contagious, making this film just plain fun to watch—and ultimately that's what entertainment is all about.
(Some spoilers below, but no major reveals.)
Director Joe Carnahan (The Blacklist, The Grey) started working on a script for a film with the working title Continue back in 2012. He envisioned making "Groundhog Day as an action movie," but the project apparently foundered at 20th Century Fox. Later that year, he posted footage from screen tests with eventual star Frank Grillo—who had worked with Carnahan on 2011's The Grey—"to show you how cool this movie could have been." (Carnahan deleted his Twitter account in 2019 after attacking multiple critics who gave his film, El Chicano, mixed reviews and receiving considerable blowback for doing so. His account is currently listed as "suspended.") Fortunately, the project was revived in 2017, and Hulu snatched up the distribution rights last year.
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