Major Manga Publishers Try to Identify Operators of Massive Pirate Sites

Manga publishing giants Shogakukan, Shueisha, Kadokawa and Kodansha have a new batch of pirate sites in their collective crosshairs. In one action they have asked a US court to help them obtain the identities of several ‘pirate’ operators pulling in a few million visits per month. In another, just two domains are pulling in a staggering 290 million visits per month.

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

mystery manAs we have reported on many occasions in recent years, the lowly DMCA subpoena can be a powerful tool to discover the identities of those running pirate sites.

Cheap to file in court and rarely given much scrutiny, DMCA subpoenas are regularly served on third-party service providers such as Cloudflare and domain registries, requiring them to hand over customer data.

Perhaps the most intriguing aspect, however, is how these pieces of paper often act as an early warning signal of much bigger things down the line.

A prime example can be found in a DMCA subpoena application that targeted the now-shuttered pirate manga site Mangabank. It provided an early heads-up on a later proceeding used to support a criminal investigation in Japan.

It now appears that manga publishers have yet more pirate sites in their crosshairs, some of which are huge and could face a similar fate.

Manga1000 and Manga1001

The first DMCA subpoena application was filed by Shogakukan, Shueisha, Kadokawa and Kodansha in a California district court last month. It noted that under the DMCA it is seeking information sufficient to identify people infringing its copyright works.

In support of their application, the companies supplied DMCA takedown notices previously filed with Cloudflare requesting the takedown of URLs linking to pirated copies of works including One Piece, Kujo No Taizai, and Attack on Titan.

All of the URLs were present on the domains manga1000.com and manga1001.com. At the time of writing the sites appear to be up but show Cloudflare “Access Denied” errors in some regions. Nevertheless, the significance of these domains cannot be understated.

According to SimilarWeb stats, manga1000.com pulls in around 110 million visits per month, making it the 160th most popular domain in the world. In Japan, from where the site attracts 94% of its visitors, it is the 17th most popular site, period. But even this giant is dwarfed by manga1001.com which attracts 180 million visits per month, 92% from Japan.

Whether this new request will yield any useful information on the operators of the domains is unknown but it appears to represent a second bite at the cherry. Last year Shogakukan obtained a similar DMCA subpoena targeting both domains, again against Cloudflare. Perhaps they will get lucky this time around.

DMCA subpoena documents here (1,2, pdf)

Shueisha Targets Eight More ‘Pirate’ Domains

In a DMCA subpoena application filed this week, Shueisha is again trying to obtain the assistance of Cloudflare to identify the operators of several piracy-linked domains.

The first to catch the eye is manga1002.com, which follows on in sequence from the domains listed in the earlier application. Whether it is connected to them is unclear but traffic is currently more modest at around 600K visits per month, with just over half coming from Japan.

With 2.9m visitors per month, the domain i9i9.to is the most popular in the batch but again, Cloudflare “Access Denied” messages stopped us from accessing the site at the time of writing. In any case, 94% of its visitors hail from Japan, making it very significant locally.

Cc-comic.com is another domain in the subpoena application that does well in Japan, pulling in 92% of its 1.4 million visits per month from the country. A similar situation can be found in hakaraw.com with 1 million visits, 89% from Japan. Four other domains – upanh.org, rawbis.com, uk.leoi.info, freemangaraw.com – complete the list.

In all cases the publisher wants Cloudflare to hand over pretty much everything it holds on the sites’ operators including names, addresses, telephone numbers, billing information, payment methods (including card numbers and bank account details), plus all logged IP addresses.

Where the investigations will go from here is unclear but criminal and civil prosecutions are certainly possible, particularly against the larger operators.

The DMCA subpoena documents can be found here (1,2,3 pdf)

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

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Mary, Queen of Scots, sealed her final missive with an intricate spiral letterlock

Catherine de’ Medici and Elizabeth I also secured some letters with spiral locks.

Four vector drawings show the five-slit spiral lock mechanism used by Mary, Queen of Scots; the front and back of a locked letter packet using this method; and an unfolded lock. Sections are numbered 1-20 to show the different areas created by folding.

Enlarge / Four vector drawings show the five-slit spiral lock mechanism used by Mary, Queen of Scots; the front and back of a locked letter packet using this method; and an unfolded lock. Sections are numbered 1-20 to show the different areas created by folding. (credit: Unlocking History Research Group)

On the eve of her execution for treason in February 1587, Mary, Queen of Scots, penned a letter to King Henri III of France and secured it with a paper lock that featured an intricate spiral mechanism. So-called "letterlocking" was a common practice to protect private letters from prying eyes, but this spiral lock is particularly ingenious and delicate, according to a new paper published in the Electronic British Library Journal.

The authors are an interdisciplinary team of researchers working under the umbrella of the Unlocking History Research Group. In this paper, they describe a dozen examples of a spiral lock in letters dated between 1568 and 1638, including one from Mary's former mother-in-law, Catherine de Medici, as well as her arch-rival, Elizabeth I, who signed Mary's death warrant.

As we reported previously, co-author Jana Dambrogio, a conservator at MIT Libraries, coined the term "letterlocking" after discovering such letters while a fellow at the Vatican Secret Archives in 2000. The Vatican letters dated back to the 15th and 16th centuries, and they featured strange slits and corners that had been sliced off. Dambrogio realized that the letters had originally been folded in an ingenious manner, essentially "locked" by inserting a slice of the paper into a slit, then sealing it with wax. It would not have been possible to open the letter without ripping that slice of paper—evidence that the letter had been tampered with.

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The update also enables Firefox 94’s Site Isolation by default.

A minimalist view of the Firefox web browser.

Enlarge / A minimalist view of the Firefox web browser. (credit: Firefox)

Mozilla has released the latest version of Firefox, Firefox 95, for Windows and macOS. It's available now for all users on both platforms.

The Firefox team says the new macOS version reduces CPU usage during event processing and that power usage is reduced while streaming video from sites like Netflix, "especially in fullscreen." macOS users will also get a faster content process startup and will enjoy memory allocator improvements for better overall performance.

On both macOS and Windows, Mozilla has "improved page load performance by speculatively compiling JavaScript ahead of time." There's also a way to move the picture-in-picture toggle button to the opposite side of the video on both platforms, plus a handful of fixes.

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Intensive Care Unit nurse monitors patients in the ICU ward at Roseland Community Hospital on December 14, 2020, in Chicago, Illinois.

Enlarge / Intensive Care Unit nurse monitors patients in the ICU ward at Roseland Community Hospital on December 14, 2020, in Chicago, Illinois. (credit: Getty | Scott Olson)

Illinois Representative Jonathan Carroll is scrapping his proposed legislation to make willfully unvaccinated people pay COVID-19 hospital bills out of pocket after he received violent threats that also targeted his family, staff and synagogue.

The Democrat from the Chicago suburb of Northbrook introduced legislation earlier this week that would have amended the state's codes for health and accident insurance. The proposed bill aimed to prevent insurance policies from covering COVID-19 hospital bills for people who choose to remain unvaccinated without a medical reason.

The bill was quickly politically divisive—and legally dubious. Federal law prevents health insurance providers from denying or reducing coverage based on a change in a person's health status, including a diagnosis of COVID-19.

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