Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Slashdot Log In

Log In

Create Account  |  Retrieve Password

Japanese ISPs To Cut Net Access For File Sharers

Posted by Zonk on Sun Mar 16, 2008 04:28 AM
from the would-be-nice-to-surf-the-net dept.
modemac writes "Four major Japanese telecom organizations, which represent 'about 1,000 major and smaller' domestic ISPs, have agreed to forcibly cut the Internet connection of filesharers. They're specifically targeting users of the 'Winny' program, trading copied gaming software and music. The article states that a new set of ISP guidelines will be drawn up on how to cut off users who 'leak illegally copied material onto the Net.'"
+ -
story

Related Stories

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
 Full
 Abbreviated
 Hidden
More
Loading... please wait.
  • Filesharers (Score:3, Insightful)

    by TFer_Atvar (857303) on Sunday March 16 2008, @04:43AM (#22764226) Homepage
    You're reading this HTML file right now. Guess they'd better cut me off for sharing it with you.
      • Re:Filesharers (Score:5, Insightful)

        by eiapoce (1049910) on Sunday March 16 2008, @05:32AM (#22764360)
        "under my umbrella" - Now you are guilty of downloading lyrics. Your connection will be terminated soon. (This is the world we are gonna live if we don't educate the masses on the risks of corporations messing with laws)
  • by SmallFurryCreature (593017) on Sunday March 16 2008, @04:45AM (#22764238) Journal

    Lets hope this really happens, let hope that ISP's in Japan really are this stupid and the Japanese citizens do the only thing that is logical. Cancel their service since it is no longer of any use to them so that ISP after ISP goes tits up.

    At least in holland a lot of ISP's are happy to advertise with 'download music fast' without having any music service whatsoever. Copyright infringement is one major reason to get one of the more expensive subscriptions, if everyone just went with the cheapest most minimal subscription, you know the one that is plenty for email, the web, gaming etc etc, then ISP's will really feel it in their revenue.

    On the longer term, lets hope the japanese ISP's learn very quickly that they opened the flood gates. If they can monitor this, expect everyone to come out. Just block winny? Don't count on it, every P2P program will be on it, and why just P2P, why not home run MMORPG servers, why not material that the goverment doesn't want you to host. Why not check every email for illegal material? Congrats, the ISP's in japan just become the enforcer for everyone with a gripe about the internet. There is reason the old telecoms never ever wished to do that with telephone services and they claim they have to keep a line open unless they get an outside complaint even if it is bloody obvious a phone line is only used for criminal activity. You do NOT want to become the police of your customers.

    Lets hope that this turns sour for the Japanese ISP's very quickly, because if this doesn't go totally wrong for the ISP's in question, we will get it elsewhere.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      The problem is winny users are totally unable to setup their ssoftware properly resulting in huge publication of sensitive datas. Quite often by police officer on their "home" computers.

      So cutting winny will do more good than harm... And maybe they will try to understand that software used by dirty foreigners called bittorrent...
      • Putting BitTorrent on a pillar of anonymity isn't a great idea - I can grab IPs and hostnames of peers and seeds in a couple clicks. Compared to Winny, BT seems rather transparent.
        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          The point I think he was making is that BT is perceived in Japan as P2P for foreigners - mainly because 99%+ of the stuff that Japanese people want is on Winny, whereas trying to find Japanese torrents is a bit hit and miss (since the major BT sites generally don't carry much Japanese material).
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            That's entirely untrue.. It's just that most of the Japanese material is animated and has English subtitles.. ;)
      • by macslas'hole (1173441) on Sunday March 16 2008, @05:19AM (#22764334)

        The problem is winny users
        But is that any business of the ISPs'?
        • When will they start cutting off users spewing spam everywhere because their computer is infected with a bunch of Microsoft viruses? That might actually be something useful.
          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            They actually do cut off users, sort of. Comcast, if you connect on port 25 somewhere more than some threshhold like 2-3 times a minute, they shut down your outgoing SMTP on port 25. And will never, ever turn it back on, so you have to start using alternate ports.

            This is kind of annoying, since a lot of BitTorrent folks put their torrent clients to use ports 25 or 80, and Comcast's net-traffic tools cannot tell the difference between connecting to a remote BitTorrent client, or sending spam. And of cours
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        datas
        Data is the plural of datum..
    • ...if there's a viable alternative. If changing ISP isn't possible or practical, it will modify behaviours of neither users nor the ISPs. It'll simply result in unstable service and unstable customer bases, helping no-one but (because it's distributed across all ISPs) hurting no-one who can make any difference.
      • by rucs_hack (784150) on Sunday March 16 2008, @05:12AM (#22764314)
        I personally think that 99.99999% of the reason ISP's are coming round to the idea of punishing file sharers is that doing so will cut their costs, thus extending the profitable lifetime of their current levels of infrastructure. After all, they need to make room for this new media on demand thing.

        I don't for a second think it's because they are concerned about copyrights. I doubt they'd admit this though.
        • I personally think that 99.99999% of the reason ISP's are coming round to the idea of punishing file sharers is that doing so will cut their costs

          Some ISPs in Eastern Europe solve this problem by setting up a DC++ server for their subscribers. When subscribers can share music and films with people from their own city, there's less burden on the connection to the wider Internet.

          • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

            Actually, even companies like Verizon are looking into this [newteevee.com]. I think it's an exciting time.
            • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

              As already discussed in the Slashdot story about this, the speed-up is only for authorized media, i.e. stuff from big companies that you have to pay for. You won't be able to get whatever obscure music or films you want for free at high speeds.
            • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

              THe MPAA and RIAA would be drooling if Verizon would be dumb enough to do this. Billions in capital just sitting in the bank and knowingly violate copyright laws.

              This idea wont work in the west with modern IP laws protecting copyright. The companies will be held liable. Its the same reason alot of universities ban file sharing here in the US. The legal bills are not worth it not to mention they can save with infrastructure.
          • How long until they reinvent usenet? It used to be that every ISP had a usenet server, and via that you could download or upload _anything_.

            It mostly died out because binaries on usenet are a pain in the arse, and he storage needed for a full usenet server (including the binaries groups) nowadays is phenomenal.
        • I personally think that 99.99999% of the reason ISP's are coming round to the idea of punishing file sharers is that doing so will cut their costs, thus extending the profitable lifetime of their current levels of infrastructure. After all, they need to make room for this new media on demand thing.

          I don't for a second think it's because they are concerned about copyrights. I doubt they'd admit this though.

          Of course they aren't going to admit to their fraudulent business.

          ~Dan

        • The reason is that telecoms are quickly buying up ISPs, the telecoms have already stated that they hate the current internet infra.

          They just want to scare everybody off this infra and onto their centrally coordinated GSM/GPRS network.
    • What's a matter, doesn't anyone in Japan know enough to use their neighbors' WiFi connection when filesharing?
    • by kklein (900361) on Sunday March 16 2008, @06:31AM (#22764500)

      Um, yeah. You haven't lived here in Japan have you? People don't push back. They let companies plow them over and say nothing. There are no consumer rights in Japan. If they really do this and I lose my net access, that's it. I just lost my net access.

      I'm already really throttled. I DL US TV slower now that I have FTTH than I did on ADSL. I have 83Mbit, but it only seems to work when I downloading something from a website or something.

      This is going to do nothing to subscription rates. People get the fast service because it isn't much more expensive than the slow, and because the guys from SMAP are in the commercials. It has nothing to do with the speed, because, honestly, most Japanese people can barely even type.

      This is not a good development for me...

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        There are no consumer rights in Japan.
        Actually, there may be even more than in the US. In the US, in exchange for customer service and consumer rights, people line up in court.

        In Japan, change often happens in response to customer complaints, which is extremely rare, if not nonexistent in the US.

        because, honestly, most Japanese people can barely even type.
        I regret I took you seriously.
    • ``At least in holland a lot of ISP's are happy to advertise with 'download music fast' without having any music service whatsoever. Copyright infringement is one major reason to get one of the more expensive subscriptions, if everyone just went with the cheapest most minimal subscription, you know the one that is plenty for email, the web, gaming etc etc, then ISP's will really feel it in their revenue.''

      Also, downloading music and movies (but not software, unless otherwise specified, e.g. in the case of op
      • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 16 2008, @06:15AM (#22764470)

        As a content creator, yes I hope it DOES happen. Because I'm sick of self righteous pricks helping themselves to the fruits of my hard work and paying fuck all in return. Especially the pompous ones that come onto slashdot and try and define stealing hollywood movies as some kind of fucking civil rights issue.
        grow up.
        As someone who believes in copyright, you sir are a disgrace to it, need to grow up, and get a real job.
        You want money? Sell your art. Want more? Make more art and sell it too.
        Not enough money? Get a better job. You don't hear anyone crying over the walmart worker for not making millions due to their career choice.

        Copyright specifically says your work of art belongs to the public to further the arts and sciences.
        Those works of art belong to us, after a short time. Until that short time is up, we will keep hold of what is owed to us, since we clearly can not trust you to hold up your end of the deal anymore.
        DRM, trying to claim and define 'limited' as 70 years after you die, are all proof positive you have no intention of keeping your end of the copyright deal in good faith. Don't bitch when we don't either.

        Deal with it
          • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 16 2008, @09:08AM (#22765054)
            Unfortunately that is par for the course here. That's why people making commercial software, games, media, movies, don't aim them at the slashdot / digg generation any more. Who wants to entertain people who are whining, thieving pains in the ass?
            I work in the media. We long since gave up giving a shit what teenagers want from TV. The marketplace is the 30+ viewer who isn't scared of buying the DVD.
            It's not that the media doesn't understand the youth. its that the youth get what they pay for, ie: fuck all.
          • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 16 2008, @09:40AM (#22765174)

            What a fucking shock. The person who actually creates something is modded as a troll, and the person who's whining about how it's his god-given right to copy anything he possibly can gets called insightful.

            I didn't say it was my god given right. I said it was my legal right, and it is.

            Personally I question how someone can be an artist, and yet know so little correct information about the laws that protect your trade.

            Either way however, yes, your post is a troll. You were being spiteful, mean, insulting, and injecting no useful information into the conversation, and your statements are factually incorrect (possibly lies, depending)

            Where as MY info however is reflected in US law, and also quite insightful as some of these 'artists' clearly are trying to 'steal' from me (DRM serves no other purpose.)
            [* Steal used in the same sense you were using the word, not in the legal, moral, or dictionary sense of the word.]

            I admit, my 'get a job' comment, while true, was a tad of a flame. But that was about it.

            Finally, it is Quite hard to form a perfectly insightful non-flame non-troll reply to someone who is being irrational in their posts. I seriously would love to debate the issue, but I want my words to not fall on deaf ears, and by the tone of your post I don't believe you even care to discuss this rationally, only to push your agenda. If I come off as a troll at all, it is out of my frustration at that fact.

            But I will try anyway. Please read this before blowing it off as BS, or hitting reply.
            If you still after reading it through disagree with me, then I will leave you to it...

            The only reason you or any artist is granted copyright, is NOT just for profit. Profit is a side benefit.
            Copyright in its first forms was 100% a control method used by kings and rulers to silence those that would say bad things against them. I'm not claiming you are, but if you were to try to argue for that style of copyright again, you will have no friends here, or in any first world nation for that matter.
            Afterwards, copyright became a tool to better man kind with science and art. This was the last version of it before now.
            That is to say, if your work of art could not benefit man kind at all, there is no point in offering you a copyright at all. I also highly doubt you are arguing for that, as then you would have no recourse what so ever, nor anything to complain about anyway.

            So, clearly, the only reason you get a copyright on your work at all is to benefit man kind. This used to be a deal struck between the people and the artists. The people give up some rights so the artist can gain, and at the same time, the artist loses some rights so the people can gain. This deal was, the people lose for a few years the right to copy that work, so the artist gains a monopoly on distribution to recoup their costs. In exchange, the artist loses the right to 'own' that work for ever, and the people gain the right to do with that work as they please.
            Yes, that second part comes after the first, thus the 'limited time' part of copyright.

            The problem here is, artists are not paying their end of the deal. They are NOT giving up the full rights to their work to better man kind. When I say 'they' I don't mean ALL of them of course. But they tend to use things like DRM which is effectively (assuming it would work at all) a lock that keeps it from the public once you stop caring about it. It's a little like writing a bad check, post-dated, but knowing it won't be good at that time.

            So the reaction happens. Similarly, once you write a person bad checks enough, they will simply stop accepting them. If you try to pay with credit that never gets repaid, they start demanding their stuff back (repo.)
            What we are doing now is not accepting your bad check type payments any longer, thus not honoring your copyright.

            Granted, there are artists that have NOT screwed the public at all, and yes they are being harmed by the actions of

              • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

                When I pay you $15 or $20 for your CD, why should I have to pay you again just to get that CD onto my computer or iPod?

                You only made that music once. I paid you once.

                What did you personally do that makes you deserve being paid a second time just so I can play my music on another device?

                But thanks, glad to know the artists care :{
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward
        I create plenty of content as well. I do it for the love of putting it out there in the hope that others will get some joy out of it or that it will create more time for some. Apparently, if it is really worthwhile content, society will reward me and I will live forever.

        Shut up you greedy fuck and start smelling the shit your clearly shoveling.
            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              Copyright exists for one reason and one reason only. That reason isn't to guarantee you and your relatives an income for all eternity. Copyright has been so distorted that the original goal of releasing into the public domain is unheard of these days.

              Personally, I feel that if you value it so much, you can keep your precious crap. I want to see a bullet proof method of copyright enforcement implemented so that free sources can finally flourish. Do you honestly think the likes of Microsoft or Adobe would hav
      • I've been telling all you whiners to do exactly that, and yet here we are on slashdot with our internet bravado and our childish threats. "Waaa! I'm going to take my bandwith hogging ass back to my basement unless I get what I paid for!"
        I fixed the sentence for you.

        ~Dan

  • I was worried that we might face more competition from Japan that we have. But now it's clear that they are taking steps to ensure that the vast majority of their citizens will never have net access. This is a great relief.

  • Nothing new (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Carbon016 (1129067) on Sunday March 16 2008, @05:01AM (#22764288)

    According to the new agreement, copyright organizations would notify providers of Internet protocol addresses used by those who repeatedly make copies illegally, using special detection software. The providers would then send warning e-mails to the users based on the IP addresses of the computers used to connect to the Internet. If contacted users did not then stop their illegal copying, the providers would temporarily disconnect them from the Internet for a specified period of time or cancel their service-provision contracts.


    This is pretty much what companies in the U.S. do too. People that seed a bunch of copyrighted files often get cease and desists from their ISPs and if it keeps happening the ISP will sometimes (not always, as it's beneficial for the ISP to keep them around) cut their service off. TFA seems to claim that the majority of this is going to focus on "leakers" of copyrighted material: this means mass-seeders and probably scene groups. It's doubtful that the ISPs are going to end up cutting off many _downloaders_ of the material, but mostly focus on the _distributors_: which is pretty much precedent for ISPs at least in the U.S. and I would assume globally.

    Now according to Wiki, Winny is intrinsically anonymous [wikipedia.org], and the only way the police were able to track those sharing the files was by them boasting on the Winny forums of their upload. So we probably would have heard about this earlier had Winny not been built to be as anonymous as it is now - it seems that the issue has been prompting arrests and controversy for five years or more.

    Also, expect 2ch to go bananas over this in the next couple of weeks.
  • I am not using (Score:3, Interesting)

    by mapkinase (958129) on Sunday March 16 2008, @05:55AM (#22764420) Homepage Journal
    I am not using filesharing copyright infringing material at all, so my major concern is how it would affect me as a user of a legal filesharing? How do they detect if a customer is using winny or bittorrents?

    In US there were reports that customers are cut off just because of the sheer volume of the data they are uploading or downloading. At least Japan is not doing that...
  • the more files will slip through your obstructions
  • by icyisamu (941436) on Sunday March 16 2008, @06:32AM (#22764504)

    The main target for this act is to stop a file sharing program / network called Winny. Winny [wikipedia.org] is one of the top File sharing program / network in Japan.

    Many Japanese anime fansub groups get their original copy of the show via this network. I am sure there are tons of other stuff being shared on Winny, judging from the fact that they have a Software Download board where copyrighted materials are shared.

    The creator is facing similar claims to that of the Bittorrent creator, where he has created a tool that can be used to share files with the advantage of being anonymous.

  • Simple enough, if 99.9999% of the traffic is for "illegal" sharing, then make it legal and collect a tax. Pay off the media producers and problem solved. Everyone wins.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      That's a very BAD idea. It should be so fucking obvious what would happen next! First, the "media producer" would raise their rates pulled from their ass. Second, the government would tax more accordingly.

      Im sure you would also advocate the government regulate the "media producer" as a response? Seriously, this is how government grows and becomes MORE corrupt. Nice eh?
  • For those of you who don't RTFA (yeah, that's you!), here are some interesting points:

    The Internet provider organizations have, however, judged it possible to disconnect specific users [...] if they are identified as particularly flagrant transgressors in cooperation with copyright-related organizations.
    We all know how inexact the RIAA and MPAA members are in determining infringers. Why should we expect the Japanese to be different?

    the measure would become the first countermeasure against Winny-using rights-violators
    Notice the slant? They label Winny users as rights-violators. "Those people are rights-violators. They are bad people. If someone violated your rights, you would want something done about it, right?"

    most of the files exchanged using the software [are] believed to be illegal copies.
    Notice the word most. Not all. The ISPs will have to distinguish between legal and illegal to make a correct decision. Whether they'll do that or not, time will tell. Perhaps we can use history as a guess?

    Also, aside question: how can a copy be illegal? I get that it can be illegal to create and to posses, but how can the copy itself be illegal? If it's made on a USB stick and then thrown out (ownership of the copy has ceased), the copy by virtue of not having changed is still illegal. Who do you sue, the USB stick?

    (I figure they mean illegally possessed copies, but imprecise language like this bugs me a bit.)

    Two years ago, a major Internet provider tried to introduce a measure to disconnect users from the Internet whenever the company detected the use of Winny or other file-sharing software.

    However, the provider abandoned the idea after receiving a warning from the Internal Affairs and Communications Ministry that such an approach was regarded as Internet snooping and might violate the right to privacy in communications.

    According to the new agreement, copyright organizations would notify providers of Internet protocol addresses used by those who repeatedly make copies illegally, using special detection software.
    I can't imagine how "special detection software" might reliable determine whether copyright infringement is going on without looking at the transmitted data. Isn't it then obvious that the copyright organizations are doing "Internet snooping and might violate the right to privacy in communications"?
    • Notice the slant? They label Winny users as rights-violators. "Those people are rights-violators. They are bad people. If someone violated your rights, you would want something done about it, right?"
      Well, perhaps you would want something done, had it been your rights being violated, and not the rights of some faceless corporation (or artist).
  • North side, east side
    Little Winny, Winny wears the crown,
    P2Ps the king around town
    Downloads, uploads
    Winny drives them silly with its
    file sharing shimmy shuffle down
    Way past one, and feeling allright
    'Cos with little Winny round
    they can last all night
    Hey down, stay down, stay down down

    'Cos little Winny, Winny won't go
    But you can't push Winny round, Winny won't go,
    try tellin' everybody but, oh no
    Little Winny, Winny won't go ... ;~)
  • It doesn't help that Winny was created for anonymous file sharing I suppose. But it's rather strange, I thought most people migrated to Share [wikipedia.org] when the creator of Winny was arrested, and are now starting to move on to Perfect Dark [wikipedia.org] now that anonymous file sharing isn't possible in Share. I'd think the latter two users would be targeted as well.
  • So they are going to determine what files you are sharing first, or are they just cutting off anyone that uses the client, regardless of what they are doing?

    All debates aside about IP, there millions of files shared like this with ZERO question of the legitimacy of doing so.
  • by Simonetta (207550) on Sunday March 16 2008, @12:15PM (#22766062)
    The decision of the Japanese authorities to cut off Japanese people from file sharing may be more of aspect of Japanese culture than a legal decision. File sharing is the fastest growing way of distributing cultural works (yes, even Brittany Spears pop tunes are cultural works) from outside Japan to Japan. This may be a sign that the Japanese authorities have come to believe that non-Japanese culture has become too prevalent in Japanese society.

        Japan has never been a democracy. It has always been a rigid authoritarian culture. When the authorities decide to act, they simply announce their decision and everyone obeys. Japan did close themselves off from the west before for centuries between the late 1600s until the 1850s. This happened after the authorities decided that Western ways were becoming too powerful and were beginning to threaten their power. It may be happening again.

        And, of course, it may be a total clusterfuck by a group of totally clueless bullies who have no idea of what they are fooling with. But then again, for young Japanese, what's the difference?
  • *shrug* (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Duncan Blackthorne (1095849) on Sunday March 16 2008, @03:32PM (#22767434)
    You can't stop the signal, Mal.

    Human civilization can and will devour itself trying to bring this sort of thing to a halt. Why? Because it's always gone on, on some level or another, and always will go on, on some level or another.

    Prostitution is more illegal than file-sharing is. There are always efforts in most places in the world to stop it, but the best those efforts are ever able to do is slow it down a little. We're talking tens of thousands of YEARS here, people, and it hasn't been stamped out -- and never will be either.

    Want to really stop it, and everything else society at large deems "unacceptable"? Then you need the ability to mass-erase an idea from people's minds all at once, along with every material reference to said idea, because you can't kill an idea: You can't stop the signal, Mal. Ah, but there's a problem there, too, isn't there? If any government or individual had that sort of power over people, then we're living in a world that makes 1984 [wikipedia.org] look like amateur night -- and from there the human race would likely last about another two generations, tops, before completely dying out.

    Want another example of what I'm talking about? Drugs. The world, for all of recorded human history and beyond, I'm sure, has had a problem with intoxicants of all kinds. Every culture does or has, at one time or another, tried to stamp them out. They all failed, didn't they, and for the most part our own efforts here in the U.S. are largely a waste of time, money, and resources; none of those efforts have or can really do much of anything to affect the idea of intoxicants. Remember Prohibition [wikipedia.org]? Yeah, that worked real well, didn't it?

    As I see it we, as a race, have three directions we can go to address this class of issue:
    1) We can stop fighting it, accept it, and try to develop ways to work with it so that it doesn't necessarily have to be a zero-sum game all the time.
    2) We can fight it tooth and nail to the last, hoping that it's actually possible to erase an idea from human consciousness.
    3) We can continue the cat-and-mouse games that this class of things has always been surrounded by and interwoven with, and the people who get caught at them pay the penalty for being careless.

    Where we are now is #3. What I WANT to see is #1 -- but I don't think we're evolved enough to get there yet. Where some authorities and most corporations want to go is #2 -- and they're ice-skating uphill if they try.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      I don't know what your comment is referring to exactly, but I might as well raise the question of how people in Japan use the Internet anyway. On the Soulseek network with the Nicotine client and geolocation based on IP, I don't think I've ever come across a file-sharer from Japan. Perhaps Japanese share files in their own isolated Internet communities? Since they appear to provide very little to the international community, news of restrictions on file-sharing in Japanese shouldn't trouble us as much as si
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        Actually, the Japanese tend to use a P2P called "Winny", which is loosely based off of the now defunct WinMX program. I haven't seen many of them on any of the other P2P programs much.
      • plenty of japanese porn is done via bittorrent. not that I watch that filth, some guy told me about it. yeah, what a pervert.
    • The Share (P2P) wiki page notes "It's possible to crawl about 100000 nodes within a few hours."
      All your ip's are belong to .jp.
      Perfect Dark (P2P) does sound better, but with all products the real fun is an insider.
      Someone gets in the application, to the forum or irc sites thats one degree separated from the use of application.
      All the encryption and "mixnet" will not save you then.
      You still need to find the community of people with the same interests - thats where the feds will be waiting.
      Chatting with