UK Court Orders Block of Three Torrent Sites 99
angry tapir writes "A court in the U.K. has ordered key Internet service providers in the country to block three torrent sites on a complaint from music labels including EMI Records and Sony Music. The High Court of Justice, Chancery Division, ordered six ISPs including Virgin Media, British Telecommunications and British Sky Broadcasting to block H33t, Kickass Torrents and Fenopy."
My first response is "Must check out those sites" (Score:5, Insightful)
My first response is "Must check out those sites".
Re:My first response is "Must check out those site (Score:5, Interesting)
My first response is "Must check out those sites".
If you're in the UK, you may wish to use a VPN or suchlike. Until they're made illegal outside "reputable corporations".
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My first response is "Must check out those sites".
If you're in the UK, you may wish to use a VPN or suchlike. Until they're made illegal outside "reputable corporations".
There's no need to use a VPN. The sites will simply pop up under various URL/domains. Some of them already have.
Re:My first response is "Must check out those site (Score:5, Insightful)
There's no need to use a VPN. The sites will simply pop up under various URL/domains. Some of them already have.
Indeed, the first thing I thought when this came up was: Here we go, the greatest whack-a-mole game in history is about to begin...
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If you're in the UK, you may wish to use a VPN or suchlike.
Or any ISP other than those listed in the order. We have lots of ISPs.
These orders only apply to the retail arms of big ISPs and not the wholesale services they resell to smaller ISPs.
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Fortunately, all you actually need to do is not use a big-name ISP. The ISP I use has not yet been ordered to block anything, including TPB (which the ISPs named above have been blocking for months now, AIUI).
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Exactly, this will make absolutely no difference to the vast majority of people using TPB etc.
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My first response is "Certainly that will work."
Ok, so who wants to print the "This is a bit, this is a byte" slides, and send them to the judge, so he can find the error of his ways?
Re:My first response is "Must check out those site (Score:4, Funny)
Ok, so who wants to print the "This is a bit, this is a byte" slides, and send them to the judge, so he can find the error of his ways?
Are you quoting this [ntk.net]?
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Paraphrasing, but yes, the BOFH's influence can be found, at times, in my writings.
Re:My first response is "Must check out those site (Score:5, Funny)
Only if you include some par2 files...
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This needs a higher score than it has. Alas, I have no mod points.
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There is a regularly published mirror of tpb you can grab.... its rather large though ;)
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My response is to add them to my foxy proxy list so i get to them via tor.
firefox+foxyproxy+tor > silly court order
Re:My first response is "Must check out those site (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:My first response is "Must check out those site (Score:5, Informative)
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Kickass is a horrible torrent site. There is so much garbage on their page, half the links lead to stuff you have to pay for (not in a legal way), most of the torrents I have seen don't have any seeders, its hard to find anything . Truthfully, if you can't find it on The Pirate Bay or on some private torrent site, your best bet is a Torrent Search Engine. KickAss is one of those sites that come up if you try to do a torrent search in Google.
Now I am not saying that the site is completely worthless, just say
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I don't know what you're searching for, but I've never had any results "you had to pay for". You do know the top ones are ads, right?
As for the seeders, that's common for all public torrent sites (I'm not a regular of private ones). It's usually not a problem anyway, since the DHT will get a few even if the site says otherwise.
So... (Score:2, Insightful)
What will that accomplish?
Invest in VPN service providers.
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Re:So... (Score:5, Insightful)
There are a million and one proxies for Pirate Bay that are accessible in the UK. As far as I know none of these have been shut down by authorities since TPB itself was banned in the country. So if we assume the same model here then chances are proxy sites will be left alone.
Nothing to say the BPI/government (more or less the same thing now) might not change tack of course.
Re:So... (Score:4, Insightful)
The Pirate Party UK proxy was shut down by legal threats.
To the BPI: stop breaking my fucking internet. You added a fiver a month to my bill for a VPN, which I am deducting from the money I would otherwise have spend on your products.
Re:So... (Score:5, Informative)
As far as I know none of these have been shut down by authorities since TPB itself was banned in the country.
TPB is not banned in the UK. A handful of ISPs are banned from letting their users access it directly (IIRC, the list is: BT, Virgin, O2, TalkTalk and Sky). Fortunately the UK has local loop unbundling and easy migration between service providers, so you can just move to one that isn't banned.
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So does that mean I can just view these sites using my mobile broadband connection from Three, and then after getting the torrent file or magnet link I can carry on downloading the torrent on my Virginmedia home broadband? Naturally, the torrents I download will be from copyright holders that have given permission to download their work through torrents, I would never download copyright infringing work, honest!
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So does that mean I can just view these sites using my mobile broadband connection from Three, and then after getting the torrent file or magnet link I can carry on downloading the torrent on my Virginmedia home broadband?
Yes, since the block only applies to the Pirate Bay site itself (as far as I know).
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As far as I know none of these have been shut down by authorities since TPB itself was banned in the country.
I know of only one - the UK Pirate Party hosted one which they were requested to take down and threatened with legal action if they did not comply. I believe some other proxies hosted in the UK may also have been shutdown by similar legal action against them.
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"What if they want to pass a draconian law they believe will hinder piracy a bit?"
What do you mean "What if"??? Have you been asleep for a couple of decades?
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They are making it as difficult and possible to get at the content legally.
Indeed. So the less sociopathic and self-entitled among us take the option of 'not getting at it' rather than 'getting it illegally'.
...ng of the South (Score:2)
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And you've accomplished exactly nothing. Talk about a pointless sense of self-righteousness.
Re:So... (Score:5, Insightful)
They don't sell the product the torrent sites provide.
I.e. DRM free video downloadable (not streamed) and released nearly at the same time world wide (some of us aren't in the US)
The day they sell the product then let me know.
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Um I'm in US and it seems many Blurays are released in other parts of the world before us, I'm assuming because of the Pay Per View streaming licenses. All I know is 90% of movies are up on usenet/torrents a full month before actual release. And 1 time I checked, france shopping sites did have the Bluray 3 weeks before us.
Now I get you're other part. DRM free video downloadable not streamed. I'm all for this. And AFAIK no one sells this.
Re: So... (Score:1)
I distribute my own side project work freely across torrent sites, as do a large number of other musicians, devs etc. So should my reach be penalised too?
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TPB *is* a legal torrent site. (Score:1)
Just like fast cars are LEGAL cars. That people break the speed limit doesn't make that change.
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Technically you should then store your material in some kind of legal torrents site.
1. Torrent sites don't store material, only links.
2. Kat and other sites are not "illegal". (The previous version of TPB was, but its now hosted somewhere else, so it isn't now).
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Torrent sites don't store material, only links.
Those links make the pirating possible in the first place. Someone has to index the magnet links for people to find the actual files. So while the material itself is not on the torrent sites, they are heavily "partners in crime". Like a drug dealer, but not drug maker.
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Those links make the pirating possible in the first place.
So do browsers, web servers, the Internet, computers, etc.
Someone has to index the magnet links for people to find the actual files.
Yeah, like Slashdot: magnet:xturnbtihbe7968dc49ebc2994ec4129a7d42350831c95bb5 [magnet]
Damn piracy enablers!
So while the material itself is not on the torrent sites, they are heavily "partners in crime". Like a drug dealer, but not drug maker.
I'd like to see a drug dealer which doesn't handle drugs.
The problem with the analogies people make up, is that they're simply wrong.
Not only a torrent site doesn't see the contents of the files, as - unlike drugs - files are not illegal (otherwise the MPAA and c couldn't sell them either). Copyright infringement occurs when a person X transfers a
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How about investing in buying the real products instead of pirating them.
Hope you like a challenge - find all 78 episodes of Sonic X on region 2 DVD.
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The judge probably runs a proxy and wants to drum up some customers. There is nothing that will be achieved by this. kat.ph used to be a good site but now the advertising is getting to be a pain so I had stopped using it anyway and gone back to thepiratebay.se which they banned earlier and is still going strong.
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BPI (British Pornographic Industry)
Oho. Your joke would be so funny... if that's what TFA actually said.
luckily (Score:1)
australian courts aren't retarded
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*aren't THAT retarded.
Unfortunately our politicians can be. *cough* Nicola Roxon
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yeah good point, but at least we have the iinet case as a precedent for the type of garbage in TFA
Discovered two new sites today (Score:1)
What's next? (Score:5, Interesting)
What is more concerning here is that none of the sites blocked hosted the copyrighted works. This is something that only few really consider as a serious shift in the court system. None of the sites blocked for copyright infringement host copyrighted works! What will be the next step? Someone will create a site that will list all the blocked sites along with the new mirrored sites that can be accessed within the UK. Should this new site be blocked? Based on what? It doesn’t host any copyrighted works, nor provides an index to the copyrighted works. Let’s say that the UK block-thirsty judges will issue a new verdict to block the sites that list mirrors. What next? Someone will write a browser plugin that will automatically redirect to the current working mirror of the blocked sites and users will continue to use the sites without even noticing any blocking and without using any VPN. Should browser plugins be blocked or any sites that host browser plugins? Someone will say that it will be good enough if less people are aware of the options. But how did we get to the point that more users are aware of thepiratebay than about the legal ways of obtaining the same material? The reason is that thepiratebay does better consolidating all the media (even that that cannot be purchased anywhere) in one spot at an attractive price point. Offer something better and people will pick the alternative. Otherwise, blocking will not solve any problem that BPI thinks exists.
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"even that that cannot be purchased anywhere"
Like movies that'll play on anything.
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This game of blocking the sites cannot be won.
(I think) everyone is well aware of this. If not, they bloody well should be in 2013 :)
So hardcore pirates will always find a way. It's the casual pirates that they're targeting, the people who would normally buy a CD/DVD/game/app if no other source is readily available, and it's this middle group that is a significant source of "lost sales".
Peace,
Andy.
Why can't I get a lawfully made copy (Score:2)
It's the casual pirates that they're targeting, the people who would normally buy a CD/DVD/game/app if no other source is readily available
Publishers can't sincerely target this group of infringers without actually releasing the CD/DVD/game/app. So why can't I get a lawfully made copy of the film Song of the South, the TV series Spartakus and the Sun Beneath the Sea, and the video game Mother 3?
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``no other source [being] readily available [...] is a significant source of "lost sales"''
The businesses are still failing to respond to an economic want. They have no right to survive, they've been terminally stupid for so long.
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Another repeat story (Score:3, Informative)
We already did this one four days ago:
High Court Orders UK ISPs To Block More Torrent Sites [slashdot.org].
The best part about this (Score:1)
Ass also means donkey (Score:2)
Translator (Score:2)
Should be a fairly simple thing to develop.
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Me neither. That's why I only buy single tunes for 99 cents each, on iTunes.
What are they going to do about postman's I2P site (Score:2)
Hmm?
Is this even legal? (Score:2)
I mean, this is only a court order, against sites that have _not yet_ been persecuted for copyright infringement. So how can the court order this without at least opening a case against them? This sounds wholly illegal to me.