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Piracy Software The Courts

MPA and Amazon Ask GitHub To Suspend Kodi Add-On Developer's Account (torrentfreak.com) 48

The MPA, MPA-Canada, and Amazon have filed a request with Github requesting that a Kodi add-on developer's account be deleted from the platform. Citing a copyright case and a permanent injunction handed down by Canada's Federal Court, the content companies claim that the account is still being used to infringe their rights. Github has left the account intact, however. TorrentFreak reports: In February 2018, a developer known online as 'Blamo' (aka 'Mr. Blamo') revealed that he, in common with several of his counterparts, had been threatened by content companies. From there the trail went cold but according to a complaint filed against Github this week, legal action in Canada followed. On September 7, 2018, a dozen companies including the studios of the MPA/MPA-Canada plus Amazon and Netflix launched a copyright infringement lawsuit at Canada's Federal Court against an individual "doing business" as Mr. Blamo.

"In the context of that action, our clients alleged that [Blamo] notably developed, hosted, promoted and distributed infringing add-ons for the Kodi media center, which provided unauthorized access to motion pictures and television content for which the copyright is owned by our clients," the MPA writes. According to Federal Court records, Blamo did not mount any kind of defense so as a result, the matter was decided in his absence. On January 15, 2019, the Federal Court handed down a final judgment, including a declaration of infringement and a permanent injunction. "The permanent injunction enjoins and restrains [Blamo] from, inter alia, hosting, distributing or promoting infringing Kodi add-ons and their repositories, including notably the 'Blamo' repository and the "Chocolate Salty Balls' infringing add-ons," the MPA adds.

The problem here is that, according to the MPA and associated companies, Blamo has a Github account where it is claimed he continues to "host and distribute infringing Kodi add-ons and their repository, including notably the Chocolate Salty Balls infringing add-on and the Blamo repository." This, the MPA says, amounts to contempt of court. What's particularly interesting here, however, is that the MPA isn't asking for the specified URLs to be deleted. Instead, it asks for Blamo's entire Github account to be deactivated instead.

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MPA and Amazon Ask GitHub To Suspend Kodi Add-On Developer's Account

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  • Re: (Score:1, Funny)

    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • WTF? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by UnknownSoldier ( 67820 ) on Thursday May 07, 2020 @05:15PM (#60033816)

    Why does Canada's Federal Court have ANY say over GitHub hosted in the US???

    • Re:WTF? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by SirAstral ( 1349985 ) on Thursday May 07, 2020 @05:28PM (#60033876)

      Because they are crying bitches... just like everyone everywhere else when it comes to "imaginary property" rights.

      The moment we decided it was okay for people to own ideas is the moment we started this long descent into hell.

      There are some merits to some "imaginary property" laws sure, but it has clearly gone too far!

    • by davecb ( 6526 )

      Because Canada enforces US court orders, and the US enforces Canadian ones. If something is a crime in multiple countries, they often agree to help one another.

      IMHO, Mr Blamo should have hired a lawyer, to see if Canadian law protected him from such (perhaps doubtful) suits.

      • by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Thursday May 07, 2020 @05:46PM (#60033934) Journal

        IMHO, Mr Blamo should have hired a lawyer, to see if Canadian law protected him from such (perhaps doubtful) suits.

        Maybe he did, and the lawyer advised him not to respond.

        I don't know how it works in Canada. But (I've heard that) in the US it's a good idea NOT to respond to court actions that don't have jurisdiction over you - because telling them that and/or asking for the suit to be quashed or you to be removed as a defendant because of that is construed by the courts as VOLUNTARILY GIVING them jurisdiction. You asked the court to rule, so if it rules against you, that, along with any other rulings it makes, sticks.

        But IANAL. Can an actual copyright lawyer please comment? Or maybe one each from the US and from Canada?

        • by davecb ( 6526 )

          It sounds like a follow-on to https://tech.slashdot.org/stor... [slashdot.org] and may have been a Canadian developer in question. Certainly it was brought in Canada....

          Citing the Bell Canada vs Lackman, https://www.canlii.org/en/ca/f... [canlii.org]
          "I am of the view that its true purpose was to destroy the livelihood of the defendant, deny him the financial resources to finance a defense to the claim made against him," the judge wrote. "The defendant has demonstrated that he has an arguable case that he is not violating the [Cop

        • I don't know how it works in Canada. But (I've heard that) in the US it's a good idea NOT to respond to court actions that don't have jurisdiction over you - because telling them that and/or asking for the suit to be quashed or you to be removed as a defendant because of that is construed by the courts as VOLUNTARILY GIVING them jurisdiction. You asked the court to rule, so if it rules against you, that, along with any other rulings it makes, sticks.

          Do you have a citation for that? I can't think of why a defendant wouldn't be able to respond with a motion to dismiss the case because of lack of jurisdiction.

        • by DRJlaw ( 946416 )

          But (I've heard that) in the US it's a good idea NOT to respond to court actions that don't have jurisdiction over you - because telling them that and/or asking for the suit to be quashed or you to be removed as a defendant because of that is construed by the courts as VOLUNTARILY GIVING them jurisdiction

          But IANAL. Can an actual copyright lawyer please comment? Or maybe one each from the US and from Canada?

          You don't need a copyright lawyer to tell you that that is wrong [americanbar.org]. The ABA will do it for you for free

          • You don't need a copyright lawyer to tell you that that is wrong. The ABA will do it for you for free.

            Thank you.

            But that is all explicitly international. Does a similar rule also apply to suits across state lines in the US?

            • by DRJlaw ( 946416 )

              But that is all explicitly international. Does a similar rule also apply to suits across state lines in the US?

              Which rule? The one that you can contest personal jurisdiction in a court without becoming subject to the personal jurisdiction of the court? Or the one that says that a State does not have personal jurisdiction over you simply because the plaintiff dealt with you and is a resident of the State? Or the topic of the article -- where plaintiffs in the Canadian suit are seeking deletion of a US ser

      • IMHO, Mr Blamo should have hired a lawyer, to see if Canadian law protected him from such (perhaps doubtful) suits.

        Bullshit, on two counts:

        1) Canadian law is irrelevant if it's a US company, and this wasn't a crime in multiple countries. He didn't represent himself and the case was automatically decided against him as a result, but in the US it's innocent until proven guilty, not the other way around.

        2) If he had hired a lawyer or even represented himself of acknowledged this in a manner which allowed them to get more than "mr blamo" as his name that would have opened him up to non-legal attacks such as the MPA is

        • by davecb ( 6526 )

          1) Canadian law is irrelevant if it's a US company, and this wasn't a crime in multiple countries. He didn't represent himself and the case was automatically decided against him as a result, but in the US it's innocent until proven guilty, not the other way around.

          There's about a 99% probability that he was in Canada, because he was sued in Canada and the courts accepted they had jurisdiction over him. It's Github who is in the 'States.

        • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

          IMHO, Mr Blamo should have hired a lawyer, to see if Canadian law protected him from such (perhaps doubtful) suits.

          Bullshit, on two counts:

          1) Canadian law is irrelevant if it's a US company, and this wasn't a crime in multiple countries. He didn't represent himself and the case was automatically decided against him as a result, but in the US it's innocent until proven guilty, not the other way around.

          That is only true for a criminal case. This is a civil case.

    • by Luthair ( 847766 )
      Github operates internationally thus is subject to the laws of the nations in which it operates.
    • Do they have a say? The article only says that the MPA et al "requested" that Github delete the account. Don't sound particularly legally binding to me. It's not a cease & desist or a court order. Then again IANAL.
    • Treaties, dude. I feel like no adult should need this explained.
    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      Because if the USA and Canada can't settle this, Disney is going to stop the car and come back there.

    • Re:WTF? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Thursday May 07, 2020 @07:34PM (#60034314)

      For the same reason the US gets to arrest, charge and imprison someone who creates a gambling site outside the US but allows US citizens to use it.

      Don't even try and suggest that extraterritorial jurisdictional reach isn't something the US doesn't throw around itself all the time, and don't act surprised when another country also does it.

    • Why does Canada's Federal Court have ANY say over GitHub hosted in the US???

      I would guess it's because the GitHub site is accessible in Canada.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Because the United States wants to enforce US copyright world wide, which means reciprocal deals to enforce other country's copyrights and legal rulings.

      Personally I'd be happy if we just ended those treaties, went to 15 year copyrights and just ignored the howls of anguish from Disney et al.

    • It does not. Canada's Federal Court is the LOWEST court in Canada and it can (and should) be totally ignored.

  • `git clone` the relevant repos and push to other/new github/bitbucket/gitlab repos
  • So funny. (Score:5, Funny)

    by rlwinm ( 6158720 ) on Thursday May 07, 2020 @06:07PM (#60034006)
    I'm enjoying a good belly laugh at the thought of some government court bureaucrat having to type out "Chocolate Salty Balls."
  • I mean, .ca, .cn, what's in a letter...

  • Github has left the account intact, however.

    But Github did in fact delete/hide the two repos in question, so the account is not "intact" is it?!

  • This article never says, is this the Amazon and Netflix addon which lets you watch these services with a paid account? or is this an addon that lets you watch without paying? If it is the first, then fuck them. It's always been fucking ridiculous that companies get to use their DRM to determine the platform that you use. DRM is being used to enforce that you have to use a platform that spies on you. I'll always either use the platform and player of my choice that DOESN'T spy or I'll pirate.

  • Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday May 07, 2020 @06:33PM (#60034114)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by fred911 ( 83970 )

      " Linking to the content and not distributing it is an almost impossible case to win against"

      Because we all know how successful litigation was in shutting down ThePirateBay 12 years ago. Surely they are unable to index swarms any more, right?

      The same deal goes for authors of plugins for Kodi. Basically they scrape hosters of the unauthorized content, and rob them of their ad supported websites. Fuck a pirate robbing a pirate, how cool is that?

      You can kill the bearer of the news, but it's useless when the ne

    • by Rockoon ( 1252108 ) on Thursday May 07, 2020 @07:20PM (#60034264)

      the plugin, as far as i can gather, aggregated links to the content as it existed online already from sites.

      Thats exactly what these kodi plugins do. The plugins scrape websites for the content, and it does so from the users machine.

      To be pedantic, there is a tower of inter-related plugins from far more than one author involved. Some plugins scrape IMDB for movie names, ratings, and actors. Some plugins scrape particular "illicit" websites for movies being available for download. Some plugins even scrape up fan-created artwork for the movies.

      The plugin being targeted merely coordinates these other plugins to provide a UI, a simplified user experience, and there are easily dozens of these plugins that coordinate it all, some have been "stopped" already, and some that have been "stopped" have even been reborn.

      These plugins are written in python, and there is a constant stream of updates to them because the websites being scraped dont like it either and attempt to foil the scrapers. Therefore the users of these plugins are all too familiar with (re)locating and downloading them.

      The person in question, code named Blamo, operates one of many repositories of these plugins. His service to the community is maintaining compatible versions of all these various plugins together in one place.

  • In the end, the only thing that matters is that newspapers and website reported on "chocolate salty balls"

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