iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Movie Piracy Websites Seized In Widespread Raid By Feds

RYAN NAKASHIMA   06/30/10 07:16 PM ET   AP

Computer

BURBANK, Calif. — U.S. officials on Wednesday announced a major crackdown on movie piracy that involved disabling nine websites that were offering downloads of pirated movies in some cases hours after they appeared in theaters.

Officials also seized assets from 15 bank, investment and advertising accounts, and executed residential search warrants in North Carolina, New Jersey, New York and Washington.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials worked with the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York and other government agencies. The investigation involved about 100 agents in 11 states and the Netherlands.

Officials wouldn't say how many people were suspected of intellectual property theft, but said the penalties could include prison time.

The raids were the first actions in a new "Operation In Our Sites" initiative to combat Internet counterfeiting and piracy.

The government only seized domain names for the sites in question, however, meaning the computers that run the sites could still be used under a different name.

Acknowledging the slippery nature of online piracy, John Morton, the assistant secretary of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said government agents would have to be persistent in chasing site operators.

"If a site reappears, so will we. If the criminals move overseas, we will follow," he said at a press conference on the studio lot of The Walt Disney Co. "Take it from me, I don't think that we've stopped Internet piracy in a day, but this is going to be a sustained effort."

The domain names seized were: TVShack.net, PlanetMoviez.com, ThePirateCity.org, Movies-Links.TV, FilesPump.com, Now-Movies.com, ZML.com, NinjaVideo.net and NinjaThis.net. All the sites' domain names were registered in the U.S., although one was physically based in the Netherlands.

The sites had about 6.7 million visitors combined every month, and at least one had about a 10-fold increase in traffic from a year ago. They made money from advertising or donations.

Officials said the sites would be disabled. As of Wednesday afternoon, several of the sites checked by The Associated Press were still functioning. The ICE said it would take about a day before all the sites would show a banner saying the domain name had been seized.

Morton said there were hundreds of similar websites infringing on copyrights.

The conference was also attended by executives from Disney, Viacom Inc.'s Paramount Pictures, the Directors Guild of America, Motion Picture Association of America and the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, which covers behind-the-scenes workers in the movie industry.

U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said in a statement that money lost because of copyright infringement translates into lost jobs. The MPAA said film and television production supports 2.4 million American jobs and contributes $80 billion a year to the economy.

"That's why we took the actions that we did," Bharara said in a statement. "If your business model is movie piracy, your story will not have a happy ending."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST TECH

Filed by David Vines  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 52
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
05:40 PM on 08/08/2010
NinjaVideo Forum is still open and as amazing as ever! And now, our new store is open!! We have some amazing, fun, and straight up stylish designs in shop, so be sure to check it out! This is one way that you can contribute to the defense fund, and support Ninjavideo’s fight. So promote us in style and snatch up some primo threads.

To Visit the Store: http://www.cafepress.com/NinjaVideoStore
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
04:31 AM on 07/04/2010
There is so little worth the DL when the library has most the good flicks anyways.
02:48 PM on 07/03/2010
I wrote an article to educate people about the fact that they ARE downloading the copyrighted work, even if it plays right away, if they watch it they have copied it.
Millions of people search each month using the search term "watch movies online for free without downloading" They think that they are circumventing copyright laws by not actually seeing that the file IS being downloaded onto their computers. For those of you who already know what a "cache" is, this is not for you.

http://hubpages.com/hub/free-movies-online-without-downloading-

BTW my website is http://www.iamsandman.com
06:37 AM on 07/02/2010
It will be a never ending battle. For every 1 website they take down, 2 will pop in their place.
06:17 AM on 07/02/2010
If the Feds fight this like the war on drugs.....Free movies for everyone!!!
01:36 AM on 07/02/2010
And putting the government in chage of the internet is a good thing?
09:33 PM on 07/02/2010
all internet address resolve at the dns servers of the goverment. in simple terms, everytime you enter an address on the internet, before you reach that site, it is registered and checked at the goverment servers.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
10:35 PM on 07/02/2010
NO!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
10:36 PM on 07/02/2010
Unfortunately, it was the government that invented the internet - National Science Foundation.
photo
spytheweb
Black Democrat
11:36 PM on 07/01/2010
They want to make it so you can't copy any movie you paid for from net flix. TVs are being internet streaming enabled and in a few years will be bigger than P2P sites. ISPs better worry about handling all that traffic and speed up or they'll be going under and out of business.

Korea and Japan have 100mbps for what we pay for 10mbps. Korea has plans to have 1GBps in homes by 2013. Japan has a satellite internet service that delivers 155mbps for about $55.00 US a month.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
04:21 AM on 07/04/2010
sigh
08:53 PM on 07/04/2010
Hmmm...do you think Korea and Japan's much smaller populations and much larger population densities might have something to do with that?
photo
spytheweb
Black Democrat
05:32 AM on 07/18/2010
Japan has a satellite, Kizuna which will service much of Asia and itself at the speed of 155mbps for about $55.00 a month. The US has satellite internet HughesNet they have a super speed of 5.0mbps @ $329.99 a month.

Why isn't there service in the NY/NJ/CT area? 16 million people? If Japan can produce a fast satellite speed why can't the US? Because the US is charging top dollar for their crap service, what's in it for them?
10:50 PM on 07/01/2010
Movie Piracy Websites that are in it to make money are the target here. I don't have an informed opinion on if they are good or bad guys, but I do know that peer to peer piracy has benefited society.

There is a difference between these guys and those that would do it for no monetary gain, and they will not be out maneuvered. It would take something like net-neutrality to be abolished and that day will be a net-memorial.

I used to think we had a fighting chance and they would never mess with the internet, but the more I know the more control I realize we don't have.
photo
emmanuel goldstein
Have you had your two minutes today?
10:42 PM on 07/01/2010
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pntwjRBXDt4&feature=channel
"Viacom knows you watched this video"
02:22 PM on 07/01/2010
"The investigation involved about 100 agents."

Glad to see their busy keeping us safe.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
IfIonlyknew
Go ahead....Say something funny.
12:13 PM on 07/01/2010
The police are willing to spend Any amount of the taxpayers dollars to help save the movie industry.
01:13 PM on 07/01/2010
I think you might be missing the point, IfIonlyknew. The amount it would cost to raid a few offices around the world and shut down some of the worst sites might well be a drop in the bucket compared with all the VAT *not* being paid on legal book sales, all the city and state sales taxes, all the state taxes *not* being paid. Also, there's all the income taxes, all the social security, not being paid by actors, authors, agents, editors, artists, cover models, mainstreet bookstore workers etc who are all seeing less income because sales are dropping.

The economy runs on people buying and selling stuff.
01:48 PM on 07/01/2010
Does that not include buying and selling advertising on web sites?

Also, they've never been able to quantify exactly and authoritatively the number of people who are sharing movies (the actual copyright violation, not the act of downloading) that would otherwise have paid to see a movie. Most actual studies conclude that it isn't a very significant number.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
IfIonlyknew
Go ahead....Say something funny.
02:33 PM on 07/01/2010
No , I feel that all that money is being spent for nothing.We have plenty of tax cheaters her in
our country that they can chase.As long as there is the interweb things will be shared.It is not the majority,It is a small minority that are downloading for profit.
09:26 PM on 07/04/2010
We still have a "movie industry"?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
IfIonlyknew
Go ahead....Say something funny.
09:55 PM on 07/04/2010
did the watch industry die because of knock offs.
10:27 AM on 07/01/2010
somebody in law enforcement needed a pr media mention for their jobs,...but seriously why waste the time, bandwidth, risk of viruses, etc. so you can watch copy of movie made by someone in russia or china that is likely such poor quality you can't understand what is being said or barely make out the images? you get what you pay for, if it is free, well it isn't, there is a price to paid one way or the other. if nothing else wait until it comes out on b-ray or dvd, go over to a friends place with a six pack, sit down and enjoy the thing on a good set, with good sound and a nice cold one. you've saved a few bucks, had a good visit all sans viruses, trojans and braking of laws. besides if you have the funds to pay for high speed service which is a must to download files of that size compressed or not then you can afford to get or watch the real deal. imho but to each their own.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jack Davies
THEY OWN BOTH SIDES!
12:36 PM on 07/01/2010
You obviously haven't been keeping up with the speed, quality and safety of pirating these days, yargh!
08:39 AM on 07/01/2010
When I saw that the Feds had cracked down on the Netherlands, I wondered whether they'd finally done something about ASTATALK, but it looks like ASTATALK'S movie-sharing site is still going strong. http://astatalk.com/tag/3/Movies/
11:11 PM on 06/30/2010
Ninjavideo was a great site for those that wanted to watch TV shows. As for movies...well...I always stuck to uTorrent for that one. It's a real shame it had to get shut down, nonetheless.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SimonFromSydney
10:40 PM on 06/30/2010
never heard of those sites, isohunt and piratebay are all you need :)
they spent quite a bit of resources just for a PR OP for the RIAA/MPAA .. but i suppose they moved their strategy to make the gov pay for all of it, so they can then sue without opposition.
Piracy will always be around, spending millions on preventing something being distributed by suing/chargint he end user isnt going to stop anything, only way to nip the bud is to stop the source, the original pirater, once its online, its online forever.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
zxrod
Why don't you?
12:32 PM on 07/01/2010
I'd avoid piratebay, I know they got nailed a while back but the site always stayed up.. I think they're really keeping an eye on it.