U.S. Pursuing a Middleman in Web Piracy

  • Throughout the month of April 2024, participate in the FileJoker Thread Contest OPEN TO EVERYONE!

    From 1st to 30th of April 2024, members can earn cash rewards by posting Filejoker-Exclusive threads in the Direct-Downloads subforums.

    There are $1000 in prizes, and the top prize is $450!

    For the full rules and how to enter, check out the thread
  • Akiba-Online is sponsored by FileJoker.

    FileJoker is a required filehost for all new posts and content replies in the Direct Downloads subforums.

    Failure to include FileJoker links for Direct Download posts will result in deletion of your posts or worse.

    For more information see
    this thread.

gyoza ramen & a beer

Active Member
Feb 20, 2009
548
32
U.S. Pursuing a Middleman in Web Piracy

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2012/07/13/business/Extradite/Extradite-articleLarge-v2.jpg
Carl Court/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Richard O’Dwyer at a courthouse in London. He started a Web site that prosecutors say helped people find pirated content.

By SOMINI SENGUPTA
Published: July 12, 2012

"Richard O’Dwyer, an enterprising 24-year-old college student from northern England, has found himself in the middle of a fierce battle between two of America’s great exports: Hollywood and the Internet.

At issue is a Web site he started that helped visitors find American movies and television shows online. Although the site did not serve up pirated content, American authorities say it provided links to sites that did. The Obama administration is seeking to extradite Mr. O’Dwyer from Britain on criminal charges of copyright infringement. The possible punishment: 10 years in a United States prison.

The case is the government’s most far-reaching effort so far to crack down on foreigners suspected of breaking American laws. It is unusual because it goes after a middleman, who the authorities say made a fair amount of money by pointing people to pirated content. Mr. O’Dwyer’s backers say the prosecution goes too far, squelching his free-speech right to publish links to other Web sites.

...In the last two years, the Obama administration has closed about 800 Web sites suspected of piracy, including those that stream new Hollywood films. In a widely publicized case, the Justice Department has sought to extradite the operators of Megaupload, a site that let users anonymously share movies and music, on criminal copyright infringement.

...Mr. O’Dwyer’s story began in 2008 when he set up his Web site, TVShack.net, which allowed users to search for and link to other sites, including ones that the authorities say showed pirated movies and shows. Because the domain name was registered in the United States, it fell under the ambit of American law. The government shut down TVShack.net in summer 2010.

Mr. O’Dwyer was unbowed. TVShack.net had been growing in popularity, and it made about $230,000 from advertising over the course of two years, federal prosecutors say.

full story here: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/13/t...odwyer-as-intermediary-in-online-piracy.html?
 

Rhinosaur

Outside Context Problem
Sep 23, 2007
2,008
614
Make a handful of $$$ creating a website and end up in federal prison. Steal billions from investors and taxpayers through fraudulent underwriting and predatory lending and get invited to the Whitehouse!
 

CFUD

Member
Jan 24, 2007
74
3
Federal agencies targeting people who can;t legally defend themselves is nothing new. It's a scare tactic to imply that anyone can get sued.
Japan sued a 41yo mother for uploading an episode of One Piece.
That's like pistol-whipping a blind kid