pwshub.com

Movie industry touts takedown of “world’s largest” pirate streaming ring

"We took down the mothership" —

Fmovies takedown "is a stunning victory," MPA CEO Charles Rivkin said.

Motion Picture Association CEO Charles Rivkin gives a speech at a podium during a conference.

Enlarge / Motion Picture Association CEO Charles Rivkin speaks onstage during CinemaCon, a convention of the National Association of Theatre Owners, at Caesars Palace on April 9, 2024, in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Getty Images | Jerod Harris

A group representing major film studios said it collaborated with Vietnamese authorities to take down what it called "the largest pirate streaming operation in the world."

Fmovies, which the film industry group also called the "world's largest piracy ring," is said to have drawn more than 6.7 billion visits between January 2023 and June 2024. Launched in 2016, the Hanoi-based outfit included pirate sites bflixz, flixtorz, movies7, myflixer, and aniwave.

"The takedown of Fmovies is a stunning victory for casts, crews, writers, directors, studios, and the creative community across the globe," Motion Picture Association (MPA) CEO Charles Rivkin said today.

The industry announcement was made by the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment (ACE), an enforcement group that was created by the MPA and has members including Amazon, Apple, Comcast, Disney, Fox, HBO, Hulu, MGM, NBCUniversal, Netflix, Paramount, Sony, and Warner Bros. In addition to leading the MPA, Rivkin is the chairman of ACE.

"With the leadership of ACE and the partnership of the Ministry of Public Security and the Hanoi Municipal Police, we are countering criminal activity, defending the safety of audiences, reducing risks posed to tens of millions of consumers, and protecting the rights and livelihoods of creators," Rivkin said.

ACE said that Vidsrc.to, "a notorious video hosting provider operated by the same suspects," was also taken down in an operation that affected "hundreds of additional dedicated piracy sites."

“We took down the mothership”

Rivkin claimed that the industry action will have a major effect on availability of pirated content. "We took down the mothership here," he told Variety. "There was a time when piracy was Whac-a-Mole… Today, we go after piracy at its root."

Another MPA official, Chief Content Protection Officer Larissa Knapp, said the group anticipates "ongoing joint efforts with Vietnamese authorities, US Homeland Security Investigations, and the US Department of Justice International Computer Hacking and Intellectual Property (ICHIP) program to bring the criminal operators to justice."

ACE also recently announced settlements with three US-based operators requiring them to shut down IPTV services accused of "mass copyright infringement." ACE bills itself as the "world's leading coalition dedicated to protecting the legal creative market and reducing digital piracy." It works closely with the US government: The National Intellectual Property Rights Coordination Center, a US government office overseen by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, announced in 2022 that it was "embedding MPA and ACE personnel" with its team in Washington, DC.

In an April 2024 speech, Rivkin complained that American users were able to access Fmovies because of the lack of a site-blocking law. "One of the largest illegal streaming sites in the world, FMovies, sees over 160 million visits per month—and because other nations already passed site-blocking legislation, a third of that traffic still comes from the United States," Rivkin said. In the speech, Rivkin said the MPA planned to lobby members of Congress for a law requiring Internet service providers to block piracy websites.

Film studios have also tried to force ISPs to disconnect Internet users accused of piracy. Cable firm Cox Communications recently asked the Supreme Court to overturn an appeals court ruling in a case brought by Sony, saying the ruling "would force ISPs to terminate Internet service to households or businesses based on unproven allegations of infringing activity."

Source: arstechnica.com

Related stories
3 days ago - Although its speeds don't quite match the top offerings of Starlink and Viasat, Hughesnet is still the most affordable satellite internet provider.
3 days ago - For some, choosing between Hughesnet and Viasat might feel like picking the lesser of two evils, but for many rural internet users, they can be godsends.
1 month ago - PrivadoVPN has one of the best free plans available and delivers great streaming unblocking, but its unreliable internet speeds and privacy pitfalls hold it back for all but casual VPN users.
1 month ago - Get up to speed on the rapidly evolving world of AI with our roundup of the week's developments.
1 month ago - Take an inside look at our expansive mattress facility and learn all about how CNET’s sleep experts test, rate and review mattresses.
Other stories
22 minutes ago - Here's today's Connections answer and hints for groups. These clues will help you solve New York Times' popular puzzle game, Connections, every day!
22 minutes ago - Here's today's Wordle answer, plus a look at spoiler-free hints and past solutions. These clues will help you solve New York Times' popular puzzle game, Wordle, every day!
22 minutes ago - Here's today's Strands answers and hints. These clues will help you solve The New York Times' popular puzzle game, Strands, every day.
1 hour ago - Also reveals boosted utilization rates, upgraded IaaS and more – all in the name of AI apps Alibaba Cloud has revealed a modular datacenter architecture it claims will help it to satisfy demand for AI infrastructure by improving...
1 hour ago - Horrific games and an enticing prize are back in a new teaser trailer for Squid Game season 2. Netflix unveiled the 45-second preview during its...