RapidShare Ordered To Proactively Filter Book Titles

Six book publishers have gained an injunction against file-hosting company, RapidShare. The Swiss-based 'cyberlocker' service must monitor user uploads to ensure that around 148 titles, many of them textbooks, are never made available to its users. Failure to do so could result in $339,000 fines, or even jail time for…

New Zealand Introduces File-Sharing Amendment Bill

Following widespread objections, New Zealand’s Section92A ‘guilty upon accusation’ anti-piracy law was scrapped last year. Today, The Copyright (Infringing File Sharing) Amendment Bill will be introduced, which repeals Section 92A and replaces it with a "three-notice" regime, backed up by $15,000 fines and 6 month Internet suspensions.

isoHunt to Appeal in MPAA Lawsuit, Sees The Lite

Last year the BitTorrent search engine isoHunt lost in court against the MPAA. A Californian court ruled that isoHunt was guilty of inducing copyright infringement and granted summary judgment. IsoHunt, however, does not intend to crack so easily as it sets course towards an appeal and launches a 'Lite' version…

UK Says ‘No’ To Disconnecting File-Sharers, Sort Of

One of the key clauses in the UK's Digital Economy Bill is the suggestion that alleged persistent copyright infringers could be disconnected from the Internet. In a response to an online petition opposing the measure, the UK government has stated it will not terminate the accounts of infringers. But it…

Piracy Isn’t Killing The Movie Industry, Greed Is

At the box-office the major movie studios are raking in record profits, but their continuing refusal to widely adopt online business opportunities are hindering progress. According to the head of the Blockbuster video chain, the movie industry's greed is to blame for holding back innovation.

Anti-Piracy Group Loses In Court, Doesn’t Want To Pay Costs

At the beginning of February, AFACT, representing several Hollywood movie studios, lost its case against iiNet after the court decided that the ISP was not responsible for the infringements of its subscribers. Despite being ordered to pay all costs, AFACT says it will now go back to court in an…

Web-Sheriff Mistakenly Targets Legal Torrent Site

The Web-Sheriff has made quite a name for himself, targeting dozens of torrent sites in recent years for clients such as Prince, Michael Jackson and The Village People. This week, however, a painful mistake was made when the anti-pirate tried to take down a torrent from Legit Torrents.