IFPI Pressure Forces ISPs to Block Another File-Sharing Site
Written by enigmax on March 06, 2008Following pressure from the IFPI, a court has ruled that ISPs should be forced to block access to a file-sharing link site. The Haifa District Court in Israel has ordered that the country’s three largest ISPs should block access to HttpShare.com, a BitTorrent and http hyperlink-only website.
It hasn’t been so long ago that in order to shut down or block access to a file-sharing site, it would be necessary for the site to be breaking the law. BitTorrent sites located in countries where there is no such offense as ‘facilitation’ of copyright infringement operate legally, and this is why sites such as The Pirate Bay continue to thrive.
However, the lack of a legal basis to try to stop people from using such sites doesn’t hold back the likes of the IFPI. In February we reported how the IFPI successfully managed to convince a Danish court to block its users from accessing The Pirate Bay, despite the likelihood that this action breaches EU law. In the past, Turkey has blocked access to The Pirate Bay and Kuwait has recently blocked access to quite a few torrent sites in what appears to be a rising trend.
As attempts to actually close sites seems to be faltering, the IFPI is putting more effort into forcing ISPs to block access to them instead. The latest addition to this tactic comes from Israel, as the Haifa District Court - under pressure from twelve IFPI affiliated recording labels - has ordered the three biggest ISPs in Israel to block access to BitTorrent and http link site, HttpShare.com.
HttpShare does not carry any copyright material itself. Instead - and typically for this type of site - its users provide links to material stored elsewhere on popular file-hosting sites such as Rapidshare and MegaUpload, along with regular BitTorrent links.
According to a report, users trying to access the site recently from inside Israel have received a 404 error.
Haifa District Court Judge, Gideo Ginat said: “I order the respondents, that is Israeli internet service providers, to systematically block access to the illicit site, HttpShare, so that surfers cannot enter this site and utilize it in in order to impede upon the claimants’ copy rights,” while failing to mention a timescale for implementation, or duration of the block.
Of course, as is customary in these file-sharing cases, the site owners aren’t sitting back and simply taking it. In an effort to avoid the block they have apparently made some modifications to the way the site operates but they report that the ISPs are still managing to block them. A message on the site reads:
“The file sharing battle has begun. We’ll be left with a world wide web that contains only news.”
The site’s operators are insisting that the site “is perfectly legal”. Indeed, the site - like so many other similar ones - is thought to be operating legally, according to the laws of the country where it is hosted.
The site owners state: “According to legal codes in the Netherlands, sites providing external links allowing surfers to download movie, music, games and program are perfectly legal. Sites cannot store these illicit files on their internet servers, and that is precisely what we do not do. The site merely provides links to file sharing sites such as http and BitTorrent.”
It is thought that not only is the site operated outside Israel, but the owners aren’t living in Israel either, which adds further weight to the argument that the site operates legally. “The website operates from the Netherlands,” say the owners, “and the fact that is in Hebrew does not make it automatically subject to Israeli law! Israeli law applies only to Israeli residents and to websites operating from Israel itself.”
TorrentFreak contacted Tel Aviv lawyer, Jonathan Klinger, who feels the decision of the court is problematic, he writes: “First of all, it has no legal grounds (the decision itself was given like in the Wikileaks case, with the Defendant’s consent). Not the Israeli Copyright Order nor the civil torts act or the Copyright Act acknowledge an Injunction blocking Users from accessing a website in this level, as the users are not a party to the process nor is the ISP a hosting provider. The ISP is simply granting access to a website which only provides links for users to use in file sharing programs. The Users themselves chose to infringe copyright. (and until today no court decision was given claiming links to files stored elsewhere deem as liability for copyright infringement).”
But of course, the IFPI (like the MPAA) doesn’t really care for such detail, with their ‘Director of the Enforcement Unit’, Moti Amitai simply stating: “The IFPI has taken action against sites which operate from Israel and whose proprietors are Israeli.”
Perhaps signaling a widening of this blocking strategy Amitai said: “We want to utilize this verdict as a precedent and go after international sites as well. We are now looking into the logistics and the legal issues involved.”
In the meantime, HttpShare is operating perfectly well (worldwide) for everyone not using the three main Israeli ISPs, either using its domain name or its IP-address.
Previously: Study: Piracy is Caused by Poor Choice
Next: Dutch University Uses BitTorrent to Update Workstations


57 Responses (Add yours or TrackBack)
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zat iz nonsense.
Pfft.
IFPI sucks.
Pfft.
Bullshizt.
/spits
i never even heard of that httpshare site
oh my bad I just now went to it, and realized why I haven’t
you can access it from new domain
http://www.httpshare.net
That ok, in Israel we can enter it with http://www.httpshare.com.nyud.net/
and
http://anonymouse.org/cgi-bin/anon-www.cgi/http://httpshare.com
but they made a mistake no one heared about this one small website before they did censorship it.
fucking ifpi. hope someone fixes this….
am i supposed to read this while waving my fists in the air angrily as if i’m reading a fucking red-top tabloid or what?
I don’t care, hah.
http://85.17.228.113
Wow, the IFPI remind me of chickens:
“The hen–when it lays an egg–carries on as if it just laid an asteroid.”
Frickin’ Isreal, I tell ya… Now they won’t be able to download Jenin, Jenin.
Do they _REALLY_ think they can shut down filesharing? Sh!t, when I visit a website, I’m downloading a fucking HTML file.
Over 4 million IP addresses, multiplied by 65,535 ports per IP, they gotta be fucking kidding if they think anyone can control all of it.
[quote comment="305117"]Over 4 million IP addresses, multiplied by 65,535 ports per IP[/quote]
4 *billion* IPs in the IP4 address space.
4 million wouldn’t even cover UK usage :-P
proxy anyone?
Bring on ipv6
I suggest, never going to a site called Codex-Creations. The staff are rude a*sholes, without half a brain between them. The owner is a nazi boy, who thinks he’s the embodiment of the l33t haXor. lol Slow speeds and a racist site against asians. A disgrace to any community.
who gives a fu.ck about some big-nose file share site?
fu.cking jews !
hidemyass.com or opendns.com for those who have problems accessing it.
They prefer BitTorah.
lol they are so pathetic, reminds me of a ant trying to stop a tidal wave.
The more you tighten your grip, the more file-sharers will slip through your fingers.
They’ve just gone and started a war they can’t possibly hope to win.
Lawls and their failures. They’re dooming themselves.
Arrr raise the sails full ramming speed….Fight for yer lute..
Dude… Im just gonna roll another joint and munch on my fritos watching all this action. Its as if they don’t expect the people that were block to use a proxy.
ehh..
The real problem is that these all knowing judges haven’t a flying fucking clue about file sharing.
There is an outdated understanding.
[quote comment="305213"]The more you tighten your grip, the more file-sharers will slip through your fingers.
They’ve just gone and started a war they can’t possibly hope to win.
Lawls and their failures. They’re dooming themselves.[/quote]
They havn’t doomed themselves, its over, people think they have hope or some way to turn this around.
It was over long ago when they started this, they are on a 1 way ticket now and thats why they still fight like they do, they know there sinking and theres nothing they can do about it so why not make it last as long as they can? Wouldnt you if you were making that much money?
Sit back, relax, watch them crumble before us.. oh I must go my download is done.
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