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Indian ISPs Unblock BitTorrent Sites After Appeal

Millions of Indians can today breathe a sigh of relief. They are once again able to access their favorite file-sharing sites, including The Pirate Bay and Torrentz.eu, after a consortium of ISPs appealed a broad censorship order. The Madras High Court specified an earlier decision and ruled that Internet providers no longer have to block entire websites to prevent a single movie from being shared online.

Last month millions of Indians were shaken up by what appeared to be a mass anti-piracy action from the Government.

Many of the country’s leading Internet providers had blocked access to a wide range of file-sharing and streaming sites including Torrentz.eu, The Pirate Bay and Vimeo.

It turned out that the ISPs in question were responding to a so-called “John Doe” court order under which they had to prevent users from sharing the movie Dhammu. Responding to this request, many ISPs saw no other option than to block a wide range of sites in their entirety.

The court order wasn’t targeted at a specific site or ISP and gave the copyright holder carte blanche to demand broad blockades. The ISPs were seen as the bad guys by subscribers and “Anonymous” groups, but had no other option than to comply.

Behind the scenes, however, a consortium of Internet providers decided to appeal the broad court order. These ISPs felt they were being “wrongfully vilified on the Internet” and argued that the broad blockades also prevented the public from accessing many legitimate files.

The Madras High Court sided with the ISPs and ruled that the copyright holder can’t demand broad takedowns. The Indian news site Medianama has a copy of the order which specifically states that the copyright holder has to list the infringing URL, instead of demanding the shutoff of an entire website.

“The order of interim injunction dated 25/04/2012 is hereby clarified that the interim injunction is granted only in respect of a particular URL where the infringing movie is kept and not in respect of the entire website. Further, the applicant is directed to inform about the particulars of URL where the interim movie is kept within 48 hours.”

The order came in late last week, and in the days that followed millions of Indians regained access to their favorite file-sharing sites.

While the copyright holders are bound to be disappointed by the new restrictions, the new order prevents needless and broad censorship of legitimate files. To protect the rights of one movie, tens of thousands of independent artists saw their work being blocked, which can’t be good.

The first John Doe order targeted at file-sharing sites was issued last summer, followed by a handful of others. Whether the Madras High Court ruling is the end of the catch-all John Doe orders has yet to be seen, but it’s clear that ISPs are now prepared to put up a fight.

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  • john doe

    Common sense is coming back to indian courts… congratulations.

    • yello

      ladies and gentlemen. introducing a WIN. lets hope it spreads.

      • http://ufil.ms/bK6Pk Marion M. Sipos

        They don’t seem to understand that the blocks don’t work, anyway. http://DemoforFrank.blogspot.com

      • http://zapit.nu/2Am Ruby D. Parks

         the laws on the books are two or three time criminalization of the same thing. http://DemoforFrank.blogspot.com

        • Guest

          Nice link there Ruby. I love seeing it plastered over all my favortite sites.

        • XFyrios

          These links are spam, redirecting you to some ‘make cash fast’ website. Would someone please hit the spam button for me? Damn disus doesn’t provide one for mobile users :-/

    • http://lazycash1.com/ Anonymous

      my roomate‘s sister makes $82/hour on the laptop. She has been out of work for six months but last month her check was $19771 just working on the laptop for a few hours. Read more on this site

      ?????? (Click On My Name For Link)

    • Violated0

      I just find it ironic that the High Court in India (a country known for extreme censorship) has unblocked TPB due to the lawful content they provide in the same week that UK BT blocks the whole TPB site!

      It makes you wonder who exactly is running on censorship overkill these days.

      • Daniel

         India is known for extreme censorship? Are you just trying to sound stupid? Or are you actually stupid? lol. Medias in India are mostly private entities and are always in tangles with the government for hot news stories. You probably mistook India for some other country that has a state run media.

        • http://www.bhagwad.com/blog/ Bhagwad Jal Park

          No, he’s right. Look at Sibal’s move and the government’s cases against Google and Facebook in India. Utterly irresponsible censorship demands and a violation of free speech.

      • lutmn2

         India known for extreme censorship? hahaha, what a joke. :/

        Media in India is free. The government has NO power to control it.

        • Guest

          The media might be free but the political parties in India still do whatever it takes to eliminate whistle blowers and make the sure the whistle is never blown on the vast amounts of money laundering, scandals, scams, corruption and political murders.

      • UniversalSoldier

        India is a piracy heaven. Nobody cares about Hollywood, MPAA, RIAA and even court orders. My ISP, the well known Tata, never blocked a site. The funny thing is that most people even don’t know that they are using pirated software, they think they bought it with their computer. :-)

        • Guest

          I am from India. When I complained to my ISP regarding low download speed, the first thing he did was ask me to come on Team Viewer, then he logged into my PC and tried to test download speed by downloading a torrent of Windows 7. Now that’s how ISPs in India roll. 

        • Vikram

          Actually most people in India don’t think they bought the softwares with their computer. They know the softwares are pirated but they don’t care because we Indians don’t see piracy as wrong. Its so deep rooted and common at all levels of society that its the only natural thing to do. Exchanging CDs and pen drives starts right from school level and it carries on from there. 

          Even the police stations in every area are supplied with pirates movies by the local boys for free.My college has like 500 computers, they all have Windows 7 installed but I am pretty sure nobody paid for licensing those.

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  • Anonymous

     a little bit of sense here but nowhere near enough. until there is sensible and amicable agreement between entertainment industries, ISPs and customers on availability, download speed, format variety, drm free downloads and pricing, this cat and mouse game will continue. no one wins, which is the most ridiculous part and a few ordinary citizens get really hurt, even suffering total bankruptcy and loss of everything. the industries have never, nor will they ever suffer from such destruction but they dont give a toss. that in itself is, in my opinion, what makes file sharing continue unabated.

    • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

      Really, they need to STOP with the focus on ‘piracy’. Most things ‘pirated’ have already been paid for in some manner (cable/satellite TV for tv shows, movies and music) by the people who are ‘pirating’ them.

      • Decimus

        Unfortunately, they don’t see it that way.  They see numbers, probably nearly all which are made up, and illegal downloads.  If they’re on a torrent site with their movie that says it has 3,000 seeders, they see 3,000 people that would have purchased that film, but didn’t because the option to pirate it is there.  So, they lose out on 3,000 sales.  The reality is typically very far from this, but they refuse to accept any other explanation.

        It’s likely true, however, with tv shows and films that are made exclusive.  Game of Thrones only airs on HBO, they don’t want to let anyone on NetFlix watch it, and the show airs at different weeks around the world.  As long as examples like this exist, companies that “fight piracy” will use this reasoning, even if it doesn’t apply to them at all.

      • Guest

         Can you back up that claim with data please?

  • Andrew Lee

    Well at least they realized censorship will not fix anything. Any single law that is going to have such widespread effects should not be possible to pass without a vote by the whole public.

    They should also be forced to explain them in a way that everyone can understand and not 6000 pages of legal mumbo jumbo that is meaningless to most normal people.

    • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

      Agreed. No need for 90% of the laws on the books in all parts of the world. In fact, most of the laws on the books are two or three time criminalization of the same thing.

  • McCheezits

    Well that’s fantastic.

  • http://torrentfreak.com/ Rob8urcakes

    It never ceases to amaze me just how dumb our Courts are (whether they’re in India, USA, UK or wherever) when it comes to making Draconian, and even fascistic, decisions that shut-down whole chunks of our beloved internet simply for reason of a CopyWrong claim.

    We need a drastic Weltanschauung (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_view ) toward genuine openness, proper societal standards and outright fairness when Courts are asked to decide on ANY issue that’s internet-related.

    Perhaps it’s time the United Nations creates a new International Internet Court to resolve these disputes by using specialist Judges who have been specially trained to deal with these issues, because our domestic Courts are just a fucking mess and are screwing everything up to the detriment of everyone involved.

    • Decimus

      I don’t have any faith in the United Nations.  It seems to follow the agenda of the USA a lot and is represented by morons.  As nice as it would be to have such a treaty, the USA would still have its corrupt politician’s presence in the rulings and they, too, would be a mess.

      The only real way to settle this is to keep on listening to arguments and to rationalize which seems to be the most reasonable.  I think that this particular ruling may help a lot of cases where ISP’s are requested to block websites.  They don’t seem to understand that the blocks don’t work, anyway.

    • ScrewEwe2

      Weltanschauung makes my brain hurt. Make it go away please.

  • Guest

    Hopes this makes it difficult for the MPAA and RIAA difficult to swallow lol

    • MPAA

      It doesn’t.  We have too many judges and politicians in our pocket for this to ever happen.  By the way, it’s about time we sued you.  We’ll accept a settlement, just to make things easier for you.

      • Guest

        Keep working at it MPAA troll pmsl

      • Guest

        Good luck on suing someone that is bankrupt and has no money. It will hurt you more in the end than it will me. lol

  • Guest

    All we need now in the UK is for the ISP’s to notice of this and now band together but then it may all be to late if they have already blocked Thepiratebay.

    • Anon

       UK is ‘Hollywood’s’ bitch.

  • Lupo

    These ones works over here to:
    http://194.71.107.83/
    http://194.71.107.84/

    • Lupo

      oeps: the 84 doesnt work

  • Wantopang

    Oh wow, OK man that makes a lot of sesne man,. Wow.
    Anon-Surfer.tk

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  • thedude321

    The judges in America should be replaced by Indian Americans…lol! :P

    • OccamsKatana

       They are…….

    • ScrewEwe2

      How…
      Never mind, I thought you said American Indians, not Indian Americans. Big difference there.

  • Mark

    LOL..blocking all sharing sites to stop sharing of one shite film, that was mad. At least some common sense has come to light in this case

  • Anon

    “… which specifically states that the copyright holder has to list the
    infringing URL, instead of demanding the shutoff of an entire website.”

    Fucking hell a court that sees sense.

    Maybe all the people out of work in ‘Hollywood’ can now start searching for infringing URL’s instead of joining swarms and reporting the IP addresses. Perhaps that would be a better way for ‘Hollywood’ to fight piracy, oh wait, there won’t be any extortion demands if they do that.

  • Pingback: Indian BitTorrent Sites Unblocked By ISPs – Sigh Of Relief For Many | CrazyEngineers

  • Google

    Glad to see they unblocked !!! Proud to be Indian first time !!! Unlike U.S , Money solves the problem here ,Maybe for now .

  • Pingback: All websites UNblocked. High court comes to its senses! :D

  • http://twitter.com/Anime4PSP Anime 4 PSP

    This is win. Congratz

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  • Wantopang

    lol, those silly Indian ISPs crack me up sometimes lol.
    Anon-Surfer.tk

  • ken147

    Some faith in humanity has been restored.

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  • Loyal Reliance User

    ISP giving the 
     “wrongfully vilified on the Internet” argument. Reliance was both the producer of the film Singham and Don 2 and first to ban torrents sites. fuck Reliance.

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  • Oopsusername

    Still Blocked by MTNL !!

    • Jassi

       m using mtnl and its 100% unblocked! you may want to clean the cache or something!

    • http://www.born2model3d.com/ Aditya

       Still blocked for me too :(

      Using MTNL

  • Guess

    I been using mipnow.com to bypass blocks and access TPB!

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/Q3XLTAUAQ2ZSBVFS425HBH2HI4 Ronald

    as Rose said I am stunned that a mom able to profit $9831 in 1 month on the internet. have you seen this page (Click on menu Home more information)  http://goo.gl/dKqVy   

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  • Pingback: » Indian ISPs Unlock BitTorrent Websites After Appeal – Who Knew? Blocking Entire Websites to Stop Pirates Not Great Idea »

  • Maniacks

    I got a call from airtel escalation desk apologizing for the block :)… I had complained that the block was illegal.. the maneger called me and apologized and informed all sites are now unblocked :)

  • Guest

    Looks like the film industry didn’t bribe the right judges to protect their interests. 

  • http://twitter.com/EamcetAdvisor EamcetAdvisor

    Free speech is our right! 

  • dkbose

    deleted

  • http://twitter.com/99techtips Shekhar

    Well thats great for all the torrent lovers..for more tech tips on torrents visit http://99techtips.com

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  • Pingback: Last Week in Asia: Japan’s jail-for-download law, India ends torrent block, Android dominating in China | Bitmag

  • Anonymous

    A lot of the Educational Institutes use pirated Windows XP, 7 in their lab (example – Brainware, NIIT). Now this is the real situation where piracy led us. Most of Indian even from IT field don’t even see the worst part in this. From the childhood we are tought the piracy like copying mp3 to cds, dvds, usb. In governmental organization like High Court, PWDs they use unlicensed OS even Govt Instruction of paying and licensing, instead they (employees) take the license money and put pirated softwares.
    It is time when we understand the key of piracy. Softwares are too costly according to common Indian sense.

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  • Pingback: Indian ISPs unblock Bit Torrent Sites after appeal - Nine Tech Blog

  • Dave

    You can also use a VPN service like http://www.sunvpn.com to get on
    blocked sites.

  • Prashant

    I`m using this when I need to to access blocked sites: http://www.sunvpn.com/      It`s a VPN service, works similar with a proxy, only faster..

  • BTGuard - BitTorrent Anonymously

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