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Music Industry Threatens OpenBitTorrent’s New Hosting Provider

OpenBitTorrent is a non-commercial BitTorrent tracker that doesn’t host or link to torrent files. Despite this seemingly neutral setup, both Hollywood and the music industry have declared war against what they see as an illegal service. After Hollywood won its case against the former provider of OpenBitTorrent, IFPI is now going after its new host in Spain.

In the last year or two the entertainment industries have targeted many BitTorrent sites. The majority of the verdicts against these sites have thus far ruled in favor of the copyright holders. Only in Spain have BitTorrent sites been repeatedly found to operate within the boundaries of the law.

Under Spanish law torrent sites and BitTorrent trackers deemed legal even though some of its users may be using it to download copyright infringing content. This might be one of the reasons why the OpenBitTorrent tracker moved to a Spanish host after Hollywood managed to get a court decision in their favor against its Swedish hosting provider.

The OpenBitTorrent tracker, which doesn’t link to or host any torrent files and is not linked to any torrent search engine, merely serves as a facilitator of the communication between torrent users, much like BitTorrent clients do. This means that the site is not breaking any laws in Spain.

“According to all Spanish legal resolutions, a link does not communicate nor reproduces the work under intellectual property,” copyright expert and lawyer Javier de la Cueva told TorrentFreak. “So, linking is not a violation, hosting without the rights holders permission is.”

OpenBitTorrent

openbittorrent

Despite this seemingly safe legal environment, music industry lobby group IFPI decided to go after OpenBitTorrent’s new hosting company in Spain. A few days after OpenBitTorrent moved to SoloGigabit, its owners received a threatening letter stating that the hosting company could be “liable for aiding and abetting criminal copyright infringements and receiving payments from criminal activity.”

In their communication with SoloGigabit, IFPI argues that OpenBitTorrent is facilitating copyright infringements because users of The Pirate Bay may be using the tracker. “The tracker performs a key function for the BitTorrent file sharing service provided by The Pirate Bay. The Pirate Bay service has been judged illegal in several countries,” IFPI writes, referring to the Swedish criminal trial that’s currently under appeal.

“The OpenBitTorrent tracker does not itself host any copyright protected works, but enables the infringement of sound recordings and other copyright works to take place by its role in The Pirate Bay file sharing service. The copyright works are made available and infringed by users of OpenBitTorrent and The Pirate Bay,” IFPI explains.

Feeling threatened by IFPI’s letter, the owner of the hosting company decided to inform OpenBitTorrent’s operator that they have to find a new bandwidth provider by the end of July. This means that, again, OpenBitTorrent has to move to a new location, this time as the result of mere threats.

TorrentFreak contacted the owner of SoloGigabit who told us that he was not sure what to do with IFPI’s complaints. After we informed the owner about the legality of BitTorrent trackers in Spain he doubted whether he had taken the right decision. However, successful or not, a lengthy battle in court is a huge burden for a small hosting company. Even though SoloGigabit might have the law on their site it is understandable that the owner is hesitant to fight IFPI.

Whatever happens, OpenBitTorrent is determined to stay online. The tracker’s operators told TorrentFreak that they are prepared to move to a new location again. This time, they hope to find a company that is less prone to threats from the music industry.

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  • the united hackers association

    iso hunt is located in canada
    give you a hint

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  • Kammi Jodeedy

    LOL, those music industry idiots just dont realize what a waste of time and effort it is. Pathetic.

    privacy-tools.es.tc

  • João Brancocampo

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    extend the deadline for obtaining the remaining 69 MEP
    signatures to 9 September. This victory gives EU citizens
    much-needed time to urge the European Parliament to take a
    stand against ACTA — the infamously secretive effort to
    curtail freedom on the Internet worldwide.

    Keep the pressure on! Contact your MEP today:
    https://www.eff.org/action/eu-action-alert-urge-your-mep-take-stand-internet-acta

  • Dan

    They have precedent on their side. I doubt there is much the IFPI could do. They know they would be wasting money if they took SoloGigabit to court. But that may be money the the provider does not have. So it is, as you say, understandable albeit disappointing.

  • anonymous

    what a shame that mere threats from IFPI caused this move. goes to show how the fact that a ‘bottomless money pit’ can do as much, if not more, than the law, even tho’ the law is in SoloGigabit’s favour. but to continuously use TPB as a reason is ridiculous. wonder what they are going to do when TPB wins the appeal? gonna be interesting to see the excuses IFPI etc come up with then.

  • Old Timer

    I would hold off on moving to Canada. The Reform part (conservatives/republican) minority has introduced a bill (c-32) which would make torrents almost illegal.

  • Old Timer

    I would hold off on moving to Canada. The Reform party (conservatives/republican) minority has introduced a bill (c-32) which would make torrents almost illegal.

    I doubt it will pass as is but one part is about p2p and banning it.

  • Zush

    If BitTorrent sites start to move to Spain, would this country’s economy improve? If so, let’s hope the Gov’t takes that into account if they want to save their derrieres in the 2012 elections!

  • m3

    I will not support MAFIAA any way possible.

  • me

    Keep buying overpriced stuff from the MAFIAA, boys and girls, so that they have enough money to buy Spanish politicians. It’s just a matter of time until Spain’s safe haven’s status will be gone, just like Sweden’s.

    Let’s face it: we shouldn’t be using centralized trackers anymore. All of them will sooner or later become targets of the MAFIAA, no matter if they are legitimate or not.

    For now it’s decentral DHT+PEX all the way.

  • Anonymous

    So its LEGAL for the hosting company to host the tracker. The law states its legal. So the host has nothing to worry about. Right?

    Nope. The law doesn’t matter when you’re funded by the entertainment industry. You’ve got lots of money and can buy a great spineless lawyer.

    Plus your PR guys have already spread all your anti P2P propaganda to the public. You might convert a couple of jurors and judges that way, gotta we worth it.

    When its all over and there’s no one left to sue, you can really let you standards slip, after all, people no longer know what good music is and you can sell them whatever crap you want.

    Like in the good old days… lol

  • rea5oned m1nd

    IS THERE NO CLEVER MINDED PEOPLE OUT THERE THAT CAN GO AFTER THE ENTERTAINMENT AND MUSIC INDUSTRY?

    STOP THEM IN THEIR TRACKS?

    MAKE THEM THINK TWICE BEFORE THEY DECLARE WAR?

    MAKE THEM CONSIDER THEIR BUSINESS MODEL?

    Shouting over.

  • me

    @12 rea5oned mind:

    Yes, we can… hit them there where it hurts the most: a many years long total boycott. And I don’t mean a half-assed boycott, but something with a large backing of society. With no money left, litigation and buying off politicians becomes a real challenge, even for them.

    But we (the people in general) are too lazy or addicted to their crap that it simply won’t happen. There’ll be always enough mindless consumers who’ll keep feeding the beast… and, like the Black Knight in Monty Python, MAFIAA doesn’t need much to continue: politicians are cheap nowadays, dirt cheap to buy.

    The Copyright Wars have just begun. Enjoy’em while they last.

  • Antony Hopkins

    Stop moderating my comments. They’re legit.

  • Brandon

    This is getting way out of control, where will they stop? Law suites against computer manufactures? against OS makers? This is like filing a lawsuit against a freeway because a criminal used that freeway while commiting a crime :/

  • Anonymous

    The last thing I’ve bought from anything even RIAA-related was the Discovery CD from Daft Punk. Since then, nothing. Hell, I don’t even pirate anything RIAA-related, as I’ve moved on completely to other genres, ones where there’s actually legit competition to make good music and happens to pay off.

  • ghost in your machine

    LOL They just don’t learn! What a bunch of “Losers”!
    Have no fear pirates-they will be a thing of the past and if what they say is true; even though we know better about losing revenue due to piracy then this will surely do the job quite nicely. LOL!:):):)

  • tyranny sucks a big one

    i for one have been boycotting industry garbage for some time..

    it occurs to me though, that whatever monetary losses the industry feels due to boycotts will immediately be blamed on filesharing..

    its kind of a no win..

    tyranny sucks a fat cocck..

  • Anonymous

    What we need is a decentralized search function built into torrent clients. And it needs to be done in a way that no fake torrents can be posted. Use similar technology to DHT and (KAD on emule) to allow websites to be hosted on a decentralized network. Add encryption to every client switched on as standard.

    This isn’t an end solution but its does bring the cat and mouse game to a new level. Its a lot harder to bring down the network because you have to sue the software distributors and get the Isp’s to block the network.

  • Urban Sundström

    Maybe it should be hosted by the Pirate Party of Sweden, the same way as Pirateby ? http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2010/05/pirate-party-hosting-pirate-bay-in-pro-p2p-political-gesture.ars?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss

    [Actually, they were acting as ISPs. As we revealed (with an english language exclusive) last Friday, they won't attempt to host it, until they have some MP's in the Swedish Parliament - TF]

  • me

    #19 Anonymous: “Its a lot harder to bring down the network because you have to sue the software distributors and get the Isp’s to block the network.”

    1. OSS software can be released anonymously, and has been in the past: no one can be sued.

    2. Bringing down a decentralized network is next to impossible, short of killing the whole IP infrastructure.

    3. ISPs can’t block stuff, if it piggy-backs on top of a popular protocol, say, HTTPS, as it would hurt big and small eCommerce sites.

  • jyyj

    How about relocating it to a place call the Pirate Party’s parliament :)

  • demo

    I find this rather stupid, most of the smaller Linux distributions out there rely on services such as open-bit-torrent to share their distro amongst the community.

    Surely there are “issues” with certain media. But you just can’t cripple a whole service for only a portion of its so called “content”.

    What these UGLY companies don’t realise is that bit-torrent has many more uses than simply sharing leaked music tracks.

    It saves bandwidth for everyone, lets everyone have something, and makes almost every happy.

    Why should a Linux/BSD distribution that cannot afford to host its own file-server or tracker have such an important service taken away from them.

  • Anonymous

    @ 21 me
    cheers for the info, its good to know that they can’t block decentralized networks. i though they could because i have a BT connection and they can throttle my p2p traffic. i though blocking would work on the same principle.
    cheers – comment 19, Anonymous

  • Anonymous

    The copyright cartel has succeeded in taking down every major ED2K server. The only way the edonkey network survives today is through its secondary, decentralized network. Bittorrent may end up having to go the same route.

  • Anonymous

    BitTorrent has DHT, which is similar to ed2k’s Kad network. OpenBT is just too big of a target. People who are still using non DHT compatible clients need to get with the times and upgrade.

  • chuckles

    Several countries=Sweden. Nice.

  • Ettore

    I still say that any torrent site should re-hash torrents to remove the private flag. When OBT went down a few weeks ago, a LOT of my torrents died because they had the damned private flag on. Sure, adding other trackers fixed it, but that’s hardly a solution that most people would use … unless something like uTorrent automatically added more trackers.

  • mack

    Everyone keeps hoo-rayyyying for “Decentralized” torrents and file sharing…..BUT, in essense, DHT is _NOT_ really “decentralized” – it still requires a “bootstrap” to connect to the DHT node (whether it be router.utorrent.com, rounter.bittorrent.com, or the Kamadelia address……

    In reality, the anti-p2p corps could just as easily take down our “Decentralized” DHT networks, as they are trying to take down these private trackers…..

    But don’t let them know this little secret….

    Think about it, you send a torrent hash to the tracker, it points you to peers who have the file.

    You send a torrent hash over the “decentralized” DHT network (Kamadelia, mainline, or utorrent), and the network connects you to possible “peers”…..

    Same EXACT concept….

    To prove this, add
    127.0.0.1 router.bittorrent.com
    127.0.0.1 router.utorrent.com

    to your HOSTS file

    Your torrent client will NOT connect to the DHT network….

    As of this post, I’m unfamiliar with Vuze/azureus/Kamadelia’s bootstrap address……so, if you use either of the clients using that DHT spec, you will likely still connect to the DHT node BUT, will not connect to DHT under BitTorrent OR uTorrent.

    [It was posted in the DHT Myths article. By the same token, you've just proved how easy it is to use any IP address as the bootstrap node, and countered your own point. Also Vuze lets you add any IP you want as a bootstrap for it's DHT system - K`Tetch, TorrentFreak researcher]

  • whipped

    Someone, please design a Client that does does display information. I don’t care what country is seeding nor the IP #. I know there must be a brillant mind out there somewhere!
    Please offer it open source.
    Thx!

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  • Brudda

    Myanmar, baby! That’s where this tracker should go. They give the US the middle finger on a daily basis.

  • Nicholas

    Imagine with me for a second a network that literally has an unlimited amount of storage and is completely untraceable. That’s what I’m in the proses of building.

    As an example if every pirate gave up say 200 MB of storage on their computer and that 200 MB hosted 2000 – 0.1 MB files. Each of those files being a piece of a movie or a song, but no more than 0.1 MB of that file. How would you be able to tell what was in that 0.1 MB file? You wouldn’t assuming it was part of a whole movie.

    Then imagine an ever growing network of servers with knowledge of where each of those files is located and stored with the ability to feed that information out an http protocol.

    Finally imagine a program that sifts through that data and figures out which parts in the millions it needs and saves those, then re-compiles it on the users end without access to any of the storing computers IP addresses.

    Combine the 3 of those things and you’ve got a literal bank house of information that makes it so that no one pirate is held responsible for stealing anything, everyone is anonymous and to stop the prossess they’d have to stop new servers from popping up, which is like killing the internet if done right.

    That in essence is my idea.

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  • tyranny sucks a big one

    off topic.. sorry

    has anyone noticed that the MOVIE section has not been showing up on DEMONOID for a while.. i tried logging in to see if that was why. no change..

    anyone see similar?

  • DRuNKeN MaSTeR

    Sueing a tracker which doesn’t host anything, doesn’t link to anything? That’s like sueing a traffic light which gives green for thieves in a car chase? Wait…, what?

  • noko

    Wow.

    The greedy, fascist conglomerates (BPI/MPAA/RIAA/…) are really contempt on destroying both the Internet and themselves.

    Well, screw ‘em.

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  • vUzetorrent

    Good! Hope they find a way to close it down for good.

    Torrents sux!

  • G

    @36

    Fuck you

    You probably suck your pay off these copyright suites.

    and as for bit-torrent
    Don’t worry, coz for each tracker and uploader that goes down, we will put 10 more up……………..

    PIRATES FOR LIFE…………..

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  • Anonymous

    someone should threaten the ifpi with human rights abuses

  • RIAAtarded

    good luck Spain has taken a sane approach to bit torrent and they haven’t won yet in court against any site there. They are very familiar with the running of the bulls whether it has horns or is coming out the other end of the animal.

  • X

    This is good news. If the MAFIAA still think nailing openbittorrent is a solution to their problems (of being obselete in the modern world), they are just demonstrating how clueless they are.

    The recording industry is based upon duplication and distribution for profit. We can do that now, so we don’t need them, neither do artists (most of whom make more money through gigs, sponsorship deals and merchandise than they do from recording industry contracts)

    If the recording industry’s answer to becoming obsolete is the act of harassing everyone, they’re only streamlining the process of their extinction as their acts encourage more and more people to boycott them.

    Support the artist (gigs, merchandise, donations, etc), f*ck the middleman and their redundant, paid-for duplicaiton service.

  • Anonymous

    I boycott all corporate stuff by never buying new products.I just look locally or on the NET for used bluray/dvd’s and will never ever buy another new film from those corps.Even the scifi TV shows I love and used to buy new to support them I do not do any longer.The only weay to end IFPI,RIAA,MPAA,etc is to hit them in their wallet.
    The Copyright WArs is on !!!!
    WE Need Soldiers to fight this war.
    Join The Movement and bring down the big boys !!!

  • townie2

    i can’t see how this can be done, trackers can also be used for legal transfer of files.

  • me

    #23: “Why should a Linux/BSD distribution that cannot afford to host its own file-server or tracker have such an important service taken away from them.”

    Those little distros can already run an opentracker daemon on their sites. Even for popular distros, bandwidth needs to contact the tracker are minimal and definitely affordable. They don’t strictly NEED openbittorrent.

  • me

    Mack #29 “Everyone keeps hoo-rayyyying for “Decentralized” torrents and file sharing…..BUT, in essense, DHT is _NOT_ really “decentralized” – it still requires a “bootstrap” to connect to the DHT node”

    You’re right. But it is trivial to update and append this list of bootstrap nodes on the client side. Such nodes are already posted regularly everywhere on the net: forums, newsgroups etc…

    People who lack the skills to update their bootstrap nodes cache — manually if need be — by following instructions in forums shouldn’t be using DHT in the first place, I guess. ;)

  • Anonymous

    I bet you that these corporate parasites still believe that Open BT is the pirate bay.

    They clearly have no clue where the TBP servers are right now.

    Whahahahahahahaha!

  • Anonymous

    “liable for aiding and abetting criminal copyright infringements and receiving payments from criminal activity.”

    Criminal copyright infringements Hum?

    The only criminals I can see right now are the entertainment industry of parasites executives and their lawyers.

    Let’s put away all these vermin’s.

  • Anonymous

    “I find this rather stupid, most of the smaller Linux distributions out there rely on services such as open-bit-torrent to share their distro amongst the community.”

    The corporate parasites know that but they don’t care. We have to kill them all.

  • FuzzyX

    It seems to me that OBTs best option is to take IFPI to court for harassing their service provider (if demands were repeated) and prove their service is legal

    They did after all move to Spain to receive the protection of this law. Past local cases should provide a quick win. Others have interest to sponsor their case.

    Stand and fight or get bullied out of town. The best defence is a good offense.

  • in.cog.nito

    That’s like saying a spoon is illegal because it facilitates the ability to eat food, which can lead to morbid obesity and death.

    What a bunch of douchebags. It’s a technology you do not like, get over it you bastards.

  • Bob Sagget

    In Your Guy’s opinion…What location offers the best bullet proof hosting currently?

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  • Obsolete RIAA

    …This time, they hope to find a company that is less prone to threats from the music industry.
    ———–

    I really think this sounds more real thus:

    …This time, they hope to find a company that is less coward and faggot to threats from the music industry.

  • Ninja

    “The tracker performs a key function for the BitTorrent file sharing service provided by The Pirate Bay. The Pirate Bay service has been judged illegal in several countries,” – DHT, any1? PublicBT? etc?

    “The OpenBitTorrent tracker does not itself host any copyright protected works, but enables the infringement of sound recordings and other copyright works…” – E-mail? MSN? Other messengers, any1?

    The internet enables infringement so we should shut it down, right?

    The arguments MAFIAA presents fail hard at proving their point. And when they prove, they are based on fake researches. I lol’d.

    I smell an epic failure here as obt can be used for legal stuff, more than indexers if you think about it… I’d pity them but all their actions, the ACTA, the way they ruin lives to keep their stupid business model alive prevents me from doing so.

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  • M.E

    So when are we getting a law against threatening innocent people and companies?
    And when will there be a regulation against contacting companies with the intent of deceiving them with threats of taking them to court over matters that the sender knows is not illegal?

    Anyone?
    Can we get some protection for the poor people who are harassed and threatened by copyright movements?

    Where is the law protecting the innocent?

  • Daniel

    This is really beyond ridiculous. A tracker on its own is just a communications platform like any other. If closing down OpenBitTorrent for reasons of copyright infringement was possible, it would be equivalent to the possibility of prohibiting any and all forms of social interaction by which people can do illegal things. Which, of course, means *any and all* forms of social interaction. This is like the IFPI asking towns to close down all public plazas and schoolyards.

    I am glad that I have stopped buying any records affiliated with IFPI labels many years ago, and I hope many will follow this ideology. Until IFPI and RIAA die, musicians and listeners alike will be supressed and extorted. These organisations need to disappear, and fast.

  • BTGuard - BitTorrent Anonymously

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