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Police Warn Internet Users Not To Pay Fines To File-Sharing Fraudsters

Police in Sweden are warning Internet users not to send money to criminals trying to extort money from alleged file-sharers. The sophisticated scam began when unsuspecting cell phone users browsed an infected website which somehow extracted information from their devices. This was followed up by a mailed allegation of copyright infringement and a cash demand for between 90 and 195 euros to be paid into a foreign bank account. Swedish Antipiratbyran say the scheme is nothing to do with them.

In many countries around the world, especially the United States, Germany and the UK, hundreds of thousands of Internet users have received letters from rightsholders demanding cash settlements to make supposed copyright lawsuits go away. The cases rarely end up in court, leading some to label these schemes “legal blackmail”.

Nevertheless, and erroneous accusations aside, the vast majority of these projects operate within the law, which is more than can be said for a new scam currently hitting Sweden. Unsuspecting Internet users are receiving demands for almost two hundred euros in letters that claim they have been engaged in illegal downloading.

At this early stage it is not exactly clear how the scam operates, but it is believed that Internet users browsed a website set up by criminals which had the ability to gather information from their phones.

After visiting the site, victims reported receiving an SMS followed up by a mailed cash demand from Arcad World Corp., a company registered at a post office box in Stockholm.

“You have downloaded copyrighted porn. Soon you will receive a civil claim. We ask you to pay it so that your illegal activity will not be a police matter. According to Swedish law, it is your duty to find out if the movies can be downloaded or not,” the scammers explain.

Victims are then told to send amounts between 90 and 195 euros to an account held at the Valartis Bank in Liechtenstein.

When action against illegal downloading is mentioned in Sweden, the name that often springs to mind is the infamous Antipiratbyran. That image was only reinforced when the scammers included a link to an Antipiratbyran webpage in their scam mails. The group says it has absolutely nothing to do with the letters.

“We have been approached by some 100 people across the country, consumer groups and others who are wondering what this is all about,” says Sara Lindbäck, a copyright lawyer at Antipiratbyrån.

Antipiratbyran’s advice is for letter recipients to inform the police and certainly not pay. In an announcement last evening the police said they are aware of the scheme.

“This is a new type of scam where the sender wants to intimidate the recipient into paying money. Anyone who receives one of these requests should absolutely not pay any money but should instead contact the police,” said Niclas Linér, Detective in cybercrime group at the Police Authority in Västmanland.

Police say that a person resident in southern Sweden is suspected of fraud.

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  • TerribleTony

    “Swedish Antipiratbyran say the scheme is nothing to do with them,” but they did later admit that they were very impressed with the scheme.

    • http://torrentfreak.com/ Rob8urcakes

       For want of a better phrase, Antipiratbyran really are a bunch of evil tossers who need to slink off into the sunset and die.

      As if it’s not bad enough we get the so-called entertainment industry deliberately ripping us off with over-priced shit, we’re now being targeted by con merchants too ffs.

      Hey, glad to see the Police are involved already = that’s cool ;)

      • McCheezits

        It’s good to see the police are on the side of the filesharers (technically) for once.

        I don’t live in Sweden, but I might as well warn people about this shit…

        • anon

           its not a matter if you live in sweden or not, fraud is a global industry

        • zkank

          Wait until the Nigerians get hold of this one.

          (All units - stand by for new wave of spam mail!)

        • Gavin

          Between this and the anti antivirus websites fraudsters have a couple of good scams.

      • TixatiUser

        I am surprised the police are involved. I guess sometimes they actually have to do their jobs.

    • Ole Juul

      Of course it has something t do with them. The whole idea is based on their IP. 

    • Copyinfingers

      What ever they do they are just bunch of evil tosserrs like “cake” says… all filesharing fraudster are with Antipirat, Riaa etc. mafia and if they like to say “We are not involved” then they must do what they can do best and SUE them for Copyinfringement. Easy to do !

    • 0omg

      more like the one being scammed are not being scammed by us THIS TIME ……

    • Danton

      Swedish Antipiratbyran are  file sharing fraudster just like the RIAA/MPAA the BPI and the IFPI.

      The entire entertainment industry is a BIG FUCKING FRAUD!

      We have to jail them all or hang them all starting with the CEOs and the presidents.

      REVOLUTION!

    • Guest

       It says something when the legal and illegal schemes are basically indistinguishable.

      • Danny

        Just remember ‘Antipiratbyran’s advice is for letter recipients to inform the police and certainly not pay’.

        That goes the same for ANY pay up or else lettersespecially from Antipiratbyran.

    • DRuNKeN MaSTeR

       Very smart move Antipiratbyran… Very smart. First you scare people with a scam to go to the police. They you get their data from the police to blackmail them.

  • Anyone

    it’s exactly the same scheme “official” copyright trolls use as well
    if a scheme works of course more criminals besides the original trolls will jump on the bandwagon

    there is no risk involved, almost no cost in sending out those extortion letters and if you find some idiots actually paying you recovered all your costs and then some

    the MAFIAA has to be dismantled, if it is clear that you can’t be extorted for sharing files these schemes would stop

    • http://twitter.com/Manuelodi1 Manuelodi

      …..
      goo.gl/m1LJN

    • TixatiUser

      Rule of thumb: Do Not Pay Anyone Just Because They Say You Owe Them. Especially the RIAA, but really it applies to everyone.

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  • http://twitter.com/Manuelodi1 Manuelodi

    Evelyn responded I am alarmed that you able to make $5863 in 4 weeks on the network. have you look this(Click on menu Home)

    • Evelyn

      I never said such a thing. People like you belong in the depths of Hell.

      • Anyone

        don’t reply to spammers, just flag

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  • Pianogamer

    They should provide a real scheme for comparison. Although you shouldn’t really pay those either.

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  • Mafiaa Racket Copycats

    Government Mafiaa file sharing extortion rackets copycats.

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  • quawonk

    This kind of intimidation/extortion is simply A-OK if it comes from “official” MAFIAA people, of course.

  • Non2

    File sharing fraudsters like MAFIAA?

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  • http://twitter.com/Manuelodi1 Manuelodi

    Barbara responded I’m taken by surprise that some people can get paid $7227 in 1 month on the network. did you look at this(Click on menu Home)

    • http://twitter.com/Tamralcp Tamralcp

      like…@a529a1af3bf22d01b9815cdc19c6d6b8:disqus ,
      goo.gl/9DA0D

  • http://twitter.com/Tamralcp Tamralcp

    Theresa implied I’m taken by surprise that any body able to earn $8844 in a few weeks on the computer. have you seen this(Click on menu Home)

  • TixatiUser

    I like how they don’t warn people to not pay the RIAA shysters. 

  • Gear Mentation

    “This is a… scam where the sender wants to intimidate the
    recipient into paying money. Anyone who receives one of these requests
    should absolutely not pay any money”  Good advice http://falkvinge.net/2012/07/11/what-to-do-if-prosecuted-for-sharing-culture-stfu/

  • Pingback: Police Warn Internet Users Not To Pay Fines To File-Sharing Fraudsters » Cyber Crimes Unit | Cyber Crimes Unit

  • anon

    see this is the problem with the whole “war on piracy”. All of these anti piracy regimes are opening doors to organized criminals to start a whole new section in the industry of fraud and extort money from innocent and legit citizens of the internet.

  • chronoss chiron

    i agree the riaa and mpaa should not get any money , site there quotes in court

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  • Guest

    Why didn’t we get these warnings the moment the RIAA started suing people?

    They’re not paying artists who were allegedly robbed from; they’re suing for money to sue more people with!

    • WCKicksAss

      So much truth

  • arb1

    Question is, what took them so long to start this kinda scam, Sending fake copyright claims to people is a prime way to scam people. RIAA/MPAA been doing it for years.

  • Iseemtobelost

    Well, at least the MAFIAA can now claim they innovated something.

    Nigel

  • Mark Klass

    Yes, contact the police, and tell them they were contacted because they downloaded illegal porn.  ><

  • Pingback: ImPuls.Name » ?????? ??????? ? ????????-????????????? ?????? ?? ?????????

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  • ahwront

    good way to take money from stupid people

  • Rekrul

    Antipiratbyran just doesn’t want the competition…
     

  • Luke Solis

    Uh look. it gives the people a reason to ignore the R/MPAA’s messages to pay up.

  • Xi_ruler

    I’m surprised a scam like this took so long to surface, given that the “official” one has proven to be so effective.

    How ironic is it that criminals (in the view of the police) are doing exactly the same thing that the undeclared criminals are.

    This should open some authorities’ eyes, but of course it won’t.

  • Pingback: Anti-piracy drive new developments - a ruling and a scam | TheTechJournal

  • http://twitter.com/MelodysuhWaltco MelodysuhWaltcott

    Amanda said I can’t believe that a mom can profit $8647 in 4 weeks on the network. did you look this(Click on menu Home)

  • ScrewEwe2

    Here’s a similar story happening in the US.

    “The U.S Federal Bureau of Investigation is warning about an uptick in online extortion scams that impersonate the FBI and frighten people into paying fines to avoid prosecution for supposedly downloading child pornography and pirated content. This post offers an inside look at one malware gang responsible for orchestrating such scams.”

    http://krebsonsecurity.com/2012/08/inside-a-reveton-ransomware-operation/

  • Guest

    What’s so special about this?
    They have been sending DMCA’s and CnD reports for content they do not own for ages and they constantly engage in mass lawsuits against does without any identified proof of what they claim except being on the same IP range.
    They already sue millions of innocents daily.
    They sue and sue innocent people over properties they do not own and never intend to get any fair repayment, they always force people to opt for the settlement.
    There’s no difference between this and what the publishers are doing already.
    They do it, it’s ok. Someone else does it, it’s a scam.
    It’s all a scam. It’s always a scam.

  • Miami Sunset

    The worst part is that people are now justified in ignoring legitimate legal claims against them.

  • Andrew Lee

    You know what’s funny the demands of these con artist are far more reasonable than the amount movie,porn, and music studios are extorting from people.

    The fact that they’re using this to con people is not a surprise I’m more surprised that the Nigerians did not start doing it first.

    • Xi_ruler

      Nigerians have higher standards. Plus, they continue to get a bad rap for schemes originating elsewhere.

  • Rusty Shackelford

    Fraudsters, does that include the MPAA, RIAA, and others trying to sue?

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  • Amused

    While I hate scammers of any sort, you have to love the irony in this.
    “Real” criminals copying the exact tactics of the “legal” thieves.
    That’s funny.

    It will be interesting to watch the press coverage.
    As the press is warning everyone of the scams there will also be coverage discussing where the idea came from – the sleazy extortion tactics used by the “legal” scams.

    I hope it spreads, and since it is profitable it probably will.
    This will call more attention to the issue.

    Hopefully that Hollywood whore Obama will be gone soon along with his legal lapdog Holder.
    Corrupt scumbags.

  • Soumynona

    its bad when you cant tell between the people scamming you and the people extorting you

  • Alsabetya

    PROVEN…wheres theres shit theres money..thx for this..was lookin for something to
    get me some bucks to get me thru these hard times and love bein chased too…

  • Musician

    IF YOU MOTHERF*****S HAVE PAID FOR WHAT YOU DOWNLOADED, I HAVEN’T BEEN OUT OF WORK! Nuff said.

    • PIRATE

      Go get a real job. I sob for you.

      • Musician

        I’ve already got one – as a programmer hunting down people like You! :-D

        • Guest

          So you’re not a musician anymore. What, then, is the problem?

          Good luck hunting down people trading hard disk drives.

    • http://twitter.com/7daykatie katie anderson

      I don’t down load stuff. I have more than enough music on CDs and don’t even own an MP3 player (new fangled stuff). I did until about a year ago spend on movie theatre tickets (the expensive theatre where they have recliner chairs and a call button to summon waiters to bring food and beverages) and hire DVDs. Unless it’s only a few minutes, I’d rather not watch video on my computer and if there’s some way to get a downloaded movie onto my tv, I’ve no idea what that is and I doubt I could be bothered with it.

      I’m not spending any money on copymonopolists’ content so long as they keep their antics up.  I’ve had a gutsful of their crap and I will go without rather than put more money in their pockets.  If that lost anyone their job, then they can blame the industry insiders who have driven me to boycott the industry.  It sure as heck was not the file sharers who annoyed me to the point where I decided that I cannot support the industry with my dollars and still feel good about myself.

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  • RIAARACKET

    How the hell are people supposed to know the difference between the “legal” extortion racket and the “illegal” copycats? 

    Extortion is extortion. 

    And frankly, I’m surprised that the RIAA did not patent their mass-lawsuit technique and license it out for a percentage of booty. 

  • nikc0069

    Isn’t this what ACS:Law were doing in the UK for ages? I was targeted by them and it wasn’t a fun experience.

  • Wormlore

    “The group says it has absolutely nothing to do with the letters.”

    That’s not true. They might not be behind this specific scam, but they’re the one that gave the idea of it. Blackmailing people into settling so-called legal issues outside of court, that’s a great business. But then, is that any wonder that someone thought about taking up the idea? Threatening people and NOT going to court, anyone can try it.

    And seeing how some of the “official blackmailers” went after people on totally false charges, is that also any wonder that someone thought he could do the same? Menacing people without any right to? Anyone can try it too.

    Those lobby and “lawyer” groups made it usual to receive such threat letters. It’s so common (at least in some countries) that there’s no way now to distinguish “official blackmail” from “illegal blackmail”. Only option today is to ignore them until you actually get sued. (Then again, even then you don’t need to pay up front since the file being brought to court doesn’t even need it’s valid.)

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  • minghao579

    tinyurl.com/cyk9xz2

  • KDV

    I wounder why it is legal when copyrastic morons like Antipiratbyran do that, and illegal when Arcad World Corp. does.

    The Law is the same for everybody.

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