Motion Picture Association 2019 Notorious Markets
Motion Picture Association 2019 Notorious Markets
Motion Picture Association 2019 Notorious Markets
Jacob Ewerdt
Director for Innovation and Intellectual Property
Office of the U.S. Trade Representative
600 17th Street, NW Washington, D.C. 20508
The Motion Picture Association submits the following response to the request issued August 19,
2019, by the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, inviting submissions from the public on
notorious markets outside of the United States.
The American motion picture and television industry is a major U.S. employer that supported 2.6
million jobs and $177 billion in total wages in 2017. Nearly 340,000 jobs were in the core
business of producing, marketing, and manufacturing of motion pictures and television shows.
Another nearly 587,000 jobs were engaged in the distribution of motion pictures and television
shows to consumers, including people employed at movie theaters, video retail and rental
operations, television broadcasters, cable companies, and online video services. The industry
also supports indirect jobs in the thousands of companies that do business with the industry, such
as caterers, dry cleaners, florists, hardware and lumber suppliers, and retailers.
The American motion picture and television production industry remains one of the most highly
competitive in the world. In 2017, the enduring value and global appeal of U.S. entertainment
earned $17.2 billion in audiovisual exports. Today there are approximately 450 legitimate
services providing audiovisual content to consumers online, accommodating all manner of
consumer viewing preference. Moreover, this industry is one of the few that consistently
generates a positive balance of trade. In 2017, that services trade surplus was $10.3 billion, or
four percent of the total U.S. private-sector trade surplus in services. The industry exported four
times what it imported in 2016.
The industry distributes its films and TV shows to over 130 countries and with well over half of
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MPA member companies’ distribution revenue annually earned from overseas, MPA has a
strong interest in the health and sustainability of these international markets. MPA greatly
appreciates USTR’s interest in identifying notorious markets that jeopardize the growth of
legitimate commerce and that impair U.S. global competitiveness. The economic and cultural
vitality of the creative industries is one of our nation’s most valuable assets. It is critical that our
trading partners protect and enforce intellectual property rights.
While in prior years MPA has included physical marketplaces in our notorious markets
recommendations to USTR, this year we again focus our recommendations on online
marketplaces. To be clear, physical notorious markets and in some cases content distributors
with physical distribution infrastructure, remain a persistent threat in many territories around the
world. Online marketplaces, however, are frequently extraterritorial in reach and have the most
significant impact on the global legitimate market for U.S. movies and television programming.
Moreover, they are the focus of MPA’s global content protection energies.
Online content theft continues to pose the most significant and evolving threat to our industries.
Worldwide, in 2016, there were an estimated 21.4 billion total visits to streaming piracy sites
worldwide across both desktops and mobile devices.1 In 2018, there were an estimated 9.8
billion downloads of pirated wide release films and primetime TV and VOD shows using peer-
to-peer protocols2. Content thieves provide or administer easy-to-use online piracy websites,
apps, and services to distribute infringing content usually for monetary gain. These sites and
services often have the look and feel of legitimate content distributors, luring unsuspecting
consumers into piracy.
Online enforcement efforts are complicated when intermediaries fail to take adequate steps to
ensure their services are not being used to facilitate copyright infringement, a problem
compounded by the fact that most website operators operate anonymously and outside the
boundaries of the law. All stakeholders in the Internet ecosystem – including hosting providers,
cloud services (including reverse-proxy and other anonymization services), advertising networks,
payment processors, social networks, and search engines – should actively seek to reduce
support for notoriously infringing sites such as those we have nominated in these comments,
including through voluntary initiatives aimed at combating online content theft.
An emerging global threat is piracy from illegal Internet Protocol television (IPTV) services that
provide stolen telecommunication signals/channels and often on-demand infringing film and
episodic content to a global audience via dedicated web portals, third-party applications, and
piracy devices configured to access the service. MPA has identified over one thousand of these
illegal IPTV services operating around the world.
Piracy devices preloaded with software providing access to illicitly stream movies and
1
Analysis of SimilarWeb data, based on streaming sites with at least 10,000 copyright removal requests according
to the Google Transparency Report. https://www.alliance4creativity.com/mission/the-threat-of-online-piracy/
2
Analysis of MarkMonitor data. https://www.markmonitor.com/download/ds/MarkMonitor_AntiPiracy_GDPI.pdf
2
television programming and a related ecosystem of infringing add-ons continue to be
problematic, particularly in certain countries in which the legality of the boxes and of activities
surrounding their trafficking remains in doubt. Websites enable one-click installation of
modified software onto set-top boxes or other Internet-connected devices. This modified
software taps into an ecosystem of infringing content add-ons and portals to illicitly stream
movies and television programming live or “on demand.”
The list of online markets below is not intended to be comprehensive but, rather, reflects an
attempt to identify sites and services particularly illustrative of the current nature and scope of
online content theft. When possible, we have attempted to provide the specific information
requested in the Federal Register Notice (FRN), including popularity rankings from Alexa3 and
site traffic volume data from SimilarWeb4, as well as information on revenues where available,
among other details. MPA has also attempted to respond to the FRN’s request for information of
any known enforcement activity including by noting jurisdictions that have issued blocking
orders against the named market. In all instances, blocking orders implicate the availability of
the piracy service in the specific territories in which the orders are issued; they are not directed at
the availability of such services extraterritorially.
In most instances, criminal enterprises and individuals work to obfuscate identifying information
such as location, and can hide behind anonymizing services with ease. With this in mind, with
regard to online markets, MPA has aimed to identify each site’s predominant location(s)
determined by a number of factors including server location, host location, and domain registrant
location, recognizing that frequently these may be different. This underscores the vital
importance of cross-border law enforcement cooperation.
MPA lauds USTR’s focus on “Malware and Online Piracy.” Piracy is a serious and growing
threat to consumers. Pirate sites, apps, and services increasingly use content as bait to generate
revenue through identity theft and malware distribution. A March 2018 Carnegie Mellon
University study found that doubling the amount of time spent on infringing sites causes a 20
percent increase in malware count.5 Further, when consumers use streaming piracy devices and
applications, they typically place the devices on the other side of the router, past the firewall or
other security measures.6 This helps usher hackers beyond the defenses of the network the
device is connected to, which can result in access to anything else connected to that network; the
siphoning of massive amounts of data; theft and sale of user names, passwords, credit cards, and
3
Alexa rank represents the approximate number of web sites in the world that have popularity higher than the given
site – the more popular a site, the smaller the number. To put this in context, Wikipedia is ranked fifth in worldwide
traffic and Netflix is 32. See http://www.alexa.com/ for more information.
4
SimilarWeb site traffic data cited here represents worldwide unique visitors on desktop and mobile for the last month
available. SimilarWeb is a market intelligence company that uses a combination of panel, public data sources, ISP
and other data for its data estimations. See http://similarweb.com for more information.
6
Federal Trade Commission, Blog, Free movies, costly malware (April 2017).
7
Rahul Telang, Does Online Piracy Make Computers Insecure? Evidence from panel data (2018),
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3139240
8
Digital Citizens Alliance, Fishing in the Piracy Stream: How the Dark Web of Entertainment is Exposing
Consumers to Harm 3,8 (April 2019),
https://www.digitalcitizensalliance.org/clientuploads/directory/Reports/DCA_Fishing_in_the_Piracy_Stream_v6.pdf
3
identities; remote, third-party control of devices and applications on the network; surreptitious
use of the network by someone else; or other harms.7 The U.S. Federal Trade Commission
(FTC) has issued two blogs warning consumers of the dangers of online piracy, which includes
malware and theft of personal and financial information.8 The FTC advises consumers, “If you
want to avoid downloading malware when you stream video, don’t watch pirated content. Period.
Not online and not through a video streaming device.”9
Linking and Streaming Websites: Linking sites aggregate, organize, and index links to content
stored on other sites, largely deriving revenue from advertising and referrals. Linking sites that
offer unauthorized movies and TV shows typically organize posts by title, genre, season, and
episode and often use the official, copyright-protected, cover art to advertise the content akin to
legitimate services. The sites then provide one or more active links so users can access the
infringing content. Depending on the website, users are commonly presented with the options of
either streaming the content in a video-on-demand format or downloading a permanent copy to
their computers. Many streaming link sites also frame or embed video players from third-party
websites, reducing the number of clicks needed to get to content for a more seamless user
experience while retaining the user to serve advertisements or malware. Some also appear to be
hosting the underlying content files on servers they control to maintain continuity of infringing
offerings and to avoid takedowns on third-party file-hosting sites.
Further, many of these sites utilize reverse proxy functionality to hide the real IP address of a
web server. An example of a CDN frequently exploited by notorious markets to avoid detection
and enforcement is CloudFlare, a reverse-proxy service that also provides a CDN functionality.
Cloudflare's customers include some of the most notorious, long-standing pirate websites in the
world, including The Pirate Bay, whose current domain, thepiratebay.org, has been identified as
infringing rightsholders' copyrights over four million separate times.10 Nonetheless, The Pirate
Bay, and other notorious pirate sites, remain Cloudflare customers despite repeated notices of
infringement to Cloudflare.
An important development in this space in 2019 was the raid by Uruguayan authorities against
the operators of pelispedia.tv and pelisplus.tv. (Pelispedia.tv was included in USTR’s 2018
Notorious Markets report.) These sites were extremely popular throughout much of Latin
America and were monetized through advertising. The operators were arrested on May 19 and
sentenced to more than three years in prison on the basis of copyright infringement and money
laundering.
7
Id. At 3-5, 8, 15-20.
8
FTC Blog, “Free Movies, costly malware” and “Malware from illegal video streaming apps: What to know,” (May
2019)
9
FTC Blog, “Malware from illegal video streaming apps: What to know,” (May 2019).
10
Google Transparency Report.
https://transparencyreport.google.com/copyright/overview?hl=en&browse_copyright=ce:domain;size:6&lu=searc
h_copyright©right_result_owner=©right_result_org=©right_result_domain=&search_copyright=q:T
HEPIRATEBAY.ORG
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According to SimilarWeb data b9good.com had almost 16 million visits per month from
almost two million unique visitors in August 2019, with more than 96 percent of visitors
from Japan. With local ranks of 265 and 289 in Japan by Alexa and SimilarWeb
respectively, the site is harming revenue streams across all distribution windows. The top
traffic source to b9good is tvanimemuryoudouga.com, which means “television animation
free of charge videos dot com” and organizes infringed content by “new releases,” “new
HD,” and “movies.” The server appears to be in Canada and the latest data indicates it may
be hosted on Yesup Ecommerce Solutions Inc.
CB01 – Italy. CB01 is a long-standing piracy source in Italy. The website has changed its
top-level domain at least 50 times to avoid site-blocking. The newest domain,
cb01.productions, has only been functioning for a month and yet has already climbed to an
Alexa ranking of 42 in Italy, with 9.77 million visitors according to SimilarWeb data. The
site has over 25,000 movie titles and over 2,500 TV shows available. The site has been
blocked in Italy and Indonesia. The operator of the website uses Cloudflare’s services to
mask the location of the website’s server.
Cda.pl – Poland. Cda.pl is Poland’s most popular piracy website, eclipsing several
legitimate VOD services in the country. Cda.pl had almost 55 million worldwide visitors
with 10 million unique visitors in August 2019 according to SimilarWeb data. It currently
enjoys a global Alexa rank of 1,357 and a local rank of just 13 in Poland. The operator of the
website, Comedian S.A., uses Cloudflare’s services which mask the IP location of the
website and curbs rights holders’ ability to identify its precise host. The last time that the
information was available, Cda.pl was hosted at OVH Poland in Poland.
Cimaclub.com & cima4u.tv – Egypt. These are the top infringing websites in the Middle
East and North Africa and the top Arabic language piracy websites. These sites are very
popular, with monthly visitor tallies in August 2019 alone of over 27 million visits from 5
million unique visitors for Cimaclub and 20 million visits from over 3.5 million unique
visitors for Cima4u. Cimaclub.com has a local Alexa rank of 26 in Saudi Arabia, and
cima4u has a local Alexa rank of 36 in Egypt, ranking higher than many known legitimate
services according to SimilarWeb data. The operator of the website uses Cloudflare’s
services to mask the location of the website’s server.
Dytt8.net and Dy2018.com – China, Taiwan. Dytt8.net is a highly ranked pirate website in
China with local rankings of 198 and 215 on Alexa and SimilarWeb, respectively. This
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website receives around 17.24 million visits per month from users accessing more than
12,000 infringing film titles made available by the operators. With a very user-friendly
interface, this website remains a particular threat to legitimate services both within and
outside China. Dy2018 received almost 10.5 million visits a month from 2.5 million unique
visitors in August 2019. The site has high local rankings of 256 and 399 in China according
to Alexa and SimilarWeb, respectively. Dy2018.com makes available to users over 10,000
infringing titles through the provision of direct links to third party storage providers.
Dytt8.net and Dy2018 appear to have the same operators and the servers appear to be located
in Taiwan. The sites were referred to the NCAC as part of its annual campaign and are under
review.
“Indo 21” (Indoxxi) and many related domains (e.g., indoxxi.center, dunia21.pw, and
indoxxi.network) – Indonesia. “Indo 21” has emerged as the main brand for piracy in
Bahasa throughout Indonesia and Malaysia. One of the related sites, indoxx1.center, has a
local ranking of 40 in Indonesia according to SimilarWeb data with 23.85 million monthly
visits in August 2019. Indoxx1.network boasted almost 2.72 million monthly visits in August
2019 according to SimilarWeb data. Another related site dunia21.pw has a local ranking of
196 in Indonesia according to SimilarWeb with 5.95 million visits in August 2019. These
sites use Cloudflare’s reverse proxy services which mask the location of the websites’
servers. At last available update the site was hosted by India-based Host Palace. Many
domains associated with this syndicate have already been blocked in Indonesia, Malaysia,
and Australia.
MrPiracy.site and .xyz – Portugal. MrPiracy is operated out of Portugal and mainly caters
to the Portuguese and Brazilian markets. Despite being blocked in Portugal, its domains,
MrPiracy.site and .xyz, are ranked 19 and 59 in the country, respectively, according to Alexa.
It enjoys 14.88 million monthly visitors, according to SimilarWeb data. The sites host over
13,000 movie titles and 2,250 different TV shows. The operator of the websites uses
Cloudflare’s services to mask the location of the websites’ server.
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Phimmoi.net – Vietnam. Phimmoi.net is operated out of Vietnam and has a local Alexa
rank of 14. It has become one of the most notorious piracy sites in the world, currently
ranked 749 in the world according to SimilarWeb with nearly 75 million monthly visits from
11 million visitors according to SimilarWeb data. Notwithstanding complaints about the site
and an official letter of denunciation filed with the Vietnamese Ministry of Public Security,
the authorities have yet to take firm action to address this egregiously infringing site.
Seasonvar.ru – Russia. With 31.4 million visits and 3.25 million unique visitors in August
2019, the Russian site Seasonvar.ru is among the world’s most popular infringing streaming
websites according to SimilarWeb data. As of August 2019, more than 12,000 different TV
series were made available to their users. The site’s current global Alexa rank is 677 with a
local rank of 133 in Germany which makes it more popular than Twitter, Booking.com, and
eBay in the country. It is currently hosted by a Russian hosting provider, ITSARAY -
ITCITI.RU based in Saint Petersburg. Variants of the site have been subject to blocking
orders in Russia.
Direct Download Cyberlockers and Streaming Video Hosting Services: Direct download
cyberlockers and streaming video hosting services are websites that provide centralized hosting
for infringing content which can be downloaded and/or streamed by the public. The distribution
process is simple. A user uploads an infringing file and the cyberlocker or video hosting service
gives the user a link for accessing the file. The user posts the link on one or several linking sites
facilitating access to the wider public. Clicking the link will either initiate a download, a stream,
or both of the uploaded file.
It is common for links to unauthorized copies of movies and television programs to be widely
disseminated across the internet, not just via linking sites, but also via mobile and other web
applications, social media platforms, forums, blogs, and/or email. Complicating enforcement,
cyberlockers and video hosting services frequently provide several unique links to the same file
and use proxy services to mask the locations of where the site and content are hosted. If a
content owner sends an infringement notice for one of the links, the others may remain active,
enabling continued infringement. Additionally, many cyberlockers and video hosting services
do not respond to takedown notices.
11
According to a NetNames and Digital Citizens Alliance report, “[u]nlike legitimate cloud
storage services the cyberlocker business model is based on attracting customers who desire
anonymously to download and/or stream popular, copyright infringing files that others have
posted.” NetNames found that the 30 direct download and streaming cyberlockers it analyzed
took in close to $100 million in total annual revenue and generated average profit margins of 63
to 88 percent from a mix of advertising and subscription services. The principal use and purpose
of these cyberlockers is to facilitate content theft.
11
NetNames, “Behind The Cyberlocker Door: A Report on How Shadowy Cyberlocker Businesses Use Credit Card
Companies to Make Millions,” September 2014. Available online at:
http://www.digitalcitizensalliance.org/cac/alliance/content.aspx?page=cyberlockers.
7
The cyberlockers and video hosting services listed below include examples of both direct
download and streaming models. By making vast amounts of infringing premium content
available to the public, these sites attract huge amounts of traffic.
Baidu Pan – China. Large quantities of infringing content are stored on Baidu Pan with
links disseminated through popular Chinese social media platforms and piracy linking
sites. Baidu holds more than a 75 percent share of China’s search engine market, and it is the
second largest search engine in the world by user base. Given its market dominance, it is
vitally important to ensure that Baidu has rigorous content protection standards and practices
in place, cooperates fairly and transparently with rights holders, and sets the right example
for other Internet businesses. Although Baidu has in recent years provided tools for taking
down motion picture and television content, and demoted infringing video listings of new
release titles on Baidu search results, takedown rates and timeframes for removal of
infringing links are inconsistent and too long, from two days for one of its service to as long
as fifteen days for another. Given its size, rightsholders must send up to thousands of
infringement notices for proliferating copies on Baidu Pan of a single piece of
content. Baidu should be encouraged to do more, including improve implementation of its
takedown tools, apply rigorous filtering technology to identify infringing content, and take
more effective action to suspend or terminate repeat infringers to ensure all rights holders are
treated equally and infringing content and links are removed expeditiously. In 2017, Sohu
was successful in a first-instance suit against Baidu Pan for indirectly facilitating copyright
infringement of third parties. However, that case is on appeal, and meanwhile, Sohu has
filed two additional cases against Baidu for copyright infringement of additional licensed
series.
8
UK, and U.S.). Gounlimited.to has a valuable membership scheme that offers an additional
50 percent profit to users on views when their video player is used as the main server on their
website. Gounlimited.to has become increasingly popular in the last nine months, with the
site jumping from 2.2 million visits in February 2019 to 13.5 million visits in August of this
year. This site is hosted at OBE Network in Sweden.
Netu.tv – Russia. Netu.tv is a cyberlocker with a global Alexa ranking of 26,121. Netu.tv
had 2.78 million visits worldwide in August 2019 according to SimilarWeb data. The site has
its own NetuUSD currency. NetuUSD is referred to in their terms and conditions as an
‘internal site currency that does not equal any other country currency’. Users who upload
files are rewarded up to approximately 80 NetuUSD for every 10,000 views in top tier
countries such as U.S., Canada, UK, and Australia. The server of Netu.tv will reject a
connection to their content if a viewer has the developer console open at the same time,
making it impossible to find the origin of the content. The site is being masked behind
Cloudflare’s reverse proxy service to curb rights holders’ ability to identify its precise host.
Rapidgator.net – Russia. This site has a global Alexa ranking of 827 and had 24.58 million
visits from 6.2 million global unique visitors in August 2019 according to SimilarWeb data.
Rapidgator.net offers monetary rewards, which encourage uploaders to distribute popular
content such as copyrighted movies and television programs as widely as possible. Users
who upload files are rewarded up to approximately $40 USD for every 1,000 downloads and
for every initial purchase of a premium membership, the user making the referral is paid up
to 15 percent of the sale. Premium subscription plans are available for $14.99 a month,
allowing users to avoid throttled download speeds and data-download limits. According to
NetNames’s “Behind the Cyberlocker Door” report,12 Rapidgator.net generated
approximately $3.7 million in annual revenue, most of which comes from premium accounts.
Rapidgator.net is blocked in Italy. The hosting location of RapidGator.net is being masked
behind a reverse proxy service, DDoS Protections Ltd, to curb rights holders’ ability to
identify its precise host.
12
Ibid
9
Rapidvideo.com – Canada, Germany, France, others. Rapidvideo.com is a
streaming/download cyberlocker with a global Alexa ranking of 2,277. Rapidvideo.com had
7.8 million visits from 2.6 million unique visitors in August 2019 according to SimilarWeb
data. The site incentivizes users to upload popular content with an affiliate program. The
site pays from $7.50 to $60 USD per 10,000 views depending on the country in which the
viewer is located.
13
Ibid
10
Verystream.com – France. Verystream.com, a streaming/download cyberlocker launched in
March 2019, is rising very quickly in popularity with a global Alexa ranking of 358. It had
46.5 million visits from 11 million unique visitors in August 2019 according to SimilarWeb
data. The site allows users to upload large files for free without storage or traffic limits. The
site further incentivizes users to upload popular content files like movies and television
episodes by paying a fixed reward per 10,000 downloads/streams. The site offers five reward
tiers with the “Very High Tier” for files downloaded by users in Australia, Canada, the UK
and the U.S. This tier pays $40 per 10,000 downloads. The site is being masked behind the
reverse proxy service Cloudflare to curb rights holders’ ability to identify its precise host.
VK.com – Russia. VKontakte, or VK.com, is the leading social networking site in Russia
and Russian speaking territories and a hotbed of illegal distribution of movie and television
files. Searching for content is relatively easy and the site supports streaming playback
through embedded video players. In September 2016, VK took steps to limit access to third-
party applications dedicated to downloading content from the site, which has made it more
difficult for users to download content directly. It has also experimented with content
recognition technologies and additional progress has been made with its content recognition
and filtering tool. VK blocks infringing sites from accessing videos stored on VK, but third-
party pirate sites can still stream illegal content from another service, Odnoklassniki, OK.ru,
operated by the same parent company, Mail.Ru Group. In spite of these limited measures,
VK.com continues to be a major infringement hub; MPA and its member companies continue
to find thousands of infringing files on the site each month. Available worldwide in multiple
languages, including English, it is easily one of the most visited sites in the world, with a
global Alexa ranking of 19 and a local ranking of two in Russia. VK.com had 1.4 billion
visits from 50 million unique visitors in August 2019 according to SimilarWeb data. MPA
welcomes Mail.Ru Group’s involvement in the Anti-piracy Memorandum, signed last year
and recently extended. The Memorandum’s aim is to establish a legal procedure to reduce
the availability of pirated content based on voluntary takedown by the platforms when
notified by local rights holders. ISPs in Italy were ordered by the Court of Rome to block
VK.com in November 2013. The site operates on its own corporate-owned servers in Russia.
Illegal IPTV Services: Illegal IPTV services typically offer hundreds of channels illegally
sourced from providers worldwide alongside video-on-demand (VOD) content that includes
unauthorized copies of movies and television series. Many of these illegal services are
subscription based and run for profit, offering monthly or yearly packages to their user base. The
technical infrastructure related to these services is often vast and complex making the
identification of content sources and service operators extremely challenging.
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IPTV services have been a driving force in the emergence of a number of related illegal
businesses including ones engaged in (i) the re-sale of IPTV services and (ii) the theft,
distribution, and sale of channel feeds.
IPTV services must rely on infrastructure and support services in order to function such as
hosting providers, media servers, and panel hosting. Some of these services are used without the
knowledge or approval of the service provider. However, some infrastructure providers cater
their business strategy towards illegal sites or ignore bad actors amongst their clients even when
notified by rights holders and other stakeholders of illegal activity. Based in the Czech Republic,
though the website and marketing materials cite a registration to a UK virtual office, DataCamp
Limited (and affiliated companies Datapacket and CDN77) is a service provider whose offerings
include dedicated IPTV streaming servers and IPTV panel hosting with support for popular
panels. A growing number of globally popular illegal IPTV services use DataCamp
infrastructure and services to deliver/distribute their illegal IPTV content to a worldwide
audience.
The marketing and sale of IPTV services is often carried out by a growing network of global
IPTV service resellers who purchase subscriptions at wholesale prices and re-sell them for a
profit, further complicating investigations. These resellers are also often involved in the
promotion and support of the service with many also providing a limited number of channels to a
given service. It is not uncommon to see resellers expand on their business model and move on
to become an illegal IPTV service provider.
A significant development in the IPTV piracy space in 2019 was the dismantling of Xtream
Codes (XTC) in a multi-country enforcement action coordinated by Eurojust. Xtream Codes,
once the world’s most popular IPTV management software, allowed anyone to build their own
IPTV server from scratch. Eurojust approximates that the damage caused by the criminal gang
operating Xtream Codes amounts to €6.5 million and jeopardized the existence of many legal
pay-tv providers. The Eurojust press release notes, “More than 200 servers were taken offline in
Germany, France, and the Netherlands, and over 150 PayPal accounts of the criminals were
blocked.”14
The following notorious markets are a sampling of the global illegal IPTV ecosystem:
Buy-IPTV.com – Egypt. This service is popular in the Middle East and North Africa,
averaging over 450,000 monthly visitors to their website, with some months showing activity
as high as 733,000 visitors. The site seems to serve no other purpose than to market the
14
Press Release, http://www.eurojust.europa.eu/press/PressReleases/Pages/2019/2019-09-18.aspx
12
service and provide a means to sign up for illegal access to content so subscriber figures are
likely significantly higher. Buy-IPTV is compatible with all types of devices and is
supplying over 4,000 live channels and 2,000 VOD channels. There is a reseller and
restream program available, which proliferate IPTV services by providing a plan to resell
subscriptions and content to repackage into an additional service. Subscriptions start as low
as 2.50 EUR ($2.70 USD) per month for a three-year plan. It has been operating since 2016.
GenIPTVBuy-IPTV.com
– France. GenIPTV is an IPTV service that is very popular across European
markets. The service offers over 8,000 live channels and over 12,000 VOD titles with
subscriptions starting as low as seven EUR (7.70 USD) per month. GenIPTV has been
running since 2017. To gain the largest possible reach, it is compatible with all types of
devices and leads an aggressive expansion campaign with multiple resellers. There are
multiple infringing IPTV services that use GenIPTV as a content source.
ThePK.tv – Canada, UK, Australia. The Players KLUB IPTV is a popular illegal IPTV
service that offers thousands of live channels and VOD content to subscribers for a monthly
fee of $8 USD/month. Content can be consumed via an online web portal, ISD devices and
custom applications for Apple, Android, and KODI. The vast majority of the 90,000 visits
per month to their web portal originate from the United States.
Piracy Devices and Apps: A damaging piracy ecosystem has emerged around piracy devices
and apps, i.e. “illicit streaming devices” (ISDs). Piracy devices and apps provide illegal access
to movie and television content through a variety of means including downloading and streaming
content as well as unauthorized streaming of live television and sporting events, thus
undermining the licensing fees paid by distributors on which content creators depend. MPA
members continue to suffer enormously from a growing threat of these devices and apps.
Streaming devices that are preloaded with infringing apps and TV/VOD subscription services
can be found online and in physical marketplaces. Additionally, illegal apps that can make
legitimate streaming devices infringing can be found through a myriad of mainstream and
specialty app repositories. Piracy devices are also sold in physical marketplaces in the Asia
Pacific region, notably including Singapore’s Sim Lim Square. The BeOutQ piracy device and
related services, while currently offline, need continued monitoring to ensure they do not come
back.
RenRen Shi Pin – China. This app has been the subject of legal action by legitimate
services in China and continues to infringe foreign content. It has approximately 35.6
million downloads from the major China-specific Android Apps Stores. The site is one of
many locations where the app can be downloaded and ranks in China at 317 and 391 on
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Alexa and SimilarWeb, respectively, with more than 85 percent of its traffic emanating from
China. Surprisingly, this app also has ten percent of its traffic originating from Japan and
one percent from the United States. The site (rr.tv) supports an app that is available on both
Apple and Android platforms, indicating its use is more prevalent than the traffic numbers
would suggest. Hundreds of unauthorized foreign television series’ episodes are available on
the app.
ShowBox - Russia. Although no longer available for download from official App stores,
ShowBox remains one of the biggest infringing applications available on Android, iOS, PC
& Mac. ShowBox is free of charge, financed instead through advertisements. More than
10,000 Movies and 1,000 TV Shows are made available to over 60 million active users
across all platforms. The content can be streamed or downloaded using the P2P technology.
The operator is believed to be a resident of Russia.
The sites identified in this year’s filing were identified in part because of their high-quality,
recently-released content and because, in some cases, they coordinate the actual upload and
download of that content.
1337x.to – Switzerland. 1337x.to is a popular torrent website with a global Alexa rank of
317 and a local rank of 220 in India. The site provides access to a range of content including
movies, TV series, music, and software. 1337x.to had nearly 52 million visits from 6.8
million unique visitors in August 2019 according to SimilarWeb data. The site is hosted with
the Icelandic company Flokinet in Finland. Variants of the site have been subject to blocking
orders in the United Kingdom, Denmark, Portugal, Belgium, Indonesia, Ireland, Malaysia,
India, Austria, Australia, and Italy.
Rarbg.to – Bosnia and Herzegovina. Rarbg.to is a very popular torrent website with a global
Alexa rank of 414 and a local rank of 293 in the U.S. The site provides access to a range of
content including movies and TV series. Rarbg.to had over 45 million visits from 4.6 million
unique visitors in August 2019 according to SimilarWeb data. The site is hosted in Bosnia
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and Herzegovina by NETSAAP Transit Services. The site and its variants have been subject
to blocking orders in Portugal, Italy, Denmark, Finland, Indonesia, Belgium, Ireland,
Malaysia, Australia, and the United Kingdom.
Rutracker.org – Russia. This BitTorrent portal was launched in 2010 in response to the
takedown of Torrent.ru by the Russian criminal authorities. Rutracker.org is a BitTorrent
indexing website with 14 million registered users and 1.9 million active torrents. It is one of
the world’s most visited websites, with a global Alexa ranking of 294, and a local rank of 44
in Russia. Rutracker.org had 40.7 million visits from 5.7 million unique visitors in August
2019 according SimilarWeb data. The site is hosted in Russia by Dreamtorrent Corp., a
Seychelles company that is also believed to be the owner of the site. The site has been
subject to blocking orders in Russia and Portugal.
Tamilrockers.ws – India. This infamous torrent site, along with its many progeny and
copycats, constitutes a notorious piracy syndicate for motion pictures. Tamilrockers.ws has
grown exponentially over a short period of time with the site now ranking in the top 200 in
12 countries, and ranking 170 in India, according to SimilarWeb. The site has nearly nine
million monthly visits by nearly one million unique visitors according to SimilarWeb data.
The site’s operators frequently boast about offering new releases on their site within hours of
release. Despite many efforts to block Tamilrockers and its related sites, the group has
shown an expertise in evasion by quickly creating and rotating new domains to continuously
thwart blocking efforts. The syndicate’s operators and server locations are unknown and it
uses with proxy servers located in Russia or the Ukraine.
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a system located at the hosting provider Shinjiru Technology in Malaysia.
In May 2016, the Svea Court of Appeal ordered the seizure of the piratebay.se and
thepiratebay.se domains from one of the original founders. The decision was appealed, and
the Swedish Supreme Court granted leave to appeal. In December 2017, the Swedish
Supreme Court confirmed that domains can be seized under Swedish law, upholding the
Court of Appeals’ decision. In June 2017, the CJEU (case C-610/15) confirmed that The
Pirate Bay communicates to the public, directly infringing copyright. That said, the site
maintains numerous other domains to evade enforcement.
Torrentz2.eu – Bulgaria. This very popular torrent search website has a global Alexa rank
of 1,696. Torrentz2.eu emerged in 2017 following the closure of the original Torrentz.eu.
The site positioned itself as a new and improved version that indexes and aggregates over 80
third-party torrent sites. The site also operates a mirror site torrentz2.is. The site claims to
currently index over 61,110,000 torrents. The site is currently hosted at BelCloud Hosting
Corporation in Seychelles and is being masked behind a reverse proxy service that curbs
rights holders’ ability to identify its precise host. The site is blocked in Belgium, Italy,
Denmark, India, Portugal, and Australia.
Zooqle.com – UK, Russia. Zooqle is a popular torrent website globally, boasting nearly 7
million visits from 1.6 unique visitors in August 2019. It has a UK rank of 1,704 according
to SimilarWeb data. The top five most popular countries are the U.S., UK, India, Brazil, and
Australia, which make up 35 percent of its market share. Operating since 2009 but
previously under the ‘bitsnoop’ name, zooqle.com is one of the oldest running torrent
indexing websites available. The website is known for its carefully organized movie and TV
series sections. The site is blocked in Australia, Italy, Denmark, Singapore, and Portugal.
The operator of the website uses Cloudflare’s services to mask the location of the website’s
server.
Hosting Providers: Hosting providers make available the essential infrastructure required to
operate a website. Websites engaged in massive copyright infringement depend on a hosting
provider for the technical infrastructure to make their website easily viewable and to provide
high-quality video playback. The hosting provider has the ability to take websites engaged in
massive copyright infringement offline or to disable or otherwise shut them down.
Some hosting providers allow sites to hide behind a content delivery network (CDN). A CDN is
typically used to effectively and efficiently deliver content to a global user base by placing
servers all around the world that cache the pages of the website, providing a high-speed hosting
infrastructure to some of the most popular web streaming services. One of the by-products of
using a CDN is that they mask the true IP and hosting provider of a website. An example of a
CDN frequently exploited by notorious markets to avoid detection and enforcement is
CloudFlare, a reverse-proxy service that also provides a CDN functionality. Reverse proxy
functionality hides the real IP address of a web server.
Given the central role of hosting providers in the online ecosystem, it is disconcerting that many
refuse to take action upon being notified that their hosting services are being used in clear
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violation of their own terms of service that prohibit intellectual property infringement and, with
regard to notorious markets such as those cited in this filing, in blatant violation of the law.
Fishnet Communications LLC – Russia. Registered and with servers in Russia, FISHNET
is a hosting provider for two of the largest 24/7 Live UGC Streaming Platforms,
123tvnow.com and Ustreamix.com. Both Platforms focus on delivering uninterrupted 24/7
access to infringing content. FISHNET and their upstream provider TransTelecom have
been unresponsive to outreach attempts.
M247 – Romania. For years, M247 has served as a trusted partner for infringing sites. M247
responds to infringement notices by indicating receipt of notice with intent to investigate, but
it fails to act expeditiously and take permanent action against pirate sites and repeatedly
infringing services. M247 hosts a large number and array of infringing sites and
services. The company is registered in Romania and uses servers located in Romania.
Private Layer – Panama, Switzerland. For years, Private Layer has served as a trusted
partner for infringing sites. Private Layer operates in anonymity, refusing to respond to
infringement notices. They host a large number and array of infringing sites. The company
is registered in Panama and uses servers located in Switzerland.
Ad Networks and Online Advertising Entities: Ad networks are the companies that
connecting advertisers to infringing websites, contributing to the prevalence and prosperity of
infringing sites by providing funding to the operators of these sites through advertising revenue.
Although many ad networks have established best practices and guidelines to address ads
supporting or promoting piracy, detection and policing of illicit sites continues to have its
challenges. The below entity is knowingly and routinely advertising its services through display
ads on piracy sites and by burning ads for its services into the underlying infringing video files.
1XBET - Russia. 1XBET is a Russian gambling site that has started to support some of the
earliest releases of infringing theatrical camcords and infringing streams of live television
broadcasts. It has become the third most active online advertiser in Russia. Based on data
collected and published by Mediascope, 1XBet’s advertising comprised 2.4 percent of all
advertisements available in Russia, compared to 3.3 percent by Google and 3.1 percent by
PepsiCo. Reportedly, the online casino pays to insert visual and audio advertisements into
new piracy content sources incentivizing camcord and livestreaming piracy. 1XBET’s
watermark with promotion codes is ‘burned’ into the video files of infringing camcord
recordings. Thus, piracy is used as a vehicle to support this online gambling giant.
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Closing
In the U.S. and around the world, the motion picture and television industry is a community of
creators and innovators who work tirelessly at the art and craft of storytelling. The criminals
who profit from the most notorious markets threaten the very heart of our industry and in so
doing, threaten the livelihoods of the people who give it life. These markets are an immediate
threat to legitimate commerce, impairing legitimate markets’ viability and curbing U.S.
competitiveness. USTR’s efforts to shine a light on the most egregious instances of copyright
theft in foreign markets is an essential step in fostering creativity and innovation, not only in the
film and television industry but throughout the creative economy.
MPA appreciates the opportunity to comment and is ready to provide further information or
answer questions as requested.
Sincerely,
Charles H. Rivkin
Chairman & CEO
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