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Guru3D.com » News » American has to pay 1.5 Million USD for sharing 10 movies

American has to pay 1.5 Million USD for sharing 10 movies

by Hilbert Hagedoorn on: 11/02/2012 10:15 AM | source: | 66 comment(s)
American has to pay 1.5 Million USD for sharing 10 movies

Seriously, what the heck ...  A federal court in Illinois has handed down the largest ever damages award in a BitTorrent case. In a default judgment defendant Kywan Fisher from Hampton, Virginia is ordered to pay $1,500,000 to adult entertainment company Flava Works for sharing 10 of their movies on BitTorrent. The huge total was reached through penalties of $150,000 per movie, the maximum possible statutory damages under U.S. copyright law. It’s expected that the verdict will be used to motivate other BitTorrent defendants to settle their cases.

Since early 2010, hundreds of thousands of people in the U.S. have been sued for downloading and sharing copyrighted content on BitTorrent.

Nearly all of these cases end up dismissed or settled, but one involving Kywan Fisher from Hampton, Virginia, has turned into a financial disaster.

In 2011 Fisher and several other defendants were sued by adult entertainment company Flava Works. The case in question differs from the so-called “John Doe” lawsuits as the copyright holder had detailed information on the defendants who had paid accounts on the company’s movie portal.

For Fisher the trouble started when instead of just viewing the films for personal entertainment, he allegedly went on to share copies on BitTorrent. These illicit copies were traced directly back to his account through a code embedded in the videos.

“Plaintiff has proprietary software that assigns a unique encrypted code to each member of Plaintiff’s paid websites. In this case, every time the Defendant downloaded a copy of a copyrighted video from Plaintiff’s website, it inserts an encrypted code that is only assigned to Defendant. In this case, the encrypted code for Defendant is: ‘xvyynuxl’,” Flava informed the court.

Copying films was expressly forbidden in the user agreement Fisher signed with the video portal, allowing Flava to claim willful copyright infringement for 10 titles.

According to Flava the copies uploaded to BitTorrent by Fisher went on to be downloaded thousands of times.

“Defendant’s conduct was willful to the extent that he copied or distributed Flava Works, Inc.’ intellectual property at least 10 times and caused the videos to be infringed or downloaded at least 3,449 times.”

Because Fisher failed to defend himself Judge John Lee had little choice but to find Fisher guilty.

This week the Judge handed down the largest ever damages award in a BitTorrent case, 10 times the maximum statutory damages for willful infringement, totaling $1,500,000.

“Given the materials submitted by Plaintiff in support of its motion and in light of the absence of any objection by Defendant, Plaintiff’s motion for entry of default against defendant 11 is granted. Judgment is entered in favor of the Plaintiff Flava Works, Inc., and against the Defendant Kywan Fisher in the amount of One Million Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($1,500,000.00),” the judgment reads.







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14 pages « < 11 12 13 14


Chouji
Senior Member



Posts: 5636
Joined: 2004-01-10

#4447896 Posted on: 11/06/2012 04:31 AM
Obviously this guy didn't have the sense to run the dvd's through copying software which would have removed all that sort of digital tagging, and then share the copies on BitTorrent. ;)


It could have been encoded in the video itself, like a watermark.
A tiny watermark that would appear at random spots on the screen, in a slightly offset color of the default video. And would only be visible for a second or so.
Since they appear to be pornos, just keep it off center during the act.

So unless your down sample the hell out of the movie, it would easily be traceable.

Such a thing can be done rather easily, and would be very hard to remove. Unless you knew exactly where the code would be, and when. Even then you'd have to remove the code frame by frame. Before you could upload the video.


Now with that said. I think it's absolutely ridiculous. Copyright infringement is just way too common place. The fines are unreasonable.
If he did indeed share and it was downloaded a known 3,449 times. He should have to pay for the known amount of copies made.
IE if each one is $10, for a 1 time purchase of the film. It would cost him $34,490. Not the $1.5m that has been slapped on him. That's more than most people make in a life time. They have ruined this mans life, his dream of ever being successful. That in itself should be a crime.

$35k might take a few years to pay off, but it could be done. Even with reasonable interest.

I hope anon goes after Flava Works for stuff like this. Sometimes their way of doing justice sits a little better with me. Especially compared to what justice was done to the uploader here.

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