MPAA accuses laser printer of illegal file sharing

MPAA accuses laser printer of illegal file sharing
Since the RIAA first begain their campaign against illegal file sharing on P2P networks there has been intense debate over the methods used to figure out who's responsible for sharing copyrighted content. Now a a report from the University of Washington may prove to be a powerful tool for those accused of such illicit behavior in fighting back against their accusers. The report, written by Michael Piatek, Tadayoshi Kohno, and Arvind Krishnamurthy and based on experiments conducted in August, 2007 and May of this year, shows that some of the agencies tasked with putting a stop to illegal file sharing are making accusations that are simply false.

The report says "Copyright holders utilize inconclusive methods for identifying infringing BitTorrent users. We were able to generate hundreds of DMCA takedown notices for machines under our control at the University of Washington that were not downloading or sharing any content"



Takedown notices are the official mechanism used to report infringing content under the DMCA. They're routinely sent to ISPs, who then typically send a warning of some kind to the individual they determine was responsible based on information supplied by the copyright holder.

No doubt what will attract the most attention, and is certainly the most amusing aspect of the paper, is that 3 laser printers and a wireless access point were the targets of a combined 13 takedown notices. In each case, as well as 5 more where a desktop computer was alleged to have illegally shared files, it was due to intentional misdirection on the part of researchers who wrote "The potential for false positives and implication of arbitrary addresses undermines the credibility of monitoring and creates a significant inconvenience for misidentified users (if not financial and/or legal penalties)."

Despite the report's somewhat humourous point of view, in the end there's not much to laugh about. The researchers concluded "Our results show that potentially any Internet user is at risk for receiving DMCA takedown notices today. Whether a false positive sent to a user that has never even used BitTorrent or a truly infringing user that relies on incomplete IP blacklists, there is currently no way for anyone to wholly avoid the risk of complaints."

Finally Piatek, Kohno, and Krishnamurthy cautioned "Through extensive measurement of tens of thousands of BitTorrent swarms and analysis of hundreds of DMCA complaints, we have shown that a malicious user can implicate arbitrary network endpoints in copyright infringement, and additional false positives may arise due to buggy software or timing effects."



They urged enforcement agencies to adopt a "more thorough approach to detecting infringement in BitTorrent" to avoid the problems described in the paper, but note that it would be significantly more difficult than the way these operations are handled right now.

You can find more information about report at the University of Washington website.

Written by: Rich Fiscus @ 5 Jun 2008 20:35
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  • 27 comments
  • grkblood

    lol, this is pretty funny.

    5.6.2008 20:53 #1

  • tripplite

    MPAA=n00bz! ha they can't do anything right:)

    btw it seems MediaDefender is dieing.....i've noticed a slow down in there work in the past 6 months.......there just about done if you ask me....i think the MPAA used to contract them.....

    http://www.collegehumor.com/video:1672870


    -tripplite

    5.6.2008 20:58 #2

  • iluvendo

    Science can now show the MPAA is fallacious in their take down notice methodology. To use that methodology in a court of law and to use a scientifically peer reviewed paper such as the one presented here is asking for a an acquittal on the defendant's position.

    5.6.2008 21:07 #3

  • BurningAs

    HAHAHAHAHAHAH MPAA. Man they are funny.

    "motion to sentence this printer to 5 years in prison and $250,000..."

    HAHAHHAHAAA

    5.6.2008 21:18 #4

  • Schwaber

    MPAA is such a relentless group. Can they just give up already?

    5.6.2008 21:30 #5

  • ZippyDSM

    The media mafia needs to turn away from hounding the end user, focus on illicit profit.

    5.6.2008 21:35 #6

  • DXR88

    Haha...Retards

    5.6.2008 22:03 #7

  • svtstang

    No doubt they will take the printer and hub to court! Maybe we should start a fund for the hardware!? Lol I would love to see what a DMCA take down notice would look like for a damn laser printer.

    5.6.2008 22:50 #8

  • ripxrush

    WOW! all cases should be thrown out! If i was accused of killing someone and my DNA didn't match i would most likely not be found guilty! OJ had more than that & he wasn't found guilty...
    what else can i say!

    6.6.2008 01:16 #9

  • Blackjax

    Too funny, I can see the scenario now.

    Printer accused, tried and sentenced. Must pay $250,000 to MPAA. Printer starts printing out funny money to pay fine and is busted for counterfeiting. Then printer is tried and sentenced to the federal pen where unspeakable things happen to it in the shower.

    ooooooooooooooooooooooooooh the horror!

    I hope those morons read these forums and see what DA's they are!

    6.6.2008 01:24 #10

  • Pop_Smith

    This is too funny, I wonder how they got the laser printer to look as if it was exchanging data via bittorrent.

    6.6.2008 02:31 #11

  • simpsim1

    Quite a flawed technique really. They use the list of IP's in the BT client and are able to simply assume that these "peers" are actually exchanging data, rather than connecting directly to the peer as they do with the likes of kazaa and limewire.

    It wasn't me, it was the printer.... honest guv!

    6.6.2008 07:40 #12

  • venomX05

    this has got to be the funniest $hit i have ever read lately...lol, that is awesome!

    6.6.2008 07:41 #13

  • redf00t

    Bah! A public defender could get the printers and AP out of this. I hope they counter-claim!

    6.6.2008 08:04 #14

  • vurbal

    This morning I read that the printers were actually being forced into their life of crime by the WAP. I hope they throw the book at him ;-)

    6.6.2008 10:26 #15

  • DXR88

    Originally posted by ripxrush: WOW! all cases should be thrown out! If i was accused of killing someone and my DNA didn't match i would most likely not be found guilty! OJ had more than that & he wasn't found guilty...
    what else can i say!

    Hey, the glove don't Fit.

    6.6.2008 12:37 #16

  • iluvendo

    Originally posted by DXR88: Originally posted by ripxrush: WOW! all cases should be thrown out! If i was accused of killing someone and my DNA didn't match i would most likely not be found guilty! OJ had more than that & he wasn't found guilty...
    what else can i say!

    Quote:Hey, the glove don't Fit.


    But according to the MPAA, the glove fits everyone.

    If it wasnt for bad luck, Id have no luck!
    "The flimsier the product,the higher the price"
    Ferengi 82nd rule of aquisition

    6.6.2008 12:44 #17

  • varnull

    /me looks through blocklist and finds riaa/mpaa ip's.. then sets external proxy to spoof those ip's every 20 packets back to the tracker... lets see them bust themselves...

    6.6.2008 12:52 #18

  • DXR88

    Originally posted by iluvendo: Originally posted by DXR88: Originally posted by ripxrush: WOW! all cases should be thrown out! If i was accused of killing someone and my DNA didn't match i would most likely not be found guilty! OJ had more than that & he wasn't found guilty...
    what else can i say!

    Quote:Hey, the glove don't Fit.


    But according to the MPAA, the glove fits everyone.
    heh heh. Even the printer

    6.6.2008 12:55 #19

  • vurbal

    Quote:Originally posted by DXR88: Originally posted by ripxrush: WOW! all cases should be thrown out! If i was accused of killing someone and my DNA didn't match i would most likely not be found guilty! OJ had more than that & he wasn't found guilty...
    what else can i say!

    Quote:Hey, the glove don't Fit.


    But according to the MPAA, the glove fits everyone.

    Not everybody - just the list of people the tracker says it fits. Come on, they'd have to go through hundreds of gloves to actually let everybody try it on.

    6.6.2008 13:36 #20

  • DXR88

    Well Vurbal You got a Point there. that be a lot of Gloves huh.

    6.6.2008 13:39 #21

  • PetahG

    Imagine sending the laser printer

    TO COURT!!! lmao....the laser printer would probabaly need a lawyer...or wait, maybe the laser printer could speak by printer what he wants to say in fast and high quality manner!!!
    LMAO...
    This is like the funniest thing ive heard all day...
    Yes my life is boring :(

    7.6.2008 17:27 #22

  • 7thsinger

    Well, i've scolded my printer and instructed it to spend the rest of the evening in the corner.

    7.6.2008 17:50 #23

  • ThePastor

    Unfortunantly, watching the downloaded movie on that tiny, LCD display on the front of the printer just sucks.
    I hope those printers get what they deserve!

    15 years to Life... and I believe that the Lifecycle on one of those printers is about 500,000 prints... they could be in for a very long time indeed.

    10.6.2008 20:32 #24

  • vurbal

    Originally posted by ThePastor: Unfortunantly, watching the downloaded movie on that tiny, LCD display on the front of the printer just sucks.
    You're doing it wrong. You're supposed to print out each frame and put together a flip book to watch the movie. The big problem is you need really big hands....

    10.6.2008 22:59 #25

  • 7thsinger

    Dang it!

    That's where i've been screwing it up!

    Thanks for the tip Vurbal.







    "Sir, i would not harm thee for the world...but thou art standing where i'm about to shoot."

    10.6.2008 23:05 #26

  • Mez

    Not very funny. It is like a near sighted hit man who kills twice as many people as he should because he can't see and is TOO LAZY to check before he kills them. As long as it is not me...

    12.6.2008 21:14 #27

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