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posted by janrinok on Saturday June 02 2018, @04:25PM   Printer-friendly
from the concentrating-on-the-serious-crimes dept.

Submitted via IRC for SoyCow8093

Internet provider Grande Communications is requesting assistance from U.S. Marshals to serve piracy tracking company IP-Echelon. As part of the RIAA lawsuit, the ISP wants to find out more about a scam where IP-Echelon's name was abused by scammers to extract payments. Thus far, however, it has been unable to reach the company at its Hollywood office.

They used the name of piracy-tracking firm IP-Echelon and several major copyright holders, including HBO, to demand settlements for allegedly pirated content.

The DMCA scam was pretty convincing. The emails lacked IP-Echelon’s PGP signature but were good enough to fool some Internet providers into forwarding them. If anything, it revealed that these type of notices should be carefully vetted.

While we haven’t seen any reports of these fraudulent notices since, Internet provider Grande Communications has taken an interest in the matter, in preparation for its piracy liability case against the RIAA.

This case relies on DMCA notices sent by IP-Echelon competitor Rightscorp. The ISP is therefore eager to hear out IP-Echelon to find out more about the issue, noting that they received the scam emails as well.

“Grande has also received IP-Echelon infringement notices, which include both authenticated, PGP-signed infringement notices from IP-Echelon, as well as fake, non-PGP-signed notices which falsely claim to be from IP-Echelon,” Grande informed the court late last week.

Source: https://torrentfreak.com/isp-wants-us-marshals-to-help-serve-piracy-tracking-outfit-180528/


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 03 2018, @05:48AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 03 2018, @05:48AM (#687944)

    > Its a private issue. They should not get to use the forces of the US Government as a cudgel in their petty cat fight.

    It's not a private issue. IP-Echelon is using the DMCA, i.e., the forces of the US Government, to threaten their business.

    > The story seems convoluted. But the ISP can clearly already distinguish between fake and real notices. Problem solved.

    I can also clearly distinguish a fake invoice I receive in my mail. Doesn't mean that I will be able to do it 100% of the time, or that I won't think that one of the legitimate invoices is fake. Criminal fraud is a thing for a reason.

    They better be 120% sure that fake notices are actually fake. If they accidentally ignore a real notice, thinking it was fake, that excuse will not help them when the hammer of the federal government drops on their heads.