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posted by chromas on Tuesday August 14 2018, @02:00AM   Printer-friendly
from the bans dept.

A Dutch-based developer and Kodi addon repository administrator has shut down his operation following threats from anti-piracy outfit BREIN. Due to the XvBMC-NL repo offering addons including Covenant and IPTV Bonanza, BREIN accused its operator of facilitating access to infringing content. He is now required to sign an abstention agreement and pay a settlement of 2,500 euros.

As the battle to prevent unauthorized content getting into the hands of the masses continues, Kodi remains one of the leading platforms for such consumption.

Completely legal as it leaves its official download platform, the Kodi software is easily modified to provide access to pirated movies, TV shows, and live sports. From here on in, usage of such a setup to infringe copyright is illegal in Europe.

With this established, anti-piracy outfit BREIN has been attempting to stem the tide of platforms offering 'pirate' addons in the Netherlands. One of those was XvBMC-NL, a repository which contained addons including the hugely popular Covenant and live TV addon IPTV Bonanza.

According to a report by BREIN, last month the Dutch developer and administrator of XvBMC-NL received an unwelcome visit to his home by bailiffs sent by the anti-piracy group. BREIN hasn't made the precise contents of its message to 'Z' known but it's clear that it views his work as illegal and contrary to copyright law. The developer shut down soon after.


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  • (Score: 2) by KritonK on Tuesday August 14 2018, @05:10PM (3 children)

    by KritonK (465) on Tuesday August 14 2018, @05:10PM (#721426)

    Main menu>Videos>Add source>Done.

    Falls under the category "non-obvious thing X", that I mentioned. You need to know what a source is, and that it can be a local folder. In addition, if your file is not in one of the specified folders, you are out of luck. You can't just open the file. You have to add its folder as a source, even if playing the file is a one-off thing. I guess having a File>Open option was considered too much of a "legacy" approach to the Kodi developers.

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  • (Score: 3, Touché) by Osamabobama on Tuesday August 14 2018, @06:53PM

    by Osamabobama (5842) on Tuesday August 14 2018, @06:53PM (#721482)

    It might be easier to keep a shelf of DVDs near your television. You could sort them in whatever order you want. When you get a DVD that isn't on your shelf already, you can just pop it into your DVD player directly. No Kodi required!

    To do the same thing with Kodi, you'd have to rip the DVDs to various files, sort out the worthless extras, name each file in a format that Kodi will recognize, put it in a location that Kodi can find it, and let Kodi pull the metadata from the internet and build an index of all the videos. But then you can move all those DVDs to the basement and never touch them again.

    Netflix is even easier, but I will leave that process out...

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 14 2018, @09:58PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 14 2018, @09:58PM (#721558)

    It is literally the FIRST thing it makes you do when you clean install it and click videos. Now if you just start clicking around and ignore the warnings and popups telling you exactly what to do...

    You can also go video->files. It is right on the menu...

    If you can not figure that out then yeah you need to use something else. I can suggest VLC.

    You have to add its folder as a source, even if playing the file is a one-off thing.
    You can add a generic folder to drop things into. You can set it to auto update or manual.

    • (Score: 2) by KritonK on Wednesday August 15 2018, @08:08AM

      by KritonK (465) on Wednesday August 15 2018, @08:08AM (#721707)

      The first thing it wants me to do is to notice that my library is empty (I don't want a library, I want to see how this program works as a media player, to see if I want to bother with it) and to have me choose a source, which, being a beginner, I have no idea what it is. Kodi assumes that I want to use it so much, that I'll put up with its quirkiness, and that I am already proficient in its terminology and way of doing things. At this early stage, both assumptions are wrong.

      Video>Files does not open files, only folders. It allows you to specify a folder as a video source, which you need to add to your video sources, after which, you can browse said folder. Adding your home folder as a source, then browsing said source, yes, you can sort of have the equivalent of File>Open, but in a complicated, round-about way. However, being a beginner trying to figure out how to open a file, and seeing that Video>Open does not open files, one is more likely to think that one is simply looking at the wrong place. Meanwhile, VLC has "Media>Open File", not to mention Media>Open all sorts of other things.