The MediaDefender Debacle
Hackers recently intercepted e-mails and phone conversations from MediaDefender, a company that monitors torrent tracking sites and seeds fake content to discourage illegal downloading. They purportedly did this by tracking down a MediaDefender plant in a torrent forum by the user’s IP, obtained his password for the forum, and then tried that password on his Gmail account… And voila! They had access to his Gmail, to which he had forwarded his work e-mail.
(I wonder if betraying his password would violate the torrent forum’s TOS—and whether the user might have a claim against them for that. For example, he accepted the TOS which formed a contract between him and the forum owners, and if they promise to keep his password secure, then they breached the contract… Then, damages?)
The leaked e-mails and phone conversation (the latter, a separate hack) revealed which sites MediaDefender “policed” and some conversations they had with the NY Attorney General’s Office about aiding the AGO with a child porn investigation. (Yes, more child porn on this blog.) Ironically, in the phone call with the AGO, MediaDefender stressed how secure their services were given the highly sensitive nature of the AGO investigation.
On top of it all, there’s evidence that MediaDefender created a fake torrent site, a “honeypot,” named MiiVi to lure and trap torrent users (from an ArsTechnica post):
A web site called MiiVi allegedly offered full-length motion pictures for download and offered to install special client software on the user’s computer to help speed up the downloads. However, the software did a little more than that: it also reportedly performed searches of the user’s computer for other illegal software and reported its findings back to MediaDefender. Acting on a tip from The Pirate Bay, the online publication ZeroPaid began an “investigation” (a followup to Torrent Freak’s article) and found that MediaDefender didn’t make much of an effort to hide who was behind MiiVi. The whois records for MiiVi were clearly registered to MediaDefender with the company’s address in California and administrative contact information within the company.
In reaction to this shit-storm, MediaDefender has sent cease and desists to at least MegaNova and isoHunt, to which they’ve responded derisively. From the ArsTechnica article:
[T]he isoHunt administrator says that the he will comply with the request if it is properly submitted. “Despite us being located in Canada, if you do actually figure out how to compose a valid DMCA notice, we will honor it,” he concedes, “just as soon as we’re done laughing at you.” Â
“Dearest little asstunnels, Let me start off by thanking you for your pitiful attempt to have your e-mails removed from the entire internet,” Meganova’s response says. “In case you haven’t noticed, this site is located in Europe (I hope you can point it out on a map) where your stupid copyright claims have no base. But fair is fair you guys did suffer over the past week so here’s bit of advice to you guys: F*** you! F*** you again! F*** you again and again and again!”
Furthermore, MediaDefender has written to sites that have published the list of torrent sites they’ve been targeting, bullying them into removing the list.
Gotta love the drama. And asstunnels.
September 25th, 2007 at 5:45 pm
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