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Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit (PIPCU) is a unit of the City of London Police, the national lead force for fraud. It was established in 2013[1] with the responsibility to investigate and deter serious and organised intellectual property crime in the United Kingdom.

It is based in City of London Police's headquarters at Guildhall Yard East. The unit consists of 19 police officers and staff, including detectives and police staff investigators.

Part of PIPCU's remit[2] is to protect consumers from harm, focusing on intellectual property crime that has public safety implications. Since its inception, it has investigated intellectual property crime worth more than £100 million concerning counterfeit goods or digital piracy, and suspended 28,000 websites[3] selling counterfeit goods. These websites have also been linked to identity theft.

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  • Introduction to Intellectual Property: Crash Course IP 1
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Transcription

Hi, I'm Stan Muller. This is Crash Course and today we begin our miniseries on Intellectual Property Hey, isn't the entire concept of Intellectual Property illegitimate? I mean, how can we justify locking up the world of science and arts so corporations, publishing houses and other gatekeepers can control what we know and what we think! Information wants to be free, man! Hey, me from the past! There's a Stan from the past! This is great! Stan: Hey! Me from the past! There's a Stan from the past, this is great! Anyway. I can tell by looking at your vacant and bloodshot eyes that you've been up all night and I remember desperately trying to cling to any ethos that justified your rampant copyright infringement. That is if you ever participated in such activities. And even if you had participated in said infringing activities, the statute of limitations has likely run out. I don't even know what LimeWire is! I like how this is getting started, because Stan from the past raises some interesting points! There's a good chance that he, and a lot of you watching this video, might think about aspects of Intellectual Property as outdated and pretty much irrelevant. Maybe lots of you don't think of it at all! That line, "Information wants to be free", has been used to argue that current intellectual properly laws are outdated, over-broad and generally awful. The quotation is attributed to Stewart Brand and he said this to a group of computer programmers in 1984. "On the one hand Information wants to be expensive, because it's so valuable. The right information in the right place just changes your life. On the other hand, information wants to be free, because the cost of getting it out is getting lower and lower all the time. So you have these two fighting against each other." The full quote, which you hardly ever hear, actually spells out the major tension between intellectual property and technology quite well. And it did it more than 30 years ago, when the digital age was just beginning. As information technology becomes more and more pervasive and important in our day-to-day lives in the information society, information itself becomes exponentially more important and more valuable. Paradoxically, as our information technology improves, and as our computers and connections get better and faster, and sharing becomes easier, we're less able to control the copying and dissemination of this incredibly valuable information. The law of supply and demand pushes down the information's value. This tension is nothing new. Technology, especially in the context of copyright law, has always presented challenges. Socrates's and Plato's 'Phaedrus' bemoaned the advent of books, arguing that they "will implant forgetfulness in [human beings'] souls; they will cease to exercise memory because they rely on that which is written, calling things to remembrance no longer from within themselves, but by means of external marks." One way that humans have attempted to deal with these new technologies, with varying success, is by passing laws. The scourge of the piano roll was contemplated in the 1909 Copyright Act, the photocopier in 1976, and the Internet was covered in the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act. But we're going to try to avoid this simplified intellectual property versus technology binary. The idea that we have to choose between devaluing the fruits of intellectual talent and labor, or devaluing the revolutionary information sharing capacity of our networks, is wrong-headed. The more interesting and more difficult question is how we can strike a balance; how we can incentivize and promote this revolution in the way we share information, while at the same time incentivizing and promoting the production of creative works and inventions by having respect for the human beings that actually created them. The difference between today's debates and those that took place 100 years ago is that intellectual property pervades our lives more and more every day. This is especially true for anyone viewing this video. I know that about 90% of you view Crash Course in a web browser, so consider the layers of IP in this very YouTube page. A lot of what you're looking at is covered by copyright. This video, for example, is covered as a motion picture work. The website itself is considered a literary work. The Thought Bubble, the theme song, and the video you watched right before this one, all have copyright protection. The software that streams the video is also a literary work. The web browser you're using is most likely registered as a computer program, as is the operating system. Lest you Linux weirdos think that you don't have a copyright on your OS: You do. You're just not enforcing it. Even your comments could be covered by copyright. That haiku you just posted: "Who is this person? What happened to Mr. Green? Dislike. Unsubscribe." That's copyright-able! When you agreed to this (image of YouTube user agreement), you granted YouTube a worldwide, perpetual, non-exclusive license to use your content in any way they see fit. There are also patents in play here. There's proprietary video streaming technology, and many of the components in your computer are patented. But wait! There's more! YouTube is a registered trademark, and if you saw an ad before this video, there was most likely a trademark in there. This is a trademark and under this sticker is an image of a piece of fruit, also a trademark. And behind the camera, our most precious and valuable mark, Mark Olsen. Mark Olsen, everybody! The search algorithm that got you here? That's a trade secret. My appearance in this video, and subsequent marketing of commemorative mugs with my likeness fixed on each one- that implicates my right of publicity. If you're watching this on an iPhone or an Android, there's a whole other world of copyrights and patents that apply. When you start to deconstruct it like this, it's dizzying. But despite all this complexity, most of the time the system moves along with a fluidity that sometimes makes it easy to put it out of your mind. Kind of like the internal functioning of your digestive tract. But it's there. Always there. Gurgling and churning and functioning. Did anybody order lunch? Now most of this fluidity and seamlessness is borne on the back of hundreds or thousands of lawsuits, many of them against Google, thousands of pages of intricately complex contracts, and hundreds of millions of take down notices. The point is that none of us, or very few of us, can go about our daily lives without being impacted by intellectual property. It's only when it hits home, like when you receive a cease-and-desist letter from a trademark attorney for opening a restaurant called Burger Queen, or digital rights management software stops you from listening to your iTunes downloads on your Zune. Maybe your YouTube video gets taken down because of that T-Swizzie song in the background (that's what the kids call Taylor Swift). Maybe you get a letter from your internet service provider, informing you that someone using your account has downloaded every episode of Game of Thrones and that if it keeps up you may be fined or imprisoned- or beheaded! That's when it flares up. Flare up! God, are we still on the digestive tract metaphor? Somebody get me a Tums. Tums, by the way, registered trademark of the GlaxoSmithKline group of companies. Most of us encounter IP only on its borders. We hear horror stories about the motion picture and recording industry suing grandmothers. We watch those unskippable FBI messages warning us about the consequences of copyright infringement, or we complain about paying thousands of dollars per pill for medicine. We tend to encounter intellectual property law in places where we, as users, are basically being told 'no'. And being told 'no' over and over again is irritating, especially when these "no's" don't seem to make any sense. And they're really irritating when they come with threats of fines or imprisonment. So in this course we're going to focus less on enforcement and the "no's" and more on the part of intellectual property that often says 'yes', 'sometimes', 'maybe', 'it is certain', or even 'ask again later'. I'm speaking, of course, of the "Liquid filled die agitator containing a die having raised indicia on the facets thereof", registered as patent US 3119621, which you might know as the Magic 8-Ball. Before we get too far, we should probably define intellectual property. This is going to get pretty abstract, so let's go to the Thought Bubble. The theoretical definition of intellectual property would begin by saying that it is: "Nonphysical property that stems from, is identified as, and whose value is based on an idea or some ideas." There has to be some element of novelty; the thing that we describe as intellectual property can't be commonplace, or generally known, in the society where it's created, at the time that it becomes property. You can't claim that you invented the wheel or that you wrote Moby Dick. Even though the source material for all IP is social -- the inputs are our education, our human interactions, and basically all the sensory data around us that we take in -- the thing that we call 'IP' is the product of us putting together all these social inputs into something that we're gonna call "the idea". "Only the concrete, tangible, or physical embodiments of the idea are protected by intellectual property law." The idea has to be fixed into a form and location in which humans have access to it. That could be a novel, or a logo, or a liquid filled die agitator containing a die having raised indicia on the facets thereof. Thanks, Thought Bubble. So in its purest and best form, IP is the propertization of intellectual effort and talent. In its most corrupt and worst form, intellectual property can be, and has been used by the propertied and powerful to protect concentrated markets and broken business models. At its very worst, it can be used a a censorship tool. Intellectual property differs somewhat from real property like cars or houses because it's limited in duration and scope. For example, copyrights last for the life of the author plus 70 years. Copyrighted works can be copied under the fair use exception for certain personal or publicly beneficial uses. Let's say a book reviewer quotes long passages of a novel, then pans the book. It's likely the author of the book wouldn't grant permission for this type of use. But we want to encourage informed public discourse. So there's a good chance it would be found to be a fair use. Patent laws carved out a limited experimental use exception that permits minimal use of a patent for amusement, to satisfy idle curiosity, or for strictly philosophical inquiry. Again, the patent owner probably wouldn't like this, but the law wants to encourage individual tinkering. Both these limitations exist to serve the primary objective of intellectual property: that's to promote the progress of science and useful arts by increasing our stock of knowledge. So in this series, we're going to focus on the 3 main branches of intellectual property: copyrights, patents, and trademarks. We won't have time to get into some of the lesser cousins of the family like trade secrets or the right of publicity, but all of these are included under the umbrella of intellectual property. So in the coming weeks we're going to try to get at some of the nuts and bolt of what intellectual property is, because like it or not, IP is only going to become more and more relevant as our lives become more and more digital. So regardless of what or how you feel about any aspect of IP, it's probably a good idea to have some basic knowledge of it. It doesn't matter if you're a consumer or a creator of protected content or both. Is understanding IP going to help you? You may rely on it. See you next week. Crash Course: Intellectual Property is filmed in the Chad and Stacey Emigholz here in sunny Indianapolis, Indiana, and it's made with the help of all of these nice workers for hire. If you'd like to help us make Crash Course in a monetary way that doesn't imply any ownership in the final work, you can subscribe at Patreon, a voluntary subscription service where you can support CrashCourse and help make it free for everyone forever. You can get great perks, but the greatest perk of all is the satisfaction of spreading knowledge. Right? So thanks for watching. We'll see you next week.

History

The operationally-independent unit was launched in September 2013[4] with funding from the UK government's Intellectual Property Office. It was announced in August 2017 that PIPCU will receive a further £3.2 million from the IPO to fund the unit to June 2019.[5]

In 2013, the unit began Operation Creative to disrupt and prevent websites from providing unauthorised access to copyrighted content in partnership with the creative and advertising industries. Rights holders in the creative industries can report copyright infringing websites to PIPCU, providing a detailed package of evidence indicating how the site is involved in illegal copyright infringement. Research has shown that there has been a 64% decrease in advertising[6] from the UK's top advertising spending companies on copyright infringing websites and an 87% drop in adverts for licensed gambling operators[7] being displayed on illegal sites that infringe copyright.

In 2013, Operation Ashiko was created to targets the sale of online physical counterfeit goods and aims to seize the domains of infringers.[8]

In April 2017, PIPCU launched the IP Crime Directory,[9] a database for customs and police officers to help them identify counterfeit goods with the information uploaded by rights and brand holders.[10]

Operation Creative

Operation Creative, formerly Operation Trade Bridge,[11] is an ongoing campaign against alleged copyright infringing sites and their advertising network. A number of torrent and streaming sites have been either shut down, had their domains seized or threatened by the PIPCU. Whilst over 100 websites have been 'dealt with',[12] the majority of domain name suspension requests are denied.[13]

Operations

Date Action Site/Domain Result
9 October 2013 Domain Suspensions[14] SumoTorrent
MisterTorrent
ExtraTorrent via PDR Ltd
emp3world.com via PDR Ltd
full-albums.net via PDR Ltd
maxalbums.com via PDR Ltd
Moved to SumoTorrent.sx
-
Moved to ExtraTorrent.cc[15]
Restored via EasyDNS
Restored via EasyDNS
Restored via EasyDNS
9 October 2013 Suspension Request[14] TorrentPond via EasyDNS Registrar publicly refused request
December 2013 40 domains suspended.[16] - -
9 April 2014 Domain Seizure, Arrest[17] Boxing Guru domains
nutjob.eu
Site closure
Site closure
21 April 2014 Domain Seizure[18] thesportstorrentnetwork.co.uk Site closure
24 May 2014 Domain Seizure[19] Delishows[20]
Cricfree.tv
Site moved to delishows.to[citation needed]
Site moved to Cricfree.eu. 17 August domain was returned
24 May 2014 Domain Seizure[21] Filecrop Site closure
26 May 2014 Unlawful domain suspension[22] Torrentz.eu via Nazwa Domain unsuspended 27 May (next day)
4 June 2014 Domain Seizure[20] Putlocker.bz Domain unsuspended
Site moved to bestv.ch
August 2014 Domain Seizure[citation needed] Potlocker.re Site moved to Potlocker.me
6 August 2014 Domain Seizures, Arrest[23] Immunicity and various proxy sites Temporary site closure
Clone sites launched
2 September 2014 Domain Seizure[24] OnRead via InternetBS
2 September 2014 Arrest[25] CoolSport.se, CoolSport.tv and KiwiSportz.tv Charges dropped 13 October[26]
11 September 2014 Domain Seizure[27] mp3juices.com Site closure
Initially relaunched as mp3juices.cc
Officially relaunched as mp3juices.to in November 2014[28]
4 October 2014 Domain Seizure[29] Frombar.com (Spotle Network) via eNom Site voluntarily disabled UK access on other domains[30]
13 March 2015 Arrest - "DJ Mikey L", tracker shut down[31] Karaoke-World.co.uk
18 March 2015 Arrest - "Sir Paul"[32] WWE and UFC uploader
13 April 2022 Domain Seizure, Arrests Club Penguin Rewritten Website transferred to police following takedown action by Disney[33]

In December 2015 they arrested a karaoke subtitle creation gang.[34]

By August 2015, 317 domain suspension requests had been issued.[35]

In March 2021 they claimed the Sci-Hub website could "pose a threat" to university students' personal data.[36]

In April 2022, they seized the website of Club Penguin Rewritten, a fan recreation of the Disney online game, Club Penguin.[33]

Immunicity arrest

In response to the new round of web blocking in the UK in conjunction with the copyright infringing site blocking programmes, a service called Immunicity was launched.[37] to allow circumvention of both blocking types. However on 6 August 2014 the owner was arrested[38] by the PIPCU under anti-fraud legislation.[39] Anti-censorship supporters created clones of the site such as Immun.es[23] (which closed down shortly after launching) and routingpacketsisnotacrime.uk[40] to resurrect the service.

By August 2015 the immunicity domain was back under the control of anti-censorship activists and displays a website inviting people to use Tor and other anonymity services.

Infringing website list

PIPCU maintains an 'Infringing Website List' (IWL), a portal for digital advertisers to be informed of sites containing infringing content with the intention that they cease advertising on them.[41] Sites are identified as infringing by rights holders and the list is not made available to the public.[42] As of 12 August a freedom of information request from TorrentFreak revealed:[43] 74 domains are subject to the advertiser blocking programme, of which of October 2014 only 2 domains[44] had ever been removed from the list. 83 advertising companies with a UK presence are currently participating.

Working with the media and advertiser industry body, the Audit Bureau of Circulations (ABC) created a technology portal called 'Project Sunblock'.[45] If PIPCU do not receive a response from the website operators, the host or registrar[12] of an allegedly infringing site, the site is added to the IWL via the Sunblock portal, which is then passed along to participating advertising networks for blacklisting. From June 2014 this technology allowed replacing the adverts of websites believed to be offering unauthorized content with warnings from PIPCU.[46]

Piracy warning replacing adverts

In 2014 the PIPCU removed payment provisions from 4,650 offending sites with a .co.uk address from sites on the infringing websites list.[47]

See also

References

  1. ^ "About PIPCU". www.cityoflondon.police.uk. Retrieved 2018-01-18.
  2. ^ "How PIPCU operates". www.cityoflondon.police.uk. Retrieved 2018-01-18.
  3. ^ "Police shut 28,000 websites selling counterfeits". Sky News. Retrieved 2018-01-18.
  4. ^ "About PIPCU". www.cityoflondon.police.uk. Retrieved 2018-02-01.
  5. ^ "PIPCU funding confirmed until 2017 - Commander Head "This is fantastic news for the City of London Police"". www.cityoflondon.police.uk. Retrieved 2018-02-01.
  6. ^ "Operation Creative sees 64 per cent drop in UK advertising". www.cityoflondon.police.uk. Retrieved 2018-02-01.
  7. ^ Media, Newton. "Gambling adverts on illegal sites drop 87%: research". www.trademarksandbrandsonline.com. Retrieved 2018-02-01.
  8. ^ "PIPCU suspends more than 2,000 illegal websites since New Year". www.cityoflondon.police.uk. Retrieved 2018-02-01.
  9. ^ "IP Crime Directory - Home". ipcrimedirectory.org. Retrieved 2018-02-01.
  10. ^ "City Of London Police | Richard Branson endorses the City of London Police's Intellectual Property (IP) Crime Directory on World IP Day". news.cityoflondon.police.uk. Retrieved 2018-02-01.
  11. ^ "City Police initative [sic] to battle illegal websites christened Operation Trade Bridge as Affectv comes on board". 16 July 2013. Retrieved 13 December 2014.
  12. ^ a b Kobie, Nicole. "Policing the web: anti-piracy and beyond". www.pcpro.co.uk. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  13. ^ Ernesto. "Domain Registrars Deny Police Requests to Suspend Pirate Sites".
  14. ^ a b Ernesto (9 October 2013). "UK Police Orders Registrars to Suspend Domains of Major Torrent Sites". Torrentfreak. Retrieved 21 April 2014.
  15. ^ Andy (October 10, 2013). "ExtraTorrent Threatens Legal Action Over Police-Ordered Domain Seizure". Retrieved 21 September 2014.
  16. ^ Solon, Olivia (12 December 2013). "With Operation Creative, police crack down on 'ad-funded' piracy". wired.co.uk. Retrieved 21 April 2014.
  17. ^ Andy. "Police Arrest Streaming Site Admin, Several Domains Suspended".
  18. ^ Andy (21 April 2014). "UK Police Force Shutdown of Sports Torrent Network". Torrentfreak. Retrieved 21 April 2014.
  19. ^ Ernesto (May 24, 2014). "Cricfree Bounces Back After UK Police Domain Seizure". TorrentFreak. Retrieved 21 September 2014.
  20. ^ a b Ernesto (June 4, 2014). "Putlocker.BZ Loses Domain Name, Moves to "Safe Haven" Iceland". Retrieved 21 September 2014.
  21. ^ Andy. "UK Police Shutdown File-Host Search Engine FileCrop". Retrieved 21 September 2014.
  22. ^ Ernesto (May 27, 2014). "Torrentz.eu Domain Unsuspended and Back In Action". Retrieved 21 September 2014.
  23. ^ a b Ernesto (August 11, 2014). "Immunicity Resurrected by Anti-Censorship Supporters". TorrentFreak. Retrieved 10 September 2014.
  24. ^ Andy. "Anti-Piracy Police Begin Targeting eBook Pirates". Retrieved 22 September 2014.
  25. ^ Andy (September 2, 2014). "UK Police Make Third 'Pirate' Streaming Arrest". Retrieved 19 October 2014.
  26. ^ Andy (October 13, 2014). "Police Drop Charges Against Industrial-Scale 'Pirate'". Retrieved 19 October 2014.
  27. ^ Ernesto (11 September 2014). "UK Police Shut Down MP3 Search Engine MP3Juices". Retrieved 11 September 2014.
  28. ^ Ernesto. "MP3Juices Recovers From UK Police Shutdown With New Domain". Retrieved 3 November 2014.
  29. ^ Ernesto. "Police Seize Domain of Frombar Sports Streaming Site".
  30. ^ Ernesto (October 19, 2014). "Sports Streaming Site Hides Itself From The UK Piracy Police". Retrieved 19 October 2014.
  31. ^ Andy (13 March 2015). "UK Police and PRS Shutdown Karaoke Torrent Site". Retrieved 13 March 2015.
  32. ^ Andy (March 18, 2015). "Police Arrest World's Most Prolific UFC and WWE Pirate". Retrieved 21 March 2015.
  33. ^ a b "Club Penguin Rewritten Shut Down by Disney". TechRaptor. Retrieved 2022-04-13.
  34. ^ Andy (16 December 2015). "KickassTorrents "DIY" Karaoke 'Gang' Busted By UK Police". Retrieved 16 December 2015.
  35. ^ Ernesto (21 August 2015). "UK Piracy Police Asked Domain Registrars to Shut Down 317 Sites". Retrieved 22 August 2015.
  36. ^ Sean (19 March 2021). "Police warn students to avoid science website". Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  37. ^ "Unblock Torrent Sites, Blocked Proxies, & Cameron's Porn Filter With Immunicity". TorrentFreak. July 28, 2013. Retrieved 10 September 2014.
  38. ^ Ernesto (August 6, 2014). "Police Arrest Operator of Torrent Site Proxies". TorrentFreak. Retrieved 10 September 2014.
  39. ^ "The Laws PIPCU used to intimidate Immunicity". survivetheclaireperryinter.net. Retrieved 10 September 2014.
  40. ^ "Andy". September 23, 2014. Retrieved 13 December 2014.
  41. ^ City of London Police call on advertising and brand sectors to help tackle cyber crime, PIPCU, 2014-03-31
  42. ^ UK Police Launch Pirate Site Blacklist for Advertisers, TorrentFreak, 2014-03-31
  43. ^ Ernesto. "UK Police Hijack Ads of 74 Pirate Websites, Refuse to Name Them". TorrentFreak. Retrieved 21 September 2014.
  44. ^ "Number of sites removed from the PIPCU Infringing Website List". Retrieved 13 December 2014.
  45. ^ a b "Online Pirates Are Making Advertisers Walk the Plank". Retrieved 29 July 2014.
  46. ^ Lee, Dave. "Police placing anti-piracy warning ads on illegal sites". Retrieved 29 July 2014.
  47. ^ Hansard, 2015-01-28

External links

This page was last edited on 31 December 2023, at 17:10
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