RIAA demonstrates collegiate anti-piracy efforts

By Ed Oswald, BetaNews

May 14, 2008, 3:32 PM

In a demonstration to The Chronicle, the music industry group discloses it uses the same software client as file sharers to catch pirates.

No university is singled out above another, and LimeWire is used as RIAA's software of choice. The process begins with a search on the service for song titles owned by its member organizations.

From there, once a track is located, the group uses the features of the software to determine who is sharing it. LimeWire will provide a list of files available for download from the host, as well as his or her IP address.

Once this information is obtained, RIAA then determines the ISP with that particular IP using Media Sentry, and then which of those file sharers are located on college and university networks.

This seems time consuming, but with Media Sentry the process is automated, including notification of the RIAA of the IPs with infringing files.

RIAA will first send a DMCA notice to the the university asking for removal of the file, and rarely will download the file themselves unless human intervention is required in order to confirm the file is indeed the copyrighted song in question.

The official -- who refused to be identified in the Chronicle's story out of fear of receiving hate mail -- said that RIAA typically will only send out pre-litigation settlement letters to the people in more serious cases. Unlike the above investigation, these files are always downloaded to verify their content for legal purposes.

While the group cannot tell who is downloading the songs, they can uncover who is sharing them. The process also differs from that of commercial ISP's, where the investigation is completely manual.

The official said that ISP's are already aware of the piracy problem, so there is no need for such a system at that level. However, colleges are apparently still coming to terms with the problem if RIAA is to be believed.

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By Hollywood__

edited May 15, 2008 - 12:22 PM

There are less comments for this entire page of threads than there were for a single PS3 or 360 story last week.

Just be smart and don't seed the torrents or P2P programs if you don't wan to get caught.
They always go after the sharers, not the downloaders.

As soon as a file is complete with Azureus, I move it to an external drive and delete it from the folder.

Score: 0

By Galway

posted May 15, 2008 - 1:34 PM

Downloads are also uploaders by default, so you are actually sharing the pieces you are downloading. Being registered on the tracker when monitored is enough to establish your IP.

By not uploading what you download you are abusing the torrent system, with some trackers blacklisting leachers.

"They always go after the sharers, not the downloaders."

Once they get your IP, do you think they will check your ratio to determine your sharing status? To be honest, being a leecher does not save you.

If you were smart you would use a IP filter to reduce the risk, but it wont save you in the long run.

Score: 0

By eunichman

posted May 15, 2008 - 3:23 AM

anyone using these file sharing softwares knows that there are a majority of files labelled as one thing but in actuality are another. the only way that riaa can be sure is to illegally download the title and try it :) isnt that a kicker?

Score: 0

By lazarus98

posted May 14, 2008 - 9:40 PM

The RIAA is lying about what they use anyway.. This article (news release) is complete bull.

Score: 0

By Hollywood__

posted May 14, 2008 - 7:44 PM

isohunt.com / Azureus torrent client.

Score: 0

By PC_Tool

edited May 15, 2008 - 12:10 PM

Been using Deluge lately.

Pretty slick. Small, efficient, my speeds are insane, but then, for Ubuntu and Fedora ISOs, what would you expect?

Score: 0

By daq

posted May 14, 2008 - 5:27 PM

Limewire is s***, has always been s***, and is now pretty much dead thankfully. RIAA burn in hell mother****ers.

Score: 0

By skimore

posted May 14, 2008 - 5:11 PM

Why not rename 20 Beethoven songs and put them on Limewire.. Oh wait years ago a friend used limewire and most of the dloads were not what it said they were..

Score: 0

By Program86

edited May 14, 2008 - 5:05 PM

only noobs use limewire...

The RIAA can suck my fat BitTorrent.

Score: 0

By LRN

posted May 14, 2008 - 4:04 PM

Uh...Limewire
Ever heard of GNUnet, Darknet, Mute?

Score: 0

By imafurby

posted May 14, 2008 - 4:02 PM

This is getting really boring.

Score: 0