
- #LOS ANGELES COUNTY ERCOM SUBPOENA MOVIE#
- #LOS ANGELES COUNTY ERCOM SUBPOENA SOFTWARE#
- #LOS ANGELES COUNTY ERCOM SUBPOENA TORRENT#
TWC requested that the judge limit subpoena lookups for the US Copyright Group to 28 per month. These lookup requests involve everything from suicide threats to child abduction to terrorist activity, and the company says that such cases take "immediate priority." It says that, without a major staffing increase, it simply cannot turn around more than 1,000 requests in a timely fashion without compromising the much more important requests from law enforcement. The company averages 567 IP lookup requests per month, nearly all of them coming from law enforcement. Time Warner Cable has pleaded with the federal judge overseeing several of the P2P cases brought this year by the US Copyright Group. But what if a major ISP like Time Warner Cable only had to do 28 of these lookups a month? And might take three years to burn through its entire list?
#LOS ANGELES COUNTY ERCOM SUBPOENA MOVIE#
Suing tens of thousands of accused peer-to-peer movie file-swappers-it can be a lucrative business model, but it works well only when Internet service providers can turn huge lists of IP addresses into real names and addresses in a timely fashion. P2P Plaintiffs to Get Just 28 Time Warner IPs Each Month It’s as if the copyright holders want to have the movie downloaded as many times as possible, unlikely as that may seem.
#LOS ANGELES COUNTY ERCOM SUBPOENA TORRENT#
Last month alone, the movie was downloaded 200,000 times, Torrent Freak reports. Yet, so far, the actual illegal downloading of the film continues undeterred.What’s more, there appears to be absolutely no DMCA takedown notices issued to sites providing torrent files of the movie. Incidentally Hurt Locker has been a box office flop. Still, the production company and the US Copyright Group that is representing them say that all of this has to do with file sharing and how it’s destroying the movie industry. The system works because most people choose the settlement option as they don’t want to be dragged into a potentially expensive lawsuit. Users receive notification letters informing them that they are being accused of illegally downloading the movie and that they can choose to pay for a ‘settlement’ to handle the business out of court.

The move has all the makings of a classic shakedown scenario. The practice has recently made its way into the US, where the producers of the Oscar winning movie Hurt Locker are suing 5,000 people for their downloads. One way copyright holders groups have been making money online is by threatening to sue everyone that might have downloaded an illegal copy if a movie, for example. Unfortunately, that doesn’t always mean what you’d expect. That said, at least some companies have managed to adapt to the new environment and generate some revenue in process. Most old school companies haven’t provided the alternatives that customers want and are, in fact, fighting vigorously to limit their choice. That is to say, many illegal file sharers would pay if it was easy enough for them to do it. The phenomenon is complex, but one of the big reasons people turn to file sharing is the convenience and not necessarily the price.
#LOS ANGELES COUNTY ERCOM SUBPOENA SOFTWARE#
Internet piracy is as rampant as it has ever been and millions of people turn to peer to peer networks or various sites to get their hands on the movies, music or software that they want. The copyright holders have not issued any takedown notices so far

Massive Hurt Locker File Sharing Lawsuit Has No Effect on Downloads If you're trying to make a living by selling information and you wind up going broke, then you have nobody to blame but yourself." – Anonymous Coward
