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  1. #1
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    Italy Starts Blocking Torrent Sites Without a Trial

    Italy doesn’t even have to bother with a court order to shut down sites it considers to be illegal and therefore has censored yet another four torrent sites.

    Back in December, Italy’s new regulations were announced and it has been clear since then that the telecoms administrative body would go on a rampage against torrent sites.

    AGCOM, the Italian Communications Regulatory Authority, has had the power to cut off access to such sites since the end of March and The Pirate Bay has already fallen prey to the blockade. Now, LimeTorrents, TorrentDownload.ws, Torrentz.pro and TorrentDownloads.me have joined the quickly growing list.

    All four sites were deemed to be infringing and, as a result, will be blocked by ISPs, AGCOM announced. Anti-piracy groups are to blame for this, as music and movie groups have complained to the authority about these sites containing links to torrented copies of work they have copyright over.

    AGCOM has simply reviewed the complaints, deemed them genuine and moved on to expand the list of blocked torrent sites.

    One thing that authorities always ignore when it comes to such situations is that torrent sites also contain perfectly legal content that users will no longer have access to due to the blockade.

    TorrentFreak points out that the United States Trade Representative has been putting pressure on the world to take action against piracy. The Special 301 Report used to include Italy among the countries where piracy was abundant.

    In this year’s report, Italy is no longer mentioned. The USTR has even noted that the removal reflects the significant steps that the Italian government has taken to address the problem of online piracy, as well as the continued US commitment to meaningful and sustained engagement with the European country.

    The decision to take out Italy from the list was most likely taken as the local government adopted the new laws empowering AGCOM to forgo any court visits and simply take the reins on the site blockade.

    Aside from the sites that are getting blocked by AGCOM, the Italian authorities separately blocked 46 websites that offer torrents, streaming and file sharing services, back in March. The decision was taken by the Public Prosecutor of Rome, which decided to crack down on websites accused of providing pirated material.

    The same legal entity blocked another 27 sites in 2013, so the measure taken in March is not really a surprise.

  2. #2
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    Italy Started Torrent Tracker Blackout without Trials

    A few months ago, the country introduced new regulations enabling a telecoms administrative body to decide whether websites should remain accessible. Before, a number of “notorious” websites like The Pirate Bay were blocked by court order, and now the local regulator ordered to block its first 4 torrent websites, without legal wrangling.

    Screen_Hunter_03_May_19_18_15.jpg

    An Italian breakthrough occurred under intense and sustained pressure of the United States to change its attitudes to online piracy. Italy was put on the USTR’s Watch List in 2013, but was notably absent from this year edition.

    Industry experts had to admit that the removal of the country from the Special 301 List indicated significant steps the local authorities have taken to tackle the piracy problem. Indeed, Italy did something extraordinary. Instead of introducing laws to make a piracy crackdown easier, the authorities simply granted the local regulatory the power to deal with copyright infringement.

    This means no need for costly legal cases and court-ordered injunctions. Since April, 2014, the Italian regulator can order to remove violating material or block the allegedly infringing domains. Everything is done under regulations, not legislation.

    Now the regulator focused on the framework’s primary targets – torrent trackers and websites. According to the first 4 decisions of the authority, torrent websites LimeTorrents, TorrentDownloads.me, TorrentDownload.ws, and Torrentz.pro were labeled infringing and will be blocked by the Italian Internet service providers. The decisions reveal when the complaints were made and by whom.

    For instance, the LimeTorrents was reported to the regulator by anti-piracy group that represents Sony Music, Warner Music and Universal Music – all those labels provided links to torrents which linked to their content without their consent, and the body had to agree the complaints were genuine. LimeTorrents’ operators were disallowed from involvement in the process. Finally, in the beginning of May the Italian broadband providers were given only 2 days to block subscriber access to LimeTorrents.

    The other sites saw similar procedure after being complained about by anti-piracy groups working on behalf of the studios. All of those sites will also be blocked by ISPs.


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