How Hollywood Catches Pirates - Everyone here should read this!
#1
Real current examples of the dangers we warn you guys about...

Following a three year investigation by Hollywood-backed anti-piracy group the Federation Against Copyright Theft, last week five of the UK’s most prolific movie pirates were sentenced in the West Midlands.

Graeme Reid, 40, from Chesterfield, Scott Hemming, 25, and Reece Baker, 22, both from Birmingham, Sahil Rafiq, 24, of Wolverhampton and Ben Cooper, 33, of Willenhall, received sentences totaling 17 years.

The men were behind several interrelated movie release groups including RemixHD, 26K, UNiQUE, DTRG and HOPE/RESISTANCE.

“Over a number of years the groups illegally released online more than 2,500 films including Argo, the Avengers and Skyfall,” FACT said in a statement.

“The outreach of their criminality was vast. On just one website where the group shared their films there had been millions of downloads.”

Speaking at Wolverhampton Crown Court, FACT prosecutor David Groome said that the men had gone to great lengths to avoid being detected. But was that really the case and just how easy was it to track them down?

TF has obtained papers detailing the FACT investigation and they reveal that unmasking the men was surprisingly easy. In descending sentence length:

Sahil Rafiq – Jailed for 4 years and 6 months

In July 2012 a FACT investigator began monitoring Rafiq’s release group, 26K. He found that many of the torrents had been uploaded by a user known as ‘memory100′.

It was discovered that ‘memory100′ had a profile on torrent site Torlock and it was determined that the same user also went under other names including ‘sohail20′, ‘hail_alpha’ and ‘froggie100′, with the former laying down the golden crumb.

In 2012, Sohail20 had posted on a forum belonging to online retailer PC Specialist. In that post he complained about issues he was having with a laptop.

“Could you help me out?” he asked. “Kind Regards, Sahil Rafiq.”

Further searches on the name Sohail20 revealed an account on PhotoBucket and a Memory100 logo file named memory100.jpg (now removed).

Suspecting they were closing in, FACT’s investigator turned to Facebook and found Rafiq’s profile. From there they found his place of work, a science school in Wolvehampton in central UK. FACT then turned to credit reference agency Equifax which revealed Rafiq’s home address. These details were handed to the police.

Reece Baker – Jailed for 4 years and 2 months

In 2012 the same FACT investigator began monitoring Baker’s release group ‘HOPE’. In the ‘NFO’ (information) files attached to a HOPE release, it was revealed that the encoder was called ‘Baker92′ while detailing a Hushmail email address where he could be contacted.

In another NFO file Baker would make a fatal mistake with the comment “My First Encode Comment & Tell Me What You Think – Plus I Love My Baby Momzie Ria”

After finding a post on torrent site Myris.me which indicated that Baker92 had been a member of another release group DTRG, FACT again turned to Equifax. Presuming the ’92’ in his nickname related to his birth year, FACT searched for any person named Baker born in 1992 with an association to anyone called Ria. This led FACT – and the police – to Reece Baker’s front door.

Graeme Reid – jailed for 3 years and 6 months

During the same month in which FACT investigated 26K, the anti-piracy group discovered from the group’s NFO files that they were affiliated with Reid’s group, RemixHD.

An NFO file for the movie 21 Jump Street revealed that the encoder was a person known as ‘Reidy’ who could be contacted at Hushmail email address. Hushmail is known for its security but that has limits – Reid used the same email address on his Facebook page where he described himself as an “encoder” who lived in Chesterfield.

FACT then turned to the Electoral Register and subsequently discovered Reid’s home address which was passed to the police.

Ben Cooper – jailed for 3 years and 6 months

During July 2012, when FACT were investigating HOPE, they discovered an associated user called ‘Cooperman666′ who also used a Hushmail email account. Again, an NFO file for a movie helped to make links, indicating that the encoding had been done by ‘Cooperman’.

Subsequent searches revealed that Cooperman666 was also an encoder for release group ANALOG and in their NFO files a Live.com email address was listed for contact. However, that same email address was also used for a Facebook account held in the name of Ben Cooper. That page revealed he lived in Wolverhampton and was born in 1981.

FACT turned to Equifax and the credit agency provided Cooper’s personal details.

Scott Hemming – 2 year suspended sentence

In July 2012, when FACT were investigating 26K, the anti-piracy group identified people who were formerly members of another release group known as DTRG. NFO files examined by FACT listed the encoder as ‘Kareemzos’ who could be contacted on the email address “iencodefordtrg@live.co.uk”

After linking Kareemzos to other groups including MARGIN, UNiQUE and INSANE, FACT then struck lucky. Posts made on Virgin Media’s support forum listed the same email address as above and it appears that the ISP later revealed that the associated account belonged to Hemming’s mother.

Again, Equifax provided the missing link by confirming that Hemming lived at the same house.

Conclusion

The above confirms that no amount of encryption is a replacement for basic Internet ‘hygiene’. Using the same aliases and email addresses across multiple sites while including birth dates and nicknames that point to real identities is clearly a recipe for disaster.

While FACT clearly did their homework and worked extremely hard to get convictions, the actions taken by these men to hide their identities aren’t shining examples of the art.


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#2
Quote:The above confirms that no amount of encryption is a replacement for basic Internet ‘hygiene’. Using the same aliases and email addresses across multiple sites while including birth dates and nicknames that point to real identities is clearly a recipe for disaster.

Long live TPB for not asking for personal infos.
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#3
(Dec 27, 2015, 07:31 am)Ernesto Wrote: While FACT clearly did their homework and worked extremely hard to get convictions, the actions taken by these men to hide their identities aren’t shining examples of the art.

Of course not.
Anything with "fabulous and fame" in the Internet is all that it takes.
While FACT act like rabid dogs vigilante, the preys having wet dream as top notch dick.
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#4
(Dec 27, 2015, 08:47 am)dolly_cat Wrote:
Quote:The above confirms that no amount of encryption is a replacement for basic Internet ‘hygiene’. Using the same aliases and email addresses across multiple sites while including birth dates and nicknames that point to real identities is clearly a recipe for disaster.

Long live TPB for not asking for personal infos.

Read it again, read it slowly. Then read it again.

This isn't about us asking (or not asking) for personal info.

It is about "you" (in general) using the same username or email address you have used here on any other site ever. About you providing any information about yourself in torrent descriptions or comments or posts on this forum. [Or about you ever referencing anything you have been involved with here/TPB on any other site ever.]

About you trying to earn money by using your own image hosts, or wanting to become famous by including information about yourselves in NFO files, or even by trying to help people over teamviewer or skype or email or any other "direct connection" rather than through forum pm's. Or about providing links to facebook accounts you are associated with (as Facebook literally hoovers up as much about you as it can get it's hands on, and actively attempts to leverage information anyone else knows about you as well).

About you posting anything (or any combination of things, over a period of years) which may, when taken together, be able to be used to narrow you down.
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#5
Yeah... That's true. I got the wrong idea. But this is so obvious; on internet, everything can be tracked down even if you take precaution measures. I can't realise why most people (especially pirates) don't get it.
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#6
Those are noobish mistakes...

Reid used the same email address on his Facebook page where he described himself as an “encoder” who lived in Chesterfield. <--- faceplam

@Ernesto
Thanks on informations I tought is more hardcore then just checking traces on internet.
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#7
They are NOT noobish mistakes, that is the problem.

They are normal and instinctive human behaviors, which only become traps in the context of the Internet, which superficially resembles the natural world.

Humans are social creatures, with millions of years of evolution programming us to get along with others. We say "hi, how are you" when we meet people we don't know or care about. We say "see you later" to people we won't ever see again. It is natural to seek information about others, and it is natural to provide information about ourselves.

But unlike the physical world, the internet saves everything, for ever, so an offhand comment shared with one person in one place can be linked to another offhand comment shared with a completely different person in a completely different place years later. Uploaders today weren't uploading 5 or 10 years ago, or even just a few years ago when they first created an account to post a comment thanking someone for sharing. So they had no particular reason to protect their anonymity. Only later did they upload something, then a lot of somethings, then realized they needed to take care. But by then it is too late, they were compromised before they even began. Long before.

Human beings are not used to the idea of total and complete lack of privacy. Nothing in the world or our experience has ever prepared any of us for that. And the great myth of the Internet, regularly reinforced to the masses, including the young, by Governments and businesses is that it provides anonymity. It doesn't, it never has.

Protecting yourself requires never ending care.

Anyway, as you might be able to tell, protecting you guys is something of a hobby horse for me (even if I do slap a few of you around occasionally). But I don't want to bore you to death so I'll leave it at that.

Lets be careful out there.
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#8
But world is not normal to have normal human behaviors. Today is like kill or be killed. Sad but true...
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#9
(Dec 27, 2015, 09:21 am)pid=\128700 Wrote:It is about "you" (in general) using the same username or email address you have used here on any other site ever. About you providing any information about yourself in torrent descriptions or comments or posts on this forum. [Or about you ever referencing anything you have been involved with here/TPB on any other site ever.]

About you trying to earn money by using your own image hosts, or wanting to become famous by including information about yourselves in NFO files, or even by trying to help people over teamviewer or skype or email or any other "direct connection" rather than through forum pm's. Or about providing links to facebook accounts you are associated with (as Facebook literally hoovers up as much about you as it can get it's hands on, and actively attempts to leverage information anyone else knows about you as well).

About you posting anything (or any combination of things, over a period of years) which may, when taken together, be able to be used to narrow you down.
^^^
This.
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#10
File Sharing is not same with Piracy Cool Angel
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