ABS-CBN sues 18 online pirates for $12M | Inquirer Technology

ABS-CBN sues 18 online pirates for $12M

/ 05:48 AM November 26, 2014

REDWOOD SHORES, California – The ABS-CBN entertainment group sued 18 pirate sites for damages of over $12 million resulting from the infringement of the copyrights and trademarks of its popular TV shows and movies.

ABS-CBN Corporation, ABS-CBN Film Productions, Inc (Star Cinema) and ABS-CBN International filed suit in US Federal District Court in Florida last November 21, 2014.

Named as defendants in the lawsuit are partnerships or unincorporated business associations that operate through the following domain names registered in the US and elsewhere: 1) buhaypinoyofw.net; 2) freepinoytvshows.net, pinoylovetvshowreplay.com; 3) hapeetube.bizlovelytube.bizpinoy-telebisyon.biz, pinoy-telebisyon.org; 4) lambingan.tk; 5) movieserye.com; 6) pinaytambayan.org;pinoy-ako.me; 8) pinoymoviegallery.net; 9) pinoytambayan.me; 10)pinoytelesine.com; 11) pinoytopmovies.com; 12) pinoytv.me; 13) projectcabbage.com; 14) tambayanofwtv.info; 15) telebesyon.com; 16) telebyuwers.phtelebyuwers.tv; 17)teleseryereplay.com; 18) yzreplay.com.

Article continues after this advertisement

According to the complaint, the defendants provide on-demand streaming performances of full-length versions of ABS-CBN’s TV shows and movies through their websites. Defendants often display the latest content to their servers within minutes or hours of the original broadcast in the Philippines.

FEATURED STORIES

imgresAdditionaly, they control the organization and presentation of the content by providing links to ABS-CBN shows and promote and advertise the content as ABS-CBN’s through search engine optimization and meta tags, including the use of ABS-CBN’s marks, then stream the shows for users’ viewing through their websites.

With the popularity of ABS-CBN films and TV shows, these sites drive significant traffic that enable them to reap profits from advertising and other revenue.

Article continues after this advertisement

According to ABS-CBN AVP of Global Anti-Piracy Elisha Lawrence, “this is another phase in our relentless enforcement campaign to identify and punish pirates whose sites have been reported to contain malware that can cause substantial financial harm to innocent people who were just trying to view our shows and movies.”

Article continues after this advertisement

This latest lawsuit comes on the heels of the police search and seizure by police in Victoria, Australia, at the home of Mary Smith in the suburb of Barooga, New South Wales in Australia, where numerous pirate ABS-CBN DVDs, DVD burners and hundreds of pirated ABS-CBN movies on computer hard drives were found.

Article continues after this advertisement

ABS-CBN also recently, received a US$10 million judgment from the U.S. Federal District Court in Oregon against Jeffrey Ashby for damages from his infringing the copyrights and well-known trademarks of ABS-CBN by rebroadcasting ABS-CBN’s popular TV shows and movies on his pirate websites. Among the many pirate sites that Ashby owned were watchfilipinotv.com, watchfilipinomovies.com and pinoytalaga.com.

“We at ABS-CBN are committed to giving our viewers the best viewing experience for our content and protecting the rights of the talented creative and production teams that work hard to deliver these shows and films,” said ABS-CBN Global COO Raffy Lopez. “Online pirates undermine that, hence, we are determined to discourage and stop them.”

Article continues after this advertisement

RELATED STORIES

ABS-CBN wins $10 million against Internet pirate

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

Police raid in Victoria, Australia yield pirated Filipino movies

TOPICS: ABS-CBN, online pirates, pirated movies
TAGS: ABS-CBN, online pirates, pirated movies

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our newsletter!

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

© Copyright 1997-2024 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved

This is an information message

We use cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more here.