Patrick Collins to Get NAMES of John Does Who Stole Movies

Comcast, Verizon Ordered To ID Subscribers to Pornographers in Maryland Case
From http://greaterannapolis.patch.com/articles/comcast-verizon-ordered-to-id-subscribers-to-pornographers-in-maryland-case

A federal judge in Greenbelt has ordered the two Internet service providers to identify customers—known only by their numeric "Internet Protocol" addresses—who have been sued for allegedly unlawfully downloading pornographic movies.
By John Wilfong
   
Two California pornography companies are attempting to sue 140 Maryland residents for unlawfully downloading and distributing their adult films.
Patrick Collins Inc. and Third Degree Films have one problem—the California companies don’t know the names of the people they want to sue for copyright infringement.
But two of Maryland’s largest Internet service providers—Comcast and Verizon—have been ordered by a federal judge in Greenbelt to turn over the personal identities of 22 subscribers known to Patrick Collins Inc. only by numeric Internet Protocol (IP) addresses.

The anonymous subscribers in that case are located throughout the state: Towson, Annapolis, Sykesville, Westminster, Rockville, Columbia, Bowie, Reisterstown, Parkville, Frederick, La Plata, Germantown and Potomac.

Maryland is the latest state to be the target of such litigation. The companies and others have filed copyright infringement lawsuits in several states armed only with IP addresses of people they allege have unlawfully been file-sharing their movies using BitTorrent technology.

It’s a legal strategy involving copyright protection pioneered when the Recording Industry Association of America pursued the identities behind IP addresses of customers who were illegally file sharing music off of Napster, said Julie Samuels, an attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which has helped fight against recent lawsuits from pornography companies in other states.
Patrick Collins Inc. filed its case against 22 "John Does" in June. Third Degree Films filed its case against 118 "John Does" just last week and is also asking for a federal judge to order Comcast, Verizon and other Internet service providers to identify the accused customers.

U.S. District Court Judge Alexander Williams Jr.’s order states that Patrick Collins Inc. "allegedly owns exclusive distribution rights to a pornographic movie that is being illegally distributed over the Internet by peer-to-peer file-sharing technology, BitTorrent. Plaintiff claims to know the Internet Protocol address (‘IP address’) of each infringing defendant, but not their real names, addresses, or other identifying information."

Williams’ July order requires Comcast and Verizon to provide that information so that Patrick Collins can then take legal action against each subscriber.
“The most important thing for us is that we treat our customers’ privacy with the utmost seriousness,” said Charlie Douglas, Comcast spokesman. “We don’t just hand stuff over without due process and reaching out to let the customer know that we’re being ordered by a judge.”

He said Comcast has alerted customers identified in the lawsuit about the legal action.
Critics of such legal action call the studios in these lawsuits “copyright trolls.” Critics contend the tactic is nothing more than a way to extract quick cash settlements by threatening to associate people with public exposure in a pornography lawsuit.

Legal documents filed in U.S. District Court in Greenbelt, however, indicate a possible shift in strategy by the studios, Samuels said. The studios have been taking legal action against thousands of people at once in other states. But doing so has resulted in some cases being thrown out either because some subscribers don’t live in the states where the lawsuits have been filed or because the studios have not shown that such a large class of defendants have been conspiring together.

The cases in Maryland are far more narrow, targeting just 22 people in one case and 118 in the second, Samuels said.
So far in the Patrick Collins case, the company agreed to voluntarily dismiss its allegations against one of the two subscribers who have hired lawyers to fight the lawsuit.
Attorney Eric J. Menhart with CyberLaw in Washington represented the John Doe whose case was voluntarily dismissed by the company.
Menhart said Patrick Collins Inc. agreed to dismiss his client’s case because allowing Judge Williams to rule on the dismissal motion could threaten the company’s case against all the other subscribers named as co-defendants in the case.

"They cut their losses by dismissing one case," he said. "These cases are happening all over the place. … We’re seeing anywhere from 20 to 200 [defendants]. So far in Maryland I haven’t seen big, big numbers. But that can always change."

6 thoughts on “Patrick Collins to Get NAMES of John Does Who Stole Movies

  1. docqualizer says:

    In most cases, IP addresses are dynamic, so how can these people be identified? Something sounds fishy here…

  2. Larry Horse says:

    The operators of this web site is not the primary producer (as that term is defined in 18 U.S.C. section 2257) of any of the visual content contained within. The original records are kept by the following Custodian of Records:
    Patrick Collins
    8015 Deering Ave.,
    Canoga Park, CA, USA
    91304

    All external links on elegantangel.com are the responsability of the pointed sites owners respectively since we don’t have any control over the content of these sites. Please refer to the linked website for any inquiries about subject.

    With regard to the remaining depictions of actual sexual conduct appearing or otherwise contained at elegantangel.com, a copy of the records required pursuant to 18 U.S.C. & 2257 and C.F.R. 75 are kept at the following location by the Custodians of Records. For any inquiries pertaining to any models/actors/actresses shown on these pages, please contact:
    HVL Cyberweb Solutions
    PO BOX 4002, SUCC D
    Montreal QC
    H3C 0J7 Canada

    Always been confused here, Collins does control the content but the website is run by someone else…in Canada, so if the material for torrent use is obtained from the website…well that’s where I get confused. Collins thinks he is gonna make an easy buck here, sure he was ripped off, but the biggest tube crook in the world is Mr Fabian, who is making millions of easy dollars, what’s Roscoe gonna do about that.

  3. I always heard one of the biggest tube sites that rips off porn studios product is the parent company of Brazzars and other porn sites?

  4. Yes, Karma. Manwin owns Pornhub, Redtube, and a few others. The industry’s attitude toward them went from a defiant “boycott these assholes” to a complacent “What can we do other than adapt or die?”.

  5. BigDickDaddy says:

    One word:

    peerblock

    Google it if you dont know what it is.

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