On the 20 February 2014 the creator, writer and actor in the hit television show Sons of Anarchy Kurt Sutter made some interesting comments on the piracy of his work on Twitter. I love Sons of Anarchy.
Every year thousands of people search the Internet to
illegally download television shows.
Research from Torrent Freak.com stated in 2012 there was no
central database for the results of searches on the search engine BitTorrent
for pirated television shows, but kat.ph one of the top three torrent sites
shared their visitor results. Sons of Anarchy rated 20.
On his official site Kurt Sutter wrote on piracy…
"hey
@google how come when I search for soa downloads, 5 out of the first 6 are
illegal, off-shore pirate sites who steal my shit.
hey @google you think folks know that your deep commitment to a “free internet” also happens to protect your billions in traffic revenue.
we can’t stop you from pirating our art, that’s between you and your black heart but we can stop the corporations who enable it. #wftgoogle
there are legal and illegal ways to watch. google enables the criminals that give you the means to commit the crime.this isn’t me protecting my life style.
if piracy continues unhindered it will unravel the infrastructure that provides quality content.
every time you hit the download button on a torrent site, you make criminals richer, monopolies stronger and erode artistic freedom.
illegal downloads are like listening to a great street musician for an hour then thanking him by taking money out of his guitar case" (no copyright infringement intended)
hey @google you think folks know that your deep commitment to a “free internet” also happens to protect your billions in traffic revenue.
we can’t stop you from pirating our art, that’s between you and your black heart but we can stop the corporations who enable it. #wftgoogle
there are legal and illegal ways to watch. google enables the criminals that give you the means to commit the crime.this isn’t me protecting my life style.
if piracy continues unhindered it will unravel the infrastructure that provides quality content.
every time you hit the download button on a torrent site, you make criminals richer, monopolies stronger and erode artistic freedom.
illegal downloads are like listening to a great street musician for an hour then thanking him by taking money out of his guitar case" (no copyright infringement intended)
Every year Google and pirated sites are making millions of
dollars of advertising revenue.
“Pirated sites generate $227million in ad revenue a year” by Ernest on
Torrent Freak published 19 February 2014 (no copyright infringement intended).
A new report published by the Digital Citizens Alliance
estimates that the top "pirate sites" generate $227 million in annual
ad revenue. The major torrent sites have the highest profit margins and earn over
$6 million each per year, partly funded by major brands such as Amazon,
McDonalds and Xfinity.
It’s no secret that
running a torrent portal, linking site, or cyberlocker can be highly
profitable. Thus far, however, only a few have attempted to quantify the money
that flows into these businesses.
This week the Digital
Citizens Alliance is trying to fill this gap. The group released a new report titled
“Good Money Gone Bad: Digital Thieves and the Hijacking of the Online Ad
Business,” which aims to offer insight into the ad dollars that end up at
pirate sites.
The term “pirate site”
should be used loosely here, as the sample is based on all websites for which
Google received more than 25 takedown requests during the third quarter of
2013. Foreign sites and sites without ads were removed from the sample,
bringing the total number of sites down to 596.
The report divides these
sites into three sizes based on the number of unique visitors per month; large
(>5 million), medium (1-5 million) and small (<1 million). They are
further classified into different categories, including torrent portals,
linking sites, streaming sites and direct download sites.
Based on the number of
ad positions, page views and estimates of the various ad-rates, the report
gives an overview of the advertising income of the sites in the various
segments.
In total, the sites are
estimated to generate $227 million in annual ad revenue. More than half of this
flows to the 30 largest sites and the top torrent sites earn the most, over $6
million per site per year.
"The 30 largest
sites studied that are supported only by ads average $4.4 million annually,
with the largest BitTorrent portal sites topping $6 million. Even small sites
can make more than $100,000 a year from advertising," the report reads.
In total half of all
ad-revenue goes to torrent portals, which make up less than a quarter of the
total sample.
Based on an estimate of
the operating costs, torrent sites are also believed to be the most profitable,
with profit margins up to 94.1%.
It has to be noted,
however, that ad revenue is often the only source of income for torrent sites,
where direct download hubs and streaming sites have secondary revenue streams
through subscriptions and affiliate deals.
According to the report
some of the world’s most respected brands are funding pirate sites. The report
shows that a large percentage of the ad revenue comes from premium brands,
including Amazon, American Express, Dell, Ford, Lego, McDonalds, Xfinity.
“Premium brand ads
appeared on nearly 30% of large sites, highlighting the ineffectiveness of
current approaches to protecting the brands’ reputation and value.”
Most of these ads are
sold and resold through various channels, so the brands themselves are not
aware of these placements. However, according to Digital Citizens Alliance the
association with these pirate sites can result in damage to the brand’s
reputation.
“Premium brands are
those easily recognizable companies familiar to most consumers, and which
suffer reputational damage when their ads appear on content theft site, often
alongside ads for illicit sites and services,” the report explains.
All in all the report
provides some interesting insight into the profitability of so-called pirate
sites. How accurate the estimates are is unknown, but with the top sites
serving hundreds of millions of pageviews a month, the figures don’t seem
unrealistic.
What’s more problematic
is that not all of the sites listed are “pirate sites.” Many sites have
perfectly legitimate uses, and a site such as vcdq.com doesn’t host or link to
infringing content at all.
Digital Citizens
Alliance, however, concludes that their findings should be a wake-up call for
advertisers and ad-networks. They urge the various parties involved to increase
their efforts to prevent ads from being displayed on questionable sites and
services.
“Advertisers and ad
agencies, networks and exchanges can start by enhancing their voluntary best
practice standards. The technology and services to identify and filter out
content theft sites are available and should be adopted in the online
advertising community,” the report reads.
“Just as brands do not
advertise on porn or hate sites, they can take steps to assure they are not on
content theft sites,” it concludes.
Sons of Anarchy writer, producer and creator Kurt Sutter from www.deadline.com (no copyright infringment intended).