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Uncategorized Tuesday, September 4th 2012 at 10:45 am

Study Vindicates Your Friend’s Paranoia, Finds Most BitTorrent Pirates Are Being Monitored

Anyone that’s used a BitTorrent client to illegally download music, movies, or really any popular media content at all might have already been tagged by a number of different monitoring firms. According to a study conducted by computer scientists at the University of Birmingham, popular torrents for things like recently released films are being constantly watched by several groups. Some of these trace back to known copyright enforcement elements, whilst others are hidden behind third-party hosting.

Tom Chothia, a computer security researcher, and his colleagues revealed their findings at this week’s international SecureComm conference in Padua, Italy. SecureComm is billed as being about “security and privacy in communication networks.” They say that monitoring on a grand scale of BitTorrent sites like The Pirate Bay has been occurring for at least three years.

By constructing what appeared to be a BitTorrent client and logging all the connections made to it, the team discovered around 10 different monitoring firms that were keeping track of who did what. While some turned out to be related to copyright enforcement, other research labs, or security firms, six of the largest monitors were difficult to identify as they used third-party hosts to do their dirty work for them.

“Our features only detected monitors in Top 100 torrents,” their research presentation paper states, “this implies that copyright enforcement agencies are monitoring only the most popular content on public trackers.” Given that the largest potential loss in revenue would be seen in products like The Avengers being pirated, this approach makes sense. It’d be unrealistic to monitor everything at all times, but monitoring the most popular torrents should provide the greatest yield.

The real concern here is exactly what those six unknown firms intend to do with this data. The goal of copyright enforcement agencies is pretty clear; the goal of unknown monitors that appear to just be hoarding data is less so.

(The Unbearable Lightness of Monitoring: Direct Monitoring in BitTorrent via New Scientist, BBC News, image credit via Anthony Kelly)

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  • Chris

    This is kinda scaring me. Someone sooth me with sweet comforting words so i can download torrents again :( .

  • Dart of Pics

    This is … concerning … knowlege if power and we the average indivual seem to be very underpowered these days …i would bring up the shared knowlege benifts everyone but those who hord tend to only be concerned about themselfs and not willing to listen to anyone else.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Thiago-Firmo/100000675658914 Thiago Firmo

    Can’t do it, bro. But i can say this: Using magnets kinda blocks this stuff, OR everytime you use torrent, you’re saying “f*** you” to the government.
    Did it help?

  • Gkiller

    Try Peerblock.

  • Punkrocknroll

    Tell me something I didn’t know, I wish it was only torrents! Oh no you got me.

  • breakingzero

    Another article on this quoted the research group as saying programs like Peerblock don’t include these companies on their block lists.

  • Fail

    Before certain posters get in here and start claiming how awesome this is, we should all be very concerned for this. It’s like strangers watching my house to see who I converse with.

  • Dean

    Yeah, the gov’t is monitoring whatever the hell they want to. Gotta keep us safe from terrorists.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=592385166 Pan Dimensional

    Get a VPN, I use SwissVPN because of their stringent data-protection laws. There’s no way they can track you then.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=592385166 Pan Dimensional


    knowlege is power and we the average indivual seem to be very underpowered these days”

    You’re right, people are quite stupid nowadays.

  • TNF-

    Haha suck my dick MPAA