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Tech Sunday, May 13th 2012 at 11:08 am

Backed by Microsoft, Pirate Pay Wants to Make Pirates Pay

Anyone that’s spent time on the internet is fairly aware that piracy is a big deal to folks in places like, oh, Hollywood and anywhere else involved in the creation of media. In fact, anyone that’s watched a movie at home has almost certainly noticed the disclaimers about potential fines and legal maneuvers related to the piracy of that material. Never fear, however, as Pirate Pay, backed by Microsoft, is looking to scramble pirates before they can get their sticky fingers on the goods.

BitTorrents, a method to share files peer-to-peer, are the current hot button issue with The Pirate Bay now being blocked in the United Kingdom. Their ease of use contributes to piracy by allowing nearly anyone to download whatever they please. Companies being paid to scramble trackers — the way users connect and find each other for specific data to download — aren’t anything new. But Russian-based Pirate Pay insists it is different.

They claim to have developed a technology which allows them to target existing BitTorrent swarms. By accident. The group was working on a traffic management solution and stumbled upon the fact that they could also stop BitTorrent traffic with it. After some development, they earned a $100,000 investment from the Microsoft Seed Financing Fund last year.

But what is it, exactly, that they’re doing? TorrentFreak reports that CEO Andrei Klimenko had this to say:

We used a number of servers to make a connection to each and every P2P client that distributed this film. Then Pirate Pay sent specific traffic to confuse these clients about the real IP-addresses of other clients and to make them disconnect from each other[.]

If it works as advertised, chances are that we’ll run into an arms race scenario. Anti-piracy measures improve so then must piracy measures improve.

(TorrentFreak via Techmeme, image credit via Tobias Vemmenby)

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  • Jack Bond

    Go Microsoft! Finally some substantial action being taken.

  • fail

    Yeah finally, MIcrosoft has only made 20.9 billion last quarter, those damn pirates it should have been 21 billion. How about the music industry, those guys made a couple billion easy, about time these pirates are left high and dry taking the music we rightfully screw out of artists. 

  • Zeonchar

    People will always find a way around measures like this, especially on the internet.

  • Fishy

    Is it legal for a company to do this when there are people who use bitTorrent as a way to legitimately share public files?

  • Anon

    So, Pirate Pay acts as a man in the middle attack?

  • http://www.annarborplasticsurgery.com/ Karolyn Wolford

    Microsoft, is looking to scramble pirates before they can get their sticky fingers on the goods.

  • blackbeard

    If Pirate Pay can permanently prevent  Bit Torrents from working I’ll eat my Parrot.

  • Jynto

    Dammit Microsoft, you won’t stop pirates that way. As long as mankind has the power to duplicate files there will still be a way.

  • Colin

    good cuz it will help the war on terror. They can turn in the names trying 2 get the movie 4 free so they can get detained & xecuted.

  • http://www.topbestwebhostings.com/ Top Web Hosting

    Wow this is a big news!

  • Tony

    I can grab 10,000 top torrents now and find, maybe a handful, that are “legitimate”.  The truth is these excuses, will not stop the companies from eventually controlling the illegal distribution of their media.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_Z4CJFSWSF6NJQ2QO56FEBHKHJM K

     It says it was specific to the one film.  It is unlikely they would target “legitimate” files