British and Dutch police have shut down the world’s biggest source of illegal pre-release chart albums and arrested a 24-year old man in an operation coordinated between Middlesbrough and Amsterdam.
The raids, which were coordinated by Interpol, follow a two-year investigation by the international and UK music industry bodies IFPI and BPI into the members-only online pirate pre-release club known as OiNK.
OiNK specialised in distributing albums leaked on to the internet, often weeks ahead of their official release date. More than 60 major album releases have been leaked on OiNK so far this year, making it the primary source worldwide for illegal pre-release music.
The site, with an estimated membership of 180,000, has been used by many hardcore file-sharers to violate the rights of artists and producers by obtaining copyrighted recordings and making them available on the internet.
It is alleged that the site was operated by a 24-year-old man in the Middlesbrough area, who was arrested today. The site’s servers, based in Amsterdam, were seized in a series of raids last week. OiNK’s operator allegedly made money by setting up a donations account on the site facilitated by PayPal.
Cleveland Police and the FIOD-ECD SCHIPOL branch of the Dutch police undertook the raids, supported by Interpol, as part of a carefully-planned international investigation with anti-piracy investigators from IFPI and BPI.
OiNK used peer-to-peer technology called BitTorrent to distribute music. Torrent sites such as OiNK act as a library for torrent files. BitTorrent is the most popular software for internet file sharing and OiNK was the best-known for pre-release piracy.
Pre-release piracy – a growing problem
Pre-release leaks are one of the most damaging forms of internet piracy that is currently eroding legitimate sales of music across the world. Recorded music sales fell by more than a third internationally in the last six years, and independent studies show that a major factor in this decline has been internet users accessing peer-to-peer networks to steal music online.
Pre-release piracy is particularly damaging to sales as it leads to early mixes and unfinished versions of artists’ recordings circulating on the internet months ahead of the release.
Closed internet communities known as “ripping groups” often get demos, early mixes of commercial releases and promotional copies of pre-release albums in advance of release with a view to distributing the music as widely and as far ahead of release as possible. Each ripping group gains cachet amongst its peers for being the first to get new music and uses torrent sites to distribute the music as widely as possible.
OiNK operated an exclusive membership scheme by which users were only invited to join the site if they could prove that they had music to offer. They were encouraged to distribute recordings in the torrent file format with other OiNK members, and have to keep posting such music to the site to maintain their membership.
Once an album had been posted on the OiNK website, the users that download that music then passed the content to other websites, forums and blogs, where multiple copies were made.
Within a few hours of a popular pre-release track being posted on the OiNK site, hundreds of copies can be found further down the illegal online supply chain.
The recording industry says that the closure of the site is an important victory in the industry’s bid to tackle copyright theft.
Jeremy Banks, Head of the IFPI’s Internet Anti-Piracy Unit, said: “OiNK was central to the illegal distribution of pre-release music online. This was not a case of friends sharing music for pleasure. This was a worldwide network that got hold of music they did not own the rights to and posted it online.
“This operation was a classic example of how the recording industry can work with law enforcement agencies to prove that illegal operations on the internet are not immune from detection.”
BPI Chief Executive Geoff Taylor said: “BitTorrent has fast become the most popular file sharing client, and while the technology is now commonplace, closed criminal networks such as OiNK take time to develop; make no mistake, this operation will cause major disruption to this illegal activity.
No more Oink!!!!!!!!!!!
Moderator: Philaflava
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No more Oink!!!!!!!!!!!
http://bondfireradio.com #thefutureofradio
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I wouldn't go as that far to disregard the technology of torrents. It depends on what you're sharing and what the true focus of the sharing network actually is. It can be beneficial beyond hey I wanna download new albums that just got released.. In terms of what can become archived and readily available to multiple users is tremendous. Independent music, music that is not in production any longer like vinyl recordings, speeches historicial information that otherwise will become extinct in hard copy form. Oink getting shut down though was inevitable. But the idea of being able to keep important rcording alive is still very important in this digital age.pestilence wrote:Fuck torrents though. This is the shit that happens if you use torrents.
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I wouldn't go as that far to disregard the technology of torrents. It depends on what you're sharing and what the true focus of the sharing network actually is. It can be beneficial beyond hey I wanna download new albums that just got released and or pricated shoftware and porn.. In terms of what can become archived and readily available to multiple users is tremendous. Independent music, music that is not in production any longer like vinyl recordings, speeches historicial information that otherwise will become extinct in hard copy form. Oink getting shut down though was inevitable. But the idea of being able to keep important rcording alive is still very important in this digital age.pestilence wrote:Fuck torrents though. This is the shit that happens if you use torrents.
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I should have said. Fuck torrents in regards to pre-major-release bootlegs because these will be the files to be policed the heaviest. The hosting sites such as oink were going to be the ones to go down first. I seldomly use these sites.
Oink was ultimately too crazy. The invites? The crazy fast download accelerators. This site was to torrents as Napster used to be to p2p... and its owner should have saw it coming.
Oink was ultimately too crazy. The invites? The crazy fast download accelerators. This site was to torrents as Napster used to be to p2p... and its owner should have saw it coming.
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I was annoyed abit by some of their interactions with me when I had issues with the site. Dudes were kinda rude...
And then like on a lot of message boards you have people that devote all their time to a site and act like asses. Some elitest attitudes coupled with silly spiteful deletions of torrents with nasty messages.
Some folks just can't share some damn files without being straight assholes.
And then like on a lot of message boards you have people that devote all their time to a site and act like asses. Some elitest attitudes coupled with silly spiteful deletions of torrents with nasty messages.
Some folks just can't share some damn files without being straight assholes.
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Wow there's a blog about it! http://oinkmemorial.blogspot.com/