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A Spate of Arrests Sends the Piracy World Reeling


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Arrests and Raids Have Roiled the Piracy World
It's been an uncomfortable week for the streaming piracy community. On Wednesday, three indictments were unsealed against members of "the Scene," an elite tier of people who rip movies and put them on the internet for free. The three were allegedly affiliated with a group known as Sparks, and while court documents are a little thin on details, they do explain how first-run movies end up online before they come out on Blu-ray or streaming. The pirates allegedly convinced wholesale distributors that they were legitimate retailers, and so were able to obtain early copies of releases. As TorrentFreak reports, the crackdown appears to be wide-ranging, comprising law enforcement activity in nearly two dozen countries and sending the world of piracy at large into a tailspin.

 

Palantir Says It May Fight the Feds Over Encryption Keys
Ominous data company Palantir filed to go public this week, and as part of its S-1 filing the company said that it "may legally challenge law enforcement or other government requests to provide information, to obtain encryption keys, or to modify or weaken encryption." That puts it on the same page as Apple and others who have steadfastly declined to soften their cryptography under federal pressure. As TechCrunch notes, the position is notable in part because of Palantir's existing ties to the federal government—including between founder Peter Thiel and the Trump administration. Still, one wonders how much work "may" is doing in that sentence!

 

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