Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. Legacy Archives

Largest ever BitTorrent lawsuit targets 23,000 file sharers

Add as a preferred source on Google

The-ExpendablesIf you downloaded a copy of Sylvester Stallone action flick the Expendables through BitTorrent, you may soon find yourself in the hot seat of the biggest illegal-downloading case in US history, reports Wired.

A federal judge has agreed to a request from the US Copyright Group, which is representing the producers of the Expendables, to subpoena Internet service providers to cough up the identities of everyone who downloaded the 2010 Hollywood blockbuster. The number of IP addresses included in the subpoenas, said to be delivered this week, currently amounts to 23,322. But that number is destined to rise as new downloader identities are revealed.

Recommended Videos

The US Copyright Group (USCG), a business started by Washington DC-based law firm Dunlap, Grubb & Weaver in early 2010, has launched a massive amount of similar lawsuits against peer-to-peer (P2P) users for downloading other movies, like The Hurt Locker and Familiar Strangers. By September 2010, USCG had filed suits against 16,200 people, which were disputed by a variety of groups including the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the American Civil Liberties Union and Time Warner, an ISP.

Because of its anti-P2P business model, USCG found itself in the crosshairs of hacker group Anonymous, which launched a distributed denial of service attack against the website of Dunlap, Grubb & Weaver in July 2010, as part of Operation Payback.  Around the same time as OpPayback, torrent-supporters discovered that, ironically, the USCG had “stolen” its entire website, code and all, from a competitor’s website — an infraction the USCG quickly tried to fix.

The USCG’s business is a lucrative one. There are currently more than 140,000 BitTorrent downloaders being targeted by lawsuits in the US. Rather than take the lawsuit all the way through a court proceeding, downloaders often cough up around $3,000 per infringement — which can add up to a bundle of cash quite quickly, especially when 23,000 people are on the shakedown list.

According to the US Copyright Act, prosecutors can seek up to $150,000 in damages, per infringement.

Andrew Couts
Features Editor for Digital Trends, Andrew Couts covers a wide swath of consumer technology topics, with particular focus on…
Apple TV is now home to CrunchyRoll anime
You now watch Crunchyroll anime through the Apple TV app
apple-tv-crunchroll-anime-channel

If you watch anime, Apple just made things a bit more convenient. Crunchyroll is now available as a channel inside the Apple TV app, where you can subscribe and watch directly without switching apps. The rollout is live in the U.S., UK, Canada, and Australia, and it comes just in time for the spring anime season.

Here's what you get with Crunchyroll inside the Apple TV app

Read more
Apple announces new sci-fi film Liminal and I can’t wait for it
A strong cast and graphic novel roots make this new Apple film hard to ignore.
Logo, Cross, Symbol

Apple just revealed Liminal, and it already looks like a serious contender for its next big sci-fi movie. With a clear sci-fi hook and recognizable names attached, this is the kind of announcement that’s easy to get invested in early.

The project comes from Apple Original Films and pairs Vanessa Kirby with Yahya Abdul-Mateen II in leading roles. It’s directed by Louis Leterrier, who’s known for keeping stories fast and visually sharp, which already hints at a more kinetic kind of sci-fi than Apple usually leans into.

Read more
Your Apple TV can now recommend shows and movies based on your viewing habits
Apple levels up your living room with tvOS 26.4, packing content discovery, audio fixes, and subtitle controls into one tidy update.
Apple TV 4K device with remote.

With the public release of iOS 26.4, Apple has also pushed out tvOS 26.4, a quiet yet meaningful upgrade for Apple TV users. The update brings smarter content discovery, cleaner audio, and most importantly, it gets rid of iTunes. 

What’s actually new in tvOS 26.4?

Read more