The AchieVer Posted June 7, 2019 Share Posted June 7, 2019 RIAA Targets 14 New Sites in Campaign Against YouTube-Rippers & Piracy The RIAA appears to be stepping up its campaign against sites offering features to rip content from YouTube. The music industry group has obtained permission from the court to force Cloudflare to unmask the operators of at least 14 new platforms, a handful of which appear to be straightforward pirate sites. For some time, the world’s leading record labels have complained that YouTube doesn’t pay the going rate for musical content streamed to its users. However, when consumers use so-called YouTube-ripping sites to obtain content, it’s claimed that the position worsens. By obtaining music in this fashion, users are able to keep local libraries which further deplete YouTube hits and by extension, revenue generated by the labels. To plug this hole, the RIAA is working to identify the operators of leading YouTube-ripping platforms. Via DMCA subpoenas, the industry group has been forcing CDN service Cloudflare and domain registries such as NameCheap to hand over the personal details of the people behind these tools. Two new DMCA subpoenas, obtained by the RIAA in recent days, reveal an apparent escalation in this activity. Mainly targeting Cloudflare but in one instance also NameCheap, the RIAA demands private information relating to several sites. 10Convert.com With around two million visitors per month (SimilarWeb stats), this platform has a prime focus on YouTube-ripping. The majority of its traffic comes from Brazil (69%), with the United States accounting for a little over 2% of its users. Amoyshare.com Enjoying around 4.6m visits per month with most of its visitors coming from the United States (15%), this platform’s focus is offering downloadable tools that enable users to grab videos and music from a wide range of platforms. However, Amoyshare also offers “AnyUTube”, an online converter which is the element the RIAA is complaining about. Anything2MP3.cc This site, which enjoys a relatively low 300,000 visits per month, appears to be dual-use. While it is possible to download content from YouTube, Anything2MP3 also offers users the ability to convert their own audio files in the browser. IMP3Juices.com With around six million visits per month, this platform is one of the more popular ones targeted by the RIAA. Around 12.5% of the site’s traffic comes from Italy, with the US following behind with just under 10%. The site functions like a ‘pirate’ download portal, with users able to search for artists and download tracks. However, the RIAA provides a URL which reveals that the site also has a YouTube to MP4 conversion feature. Indeed, it seems possible that much of the site’s content is obtained from YouTube. BigConverter.com Down at the time of writing, possibly as a result of the subpoena, this site offered downloading functionality for a range of sites, from YouTube and Facebook through to Twitter, Vimeo, Vevo, Instagram, Dailymotion, Metacafe, VK, AOL, GoogleDrive and Soundcloud. YouTubeMP4.to Enjoying around 7.7 million visits per month, YouTubeMP4.to is a straightforward YouTube video downloader. Almost 23% of its traffic comes from the United States with the UK just behind at close to 11%. QDownloader.net This platform has perhaps the most comprehensive offering of those targeted. It claims to be able to download content from 800 sites, of which YouTube is just one. With more than 12 million visits per month, it’s not difficult to see why QDownloader has made it onto the RIAA’s hit list. GenYouTube.net Another big one, this multi-site downloader platform attracts around seven million visits per month. The majority of its traffic comes from India (14%), with the United States following behind with around 12%. Break.TV For reasons that aren’t immediately clear, YouTube and SoundCloud downloader Break.TV has lost a lot of its monthly traffic since late 2018. From a high edging towards three million visits per month, it now enjoys just over 1.6 million. Interestingly the site says it must only be used to obtain Creative Commons licensed material. MP3XD.com In common with IMP3Juices.com, MP3XD.com appears to be focused on offering pirate MP3 downloads rather than straightforward ripping services. However, its content does appear to have been culled from YouTube. Given that it defaults to Spanish, it seems to target Latin America. Indeed, with close to 10 million visits per month, almost a third hail from Mexico, with Venezuela and Argentina following behind. DL-YouTube-MP3.net This platform is a straightforward YouTube-ripping site, offering downloads of both video and audio content. It is one of the lower-trafficked sites on the list, with around 870,000 visits per month with most of its traffic (38%) coming from France. ConvertBox.net With around 150,000 visits, ConvertBox is the smallest platform targeted by the RIAA in this batch. It offers conversion features for YouTube, Vimeo, Facebook, and SoundCloud via its website and mobile apps. Around a fifth of its traffic comes from France. Downloaders.io Another multi-downloader, Downloaders.io offers tools to rip content from a number of platforms, YouTube included. It’s traffic has been up and down since the start of the year but has averaged around 200K visits per month. Close to 30% of traffic hails from the United States. Hexupload.net A relative newcomer, this site doesn’t appear to fit into the ripping or general pirate site niche. Down at the time of writing, this 270,000 visit per month platform appears to have acted as a file upload site, from which users could generate revenue per download. Cloudflare and NameCheap will now be required to hand over the personal details they have on the users behind all of these sites. As usual, that will include names, addresses, IP addresses, telephone numbers, email addresses, and more. It isn’t clear what the RIAA has planned for these platforms but since the request was made by the group’s Vice-President Online Piracy, it doesn’t take much imagination to come up with a few ideas. This latest move by the RIAA follows similar action against several other sites detailed in our earlier reports (1,2,3). The RIAA’s letters to Cloudflare and NameCheap can be found here and here. Source Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steven36 Posted June 7, 2019 Share Posted June 7, 2019 Going after all these YouTube-Ripper websites but not one download manger is about as effective as when they went after all those illegal music streaming /download portals a few years ago witch cause websites to switch to YouTube to begin with, a few years ago the quality of downloadable mp3 was much better and it still is if you know were to look, they only they manged to rid the internet of the well known illegal streaming /download portals i have still have some working ones bookmarked that get there files from torrents and are not stepped on garbage from YouTube. They must not be no money in it anymore because after all there is all kinds of legal music sites with unprotected streams . People in the early 2000s listen to crappy 128k they downloaded from p2p because they was still on dailup and storage was expensive . It was cheaper to burn CDS back then than to buy digital storage . i remember it taking me all night to download one album of mp3s back when i was on dailup now it takes me a few seconds and i can upload them pretty fast for others to download . I also remember most album leak sites were using OGG back then witch was a royalty free format and I would convert them to mp3 so i had most albums before most other people did. Today its no longer the case and people are still listening to crappy low bitrate rips witch makes YouTube no different than Limewire v2 because they don't protect there streams and the irony of it is Google makes there own DRM and wont even use it . Because people are lazy and cant be bothered with having to use a search engine or downloading a program that give you good quality music . While video streaming / downloading Piracy sites are everywhere because it still pays good because the only legal free videos you can stream are old stuff , b rated or homemade . Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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