The BitTorrent piracy ecosystem lost several key players in recent weeks.
The main Popcorn Time fork operating from the PopcornTime.io domain name closed its doors on October 23, citing internal issues.
Part of the trouble was started by rumors of legal pressure, which the MPAA confirmed today.
The major movie studios have sued three Popcorn Time developers in Canada, the group announced in an official statement. The MPAA obtained an injunction on October 16 ordering the shutdown of the Popcorntime.io site.
The legal action in Canada was not an isolated incident, however. Around the same time, movie industry representatives targeted the operator of YTS/YIFY who’s a New Zealand resident.
TF learned that employees of New Zealand’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) contacted the operator of YTS last month. Both NCSC and the movie industry representatives had a warrant. The latter reportedly threatened a multi-million dollar lawsuit, urging the operator to cooperate.
YTS went dark two weeks ago as a result of the legal trouble and is not coming back.
The status of the lawsuits in Canada and New Zealand is currently unclear, but sources told us last week that several of the accused are working on an agreement to minimize their harm, possibly in exchange for information.
The MPAA, meanwhile, is ready to declare the outcome as a clear victory.
“This coordinated legal action is part of a larger comprehensive approach being taken by the MPAA and its international affiliates to combat content theft,” MPAA boss Chris Dodd says.
“Popcorn Time and YTS are illegal platforms that exist for one clear reason: to distribute stolen copies of the latest motion picture and television shows without compensating the people who worked so hard to make them,” he adds.
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