Copyright Industry Wants To Apply Automated Blocking To The Internet’s Core Routers

from the embedding-copyright-censorship-deep-into-the-core dept

A central theme of Walled Culture the book (free digital versions available) and this blog is that the copyright industry is never satisfied. Now matter how long the term of copyright, publishers and recording companies want more. No matter how harsh the punishments for infringement, the copyright intermediaries want them to be even more severe.

Another manifestation of this insatiability is seen in the ever-widening use of Internet site blocking. What began as a highly-targeted one-off in the UK, when a court ordered the Newzbin2 site to be blocked, has become a favored method of the copyright industry for cutting off access to thousands of sites around the world, including many blocked by mistake. Even more worryingly, the approach has led to blocks being implemented in some key parts of the Internet’s infrastructure that have no involvement with the material that flows through them: they are just a pipe. For example, last year we wrote about courts ordering the content delivery network Cloudflare to block sites. But even that isn’t enough it seems. A post on TorrentFreak reports on a move to embed site blocking at the very heart of the Internet. This emerges from an interview about the Brazilian telecoms regulator Anatel:

In an interview with Tele.Sintese, outgoing Anatel board member Artur Coimbra recalls the lack of internet infrastructure in Brazil as recently as 2010. As head of the National Broadband Plan under the Ministry of Communications, that’s something he personally addressed. For Anatel today, blocking access to pirate websites and preventing unauthorized devices from communicating online is all in a day’s work.

Here’s the key revelation spotted by TorrentFreak:

“The second step, which we still need to evaluate because some companies want it, and others are more hesitant, is to allow Anatel to have access to the core routers to place a direct order on the router,” Coimbra reveals, referencing IPTV [Internet Protocol television] blocking.

“In these cases, these companies do not need to have someone on call to receive the [blocking] order and then implement it.”

Later on, Coimbra clarifies how far along this plan is:

“Participation is voluntary. We are still testing with some companies. So, it will take some time until it actually happens,” Coimbra says. “I can’t say [how long]. Our inspection team is carrying out tests with some operators, I can’t say which ones.”

Even if this is still in the testing phase, and only with “some” companies, it’s a terrible precedent. It means that blocking – and thus censorship – can be applied automatically, possibly without judicial oversight, to some of the most fundamental parts of the Internet’s plumbing. Once that happens, it will spread, just as the original single site block in the UK has spread worldwide. There’s even a hint that might already be happening. Asked if such blocking is being applied anywhere else, Coimbra replies:

“I don’t know. Maybe in Spain and Portugal, which are more advanced countries in this fight. But I don’t have that information,” Coimbra responds, randomly naming two countries with which Brazil has consulted extensively on blocking matters.

Although it’s not clear from that whether Spain and Portugal are indeed taking this route, the fact that Coimbra suggests that they might be is deeply troubling. And even if they aren’t, we can be sure that the copyright industry will keep demanding Internet blocks and censorship at the deepest level until they get them.

Follow me @glynmoody on Mastodon and on Bluesky. Originally posted to Walled Culture.

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Comments on “Copyright Industry Wants To Apply Automated Blocking To The Internet’s Core Routers”

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34 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Why is nobody listening?

“It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.” — Upton Sinclair

We know politicians get bribes (“campaign contributions” and future jobs) from the copyright monopolists. What are the anti-copyright people offering? Which rich people are supporting that cause?

Crafty Coyote says:

Re:

Perhaps the best way around that is to use the anti-theft rhetoric against copyright supporters by confessing to being thieves, knowing full well that the powerful rights, high standard of proof, and lenient punishing afforded to defendants in theft cases could avail us when the day comes we do get arrested and dragged to court. I know I’ve downloaded more than my fair share of files and shared some culture, and I know “the Knock” could come at any moment but I’m not scared.

John85851 (profile) says:

Re:

I know you’re being facetious, but you’re not exactly wrong.
I remember reading a story about how an automated takedown system flagged HBO.com as illegally hosting an episode of Game of Thrones. Yet the company behind the takedown faced no consequences for wrong takedown.

If companies want to embed copyright filters on routers, they need to get their current takedown requests to 100% correct. Otherwise, way too many false positives will be caught.

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ed2718 (profile) says:

This is a great idea!

If there’s an automated system that blocks content at the core routers it’s only a matter of time before some clever person finds the keys. Ten minutes later every major site on the internet vanishes taking billions of dollars of shareholder value with them. It will be great fun watching the copyright cartel explain how none of this is their fault.

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Rich Kulawiec says:

Fools rush in...

…where angels fear to tread. Even network engineers who measure their experience in decades hesitate before making changes to production core routers, and in most operations, such changes require a careful review process, staging, and a backout plan, because it’s possible to break a lot of things, including external things, in a big hurry.

And if this is used as these meddling fools intend, it’ll do enormous collateral damage even if they get it right because of the way routing tables work and because so many operations share infrastructure, e.g., CDNs.

Anonymous Coward says:

and preventing unauthorized devices from communicating online

This gives it all away.
Basically they want to control who can talk to who.

Under US law this would have “First Amendment violation” written all over it.

After all, the US government can’t (generally) decide who gets to talk to who. Which is what that whole “unauthorized devices communicating” would be. Nice of Brazil to let us know how draconian they want to be.

Samus Aran says:

Newzbin2 and Cleanfeed

The reason the court granted the blocking order in the Newzbin2 case was because, years prior to that, BT had created the “Cleanfeed” system which was used to block child sexual abuse images. The court noted that it would be very easy for BT to use Cleanfeed to block Newzbin2.

In other words… no matter the initial reason for a blocking system, it can and will (not may, but will) be used for other purposes.

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