- Feb 24, 2011
- 497
Illegal TV streamers, here's how the feds will hunt you down
Pretty interesting...and might be worrisome for a few here.
When the US government decides to take down a website offering access to free TV streams over the Internet, it doesn't mess around. Newly unsealed court documents show that Brian McCarthy, the 32-year old alleged operator of Channelsurfing.net, got the complete treatment—investigators dug into his domain name registrar, his ISP, his Gmail account, his ad brokers, and the Texas driver's license database. They even sent a surveillance team to the Deer Park, Texas home where McCarthy lived with his parents.
McCarthy had his Channelsurfing.net domain name seized on February 1 as part of the controversial "In Our Sites" investigation from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). That program seizes domain names, often of foreign websites, without an adversarial hearing; special agents simply convince a federal judge that the domain should be seized, and it is. Domains are replaced with an ICE logo and explanation that they now belong to the US government.
The government does not appear to file follow-up charges in many of these cases, content simply to seize the domains and hope the operator goes away. That's particularly true for the foreign cases, which would be hard to prosecute in any event. But when a website offers complete access to professional US football, basketball, and hockey games along with "ultimate fighting" and pro wrestling, and when the operator of that website can be found in Texas, uses US domain name registrars, US-based e-mail, and US-based money transfer (PayPal)—he's a fat target for the feds, and one who's easy to grab....
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Pretty interesting...and might be worrisome for a few here.