June 12, 2015 |
Takedown Piracy Reports Success With Digital Fingerprinting Tech |
LOS ANGELES—Ask adult content producers about the greatest challenges they face, and they'll likely respond with one word: piracy. So when new technology comes along that can be added to the arsenal, many will embrace it. So appears to be the case with Takedown Piracy’s digital fingerprinting program. According to Takedown Piracy founder Nate Glass, many of the industry’s major players are utilizing the program to safeguard content from piracy tube sites. Takedown Piracy employs the digital fingerprinting program as an application in its Nemesis custom tool. Twenty of the top adult studios in the world are now being safeguarded by the program, and since its inception four months ago, 110,043 videos have been removed from tube sites. “This is a complete game-changer for the adult industry’s fight against piracy,” said one studio owner. “Takedown Piracy is once again taking the fight directly to the tube sites, and they’re not going to know what hit them!” “Takedown Piracy’s digital fingerprinting technology is nothing short of a catalyst for change,” stated Dr. Chauntelle Tibbals, a sociologist and authority on the adult industry, as well as the author of Exposure: A Sociologist Explores Sex, Society, and Adult Entertainment. “Our wider culture continues to disregard the adult industry as a marginalized ‘other,’ partly because it devalues its products.” “Though the industry is [and must be] in a constant state of evolution, one that corresponds with evolutions occurring in wider society, Takedown Piracy’s digital fingerprinting process will help prevent further de-evolutions into unabated thievery,” concluded Dr. Chauntelle. Early implementation of the digital fingerprinting program has already allowed Takedown Piracy to verify the accuracy of the digital fingerprints by identifying the copyright holder of hundreds of thousands of videos violating copyright laws on tube sites. Combined with Nemesis, which analyzes tube sites to pinpoint videos likely to be infringing on copyrights, the program virtually assures pirated material will be found and reported. “The reaction we have received from the industry has been phenomenal,” stated Takedown Piracy owner Nate Glass. “I’m already extremely passionate about the program, but to see my colleagues in the industry match my enthusiasm for what this fingerprinting service means to the industry is truly humbling. Cooperation is key in the war against piracy, and as an industry working together, we can truly make a difference.” As more of the adult industry signs on for Nemesis and the digital fingerprinting program, the removal numbers continue to grow. In May, tube sites were forced to take down 47,782 illegal videos. “We removed more tube videos last month than we used to take down in an entire year,” said Glass. “Even more impressive than the volume of removals is how these pirated videos are being caught within hours of being posted.” Available to all content creators, including DVD producers, pay sites, and webcam sites, the digital fingerprinting program is a separate service Takedown Piracy is offering its current and future clients. For a nominal extra charge on top of Takedown Piracy’s standard services, companies can track all their content. Takedown Piracy currently has the program set up to be implemented on 60 websites, with some three-dozen more in the works. These are all actual source tube sites—no embedding sites. The program is designed solely for detection and removal of infringing content from tube sites and search engines, like Google. Takedown Piracy actively tracks at least nine different ways content may be pirated, providing widespread coverage. Takedown Piracy’s army of servers offer protection in the following areas: cyberlocker sites like Rapidshare, torrent sites, tube sites, auctioned or unauthorized DVD resellers, search engines, image hosts, blogs, forums and social media. For more information about Takedown Piracy’s services, click here.
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