Google updates its anti-piracy report

Google updates its anti-piracy report

 

Googlgoogle-sign-post-piracye’s updated piracy report offers the some well-worn excuses

It’s that time of year.  The time of year where Google rolls out a shiny update on its “How Google Fights Piracy” report.  Google began the tradition in 2013.  At the time I noted that Google’s claim to be a “leader” in the fight against piracy was its first mistake. With today’s update, it appears the Silicon Valley giant hasn’t backed down from that dubious claim (or many others).

Katie Oyama, Senior Policy Counsel, Google asserts that, “We take protecting creativity online seriously, and we’re doing more to help battle copyright-infringing activity than ever before.”  Yet, in spite of Oyama’s rosy quote, in truth the reality (for creators) battling online piracy continues to be a bleak one.

Google search continues to list pirate links at the top of results

For the moment I’ll focus on Google search.  The report claims, “…Google does not want to include any links to infringing material in our search results, and we make significant efforts to prevent infringing webpages from appearing.”  It goes on to outline what Google’s doing to remedy the issue including this nugget:

Google believes that providing convenient, compelling, legitimate alternatives is one of the best means of fighting piracy. Accordingly, Google has launched a number of initiatives to present legitimate alternatives to users as part of search results, including providing advertisements on queries for movies and music to link users to legitimate means of purchasing content.

Google pretends to fight piracyThe reports also notes that it has focused on providing, “Clean results for media-related queries users actually type: Thanks to the efforts of Google’s engineers, the vast majority of media-related queries that users submit every day return results that include only legitimate sites.”

Oh Yeah, I’ve heard this line before, but unfortunately it isn’t true. This morning, after taking a gander at the report I went to Google search to search for the recent indie film Carol.  I typed in a pretty logical query–the kind “users submit every day” — choosing the phrase “watch Carol online.”  The VERY TOP RESULT took me–instantly–to a full, high-quality, pirated, illegal stream of the film.

Google search leads directly to pirated copy of film

Top result leads to full, pirated stream of the movie

Ok, so maybe the word “online” is too linked to piracy….so let’s drop the term and use only the terms, “watch Carol,” the first result was identical and led to the same pirated stream.  Yeah, there was was ad offering legit links at the top (which is a good thing) but unfortunately pirated versions remained front and center and at #1 in the actual search results.. Different search term, but same result

So much for their well-oiled talking point.  The fact is that Google search still provides a direct path to pirated content.

If some innocent person is simply looking for a way to (legally) watch Carol uses Google search instead of wheretowatch.com, why does the FIRST link in Google’s results offer a pirated version?  I didn’t say I wanted to “watch Carol free” I said merely that I wanted to “watch Carol.”  Is that a pretty standard approach to consuming movies???  Watching them???

Does Google really believe that watch isn’t a term people use every day to search for a movie online?

Google’s auto-complete suggests piracy-linked search terms

The only time I found somewhat clean results was by using the term “Carol movie.”   Now, forgive me, but it someone is looking to “watch” a film doesn’t it make sense they’d use that same term in a search query? Apparently Google’s engineers didn’t think so.  For them it seems that using the term “watch” is not a word worthy of inclusion amid their “vast quantity of media-related queries” when it comes to searching for a film title?

It’s also important to note that when I started typing in the terms “Carol mov…” Google’s own auto-complete provided the suggestion (carol movie online) which leads directly to the same pirated stream of Carol listed at #1 (see below).

Google auto-complete piracy term

Google auto-complete offers up a term that leads directly to pirated copy of the film

Didn’t Google’s engineering wizards notice this when they supposedly tweaked their algorithms to return results that include only legitimate sites?”

I’ll be examining Google’s report further and will follow up with another post, but I couldn’t let the announcement of this update slide by with nary a mention.  There’s much more to sift through, but I’d venture to guess it will be more of the same old, same old.  As I noted in my analysis of an earlier version of this Google report:

After reading it I think a more accurate title would be “Why Google Shouldn’t Have to Fight Piracy Because it Offers so Much Other Good Stuff.”

While the report does outline various positive steps Google’s taken (under duress) to mitigate its role in incentivizing and enabling piracy, most of the document reads more like an evangelical tome as to how their innovations have benefited content creators, blunting any collateral damage that may have occurred.  In other words, let’s overlook the bad in favor of the good…

I have a feeling not much will have changed…If there’s any truth in the claim that Google is “doing more” it’s because it’s allowing more pirated content than ever on its products.

Update to Digital Millennium Copyright Act Long Overdue

Update to Digital Millennium Copyright Act Long Overdue

DMCA is outdated and broken

Momentum is building for changes to the DMCA that will better protect creators

Content creators from all walks of life are coalescing around the need to update copyright law to protect their work against theft in digital age.  A piece in yesterday’s NY Times,  Music World Bands Together Against YouTube, Seeking Change to Lawis the latest to highlight growing calls by the creative community to update a woefully antiquated Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998.

In its newest effort, the music industry has asked the federal government to change the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, saying that the law, which was passed in 1998 and protects sites like YouTube that host copyrighted material posted by users, is outdated and makes removing unauthorized content too difficult.

Cary Sherman, the chief executive of the Recording Industry Association of America, says that even when songs are taken down, they can easily be uploaded again.

“This is a new form of piracy,” he said. “You don’t have to go into dark corners and sell stuff out of your car. You can do it in plain sight and rely on the D.M.C.A. to justify that what you’re doing is perfectly legal.” –NY Times

Last month the U.S. Copyright Office held public roundtables in New York and San Francisco to hear testimony as part of its study to “evaluate the impact and effectiveness of the safe harbor provisions contained in section 512 of title 17, United States Code.”

As part of the study, the Copyright Office also solicited public comments. While I shared by thoughts with researchers at Mason Law’s Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic for its submission, “Middle Class Artists Want a DMCA System that Works”  I also drafted my own statement.  Although my comments are part of the public record, I thought I’d share my them here as well.   My hope is to generate further dialogue as to how we can advocate for a meaningful update to the DMCA so that moving forward, creators’ rights (and livelihoods) will be better protected.

Here’s my submission to the U.S. Copyright Office.

Updating the DMCA – Areas of Concern

Overwhelming volume

The DMCA is currently the only tool content creators have available to safeguard their work from online theft and profiteering. Unfortunately, these days, using the DMCA to fight piracy is about effective as standing under Niagara Falls holding an umbrella.

Within a few months of our independent film’s release in 2010 we’d found more than 56,000 illegal download links and streams for pirated copies. Those are only the ones we managed to uncover. There were likely thousands more.

Multiply that figure by hundreds, if not thousands, of downloads per link and one can begin to appreciate the scope of the problem. Of course not every illegal download equals a lost sale, but even looking at a fraction of the total, the income lost by diluting legit sales can represent the difference between paying off production debts and making another film, or not.

The time and effort spent in policing piracy on the web is time and effort most independent artists cannot afford. For larger entities that can engage takedown services to manage the work for them the process remains an expensive and daunting task.

Ultimately such efforts can only slow, not stop, the incredible tide of online piracy.

Overly complex takedown procedures

While that language required to craft a legal DMCA takedown notice is straightforward, the process for actually sending it to an OSP’s takedown agent is often not so clear. While some OSPs accept email notification (as required by law), other larger entities, like Google, prefer that requests be sent via a cumbersome and time-consuming online process.

Uploading infringing content to a Google site can be done with a mere click of a mouse, unfortunately removing it is not quite so simple. Because the email address for Google’s DMCA Agent is not posted on its websites, rights holders must jump through various hoops and navigate through a series of questions in order to arrive at the correct form. Once there it takes additional time to complete the 9-part form. Before one can actually send it one must be sure to create a Google account, then login and send.

Once the takedown request is sent, no copy of the actual takedown request is generated, only a brief acknowledgement of receipt. Then it’s a waiting game to see whether the infringing content gets removed.

Sending a simple DMCA takedown notice via email is simple, fast, and makes record keeping and follow up easy.   Any update to the DMCA should continue to support email as an efficient way to send takedown requests and require that OSPs process emails with the same speed as those submitted via the web form.

Repeat infringement

Even if one sends a DMCA takedown notice to Google reporting a site for dozens of illegal links, Google allows the site to remain online.   It takes multiple notices, sent 48 hours apart, to trigger any sort of account disabling.

Other sites employ varying degrees of punishment for repeat infringers and some do nothing. This is certainly an area of concern for rights holders as it adds to the overall ineffectiveness and inefficiencies of the DMCA notice and takedown process.

Any update to the DMCA should specify what constitutes a repeat infringement and require that OSPs publish this information on their website. The law should also require that the OSP be responsible for preventing any re-upload of content already reported as infringing. This can be achieved by employing technological solutions described in the following section.

Technological Solutions

Technology brought us to this point. It’s time technology be utilized to help safeguard copyrighted work. YouTube’s Content ID system, though not without problems, at least provides a way for rights holders to find and manage YouTube access for their music or films. Cloud storage provider Dropbox also employs technology to scan files for identifying hash data so that reported files cannot be uploaded repeatedly.

If an OSP’s (online service provider) business model is predicated on monetizing user-generated content (not vetted for copyright) then the OSP should be required, by law, to implement some form of digital fingerprinting to prevent infringing material from being uploaded in the first place. This type of technology would also help address enforce a takedown – stay down approach and prevent repeated uploads of pirated content to a site.

If an OSP does not have the resources to build its own proprietary tech like YouTube’s Content ID, there are a number of third-party vendors, like Vobile, that offer digital fingerprinting. While such 3rd-party services are not free, it seems only fair that cost of implementing a digital gatekeeper be considered a cost of doing business. Creators have long borne the “costs” of OSPs monetizing their content without permission. Having OSPs tap into profits to better protect copyright seems only fair.

Any update to the law should include a requirement that, in order to qualify for the limitations to liability that safe-harbor offers, certain user-generated content sites must implement reasonable technology to mitigate content theft.

Counter-notices and small claims process

Not only are creators burdened with having to play detective to find and remove their stolen content from various websites, but even the counter-notice system works against rights holders.

The counter-notice system allows recipients of an erroneous DMCA to prevent the removal of content and while such a system of checks and balances is important, problems occur when such counter-notices are themselves erroneous. Unless the sender of the DMCA notice files in federal court to enforce the takedown, following a 10-day waiting period, the reported content is reposted.

For most indie artists, the cost of filing in federal court to enforce a DMCA takedown is far too costly and so, in these cases, the infringing content remains online. I’ve experienced this situation multiple times and have seen full copies of a film reposted after a counter-notice (claiming fair use) was sent after a takedown on YouTube.

Perhaps, as part of any update to the DMCA, the time has finally come to create a small claims process to adjudicate copyright claims outside the federal court system. The U.S. Copyright Office has already studied the issue and has recommended creation of a voluntary system of adjudication to resolve copyright small claims. (http://copyright.gov/docs/smallclaims/usco-smallcopyrightclaims.pdf )

Content removed due to infringement should not be replaced by direct links to 3rd party site(s) that republish the same infringing links

Another issue not addressed by the DMCA is a problem that’s arisen thanks to a third-party database that records all the DMCA notices received by a number of OSPs including Google. The Lumen database https://lumendatabase.org/ (formerly Chilling Effects) offers a searchable database of these DMCA notices. While this might serve as a valuable archive, Lumen’s searchable database, in its current form, does not redact the infringing URLs from the DMCA notices and so–in effect–becomes an efficient search engine for pirated content. This afternoon I used Lumen’s search engine to look for illegal copies of the recent release “Carol.” With one click I found a link, then right-click and I ended up at an active, illegal copy online.

Lumen’s DMCA notices are also easily found thanks to Google’s direct links to them in what would seem to be blatant disregard for the DMCA’s intent–if not the law. The scenario works like this: When an infringing link is removed from Google search following a DMCA request, the search result remains, but the original infringing link is simply replaced with a fresh hyperlink to the DMCA notice stored in Lumen’s database. Essentially, removing the infringing link from Google search with a DMCA takedown requests only means a web user searching for pirated copies only has to click one additional link in order to find the pirated content he/she was looking for.

While the database itself may claim to operate under the mantel of “free speech” one has to ask how Google qualifies for “safe harbor” protection when infringing links removed from its search engine are replaced by a link to the DMCA notice on the Lumen database that contains the same, un-redacted infringing link.  This type of re-linking should be explicitly banned in any update of the DMCA.

What’s at stake

Takedowns will continue to be a part of any DMCA fix, but collectively we must figure out a better way streamline the process, utilize technology, and mediate disputes in order to protect copyright and support a culture where creators can flourish– and the wealth of content they create can be enjoyed, and sustained, by consumers throughout the world.

If nothing is done to update the DMCA for the 21st century, content creators of all stripes will continue to struggle and the diversity, and variety of quality of creative content available to consumers will diminish. At first, we may not miss what isn’t made, but eventually our creative culture will be the lesser for it.

 

 

 

More Google DMCA misdirection…refusing takedown requests for Blogger sites with custom domains

More Google DMCA misdirection…refusing takedown requests for Blogger sites with custom domains

Hop aboard the Google DMCA carouselHop aboard for another spin on Google’s DMCA Merry-Go-Round

It’s not news that Google-hosted Blogger websites are a favorite storefront for online pirates.  It’s also not news that Google does its best to obstruct DMCA takedowns by setting up various roadblocks along the way.  Today I discovered yet another example of just how difficult Google makes the DMCA process–this time with Blogger-hosted sites that use custom domain names.

When you create a blog using Blogger you’re given a domain that ends in blogspot.com. However users are free to use a custom domain name instead.  That’s all well and good, unless the website distributes pirated content.  In that case, if you’re a creator trying to get your pirated content removed (by Google), you’re likely to run into problems.

Usually, when one of these pirate entrepreneurs creates a site on blogspot.com a rightsholder can send a DMCA by using Google’s annoying web form (or annoy them by sending an email: [email protected]).  However, if you use the same DMCA form to report a blogger-hosted site with a custom domain, Google won’t remove it.  They’ll just send you back to the beginning.

I found out about this twist when I sent several DMCA notices this week on behalf of an indie film distributor.   I requested the removal several pages of pirated movies I found on a Blogger-hosted website with a custom domain.  The claim was rejected and the response on the Google Removals Dashboard read: Inappropriate for TCRP. Please submit through the standard web form.

TCRP stands for “Trusted Copyright Removal Program” but the problem is that I didn’t use any sort of TCRP…I wish I could, but I’m just a lowly commoner who doesn’t have access to this program.  I USED THE STANDARD WEB FORM!!!!

Why–when there’s no doubt that this website is streaming a full copy of the film on a Google-hosted website–do they send me back to the same standard web form I used to send the original request?  It’s an endless loop.  Follow along below:

Google hosted Blogger pirate site

Code shows site hosted by Google's Blogger

A DMCA request was sent using Google’s own web form (for Blogger) yet the claim is rejected and I’m told to send the takedown again using the very same form?

Apparently, even though Google hosts the pirate site, it refuses to remove infringing content the pirate is using a custom domain, not a blogspot.com domain.  Welcome to the Google DMCA Merry-Go-Round. 🙁

When I researched the issue further I discovered I’m not the only one running into this problem.  On Google’s own Blogger Help Forum there’s a recent thread about the issue.  Last month a user DeeLite310  posted a question after receiving the same— Inappropriate for TCRP. Please submit through the standard web form–response to a DMCA s/he sent reporting a Blogger site pirated games.

Once again the not-so-helpful Google response was to send DeeLite310 (who’s not part of the TCRP)  back the beginning of the Google Blogger DMCA merry-go-round.   Here’s part of the exchange (but I suggest reading the entire thread to fully appreciate just how frustrating dealing with Google can be):

Google DMCA roadblocks

Google doesn't make sending DMCA notice easy

Welcome to the Google Merry-Go-Round…DeeLite310 is sent back the beginning…again and again…

Google sends you back to where you started

Google loves to throw the word “transparency” around a lot in discussions around how it handles DMCA requests.  Too bad it doesn’t provide more transparency when creators, victimized by pirates using Google products, make good faith (legal) efforts to request the removal of infringing content.  As I’ve said before, the DMCA is broken…

*Update 5/16/16:  During May’s Section 512 hearings in San Francisco I spoke with Fred von Lohmann, Google’s senior copyright counsel, about my blog post.  He told me that I had indeed discovered a “bug” and that Google staff was working to fix the issue.  I was happy to hear that Google was responding in a positive manner to this problem.  I’ll test out whether it has been fixed by resending the original DMCA notice that prompted this post.  Stay tuned…

Update 6/28/16:  According to Mr. Von Lohmann, the bug has been fixed.

A flawed study on the DMCA – Peeling back the layers of the onion

A flawed study on the DMCA – Peeling back the layers of the onion

Flawed DMCA StudyBerkeley Law’s dubious study on copyright notice and takedown faces more scrutiny

Last month–a day before deadline for public comments on the U.S. Copyright Office’s study on the impact and effectiveness of the safe harbor provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (“DMCA”), section 512–UC-Berkeley School of Law and the American Assembly (via the Google-funded Takedown Project) released a study purporting to give a “broad picture of how section 512 notice and takedown works on the ground.”

A day after its release I wrote quick post highlighting some initial concerns with the study, but hadn’t had time to fully digest the entire 160 page report.  Now, nearly a month later, others have taken the time to more carefully look at the study and uncover its (many) dubious findings.  Kevin Madigan & Devlin Hartline  scholars at the Center for the Protection of Intellectual Property (CPIP) have published a detailed response to study, “Separating Fact from Fiction in the Notice and Takedown Debate,” and note:

The study reads more like propaganda than robust empiricism. It should be taken for what it is: A policy piece masquerading as an independent study. The authors’ narrow focus on one sliver of the notice and takedown process, with no analysis of the systemic results, leads to conclusions and recommendations that completely ignore the central issue of whether Section 512 fosters an online environment that adequately protects the rights of copyright owners. The authors conveniently ignore this part of the DMCA calculus and instead put forth a series of proposals that would systematically make it harder for copyright owners to protect their property rights.

I’d urge you to read the full piece here.

Other worthwhile dissections of the study’s weakness include Stephen Carlisle’s piece, Google Funded Study Concludes Google Needs More Legal Protection From Small Copyright Owners! and David Newhoff’s post, Reports of DMCA Abuse Likely Exaggerated.  Both offer more counter-points to the efforts by Google’s spin-machine to generate dubious headlines as the DMCA debate heats up.

On that note, the Copyright Office will be holding additional roundtables on section 512 study next month in New York and California.   It will probably take time for officials at the USCO to separate the wheat from the chaff in the comments submitted (since the vast majority were boiler-plate web-form submissions) but hopefully these roundtables will allow interested parties to explore the issues at hand in a more thoughtful and methodical way.

 

Box Office Profits NOT Proof Piracy Doesn’t Hurt

Box Office Profits NOT Proof Piracy Doesn’t Hurt

Piracy hurts film industryPiracy erodes audience options-forces studios to make fewer films

The movie industry makes record profits so piracy doesn’t matter after all.…that’s the gist of many headlines following MPAA Chief Chris Dodd’s recent speech at Cinemacon’s Las Vegas convention last week where he said, “the state of our industry has never been stronger.”  We’ve seen this phenomenon before.  Positive news about record global box office revenue is twisted into justification for the pro-piracy mantra that piracy doesn’t hurt filmmakers.

These rosy 2015 box office figures were first announced in January.  Then, as with now, piracy apologists pounced on the message as proof piracy doesn’t negatively impact the movie industry. Even those writing about it took note of the repetitive nature of their particular meme as Techdirt’s Mike Masnick noted in a January post:

We seem to end up posting stories like this every year, but it just keeps on happening. Hollywood whines and whines and whines about how piracy is killing the movie business… and then announces yet another record year at the box office.

The idea that record profits prove piracy doesn’t matter both simplistic and naive.  Sure, Hollywood (and studios throughout the world) are making movies….big movies, blockbuster movies, superhero movies, sequels galore…remakes of movies that have already been made.  Such fare performs well at the box office.  However, if one drills deeper, beyond the totals, it’s easy to find proof that online piracy is corroding filmmaking in a way that undermines both consumers and creators.

Piracy diminishes both the number–and diversity– of films being made, both inside and outside Hollywood.

I’ve written about this issue before.

While (most) Hollywood studios did make a lot of money in 2015, the truth conveniently omitted from the post in Torrent Freak is that they did so by producing fewer films.  After all, the studios are in the business of making money for their shareholders and to that end–in this age of unchecked piracy–fewer chances can be taken on movies that won’t draw huge crowds.  The Hollywood films that are being made are those that are sure bets to overcome digital theft and still make money.  In 2015, the top 5 films made 20% of the revenue.

Evidence of the less is more trend is everywhere.  Earlier this month it was reported that Warner Brothers would produce fewer films, focusing instead on “tentpole” productions.  According to a recent story in The Hollywood Reporter:

Warners long has been known for its commitment to filmmaker- and star-driven projects, but sources see signs of a change in culture, though the studio denies there is one. Several executives and agents say Warners seems to be greenlighting fewer homegrown movies as it focuses on silos that echo those that generate so many hits for Disney (Marvel, Lucasfilm, Pixar and Disney Animation). In Warners’ case, the silos are DC Comics, Lego and a planned franchise spun off from the Harry Potter series.

In March, Variety reported on a report “Another Memo to Hollywood. Prediction? Pain.”  Written  Creutz, an analyst for research firm Cowen and Company, Cruetz told Variety’s James Rainey that Hollywood’s future looked “increasingly dire” due to shrinking audiences.

Creutz says the industry’s woes are demonstrated by the fifth consecutive year in which domestic box office demand “has taken a step function lower.” The fight for remaining audiences has become increasingly fierce as “the market appears to be condensing into fewer, but bigger, hits,” as studios crank out more films in the $100 million-plus budget range…

…Creutz offers a welter of stats to back up his contraction argument: “Last year, over 25% of total box office came from just five films, well above the average of roughly 16% from 2001-14 and the prior peak of 19% in 2012.” He called this a “consistent phenomenon.”

Consumers should be worried that, over the last decade, the number of films Hollywood’s produced has dropped precipitously.  What this means is fewer choices for audiences.   Films that tell stories about characters (people) who are neither CGI super heroes nor animated characters are quickly becoming an endangered species.

David Gritten examined Hollywood’s move toward producing fewer films for a piece in  The Telegraph:

BUT EVEN SUPPOSING THE STUDIOS ARE RIGHT: THAT FEWER FILMS ARE BETTER, BIGGER FILMS MAKE MORE SENSE, THAT COMMERCIALLY TESTED AND TRIED MATERIAL IS THE PRUDENT WAY TO GO, THAT TEENAGERS WILL ALWAYS BE THE MOST PLIABLE AUDIENCES – WHERE’S THE VICTORY IN THAT?

EVEN IF CURRENT STUDIO THINKING IS PROVED RIGHT AND IN THE LONG TERM, BLOCKBUSTERS ENABLE THEM TO RAKE IN REVENUE AND LOOK WALL STREET SQUARELY IN THE EYE, CONSIDER WHAT’S BEEN LOST. HOLLYWOOD WILL BE CHURNING OUT A PREDICTABLE SERIES OF DULL, MONOTONOUS, SPECIAL-EFFECTS HEAVY, DRAMATICALLY INCOHERENT MOVIES FOR A RELATIVELY SMALL SEGMENT OF THE CINEMA-GOING AUDIENCE. THE STUDIOS MAY SURVIVE: BUT WHAT A DIMINISHED INDUSTRY THEY’LL BE PRESIDING OVER.

Online piracy’s corrosive impact on content creation not limited to theatrical releases

Of course, piracy is but one factor in a complex potpourri of influences provoking shifts in the movie business.  As distribution models continue to evolve in this digital age the rise of streaming services like Netflix, Amazon, et al has certainly been felt.  Yet, even as viewing choices shift away from theaters to streaming outlets, these producers are not immune from piracy’s damage effect.  Streaming’s top dog Netflix has teamed with digital protection firm Vobile to safeguard its digital content (and subscriber base) from online thieves.   Whether productions are destined for theatrical release or for viewing in the comfort of ones own home, content producers still need to generate revenue in order to thrive.

Piracy’s apologists who chortle that Hollywood should adopt new business practices as a response to piracy are getting their wish.  Under duress Hollywood is adapting, but at what cost to us–the viewing public?  Evolving to to meet the 21st century digital world is inevitable, but should it be illegal theft that dictates how such change will manifest itself?

With this type of evolution, in the end, we will be the losers.  It’s difficult to appreciate how much we’re truly missing if it’s never made…

Google’s “safe browsing” initiative is more bark than bite

Google’s “safe browsing” initiative is more bark than bite

Google-safe-search-headlines.fake

Headlines say one thing, Google’s actions say another

Despite headlines, it’s still business as usual for Google — Piracy sites full of malware and deceptive ads remain at top in Google search results

Last fall Google introduced a series of steps to strengthen its Safe Browsing initiative announcing it would include protection against, “social engineering attacks – deceptive tactics that try to trick you into doing something dangerous, like installing unwanted software or revealing your personal information (for example, passwords, phone numbers, or credit cards).  

In February Google went further and announced it would add protection against what it called “deceptive embedded content, like social engineering ads” to its “Safe Browsing” strategy.  According to Google, such sites would:

  • Pretend to act, or look and feel, like a trusted entity — like your own device or browser, or the website itself.
  • Try to trick you into doing something you’d only do for a trusted entity — like sharing a password or calling tech support.

If a user attempted to visit such a site, Google said this warning screen would appear.

SBWarnBlur

Of course to benefit from “safe search” one has to set Chrome preferences to “protect you and your devices from dangerous sites.”

Is re-posting 2 month old news Google’s technique for generating positive headlines?

Today, the very same post re-posted on Google’s Official Webmaster Central Blog.  Why repost an old post?  Could it be Google’s way of generating positive headlines and muddying the waters as to its real business practices?  Despite the fact today’s post was identical to the February announcement, a new round of headlines splashed across multiple websites making it seem like the “news” was new news….Google’s PR folks must be patting themselves on the back.

Google explains Safe Browsing this way:

Google’s Safe Browsing technology examines billions of URLs per day looking for unsafe websites…

When we detect unsafe sites, we show warnings on Google Search and in web browsers.

These unsafe sites fall into two categories, both of which threaten users’ privacy and security:

  • Malware sites contain code to install malicious software onto users’ computers. Hackers can use this software to capture and transmit users’ private or sensitive information.
  • Phishing sites pretend to be legitimate while trying to trick users into typing in their username and password or sharing other private information. Common examples are web pages that impersonate legitimate bank websites or online stores.

Sounds like a positive step against online piracy since malware and deceptive advertising is online piracy’s bread and butter,  right?  WRONG…

Google’s “safe search” warnings are nowhere to be found on piracy websites I checked as part of a little test I conducted today using Google Chrome.

Carol heavily piratedUsing Google search I looked for the recently released film ‘Carol’ using the search terms, “watch carol online.”
What I found was the same old, same old. In typical Google fashion, three out of the top four results lead to pirate websites that offer up free, full pirated copies of the movie.  In addition–contrary to Google’s new “safe browsing” policy–all two of the pirate sites featured embedded and pop-up featuring the very type of deceptive content Google claimed it would slap with warnings. Despite this, nary a Google “warning” to be found on any of these sites.

Google search leads to piracy websites

3 out of 4 top results are for piracy sites that feature malware or Google advertising

Google pirate search results
Pirated copy of Carol with Google AdSense ads

Google warns against visiting scam sites, but continues to send consumers there via its search engine?

What’s even more puzzling is that I Google’s “safe search” initiative is also more talk than action when sites (flagged warnings about “deceptive content”) that are found via its own search engine.

Below is an example from a SolarMovie site which offers up links to pirated movies galore. Amid the pirated movies were sporadic warnings from Google.  If Google is serious about protecting users from malware and phishing scams, why not simply remove these flagged sites from Google search?

solar-movie-deceptive-piracy-site

Of course Google hypocrisy is nothing new.  Google flacks can generate all the fresh headlines they want by reposting old news, but in the end, the story remains the same. The team from Mountain View talk a good game, but in reality, nothing changes.  Google search continues to point the way to pirated content, malware or scams be damned…maybe the safest way to browse is to avoid Google entirely?