June 18, 2013

Oracle to appeal U.S. copyright damages case: SAP

a1595a61e3255b525e8852bd871d1e7d Oracle to appeal U.S. copyright damages case: SAP

() – U.S. business software maker Oracle has launched an appeal on a five-year long court case that could see SAP pay millions more in over .

On Monday, a spokesman for SAP confirmed a report in the German daily Mannheimer Morgen to this effect, adding that “in the worst case the appeal could take two years,” adding SAP was disappointed that Oracle continued to drag out the process.

“We agreed to a reasonable arrangement, since we believe this case has already persisted long enough,” the SAP spokesman said.

SAP agreed in August to pay Oracle $30 in damages over infringement allegations against a SAP unit, “to save the time and expense of this new trial, and to expedite the resolution of the appeal,” as for both companies had said at the time.

A Northern determined in 2010 that Oracle should be paid $1.3 billion over accusations SAP subsidiary TomorrowNow wrongfully downloaded millions of Oracle files.

However, U.S. District Judge Phyllis Hamilton last year discarded the and said Oracle could accept a $272 million award, or opt for a new trial against SAP.

(Reporting by Christiaan Hetzner; Editing by Leslie Gevirtz)

Business: Megaupload faces more copyright, wire fraud charges

68eba563b49d71483ae8880d288eeabf Business: Megaupload faces more copyright, wire fraud charges

(Reuters) – A added more charges against file-sharing website Megaupload and its executives, and also accused them of taking copyrighted content from sites such as YouTube for its own service, according to a new indictment released on Friday.

The founder, Kim Dotcom, and six others employed by the site were charged with eight additional counts of infringement and wire fraud. They were originally charged with five counts of conspiracy and infringement.

Dotcom and four of his co-workers have been arrested and are awaiting in New Zealand and the Netherlands. Two suspects remain at large.

They have been charged in a federal court in Virginia with a making millions of dollars from peddling copyrighted materials, including popular television shows, movies and music to millions of users around the world.

A lawyer for Megaupload was not immediately available for comment. Previously a lawyer for the company said the site served merely as a place for users to store data online and the company has said previously it took down content upon request.

The superseding indictment said the Megaupload site had 66. registered users as of January 2012 and just under 10 percent had ever uploaded a single file, suggesting most people used the site only to download infringed material, according to the .

The indictment also accused the group of taking copyrighted material from sites such as ’s service for use on Megaupload websites. The Megaupload service has been shut down.

The case is USA v. Kim Dotcom et al, No. 12-cr-3, in for the .

(Reporting By Jeremy Pelofsky; editing by Andre Grenon)

Wikipedia, Reddit plan blackout in SOPA protest

94601a4ade02241aaf05ece911e17a2f Wikipedia, Reddit plan blackout in SOPA protest

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) — A handful of large websites will go dark on Wednesday to protest an anti-piracy bill that critics say will wreck the as we know it.

Wikipedia, user-submitted news site Reddit, the blog Boing Boing and the Cheezburger network of comedy sites all plan to participate in the . The protest is their response to the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) bill, a piece of proposed legislation that is working its way through Congress.

Introduced in the House of Representatives in late October, the bill aims to crack down on infringement by restricting access to sites that fuel it. Its targets include “rogue” overseas sites like torrent hub The Pirate Bay, which essentially operates as a trading ground for illegal downloads of movies and other digital content.

A similar bill called the Protect IP Act was approved by a in May and is now pending before the full Senate.

The controversial legislation has turned into an all-out war between Hollywood and . Media companies have united in favor of it, while tech’s power players are throwing their might into opposing it.

If SOPA passes, copyright holders would be able to complain to enforcement officials and get websites shut down. and other providers would have to block rogue sites when ordered to do so by a judge. Sites could be punished for hosting pirated content in the first place — and are worried that they could be held liable for users’ actions.

As BoingBoing wrote: “Making one link would require checking millions (even tens of millions) of pages, just to be sure that we weren’t in some way impinging on the ability of five Hollywood studios, four multinational record labels, and six global publishers to maximize their profits.”

White House jumps in: The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform was supposed to hold a hearing with on Wednesday, which is why sites targeted that day for a blackout.

But Rep. Darrell Issa, a Republican from California who opposes SOPA, postponed the hearing on Friday after House Majority Leader Eric Cantor said the bill won’t move in its current form.

Cantor’s comments sparked some news reports claiming that SOPA is dead, but an aide in Issa’s office said “that’s probably a little premature.”

Reddit founder Alexis Ohanian was slated to testify in Washington, but he said he will now instead attend a protest rally in New York City organized by the group NY Tech Meetup. They plan to assemble outside the offices of New York senators Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand.

The White House released its first statement about the bill on Saturday. The Obama administration wrote that it would not support legislation that mandates “tamper[ing] with the technical architecture of the Internet through manipulation of the Domain Name System (DNS).”

As originally written, SOPA would have required Internet access providers and other companies to block access to targeted sites in ways that were rife with potential unintended consequences. The White House said its analysis of the original legislation’s technical provisions “suggests that they pose a real risk to cybersecurity.”

The White House’s statement came shortly after one of SOPA’s lead sponsors, Texas Republican Lamar Smith, agreed to remove SOPA’s DNS blocking provisions.

Issa’s aide says that isn’t enough: “Merely taking out the DNS-blocking provisions doesn’t not rectify a bill that’s fundamentally flawed.”

The controversial bill, once expected to sail quickly through committee approval in the House, is now being extensively reworked before it comes up for a commitee vote.

Rupert Murdoch, the CEO of News Corp. (NWS), voiced his frustration with the White House’s stance in a series of tweets over the weekend.

“Obama has thrown in his lot with Silicon Valley paymasters who threaten all software creators with piracy, plain thievery,” Murdoch wrote on Twitter.

In addition to Murdoch, SOPA has drawn support from groups including the Motion Picture Association of America and the Recording Industry Association of America, which say that online piracy leads to U.S. job losses by depriving content creators of income. Time Warner, the parent company of CNNMoney, is among the industry supporters of the legislation.

Proponents of the bill dismiss accusations of censorship, saying that the legislation is meant to revamp a broken system that doesn’t adequately prevent criminal behavior.

But SOPA’s critics say that say that the bill’s backers don’t understand the Internet, and therefore don’t appreciate the implications of the legislation they’re considering.

Meanwhile, a bipartisan group of House members has proposed an alternative bill, the Online Protection and Enforcement of Digital Trade Act (OPEN).

This legislation would allow rights holders to ask the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) to enforce current laws by targeting the actual content pirates. OPEN’s backers have posted the draft legislation online and invited the Web community to comment on and revise the proposal.

SOPA supporters counter that the ITC doesn’t have the resources for such enforcement, and that giving it those resources would be too expensive. To top of page

Judge Bites BitTorrent Lawyer in Butt

fe7d5a74be990d805159fd301cf83f3c Judge Bites BitTorrent Lawyer in Butt

District Judge Royal Ferguson has severed most of Texas attorney ’s remaining John Doe defendants, arguing improper joinder.

DENTON, Texas—Attorney Evan Stone may believe he was born to litigate infringement cases on behalf of producers of adult content, but he’s having a hard time convincing U.S. District Judge Royal Ferguson that the tactics he is using to achieve that end are legal. Last week Ferguson, citing improper joinder, all but decimated most of the remaining cases Stone has filed in the Northern District of Texas. In 13 of the 16 cases, all of which originally targeted hundreds if not thousands of anonymous alleged John Doe offenders, only one unnamed defendant remains.

Defiant to the end and apparently beyond, Stone told , “This isn’t over. There are numerous other tools for obtaining the names and addresses of pirates, and we’re not going to stop until justice is served.” He told the site the judge had “improperly” severed the defendants, and insisted that users must work together to achieve their file-sharing ends.

In one case, however—LFP Internet v. Does 2,619—Ferguson wrote, in his opinion severing all but one of the Does and quashing subpoenas issued to ISPs, “Plaintiff makes no allegation in this case that the claims against the joined defendants ‘arise out of the same transaction, occurrence, or series of transactions or occurrences.’ Instead, it seems that the copyright infringement claim against each Defendant is based upon the individual acts of each Defendant. Plaintiff only alleges in its Complaint that each defendant uses the same method for committing the infringement, but ‘merely committing the same type of violation in the same way does not link defendants together for purposes of joinder.’”

Ferguson then referenced the fact that several courts have agreed that where there is no allegation that multiple defendants have acted in concert, joinder is improper. Indeed, Ferguson rejected outright the salient claim in these cases that the very use of BitTorrent software systems by end users ties them together in a conspiratorial act of piracy that is legally binding. If this is the prevailing view of judges regarding the behind BitTorrent sites, it is hard to see how any of these mass defendant lawsuits will survive.

The judge added one last slap down to his decision, ruling that even the subpoena for the final sole Defendant, Doe 1, should be quashed, “pending this Court’s determination that as to whether an attorney ad litem should be appointed to protect Doe 1’s interests.”

The federal Rule of Civil Procedure 21 does not allow the court to dismiss a case for improper joinder, so all of the 16 Stone cases remain alive, as long as individual complaints against the Does are filed within 30 days of the date of the order. It remains to be seen, of course, whether that will happen, but in the mainstream that is exactly what is happening.

According to CNET, Dunlap, Grubb & Weaver, a that was also slapped down last year for trying similar tactics on behalf of the producers of The Hurt Locker, has begun to file individual lawsuits around the country.

“To do that,” wrote Greg Sandoval, “Dunlap established a network of who are licensed to operate in different federal districts.”

The firm has also begun filing lawsuits against named individuals, reported CNET, including suits filed in the for the Southern District of West Virginia against residents who live there.

“Filing in Florida in about 10 minutes,” Thomas Dunlap, one of the firm’s founders, e-mailed CNET Thursday. “I am driving to courthouse now, should have cases already in Illinois. We will file in California, Texas, Washington, and Oregon in the next two weeks.”

While penalties for copyright infringement convictions can go as high as $150,000 per violation, Dunlap will usually offer an alleged infringer the chance to settle out of court for an amount between $1,500 and $3,000. Attorneys filing on behalf of adult producers have cited similar amounts that they are offering alleged pirates, if and when they can get a hold of indentifying information.

Adult companies that Evan Stone has filed lawsuits on behalf of include LFP Internet Group, Lucas Entertainment, VCX Ltd., Productions, Harmony Films, Adult Source Media, D & E Media, Serious Bidness, Steve Hardeman, Justin Slayer International and FUNimation Entertainment.

Titan Roadblocked in Porn BitTorrent Lawsuit

d3829c504eb9b7dd792e0fd3b2d82999 Titan Roadblocked in Porn BitTorrent Lawsuit

SAN FRANCISCO — Titan Media, which hit a roadblock in a last week, has vowed to refile it.

A federal judge last week denied a Titan motion to file a first amended complaint against 50 BitTorrent users, earlier whittled down from 435 John Doe defendants, who not only were charged with infringement but civil as well.

The ruling continues to leave Titan with only one Doe defendant, known as J.W, in the case.

Judge Susan Illston said in her order that it would be futile to grant plaintiff leave to amend to file a first amended complaint because it ultimately would be dismissed for improper joinder.

“The vast majority of Does are alleged to have distributed different movies, on different days, at different times,” Illston said in the ruling. “The fundamental problem [Titan] faces is that there are no factual allegations to support the assertion that the Doe defendants are connected to the ‘same transaction, occurrence or series of transactions or occurrences,’ or any facts that show they specifically acted in concert.

Illston noted that the court “is troubled by plaintiff’s motive for seeking joinder of the Doe defendants in one action.”

“[Titan's] motive for seeking joinder … is to keep its own litigation costs down in hopes that defendants will accept a low initial settlement demand,” she ruled. “However, filing one mass action in order to identify hundreds of doe defendants through pre-service discovery and facilitate mass settlement, is not what the joinder rules were established for.”

Attorney Gill Sperlein, who represents Titan’s parent company, the IO Group, said the studio believed it set forth “unique” claims that make the joinder in the case proper.

“Unfortunately, the court disagreed,” Sperlein told XBIZ. “We will analyze the court’s guidance and refile shortly.

“One thing the representing the defendants in these cases don’t understand — we will not go away. They have every right to make sure plaintiffs follow proper procedures.

“However, if they convince the courts that extra measures are necessary because these claims should be disfavored, the increased expense will ultimately be paid by their clients and other defendants who frankly would have preferred an opportunity to settle quickly and less expensively.”

EFF Claims Victory Against ‘Copyright Troll’ Attorney Evan Stone

6810c48799cfdfdecf33daf025296685 EFF Claims Victory Against ‘Copyright Troll’ Attorney Evan Stone

, TX—The decision by Texas attorney Evan Stone to file a Notice of Dismissal Friday in Productions v Does 1-670 was hailed by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) as “another victory in [the] battle against flawed lawsuits.” The lawsuit was filed in September of last year, accusing unnamed end users of illegally downloading Haig’s Der Gute Onkel.

Stone, who recently said he “was born” to litigate these types of cases, was also labeled a “copyright troll” by EFF, which, along with Public Citizen (PC), was appointed by the court to act as counsel for the unnamed defendants in the case. In his two-page filing, which is roundly being characterized as “petulant” and whiny,” Stone took equally sharp aim at EFF and PC, implying that they were incompetent in terms of intellectual property , and referring to them as “a trio of attorneys renowned for defending piracy and renowned for their general disregard for intellectual property .”

According to Stone, he had to dismiss the case, explaining, “Four months after the initial filing of this case, with little chance of discovery in sight, Plaintiff feels it has lost any meaningful opportunity to pursue justice in this matter.” Stone places the blame for insurmountable delays not only on opposing counsel, but also the court.

Writing that he had filed a Motion for Expedited Discovery shortly after the initial filing, Stone complained, “Instead of instructing these attorneys to engage Plaintiff’s counsel in a Discovery conference which would allow the case to move forward, the Court ordered attorneys for the defense to respond to Plaintiff’s Motion, for which the Court has yet to make a ruling.”

Stone further complained that the response by the defense was “absurd” as well as “beyond the scope of the Discovery Motion at issue… Moreover, the Defense provided no alternatives for Plaintiff to cure the harm inflicted on it by Defendants.”

According to EFF and PC, however, Stone is personally responsible for doing in his own case. In a letter sent Jan. 26 to Stone by Paul Alan Levy of the Public Citizen Litigation Group, who, along with EFF’s Matt Zimmerman and Corynne McSherry, was one of the defendant’s counsel appointed by the court, Levy accused Stone of committing a serious abuse of the discovery procedure by subpoenaing ISPs before the court had even issued a ruling on Stone’s Motion for Expedited Discovery.

“We intend to ask Judge Godbey to order you to provide a sworn accounting of your actions as described above,” wrote Levy. “And, in the meantime, we have in mind to ask the Court to order you to contact every ISP to whom you have sent a subpoena in this case to tell them that the have been withdrawn, to order you to cease making use of any identifying information you have received, and to stop communicating with your clients unless we give you permission to do so or pending further order of the Court.”

In his filing Friday, Stone wrote, “Plaintiff has notified all relevant internet service providers that this case is being dismissed and hereby notifies the Court of the same.”

Whether that action satisfies Levy or the court remains to be seen, but Zimmerman, in a quote provided today, said that concerns remain.

“This dismissal is wonderful news for the 670 anonymous defendants in this case, but troubling questions remain about the behavior of Mick Haig Productions,” he said. “Given the extremely invasive power of subpoenas, plaintiffs have a duty to ensure that subpoenas are not misused. EFF is committed to ensuring that litigants are held accountable for taking shortcuts around the due process rights of their opponents, especially in cases such as this one where the very act of obtaining someone’s identity could be improperly leveraged into pressure to settle a claim.”

The EFF statement also claims that this latest “victory” indicates a major shift in how mass copyright litigation is being perceived by both attorneys and courts around the country.

“Lawyers around the country are discovering that mass copyright litigation is not such a lucrative model if you have to pursue your cases fairly,” the statement read. “In December and early January, federal judges in West and recognized that it is improper to join thousands of people in one lawsuit based solely on the fact that they all allegedly used the same software protocol to share one or more copyright works. As a practical matter, this means that copyright owners in those cases must file separate lawsuits against each alleged infringer and must have a reasonable basis for believing that they are filing in the right court.”

According to EFF Legal Director Cindy Cohn, courts are finally catching up and taking a closer look at the rash of such lawsuits that were filed in 2010 and into 2011.

“There is often a gap between when cases are filed and when judges have the opportunity to look at them closely,” she said. “But that time appears to have arrived. Judges around the country are waking up to the dangers of mass copyright litigation and taking action to make sure the process is fair for the thousands of people who have been targeted in these suits.”

Another potentially problematic wrinkle in the case for Stone was whether the company ever owned the copyright to Der Gute Onkel in the first place. According to Torrent Freak, the title was never registered with the Copyright Office, a requirement under U.S. law before a copyright infringement lawsuit can be brought.

“Since the lawyer, Evan Stone, failed to properly inform the Court that the movie in question is not registered with Copyright Office, he has not [pleaded] the case properly,” wrote Torrent Freak. “For the alleged 670 downloaders this misstep is good news. If any of the defendants challenges the complaint through a motion to dismiss or motion to quash, it should be dismissed.” In the end, the case never got that far.

That alleged impropriety aside, EFF believes the mass litigation business model as it is being practiced—or malpracticed—is fatally flawed, arguing, “Given the additional expense of filing and litigating these cases fairly—expenses the plaintiffs were likely hoping to avoid by ignoring the court rules and due process requirements—these cases may not go much further.”

There are many companies and attorneys in the adult industry who still believe that end-user litigation, if done properly, has a big role to play in the overall strategy to address the pirating of copyrighted content.

Time will also tell whether Stone—who as early as late December said, “It’s my tech background that has saved me from making the same mistakes [other attorneys] made. Either way, this trend of BitTorrent litigation is a long way from over”—will continue on as aggressively as he has thus far or whether a tactical change in his legal strategy is forthcoming.

Mick Haig v Does Notice of Dismissal can be read here.

Paul Alan Levy letter to Evan Stone can be read here.

Justin Slayer Takes Aim at 1,254 BitTorrent Users

88e90a0dc726b3437a1e8863ee6b53bc Justin Slayer Takes Aim at 1,254 BitTorrent Users

— Justin Slayer International is the latest company to file a against users who allegedly traded one of its films online.

Justin Slayer International Inc. filed suit on Monday against 1,254 John Doe defendants, alleging they uploaded and downloaded “Sara Jay in Heat.”

The suit seeks to identify the Does through their IP addresses by subpoenaing their ISPs. The IP addresses provided to the court show that the file sharers targeted are from all corners of the nation, including Georgia, North Carolina, and California. They are alleged to have traded the video through BitTorrent sites in October and November.

The video, released last summer, was self-produced by Sara Jay, who stars in the along with Lucas Stone, Angelina Castro, Lexi Lockhart, Asante Stone and Jay.

The suit was filed at in Dallas by attorney .

Corbin Fisher Goes After Hotfile, 1,000 File Traders

4d5e7e2be654c3e1dfce866868529ced Corbin Fisher Goes After Hotfile, 1,000 File Traders

— Corbin Fisher says file-trading site Hotfile.com and about 1,000 of its customers have engaged in massive infringement by making available 2,400 links to the studio’s titles.

Corbin Fisher attorneys contend that Hotfile, which charges a membership fee of up to $55 per year, has at least 800 of its films available on its servers traded by a “confederation of thieves.” That number could get bumped up during rounds of discovery, Corbin Fisher attorneys say in the claim.

The suit hones in on Hotfile.com’s self-described “one-click hosting” site, which doesn’t provide an index of content and “represents an emerging model for stealing — and profiting from — others’ intellectual property.”

The suit also makes charges that Hotfile operates its own affiliate system so that users recruit others to download files, breeding a “massive pyramid” where “veteran copyright infringers recruit new copyright infringers, while all infringers attract recruits to download the pirated intellectual property from which they receive a payment.”

“Hotfile.com cleverly avoids cataloging or indexing the files in order to be willfully blind to their users’ uploads and downloads, while profiting from the site’s web traffic,” said the suit, which also names Hotfile’s operator, Anton Titov, and its web-hosting services company, Lemuria Communications Inc., purportedly owned by Titov.

The suit also names PayPal, which provides payments to Hotfile Inc.

Titov, according to the suit, is believed to be a Russian citizen who resides in Bulgaria and Amsterdam, as well as Miami Beach.

The suit charges and civil against Hotfile, Titov, Lemuria, Paypal and the 1,000 unnamed Hotfile customers, who were named as John Does to the suit.

Filed at in Miami, the suit seeks an injunction and against the defendants, as well as to freeze assets in Hotfile’s Paypal account.

Corbin Fisher attorney Marc Randazza declined comment on the suit to XBIZ; Titov was not immediately available at post time.

Record $250K Porn File-Sharing Settlement Reached

2ac978a10add1c58e8513308a96a0ab6 Record $250K Porn File Sharing Settlement Reached

SAN DIEGO — In what apparently is the largest file-sharing settlement against a single defendant in the , an has consented to a $250,000 judgment against him for uploading six Corbin Fisher movies.

XBIZ has learned that Boston-area resident T.S. signed settlement papers on Christmas Eve, just four days after the studio filed a complaint against the defendant who was identified through his IP address.

Marc Randazza, Corbin Fisher’s general counsel, told XBIZ he knows of no other file-sharing settlement, porn or mainstream, that has reached this dollar high.

“This case was airtight,” Randazza said. “Some people fight like cats and dogs; he didn’t.”

Randazza noted that the defendant, who is in his 20s, is “one of our Patient Zeroes” relative to his prolific distribution of Corbin Fisher content using torrents.

“T.S. is not merely one of many who steal the [Corbin Fisher's] copyrighted works online, T.S. is one of the primary sources of the stolen Corbin Fisher works circulating on the ,” Randazza wrote in the complaint.

“T.S. provided copies of [Corbin Fisher's] copyrighted works to various torrent sites, where they were recirculated and redistributed widely,” the said.

Corbin Fisher movies allegedly uploaded through BitTorrent and named in the T.S. suit include “Mason Fucks Trey,” “Aiden,” “Connor Fucks Ryan,” “Jude Fucks Austin,” “Carter Fucks Justin” and “Preston Fucks Trey.”

Corbin Fisher, in the settlement, agreed to halve its actual in the suit to $250,000, with T.S. entitiled to “an opportunity to reduce the amount payable to if he ceases any further content theft (whether the plaintiff’s content or anyone elses), and if he makes regular payments toward the judgment on a schedule, which will be agreed upon between the parties in a separate settlement agreement.”

Attorney , who represents a number of companies in porn BitTorrent litigation, called the file-sharing settlement “eye-popping” because of its high-dollar sum.

“I don’t know of any settlement of its kind with anything close to that figure,” Stone told XBIZ. “That’s wild; very surprised.”

A federal judge has yet to sign off on the consent judgment.

Porn Tube Slutload Faces 2 Suits for Infringement

6d471411feb6649c5655ee89c9d9f0c1 Porn Tube Slutload Faces 2 Suits for Infringement

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa — Private Media Group has filed the first of two suits against the operators of Slutload.com, one of the largest porn tube sites, alleging it is streaming stolen content.

Slutload’s owner, Ryan Milnes of Pensacola, Fla., also was hit with an infringement claim last month by . In both of the suits, John Does have been listed as defendants as well, presumably Slutload’s advertising partners.

The two suits waged by the top adult entertainment are significant because they are taking on one of the highest ranking websites, Slutload.com, which has an Alex traffic rank of 416.

According to Private’s , Slutload is a “one-stop shop for infringing material” that has 5 million -based surfers each month that generate “million of dollars in annual revenue” from advertisements others place on the site.

Private, in its suit filed at U.S. District Court in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, seeks an injunctive order, , transfer of the Slutload.com domain name and other similar domain names and attorneys fees. Pink Visual filed its suit at U.S. District Court in New York.

Private said that Slutload has a “significant commercial and financial advantage” without purchasing licensing from copyright holders.

“Most, if not all, of the content indexed on or available on the website is infringing, unauthorized copyrighted content, including [Private's] copyrighted works,” Private’s suit said. “Slutload.com website is designed for the sole purpose of taking commercial advantage of copyrighted works without any authority whatsoever and derive benefit from the copyrighted works.”

Private also alleges that Slutload has altered its films on the site by removing or blurring Private watermarks and logos and replacing with its own “Slutload.com” mark.

Among 19 films Private claims Slutload infringed, some of the titles include “Anal Mermaids,” “Beauties in the Tropix,” “Guns and Rough Sex” and “My Cheats Me with a Lesbian.”

Allison Vivas, Pink Visual’s president, acknowledged to XBIZ her company’s infringement suit against Slutload operators but could not provide other details. Pink Visual’s suit has been filed but not yet been made public.

Private Jason Tucker and Milnes, Slutload’s owner, did not immediately respond to XBIZ for comment.