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      Premier League: 10 things to look out for this weekend

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 29 March - 00:00 · 1 minute

    Everton must find goals, Forest need tight games to go their way and there’s a mighty showdown in Manchester

    Eddie Howe turned radical as Newcastle lost their FA Cup quarter-final at Manchester City earlier this month, deploying a back three. For a confirmed four-at-the-back manager, it represented quite a departure but retaining it might just suit Newcastle’s personnel – particularly against West Ham at St James’ Park this Saturday. Given that Sven Botman is sidelined for nine months following ACL surgery – and with hindsight the Dutch defender should have had that operation when he first damaged his knee in September – the best back three would surely be Jamaal Lascelles, Fabian Schär and Dan Burn flanked by Kieran Trippier, if fit, or Tino Livramento and Lewis Hall. Hall has disappointed following his summer loan from Chelsea but a left wing-back position might finally enable him to demonstrate why many once believed he was an England player in the making. With Schär showing off his ball skills at sweeper, 3-5-2 might yet propel Newcastle into Europa League combat next season. Louise Taylor

    Newcastle v West Ham, Saturday 12.30pm GMT

    Bournemouth v Everton, Saturday 3pm GMT

    Chelsea v Burnley, Saturday 3pm GMT

    Nottingham Forest v Crystal Palace, Saturday 3pm GMT

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      Haaland v Havertz: a style subplot as City’s goal machine meets Arsenal’s false 9 | Karen Carney

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 28 March - 12:41

    The Norwegian remains ruthless but in the awkward German the title pretenders have acquired a player growing in efficiency

    Sir Alex Ferguson once said: “Attack wins you games, defence wins you championships.” The meeting of Manchester City and Arsenal on Sunday could well prove the former Manchester United manager right.

    The teams are very different in style when it comes to their centre-forwards. Manchester City have arguably the world’s best No 9 in Erling Haaland, whereas Kai Havertz assumes the role of a false 9 for Arsenal. The contrasts make for an intriguing match at the Etihad, with both teams knowing the importance of the result.

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      Who is in form as the Premier League hits the business end of the season?

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 28 March - 11:43

    Arsenal face their biggest test of the campaign on Sunday. Their trip to Manchester City could not have come at a better time

    By Ben McAleer for WhoScored

    Domestic duties return with a bang this weekend as Manchester City host Arsenal in what could prove a decisive clash in the Premier League title race. Just a point separates the pair at the top of the table and, with Liverpool playing Brighton earlier in the day on Sunday, neither side can afford to drop points at the Etihad.

    Before the big games this weekend, WhoScored have assessed the players who have shone in recent weeks. To qualify, players must have featured in two of their side’s last three games, and six of their last eight. The ratings are also weighted chronologically, with recency bias coming into effect.

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      Just how important is a settled central defence in the Premier League? | Oliver Hopkins

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 27 March - 10:41

    Arsenal have gone top of the table with a steady defence, whereas Manchester United keep chopping and changing

    By Oliver Hopkins for Opta Analyst

    A solid centre-back partnership has been the foundation of many of the Premier League’s best sides. From Tony Adams and Martin Keown, Rio Ferdinand and Nemanja Vidic, John Terry and Ricardo Carvalho, to even the undeniable importance of Wes Morgan and Robert Huth; a settled, reliable partnership is at the heart of any great side.

    With Arsenal’s title charge underpinned by a dominant defence led by Gabriel and William Saliba, we investigate the current crop of Premier League centre-backs. Who are the most effective combinations? Which teams can barely field the same partnership from week to week? And are we seeing the death of the back three?

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      Premier League IPTV Piracy Clickbait Reaches New Low, But Will Go Lower

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Saturday, 23 March - 13:37 · 3 minutes

    clown-dmca Being able to receive and impart knowledge and ideas with other people is one of the most important things any human will ever do.

    The information shared or received won’t always be accurate, even if we believe it is. It might not be accurate even if it appears in several widely read online newspapers. All anyone really expects is a tiny effort to ensure that they aren’t being fed fabricated nonsense made up on the spot.

    Apparently, even that’s too much to ask; illegal streaming detector cars , really?

    Something Something PIRACY SHIELD WARNING

    The image below shows how Google responds to a search for a very specific term. The search term ‘piracy shield’ relates to an anti-piracy system that enjoyed its full launch in Italy on February 2, 2024. We’ve written about Piracy Shield and the legislation supporting it on dozens of occasions, including numerous times in the last few weeks.

    piracy shield news

    Of the available ‘Top Stories’ space, we get a quarter while the remaining 75% is allocated to three extremely popular, UK-focused publications, all of which expend considerable resources on SEO and here, tell exactly the same ‘story’.

    While TorrentFreak’s regular readers will already know what Piracy Shield is , who built it and why , exactly how it functions from a technical perspective, and all of its ‘secret’ targets thus far , it’s likely that readers of the publications above were less aware of it.

    After reading the articles, not much would’ve improved.

    Stand By Brits, This Will End Illegal Streaming, FOREVER

    The Piracy Shield system was donated by Italian football league Serie A to Italian telecoms regulator, AGCOM. The technical section of an Italian law firm worked on development, the system was accredited for use in Italy under Italian law, and is currently hard at work trying to block access to Italian content, in Italy.

    That obviously leads seamlessly and not at all unnaturally to headlines like these.

    Given these end-of-days headlines, some may have been comforted that the doom portrayed at the start of the articles had completely disappeared by the end.

    From “the crackdown may stop games being streamed illegally for good” at the start, to variations on “there are no plans for a similar procedure to be adopted in the UK” at the end. That’s either the most miraculous recovery seen recently, or the textbook definition of clickbait.

    Unfortunately, it doesn’t matter, because it’s still not entirely true. Or indeed true at all.

    Anyone Remember The Premier League?

    The Piracy Shield system in Italy exists in the main to block pirate sports streams, delivered by premium IPTV piracy platforms or those accessed via web-based streaming portals. To ensure the legality of blocking under Italian law, so-called ‘precautionary measures’ with the ability to adapt to changing circumstances, i.e evasive action by pirates, are issued against pirate sites.

    If these ‘dynamic injunctions’ and a Piracy Shield-type system turned up in the UK tomorrow, the scenarios outlined in the articles above definitely would not happen, and for very good reason.

    Always Credit The Source

    Dynamic injunctions for tackling live sports piracy were actually pioneered and developed in the UK, by none other than the Premier League.

    In fact, in Football Association Premier League Ltd v British Telecommunications Plc & Ors. (2017/2018) , the High Court of England and Wales issued the first ever dynamic injunctions for tackling live sports in favor of the Premier League. Since then, such injunctions have been in constant force at ISPs around the country, season in, season out, controlled and executed by the by Premier League’s own system.

    That’s six/seven years of experience for the Premier League. Piracy Shield launched four weeks ago.

    Think of it like the scene in Monty Python and the Holy Grail where King Arthur tries to use the Holy Grail as leverage over the master of a French castle, but is informed that the master probably won’t be interested since “he’s already got one.”

    Or just make something up.

    From: TF , for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

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      ISPs Are Monitoring IPTV Pirates’ Activities, Court Documents Reveal

      Andy Maxwell · news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Sunday, 18 October, 2020 - 10:38 · 6 minutes

    Spy Blocking of regular piracy websites has been a feature of anti-piracy enforcement in Europe for almost 15 years.

    The way these blocks are achieved is broadly similar, with entertainment industry companies filing “no-fault” injunctions against Internet service providers who stand before the courts accused of facilitating the copyright-infringing activities of their subscribers.

    Once this infringement has been identified and the ISPs put on notice by the courts, they are required to block access to the sites in question, using basic DNS techniques or in the UK, for example, more sophisticated methods that require a VPN or similar tool to tunnel through.

    IPTV Blocking – A More Sophisticated Beast

    In recent years, live sports groups such as the Premier League and UEFA have obtained similar injunctions that are more complex. These ‘dynamic’ blocking efforts require intricate work by the organizations’ anti-piracy partners, who identify the IP addresses of specific ‘pirate’ servers, including those that can be changed at short notice, in order for ISPs to block them at match times.

    While unpopular, there is nothing particularly surprising about these efforts. Content companies have obtained the necessary legal permissions and have a right to protect their businesses. And for the ISPs, it should be a simple case of them ‘firewalling’ the IP addresses in question so that subscribers cannot access them directly to watch live matches. However, it seems pretty clear that something else is going on too.

    ISPs’ Vested Interest in Stopping Pirates

    Now that they are both broadcasters and ISPs, companies including Sky have a vested interest in stopping piracy. This means that while blocking injunctions against ISPs used to be fiercely contested, that’s no longer the case. In fact, in a recent blocking case brought by UEFA in Ireland , it was revealed in court documents that Sky actually supported the action, despite being a defendant.

    While that’s the company’s prerogative, something more worrying was mentioned in the same case. It appears that in this matter, Sky or others acting on its behalf, have been monitoring the traffic of Sky subscribers who accessed the servers of pirate IPTV providers.

    Perhaps Not the ‘Dumb Pipe’ ISPs Are Usually Portrayed As

    In the order obtained by UEFA in the High Court of Ireland in September, comments made by Justice David Barniville revealed that the activities of Sky subscribers were used to support the application by UEFA to have pirate services blocked.

    “I am satisfied that the [blocking] Order is necessary for the purpose of protecting the Plaintiff’s copyright against infringement. I note from the evidence, and accept, that there has been a significant shift away from the use of websites in more recent years in favor of devices and apps, in particular, set top boxes that can be watched on televisions in people’s living rooms,” Justice Barniville wrote.

    “The affidavit of Jiajun Chen provides a confidential traffic analysis which evidences the use of the Sky network by Irish viewers to watch online illegal UEFA content.”

    That the traffic analysis itself is “confidential” feels just a little ironic, given that it apparently reports on communications that should have been confidential too.

    In this case, Mr. Chen appears to have obtained access to at least part of the Internet habits of some Sky subscribers. Any requests made from customers’ connections usually go straight from their devices via the ISP to the ‘pirate’ servers in question, meaning that only Sky should be in the middle. Reading between the lines, Sky appears to have monitored, logged, and made available information related to these communications to support the application of the plaintiff.

    Worryingly, this monitoring of customers’ traffic has been going on for some time , since it was briefly covered in previous blocking injunctions obtained by the Premier League. Precisely what information is being held is unclear but if it relates to attempts to access ‘infringing servers’, any and all data (if only metadata) is available to ISPs.

    No Expectation of Communications Privacy?

    Putting aside the issue of copyright infringement for a moment, this type of monitoring behavior is unlikely to sit well with the customers of ISPs who either demand or at least expect privacy. Neither does it sit well with Ed Geraghty , a Senior Technologist at UK-based charity Privacy International.

    “Censorship and monitoring of the Internet, generally, leads to chilling effects and violates our human right against arbitrary interference to our privacy, home, and correspondence. This is just another example that despite cries to the contrary from industries and governments alike, the Internet is a heavily surveilled and highly regulated space, where tracking is rampant,” Geraghty informs TorrentFreak.

    “In recent years there have been great strides in the roll out of end-to-end encryption and the safety and privacy it can offer the content of our communications whilst in transit, but fundamentally there’s still – necessarily – huge amounts of metadata attached to our every interaction online.”

    What Can Be Done to Prevent ISP Monitoring?

    While some will argue that privacy shouldn’t apply when subscribers are reportedly breaking the law, the big question relates to the slippery slope. If subscribers’ activities are apparently being monitored for one type of traffic today, how long before other types of traffic are considered fair game too? Preventing this, privacy experts insist, is not just possible but also necessary to prevent Internet surveillance from getting out of hand.

    “Depending on which point the ISPs are monitoring, there are various ways you can attempt to obscure your traffic – for instance, using third-party DNS over HTTPS, or a VPN – but be aware that this is merely shifting who can see your traffic away from your ISP to someone else,” Geraghty adds.

    Given their simplicity and wide availability, the use of VPNs to prevent monitoring is a natural choice and something that has been gaining traction in recent times. David Wibergh from OVPN says he believes that Sky is proposing the “black holing” of IP addresses instead of blocking DNS queries, which is problematic in itself.

    “As IP addresses are typically in temporary use and could be used by several sites simultaneously, it can lead to unexpected and obtrusive blocking of content that has nothing to do with piracy,” Wibergh says.

    “By using a VPN provider you remove the internet providers’ capabilities of performing blocking, surveillance and traffic analysis, as the only traffic originating from you is towards the VPN provider’s server. It’s crucial to choose a VPN provider that is trustworthy as VPN providers are able to perform the same form of traffic shaping as the ISP. But even if there is a risk that VPN providers log; it’s a guarantee that your ISP logs.

    Daniel Markuson, Digital Privacy Expert at NordVPN , says that perceived privacy intrusions like these will only will lead to more uptake.

    “Blocks of services and the subsequent discoveries of traffic monitoring and trade will lead to an increased demand for VPNs,” Markuson says.

    “Whenever a government announces an increase in surveillance, internet restrictions, or other types of constraints, people turn to privacy tools. We saw similar spikes in different regions: for example, when the US repealed net neutrality, or the UK passed the law dubbed ‘ The Snoopers’ Charter ‘.”

    Finally, a simple, obvious, but nevertheless important comment from Harold Li, Vice President of ExpressVPN , that applies to all Internet users concerned about the privacy of their communications.

    “The onus is still on consumers to take action and protect themselves,” he concludes.

    From: TF , for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

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      SoccerStreams: UK’s Most Popular Pirate Site, Just in Time for Premier League PPV

      Andy Maxwell · news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Monday, 12 October, 2020 - 19:39 · 4 minutes

    soccerstreams.jpg When the new Premier League season began last month, those hoping for a return to normality had their hopes dashed once again.

    With social-distancing restrictions still in place the stadium ban continued, leaving fans with few other options than to watch games on TV. But this is the Premier League and not only is everything expensive, but it’s also complicated too.

    As previously highlighted , UK fans have a choice between spending a small fortune to watch matches on TV or not watch them at all, despite fans in other countries being able to watch all matches for the smallest of outlays.

    In the meantime, however, one site in particular is cutting through all of the red tape while eliminating all costs, at least for those bold enough to step over to the dark side of pirate streaming portals.

    Background: /r/SoccerStreams Banned By Reddit

    Readers may recall that in January 2019, /r/soccerstreams, a forum on Reddit dedicated to pirated football/soccer streams, was handed a final warning by Reddit’s administrators. The huge sub-Reddit, which at the time had in excess of 420,000 subscribers, was on borrowed time after receiving more than its fair share of complaints from copyright holders.

    It was later revealed that the Premier League had a played a key role in having the sub-Reddit shut down. While that can be chalked up as a success, it wasn’t a success story as the final whistle blew on the community.

    SoccerStreams.net – A Piracy Giant With Unprecedented Growth

    In one form or another, SoccerStreams.net has been offering links to pirated sports streams for some time but it began to gain additional traction last year, not too long after /r/soccerstreams was shut down.

    Sharing the same name and proudly advertising the fact that the site was created by the founders of its Reddit namesake, the unprecedented interest in SoccerStreams over the past several months is now a sight to behold.

    Relatively small visitor numbers at the start of the year are now being utterly dwarfed by huge crowds of hungry football fans looking for a free fix instead of several expensive subscriptions, expensive PPVs, or the now non-available expensive ticket, pie and a pint.

    SoccerStreams Traffic

    The above web traffic analysis provided by SimilarWeb shows traffic in April 2020 of around 280,000 visits per month to SoccerStreams.net. By May, the ‘slight’ rise on the graph reveals 2.5 million visits, with June skyrocketing to more than 18 million visitors.

    Four weeks on, the site was receiving 26.6 million visits per month, dipping slightly to 23.3 million in August and rising again to roughly 25.5 million in September. Such a meteoric rise is rarely witnessed in the piracy space, especially by sites specializing in just one area of content consumption.

    Massively Popular in the UK

    Clearly, the rise of SoccerStreams is nothing less than impressive but it is where the growth is coming from that perhaps points to the bigger picture. At the time of writing, Norway, Portugal and Canada each provide around 5% of the site’s traffic, with the United States accounting for close to 19%.

    Right at the top, however, is the 22.3% currently coming from the UK, with SimilarWeb reporting that the UK’s traffic share is up a staggering 63.55% over the past month. It’s impossible to say whether all of this traffic is bound for Premier League action but considering its popularity, there’s a good chance it accounts for much of it.

    Indeed, according to SimilarWeb, SoccerStreams.net is now the 439th most-visited site in the UK, period. Other stats provided by Alexa, another platform offering website traffic analysis, reveals that the streaming links platform is now the most popular pirate site in the whole of the UK. Another popular sports streaming site, Liveonscore.tv, is not far behind.

    That paints a picture of a lot of pent up demand and revenue to be realized, if only the Premier League and its broadcasting partners could get over themselves and start thinking more seriously about how the current problems can be solved at a sensible price.

    Of course, the entire business is ridiculously complicated but if fans can’t afford to pay the extortionate rates on the current “take it or leave it basis”, the above traffic analysis shows they don’t necessarily have to “leave it” at all.

    Sites like SoccerStreams.net are filling that gap and that isn’t good for an industry struggling to come to terms with the new state of play. However, one can’t help think that aspects of this crisis are at least partially self-inflicted, with astronomical costs ultimately being footed by the fans, despite the pandemic.

    Unfortunately for top-flight football, fans’ loyalty is now being pushed to breaking point alongside a background of Premier League clubs still managing to spend £1 billion in transfer fees over the summer, all while many people are struggling to pay their bills.

    From: TF , for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.