- International authorities found that Al Qaeda training materials suggested using counterfeit goods and materials to fund its cell activities.[ref]Id. at 51[/ref]
- British detectives claim that Pakistani DVDs account for 40% of anti-piracy confiscations in the UK, and that profits from pirated versions of Love Actually and Master and Commander funnel back to the coffers of Pakistan-based Al Qaeda operatives.[ref]Id. at page 50 footnote 75, citing Kavita Philip, What is a technological author? The pirate function and intellectual property, 8, No. 2, The Institute of Postcolonial Studies 199-218 (2005).[/ref]
- The U.S. Department of Justice found that terrorist groups are using technology to commit various kinds of crimes traditionally associated with organized criminal organizations. This includes fraud, computer-related crimes, racketeering, and the creation of so-called "bootleg," counterfeit, or illegal copies of movies, music and even software.[ref]Id. at 50[/ref]
- In 1994, the terrorist group, Hezbollah, used the illicit counterfeiting industry to fund its bombing of the Jewish Community Center (AMIA) in Buenos Aires.[ref]Id. at 53[/ref]
- In the aftermath of the 2008 London bombings, authorities identified Mohammad Sidique Khan, a bootleg CDs and DVDs dealer in South Africa, as one of the coordinators of the bombings.[ref]Id. at 49[/ref]
- Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay (a tri-border area) serve as a regional hub for terrorist organizational funding for groups such as Hezbollah and Hamas. This fundraising includes counterfeit American goods, including Microsoft software.[ref]Id. at 62[/ref] Twenty million dollars were donated to Hezbollah on an annual basis from this tri-border area resulting from illegal IP activities.[ref]Id.[/ref]
- There was a $2.5 million transfer from a DVD pirate Assad Ahmad Barakat to Hezbollah, who received a "thank you" note from the leader of Hezbollah.[ref]Id. at 63[/ref]
How Copyright Piracy Funds Terrorism and Google Removes 180 Million Videos from YouTube
03/06/2015
Stephen Carlisle
No Subjects
Two notable items hit the news last week. The first was an excellent and thoroughly researched law review article by Brandy Robinson which appeared in the latest issue of the Rutgers Law Record.[ref]IP Piracy & Developing Nations: A Recipe For Terrorism Funding[/ref] (Click on the endnote to go directly to the article). The article relates in great detail how terrorist groups, and those who support them, use copyright piracy as an easy way of funding their activities. The second item was Google suddenly making public what they had refused to do before, namely, to state how many videos were removed from YouTube for content violations.
Brandy Robinson's article makes very plain that terrorist organizations use copyright infringement as a method of easily and quickly generating funds, and have been doing so for quite some time.
"[T]errorist groups, especially those in developing nations, thrive on IP piracy allowing for the successful funding of terrorist opportunities. (Footnote omitted.) Terrorist groups gravitate towards IP piracy for funding because detection of IP piracy is easily evaded and developing nations do not thoroughly understand it. (Footnote omitted.)"[ref]Id. at 42[/ref]
Amongst her points:
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