Irony Alert: John Steele Denies Uploading Anything Ever Despite Growing IP Evidence
from the irony-alert dept
Well,
well. We recently wrote about a new filing in the Paul Oppold case in
Florida, in which lawyer Graham Syfert presents very, very detailed and
compelling evidence, as put together by Delvan Neville, that many of the
films that Prenda sued people over were initially uploaded by John Steele. The folks over at The Pirate Bay added to this by presenting evidence that the sharkmp4 user who uploaded the works came from the very same IP address
that Neville had found (among other evidence) in his findings.
Basically, there's a ton of evidence that, at the very least, whoever
controlled the Prenda Law domain name, also uploaded the torrent, ran a
website "releasing" the movies, controlled John Steele's confirmed email
account and commented on various blogs with clear insider knowledge of
Prenda Law's actions.
John Steele's response? Deny, deny, deny. Here's him talking to Ars Technica:
That said, here's the really ironic bit: In all of the John Steele cases of copyright trolling, in which he and his partners have been accusing people of copyright infringement and hacking computers, their "evidence" tends to be a single IP address involved in a single action, which they argue is enough information to accurately identify the person and the actions they did. Here, we not only have a single IP address, but a ton of additional information, including that identical IP address showing up in multiple places, while a variety of other evidence directly links Steele to the IP address, yet he insists it's not true. Fascinating.
One of our commenters put it all together in a single image.
At this point, not only is the evidence that John Steele was directly
involved in uploading the files pretty overwhelming, but on its own it's
orders of magnitude more compelling than the evidence that Steele and Prenda have been using against people in court.
John Steele's response? Deny, deny, deny. Here's him talking to Ars Technica:
"I have never uploaded a torrent in my life, I have never instructed anyone to do so, and I am not aware of anyone I have worked with in any capacity whatsoever (other than pirates of course). I am not sure how much more unequivocal about it I can be. I have no involvement with any case in Florida, including Mr. Oppold's case. I have not read a single document in that case. I don't intend to. As far as Mr. Syfert, you will have to ask him why he is hiring experts to try to connect me to a case I have no involvement with."For what it's worth, Syfert didn't actually hire an expert to try to connect one to the other, but merely to investigate who did what. That a tremendous amount of evidence then poured out all pointing to John Steele is the result.
That said, here's the really ironic bit: In all of the John Steele cases of copyright trolling, in which he and his partners have been accusing people of copyright infringement and hacking computers, their "evidence" tends to be a single IP address involved in a single action, which they argue is enough information to accurately identify the person and the actions they did. Here, we not only have a single IP address, but a ton of additional information, including that identical IP address showing up in multiple places, while a variety of other evidence directly links Steele to the IP address, yet he insists it's not true. Fascinating.
One of our commenters put it all together in a single image.
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