Streaming copyrighted material for free on multimedia players such as Kodi is illegal, the European Court of Justice ruled.
Downloading pirated copies of movies, music, and television shows has
always constituted copyright infringement, but streaming the same
content was previously a legal grey area. Now the EU Court of Justice
has ruled on the matter. The full statement from the Court can be
downloaded here.
https://curia.europa.eu/jcms/upload/...cp170040en.pdf
The roling was made in a case brought by the Dutch anti-piracy
organisation Brein, against the selers of the ‘fully-loaded’ Kodi STB
called Filmspeler (Movieplayer).
The court said that “In the present case and having regard, in
particular, to the content of the advertising of the multimedia player
and to the fact that the main attraction of that player for potential
purchasers is the pre-installation of the add-ons concerned, the Court
finds that the purchaser of such a player accesses a free and
unauthorised offer of protected works deliberately and in full knowledge
of the circumstances.”
The ruling will now make it possible to sue sellers of so-called
‘fully-leaded’ Kodi boxes, who offer access to illegal streaming
services for a monthly or yearly fee.
Kodi is legal, it is a neutral, open-source media player that can be
installed on a broad range of devices, from set-top boxes powered by
Android, to known brands, such as the Amazon Fire TV Stick.
Because of this illegal use of Kodi software, Kodi has for some become
synonymous with piracy. The Kodi development team has now issued a
statement about this ruling: “The team is, frankly, quite pleased with
this decision. As we’ve said in the past, pirate box sellers are a real
problem for users, because they provide users with constantly breaking
messes, vanish, and then expect Team Kodi to provide support to users
who are confused about what Kodi is, where their “free movies” are
coming from, and all of the issues related to this problem. We don’t
have any problem with users setting up their boxes however they want. We
just want them to actually know what they are getting themselves into
when doing so.
“We are also not particularly worried by this decision. There are
definitely some slippery slope arguments to be made about what can
constitute a “communication to the public” in the future, but the court
seems to have made it quite clear in its ruling that they view Kodi
itself as something akin to Firefox or the internet, perfectly legal,
while the links/add-ons specifically are the illegal IP.”
In a related development, research by Sandvine has shown that in the US
70% of all installed Kodi software is used to access illegal streams and
on-demand content, and that the sellers of ‘fully-loaded’ Kodi STBS
profit most