Los Angeles Times

Using Kodi and your moral compass

Viewing free content via pirate software add-on is stealing.

- By Jennifer Van Grove jennifer.vangrove@sduniontri­bune.com Twitter: @jbruin

We need to have a serious talk about Kodi.

Whether you know it or not, you’ve heard about Kodi — either from friends in real life who love streaming free stuff and telling you about it, or by way of social network pals who promote the boxes that make it possible.

Even so, here’s a refresher: Though Kodi itself is well-intentione­d software, it’s marketed by bad actors not associated with the company as the cord cutter’s free-for-all magic content machine.

Technicall­y, Kodi is just a media center; it’s software that offers access to all your digital files: purchased or downloaded music, shows, movies and games. Like an internet browser, Kodi can also connect people to whatever web-based content they want to view on their smartphone­s and television­s.

Because the Kodi software is open source, thirdparty developers can and do build add-ons that serve as gateways that link people to troves of copyrighte­d files, which have been uploaded by anonymous online pirates.

The XBMC Foundation, which is the nonprofit technology consortium that developed the Kodi software, has banned these addons, making them difficult for the average person to find. But they’re out there.

Thus, an entire industry has emerged around folding the bad in with the good and simplifyin­g the process of streaming anything you want — such as live sports, movies still in theaters, payper-view extras — free of charge.

There are, for instance, a number of Android box makers

who sell devices that merge Kodi’s software with other software, ultimately making it easy to find any TV show, sporting event or movie.

Then there are your average Joes and Janes; our neighbors and acquaintan­ces who buy dozens of offthe-shelf Amazon Fire TV sticks, add Kodi’s software to them and also preinstall the most popular pirate addons — say Exodus or Genesis. These so-called Kodi sticks are sold at a markup offline or through online classified sites.

“We keep a list of who [the good guys] are,” said Nathan Betzen, the president of XBMC Foundation. “But companies pop up overnight, making it almost impossible to keep a list of the [bad actors].”

You can buy these infringing set-top boxes on Amazon, EBay and Facebook, and even find them at your neighborho­od swap meet.

Roughly 6% of all households in North America have a Kodi device configured to access unlicensed content, according to a recent report published by Sandvine.

Before you, too, get sucked in by the propositio­n of free everything, I implore you to think about what you’re doing. I don’t mean to suggest that you should feel sorry for the world’s biggest entertainm­ent brands that are, no doubt, losing money on work that cost millions to produce. Rather, it’s a matter of right versus wrong, and even kindergart­ners know it’s wrong to steal.

This is a subject that hits close to home.

When I met my husband, he was an active copyright infringer, using an Amazon Fire TV stick that he bought from a friend. It came preloaded with Kodi and popular pirate add-ons. At the time, the friend who sold him the device was making a nice side income converting standard streaming sticks into deliberate infringing devices.

My husband even helped offload a few of these sticks to his friends and family members, who I’d like to assume were unaware of the implicatio­ns of streaming free TV and movies.

No one was technicall­y doing anything illegal — at least based on existing copyright laws, as courts have yet to determine where fault, or the actual act of copying a copyrighte­d file, takes place. But the players here are all messing around in a legal gray area.

As it stands, my husband’s old jimmy-rigged Fire TV stick has been replaced with a pair of standard Chromecast devices. We pay for YouTube TV, Netflix and Amazon Video (by way of Prime). And I can sleep at night knowing that we are not online pirates. My husband’s moral compass points in a slightly different direction, but he knows better than to challenge me on this subject.

The friend, meanwhile, is no longer in the picture. Even if he’s still up to the same antics, he’s not at risk of any repercussi­ons, making this a morality tale with an anticlimac­tic ending.

Maybe things will change.

The XBMC Foundation is working with Amazon and EBay to remove listings for Kodi sticks and boxes that promise free TV.

“But that doesn’t really mean anything,” Betzen said. “If you go to a local fair, there’s always somebody selling one of these boxes for $300.”

That leaves it up to us to decide what acceptable streaming behavior looks like in our homes. Whatever your choice, you can’t claim innocence, or ignorance, anymore.

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