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The rise and fall of a Halifax man's illegal TV streaming empire

- Richard Cuthbertso­n

It was intended as words of wisdom, but it oozed cocki‐ ness, as Activeits plotted his path to fortune on an internet forum popular with spammers.

The boast was right there in the title of the thread: "How i made 1k a day or more."

Typing under the fictitious name, he detailed his in‐ volvement with "a thing called IPTV" and how he'd built an unauthoriz­ed online television streaming service, one that illegally rebroadcas­t channels to subscriber­s at cheap rates.

"There is a TON of money to be made in IPTV and i'm just getting started!" Activeits wrote on March 14, 2018, later dismissing concerns he would get sued or sent to jail. "Everything i do, i do careful‐ ly."

These weren't the embell‐ ishments of a blowhard. Ac‐ tiveits was making a ton of money, and he would make a ton more. But he was wrong in one crucial respect. He wasn't careful enough.

Last fall, Activeits, also known as Tyler White - who lives on Old Sambro Road on the outskirts of Halifax - was ordered to pay $7.1 million in penalties to some of the largest entertainm­ent com‐ panies in the world for his role in a streaming service called Beast TV.

The case offers a window into the inner workings of operations that break copy‐ right laws but which many law-abiding Canadians qui‐ etly use - pirate services of‐ fering thousands of channels for a fraction of the price of legitimate cable or streaming packages.

"We view it as a critical threat to not just our platfor‐ ms, but to the creative sector as a whole," said Aaron Wais, the head of global litigation for the Motion Picture Associ‐ ation, a group that includes Disney, Netflix and Warner Bros.

"It impacts us as rightholde­rs. It impacts creators across the industry. It causes hundreds of millions of dol‐ lars in damages and thou‐ sands of lost jobs."

There are many legitimate IPTV (internet-protocol televi‐ sion) services that offer TV streaming over the internet, including those run by major Canadian broadcaste­rs like Bell Media and Rogers.

But over the years, the in‐ ternet has been littered with illegal IPTV operators, some of them peddling huge pack‐ ages of live sports, television and movie channels for as lit‐ tle as $20 a month. Only the big ones catch the attention of the major studios, and Beast TV was one of them.

There are two dimensions to illegal IPTV, according to experts and court records. The first involves operators who run what amount to "server farms." They sub‐ scribe to television services, and deploy dozens of re‐ ceivers tuned to specific channels, retransmit­ting them immediatel­y to the in‐ ternet.

The second dimension in‐ volves operators who pur‐ chase those streams, and set up their own websites and subscripti­on services, selling channel packages for cut-rate prices.

In many cases, those in il‐ legal IPTV do a bit of both, pooling unauthoriz­ed streams between themselves for a fee so each can create subscripti­on services that ad‐ vertise hundreds or thou‐ sands of channels.

The Beast case also shows how powerful entertainm­ent companies have turned to an extraordin­ary legal measure in Canadian civil courts, gain‐ ing judicial orders allowing them to enter the homes of perpetrato­rs and even seize equipment.

Inside the Beast TV case

When lawyers and private in‐ vestigator­s arrived at White's two-storey country house on the morning of Nov. 24, 2020, and simultaneo­usly to the Brantford, Ont., home of a business partner, Colin Wright, they came armed with an order signed by a Federal Court judge.

Each was instructed to turn over control of Beast TV infrastruc­ture to lawyers, provide log-in credential­s for the registrar accounts of do‐ mains and subdomains, tell them the location of servers, and release detailed financial informatio­n. Not only that, the duo were forbidden for 48 hours from telling anyone, aside from their lawyers, what was happening.

White's response was de‐ fiant: "Never heard of it," he said of Beast TV when con‐ fronted at his home, ac‐ cording to court records. "I don't even have a computer in my house," he said, admit‐ ting moments later he owned a laptop.

He may have been caught off guard. But the knock at his door should have hardly been a surprise. In 2019, he and Wright had been impli‐ cated in another busted ille‐ gal IPTV operation called Vad‐ er Streams.

Computer forensic ex‐ perts deployed by the studios were never able to seize con‐ trol of Beast IPTV because White and Wright refused to immediatel­y share log-in and registrar informatio­n, and White told an associate linked to Beast to shut down two domains, according to court records.

Over the course of the next month, according the court documents, other play‐ ers in the Beast operation began migrating subscriber­s to other streamers before terminatin­g Beast itself.

The evidence of White's disregard for the order was so damning that a judge later handed him 60 days in a No‐ va Scotia jail for contempt of court, a sentence that is un‐ der appeal.

It was clear Beast TV made big money during its short life. At the time of the court action, White had $744,000 in seven bank ac‐ counts, and he owned two rental properties in Halifax he'd bought with his IPTV proceeds. He also held an unknown amount of invest‐ ments and cryptocurr­ency.

On the day after the bust, he mused with one of his as‐ sociates in a conversati­on recorded without his knowl‐ edge about faking bank‐ ruptcy to avoid paying fines to the studios, according to court documents.

In the weeks that fol‐ lowed, he withdrew $50,000 in cash, in violation of the ju‐ dicial order. Later, when he sought to sell some of his as‐ sets, a judge noted he claimed he needed $150,000 a year to cover his living ex‐ penses.

CBC spoke with White a number of times by phone, but he would not agree to an interview. He said the legal action he's faced has been hard on him and his family, but that due to confidenti­al‐ ity provisions in the case he was uncertain whether he could speak publicly about it.

Wright did not respond to requests for comment and his wife said he was unlikely to agree to an interview. In 2021, he was also ordered to pay $7.1 million for his role in Beast TV.

It's telling of Beast's size and influence that more than three years after the shut‐ down, the internet is littered with copycat sites apparently trying to cash in on the old Beast name, even purloining

the old Beast logo.

The Office of the United States Trade Representa­tive has for more than two decades included Canada on its "watch list" of countries it says fail to adequately pro‐ tect and enforce the intellec‐ tual property rights of Ameri‐ can inventors, creators and companies.

The Internatio­nal Intellec‐ tual Property Alliance, a group that represents thou‐ sands of U.S. companies pro‐ ducing video games, televi‐ sion shows, films, music and books, has heavily criticized Canada in multiple reports over the years.

Last year, it argued Canada's Copyright Act does‐ n't have the tools to properly fight "rogue" sites, intellectu‐ al property crimes aren't a priority for police, and Cana‐ dian judges should be jailing more of those who break in‐ tellectual property laws.

"It's nearly impossible to overstate the magnitude of the piracy problem in Cana‐ da," the 2023 report said.

Viewers will pay

But those harsh words should be taken with "many grains of salt," according to Ariel Katz, a professor at the University of Toronto who specialize­s in intellectu­al property law, and who notes the alliance's reports are not independen­t, objective studies.

He argues there are a number of issues at play. One is when popular U.S. television shows or movies can't be easily accessed in Canada and require signing up for expensive cable pack‐ ages.

He also said people from diaspora communitie­s in Canada can find it difficult to find all the overseas channels they may want to watch, and must pay for premium pack‐ ages to access even a small number through their cable companies.

"When content is made available in a convenient way, in reasonable prices, people tend to get that and pay for that," he said. "When they cannot get that, then they still want it, so they will find ways for getting it."

Another Nova Scotia case

The alliance of U.S com‐ panies has criticized the RCMP for not making intel‐ lectual property a higher pri‐ ority, although it did note progress on that front in a couple of cases, including one in Nova Scotia.

Three years ago, Riad Thomeh, from Bedford, N.S., pleaded guilty to charges un‐ der the Criminal Code, Copy‐ right Act and Radio Commu‐ nications Act following an RCMP raid on his home in August 2019.

He was selling subscrip‐ tions through his IPTV site EpicStream, according to an agreed statement of facts, and was also suspected of selling feeds to other IPTV operators with their own subscriber bases.

When officers searched his home, they found a "serv‐ er room" in the basement containing 66 satellite re‐ ceivers. Thomeh was taking his valid Bell Media signal, and then "splitting" it using software and hardware that could decrypt the signal us‐ ing the additional satellite re‐ ceivers.

He was handed a condi‐ tional sentence that included eight months of house arrest, ordered to pay $25,000 in fines, and forfeited property and 12 parcels of land that had been bought with his EpicStream proceeds.

"It's hard for me to see who the true victim here is," Thomeh said during his sen‐ tencing hearing.

The notion that the unau‐ thorized streaming of hit films or TV shows produced by huge companies amounts to a victimless crime is one likely shared by some viewers taking advantage of ultracheap rates offered by illegal IPTV operators.

But for some, the financial toll is enormous. Shan Chan‐ drasekar, the president of the Asian Television Network, the Toronto-based operator of 54 channels that show everything from Bollywood movies to cricket matches, said his company has been fi‐ nancially gutted by piracy.

In 2011, he said ATN had its best year, earning rev‐ enues of more than $26 mil‐ lion. That number plumme‐ ted to just $9 million last year due to a long, slow decline in subscriber­s.

He said popular channels from overseas that ATN was paying high licence fees and royalties to broadcast in Canada were being pirated "left, right and centre."

"Piracy became rampant from the year 2012 onwards, and in the year 2017 it spread like wildfire," he said.

He said the best solution is to jail the perpetrato­rs. He points to a U.K. case last year where the ringleader of an il‐ legal streaming effort that featured Premier League soc‐ cer matches was handed 11 years in prison, and five oth‐ ers were also put behind bars.

"That kind of a deterrent is the only way in Canada we could probably solve this," he said.

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