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With the legal paperwork in hand the MPAA successfully shut down several domains. In addition, the Hollywood group also reached out to the associated hosting companies, DigitalOcean and Vultr, requesting them to take appropriate action.
Initially, the case was kept from public view, but this week the court lifted the veil. This allowed us to take a closer look at the injunction, and how it came to be. What caught our eye immediately, is that the court's preliminary injunction lists an incorrect IP-address. As it turns out, the MPAA's private investigator Bob Brasich made a typo in his testimony, and it took several weeks before he spotted the mistake.
"I discovered yesterday, March 5, 2017, that the IP address for the Vultr/Choopa server as stated in paragraph 8 of the Second Supplemental Brasich Declaration contained a typographical error," Brasich informed the court last week.
"The Second Supplemental Brasich Declaration stated that the IP address for the Vultr/Choopa server was 108.61.191.114. However, the correct IP address for the Vultr/Choopa server in question is in fact 108.61.191.141, a transposition of the final two digits."
As far as we can see, the preliminary injunction hasn't been updated through a corrected order yet, but that's besides the point really. What's most concerning is that a simple typo can lead to the wrong server being disconnected. In this example, the hosting companies also have a domain name as additional proof, but it's not hard to see how small mistakes can potentially lead to large consequences, especially when these orders become broader and more common.
After the private investigator discovered the error, the MPAA immediately asked the court for a new order correcting the mistake. Ironically, however, that request ends with an apology that also contains a rather embarrassing error. "Counsel apologies for any inconvenience," the correction letter states, complete with glaring mistake.
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