Feds Arrest Man For Sharing Pre-Release DVD Rips of 'Spider-Man: No Way Home,' 'Dune,' ' 'Venom: Let There Be Carnage,' and More, Online Before Official Release for Millions to Watch.
A worker at a DVD and Blu-ray manufacturing and distribution company used by major movie studios was arrested today in Memphis, Tennessee, for allegedly stealing DVDs and Blu-rays of blockbuster movies from the company and selling them before their official scheduled release dates. A digital copy of...
According to court documents, Steven R. Hale, 37, of Memphis, worked for a multinational company that, among other things, manufactured and distributed DVDs and Blu-rays of movies. From approximately February 2021 to March 2022, Hale allegedly stole numerous “pre-release” DVDs and Blu-rays, that is, discs being prepared for commercial distribution in the United States and not available for sale to the public. These included DVDs and Blu-rays for such popular films as “F9: The Fast Saga,” “Venom: Let There Be Carnage,” “Godzilla v. Kong,” “Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings,” “Dune,” and “Black Widow.” Hale allegedly sold the DVDs and Blu-rays through e-commerce sites. At least one pre-release Blu-ray that Hale allegedly stole and sold, “Spider-Man: No Way Home,” was “ripped” — that is, extracted from the Blu-ray by bypassing the encryption that prevents unauthorized copying — and copied. That digital copy was then illegally made available over the internet more than a month before the Blu-ray’s official scheduled release date. Copies of “Spider-Man: No Way Home” were downloaded tens of millions of times, with an estimated loss to the copyright owner of tens of millions of dollars.
If I remember correctly pre-release DVDs always have a watermark that is specific to that copy, so it's easy to track back to who leaked it. Quite a risky move on his part (that is, if he was leaking the "for your consideration" ones).
Copies of “Spider-Man: No Way Home” were downloaded tens of millions of times, with an estimated loss to the copyright owner of tens of millions of dollars.
Tbf releasing a disk-rip a month before its official release is kinda stupid. He really thought these companies wouldn’t start investigating if they got a security breach after their pre-release versions were online available. Just act a bit smarter, release them a week after the disk hit the shelves
Reminds me of having a “for your consideration” (that would pop up every 15m or so at the bottom) Two Towers back in 2002 and then again the same thing with Return of the King. Both about 1-2 months before their release in theater. Never downloaded, always passed around and copied. Still wonder how those got around like that.