A federal grand jury yesterday indicted eight people who allegedly ran two pirate streaming services that “offered more television programs and movies than legitimate streaming services such as Netflix, Hulu, Vudu, and Amazon Prime Video,” the Department of Justice said. From a report: Jetflicks, which operated from 2007 to 2017, obtained its video from torrent sites and Usenet sites “using automated programs and databases such as SickRage, Sick Beard, SABnzbd, and TheTVDB,” the indictment said. Jetflicks made “those episodes available on servers in the United States and Canada to Jetflicks subscribers for streaming and/or downloading,” the indictment said. Torrent sites that Jetflicks operators relied on allegedly included the Pirate Bay, RARBG, and Torrentz.

With this method, defendants often “provid[ed] episodes to subscribers the day after the shows originally aired on television,” a DOJ announcement yesterday said. Jetflicks charged subscription fees as low as $9.99 per month, letting subscribers “watch an unlimited number of commercial-free television programs,” the indictment said. The service claimed to have more than 37,000 subscribers.

One of the eight defendants, 36-year-old Darryl Julius Polo, left Jetflicks to create another site called iStreamItAll, which was still online today. iStreamItAll likely won’t stay online long, though, as the indictment said the site’s domain names are subject to forfeiture. The Jetflicks domain names were also subject to forfeiture orders, and the website is offline. Jetflicks “claimed to have more than 183,200 different television episodes,” while iStreamItAll “at one point claimed to have 115,849 different television episodes and 10,511 individual movies,” the DOJ said. iStreamItAll “publicly asserted that it had more content than Netflix, Hulu, Vudu and Amazon Prime,” the DOJ said. (Netflix offered 4,010 movies and 1,569 TV shows as of 2018, according to Netflix search engine Fixable.)

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