The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) is putting some bite behind its bark in its fight against illegally copied CDs and DVDs.The movie industry group has funded the eight-month training of two black Labradors, called Lucky and Flo, who can now sniff out optical discs at customs points and other locations. The MPAA worked with its U.K. counterpart, the Federation Against Copyright Theft (FACT).While dogs have long been used to detect illicit drugs, the new mission aims to slash away at the profits from movie piracy, which FACT estimates were 278 million pounds (US$519 million) in the U.K. last year.The dogs were trained to detect the smell of chemicals used in the manufacture of optical discs, said Eddy Leviten, head of communications for FACT. Last week, Lucky and Flo sniffed packages at the FedEx facility at Stansted Airport, near London. The dogs’ sense of smell is up to 10,000 times more sensitive than humans and can smell a disc through several layers of wrapping.Use of the dogs slashes the time needed to isolate suspicious packages, Leviten said. But the dogs can’t distinguish between pirated discs and genuine ones. Investigators examine packages to try to determine which should be opened for inspection.The number of pirated discs imported into the United Kingdom has fallen dramatically in the past 18 months due to increased enforcement by HM Revenue and Customs, Leviten said. However, prices for equipment to create illegal discs have fallen, meaning more operations are within in the United Kingdom, Leviten said.The dogs could also be used for warehouse inspections undertaken by FACT, which employs piracy investigators throughout the United Kingdom.FACT and the MPAA are working with law enforcement and customs officials on how the dogs will be incorporated into future enforcement efforts, Leviten said.-Jeremy Kirk, IDG News ServiceFor related news coverage, read Taiwanese Pirate Busted Taping Mission Impossible III. Keep checking in at our CSO Security Feed page for updated news coverage. Related content news Amazon’s AWS Control Tower aims to help secure your data’s borders As digital compliance tasks and data sovereignty rules get ever more complicated, Amazon wants automation to help. By Jon Gold Nov 28, 2023 3 mins Regulation Regulation Government news North Korean hackers mix code from proven malware campaigns to avoid detection Threat actors are combining RustBucket loader with KandyKorn payload to effect an evasive and persistent RAT attack. By Shweta Sharma Nov 28, 2023 3 mins Malware feature How a digital design firm navigated its SOC 2 audit L+R's pursuit of SOC 2 certification was complicated by hardware inadequacies and its early adoption of AI, but a successful audit has provided security and business benefits. By Alex Levin Nov 28, 2023 11 mins Certifications Compliance news GE investigates alleged data breach into confidential projects: Report General Electric has confirmed that it has started an investigation into the data breach claims made by IntelBroker. By Shweta Sharma Nov 27, 2023 3 mins Data Breach Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe