Archive for January, 2010
Jim Killeen googled his own name and made a documentary about the men with whom he shares it.
Starting in a few months, French file-sharers are set to be tracked and reported to the authorities in an attempt to lower the country’s piracy rate.
Under the new Hadopi law, alleged copyright infringers will be reported to a judge once they have received three warnings. The judge will then review the case and hand down any one of a range of penalties, from fines through to disconnecting the Internet connection of the infringer.
Trident Media Guard, the investigative company that will be responsible for tracking down alleged infringers, was presented to the public today. Interestingly enough this private company was not appointed by the government but by the entertainment industries, including the major record labels and movie studios.
Among file-sharers Trident Media Guard (TMG) is not a new name. In fact, thousands if not millions of people have run into them already as they are known to hinder illegal downloads by spreading fake data. For their ‘revolutionary’ anti-P2P technology they have submitted a patent application which is currently under review.
Aside from polluting file-sharing networks, the company will now also be responsible for tracking and reporting pirates to the authorities. TMG has the capacity to record up to 25,000 infringements a day, and according to initial estimates 10,000 offenders a day are expected to receive a warning.
TMG’s tracking technology will cover a wide range of file-sharing networks, with four of them being monitored as a priority. There is little doubt that BitTorrent, eDonkey and Gnutella will be the major targets, but according to TMG it is also possible to monitor Rapidshare, newsgroups and streaming services.
How they will be able to monitor these non-P2P services remains a mystery for now, but it suggests some form of privacy invasion. Unlike with BitTorrent, a third party can’t simply see what a user is downloading as they do when they actively monitor a user’s P2P connections.
In the UK the ISP Virgin Media is trialling a technique which involves Deep Packet Inspection to monitor the level of illicit file-sharing across a percentage of its customer base.
Because systems like this are believed to breach the privacy of individual Internet users, the European Commission has been asked to review its legality.
Thus far no details have been published on the data gathering techniques of TMG, but considering the enormous opposition against the Hadopi law there is little doubt that their every move will be closely watched.
Article from: TorrentFreak, check out our new blog at FreakBits.
“You guys want to hear some fucking Pantera,” bellowed Corey Taylor.
The Slipknot, Stone Sour and Junk Beer Kidnap Band frontman obviously knew the answer before the crowd at the Revolver Magazine-sponsored Dean Guitars NAMM Jam roared back with their cacophonous approval. That resounding yes
Heavy metal hardly ever gets the credit that it deserves.
It’s an extremely intelligent and, dare I say, literary genre. Metallica drew a ton of inspiration from H.P. Lovecraft, as did Megadeth. Tool pulls from Bill Hicks and Timothy Leary. Plus, we know that Black Sabbathâwith Ozzy and Dioâhad
Melora Hardin (The Office, Hannah Montana: The Movie, 17 Again) will release her first live studio- album, All the Way to Mars, through the LML Music Label on February 9th, 2010. The album will be made available in retail stores nationwide as well as online at Amazon & iTunes. This album makes
High On Fire continue to ride the snake.
There’s something physically psychedelic and dangerously entrancing about their latest offering, Snakes for the Divine. If Jim Morrison fronted a metal band, it’d be High On Fire. The palpable doom-y and apocalyptic energy that Matt Pike and Co. conjured
Hollywood Undead tap into something that no one has truly tapped into since Korn dropped Life Is Peachy.
That something is the violent, vibrant and visceral catharsis that the youth of this country so desperately craves more and more each and every day. Times are way more desperate than when
Beach House have a dream.
That dream arrives in the form of the ten ethereal pop songs comprising their third full-length offering, Teen Dream [Sub Pop]. The album picks up where 2008’s wistful Devotion left offâright in the same aural sleep space that transfixed both critics and fans
“I’m always writing,” says Miguel. “I like to drive and write at the same time. I get to write without thinking [Laughs].”
His system is definitely working. With a little bit of hip and a whole lot of soul, Miguel pops out one catchy chorus after another on tracks like “Sure Thing” and
Search engine Baidu.com is not only China’s biggest, but also a major player globally. It recently grabbed headlines when it was hacked by the ‘Iranian cyber army’, the same outfit that took Twitter offline in December.
Baidu has become increasingly popular with the Chinese population for its MP3 indexing abilities. While its “MP3 Search” provides algorithm-generated links to millions of undoubtedly illicit copyright tracks hosted by others (so-called “deep-linking”), Baidu has always insisted that the provision of such links alone is entirely legal. Needless to say, IFPI, the global music group, disagrees strongly with this assertion.
âThe music industry in China wants partnership with the technology companies – but you cannot build partnership on the basis of systemic theft of copyrighted music and that is why we have been forced to take further actions,” said John Kennedy, Chairman and Chief Executive of IFPI, in a February 2008 statement.
Bolstered by an earlier ruling against Yahoo China, by further actions Kennedy unsurprisingly meant “legal actions.” In early 2008, IFPI (Sony BMG, Universal Music and Warner Music) sued Baidu.com for $9m. Today the result of that case has been made public.
Beijing No.1 Intermediate People’s Court has cleared Baidu on accusations of copyright infringement, with a court statement showing that simply providing search results does not breach Chinese copyright law. According to lawyer Sun Yan, the case against the search giant fell because IFPI failed to identify the actual sites hosting the illegal music downloads.
IFPI has challenged Baidu – and lost – in the Beijing No.1 Intermediate Court before. In September 2005, IFPI filed claims regarding nearly 200 music tracks it claimed were made available via Baidu. In 2006, the Court ruled Baidu was not infringing copyright. IFPI appealed to the Beijing Higher Peopleâs Court which upheld the earlier ruling.
Article from: TorrentFreak, check out our new blog at FreakBits.
Downloading torrents remotely can come in quite handy when youâre at work, school, in a shopping mall or at a friend’s place.
With ReactorFeed, brought to you by the people from ShareReactor, this can be done with relative ease.
Instead of downloading the torrent directly, users can simply add the torrent to their personal RSS feed. ReactorFeed supports torrents that are hosted anywhere on the web and is not restricted to one torrent site.
When added to your personal feed, the torrent will download automatically when your BitTorrent client is running at home. That is, if your favorite BitTorrent client has RSS support. Luckily, almost all popular clients do by now.
Additionally, users can choose to share their feed in public so it can be accessed by others with similar interests. For those who would rather keep their feeds private, it’s recommended to set the feed as private, since URLs of the public ones are easy to guess.
Overall, ReactorFeed is a simple but extremely useful service for those who want an easy way to add torrents to their BitTorrent client on the go.
For those looking for feeds where the torrents are added automatically based on pre-selected content, we have a tutorial for that on our side-blog FreakBits.
Article from: TorrentFreak, check out our new blog at FreakBits.
The administrator of the private EliteBits BitTorrent tracker has been explaining how he received some unwelcome visitors last week.
Known by his nickname ‘Laeborg’, the Denmark-based admin had a knock on his front door at 7:00am on Friday. There he was confronted by a man from the enforcement court, accompanied by three men from Johan SchlĂźter Advokatfirma, a law firm that works with Danish anti-piracy group, Antipiratgruppen.
After producing screenshots from EliteBits, information on the bank account used to collect site donations and a warrant, they explained that they had come to secure evidence to show Laeborg was involved in the illegal distribution of copyright works.
The man from the enforcement court contacted lawyer Benny Thomson to represent Laeborg, who was told not to use his phone on concerns he could use it to destroy evidence.
“The collection of evidence started when they asked me to turn on my computer which I did,” Laeborg explains. “They asked me to go to elitebits.org where they took screenshots of my profile and screenshots of the statusbar that says: “Welcome, Laeborg (Owner).”
They went on to take screenshots of all the staff profiles, the Top 10 downloaders, Top 50 uploaders and various other lists, including uploaded torrents.
A list of donors who contributed via bank transfer was discovered and screenshots of all their profiles were taken. Laeborg was informed that he had been traced via the bank account used to accept these donations from site members.
After taking screenshots of hashes and NFOs linked to a pair of torrent files, Laeborg was asked for the user database. He explained that he couldn’t provide it and they would need to speak to host Netdirekt.
Various “non-legal” CDs and DVDs were seized from Laeborg’s office for destruction, with an assurance that the contents wouldn’t be examined. The evidence was copied to a USB drive and the group left.
“My lawyer stayed and we talked the whole thing through,” Laeborg recalls. “I told him the basic concepts about the site. He says that they won’t have enough evidence to make me pay for the all the stuff shared, but it is possible that they will take down EliteBits.org.”
Article from: TorrentFreak, check out our new blog at FreakBits.
This week there are three newcomers in the top 10. Sherlock Holmes is the most downloaded movie on BitTorrent.
The data for our weekly download chart is collected by TorrentFreak, and is for informational and educational reference only. All the movies in the list are DVDrips unless stated otherwise.
RSS feed for the weekly movie download chart.
| Ranking | (last week) | Movie | Rating / Trailer |
|---|---|---|---|
| torrentfreak.com | |||
| 1 | (2) | Sherlock Holmes (DVDscr) | 7.7 / trailer |
| 2 | (…) | The Informant! | 7.1 / trailer |
| 3 | (1) | The Men Who Stare at Goats (R5) | 6.8 / trailer |
| 4 | (…) | Couples Retreat | 5.5/ trailer |
| 5 | (…) | The Book of Eli (TS) | 7.4/ trailer |
| 6 | (3) | Avatar (TS) | 8.9 / trailer |
| 7 | (4) | 2012 (R5) | 6.7 / trailer |
| 8 | (5) | Smokin’ Aces 2 | ?.? / trailer |
| 9 | (6) | The Princess And The Frog | 7.9 / trailer |
| 10 | (10) | This Is It | 7.4 / trailer |
Article from: TorrentFreak, check out our new blog at FreakBits.
Last Thursday, both the PC and Xbox360 versions of the upcoming Mass Effect 2 game leaked to BitTorrent, which didn’t go unnoticed by the masses.
The game is scheduled to be sold in stores starting Tuesday in North America and Friday throughout Europe, but many curious customers couldn’t wait until then and have downloaded an unauthorized copy instead.
At the time of writing, tens of thousands of people are downloading the game, which is more than 14 gigabytes worth of data for the PC version and over 13 gigabytes for the Xbox360 version. According to the latest statistics gathered by TorrentFreak, more than 300,000 people started downloading the files in the past days.
All purchased copies of Mass Effect 2, developed by BioWare and published by Electronic Arts, will come with a ‘Cerberus’ Network Card. The card is required to download in-game items and new missions that will become available when the game is officially released, but it’s possible to play the game just fine without it.
According to reports from many downloaders, the game lives up to its expectations. Hundreds of people have reported their successful completion of the game already, in playing times ranging from 10 hours to well over 30 hours.
Although the ‘Cerberus’ Network Card might not prevent people from grabbing an early copy of the game on BitTorrent, it might help to convert illegal downloaders who like the game into buying customers, if it’s not hacked or cracked itself.
Whether Mass Effect 2 will come close to the massive popularity of Modern Warfare 2 among BitTorrent users is doubtful, but the game will certainly make an appearance in the 2010 most pirated games list later this year.
Article from: TorrentFreak, check out our new blog at FreakBits.
In an attempt to take a stand against the labels, several well known artists including Radiohead formed the Featured Artists Coalition last year, a lobby group that aims to end the extortion-like practices of record labels and allow artists to gain more control over their own work.
Radiohead and others are unhappy with the fact that the labels, represented by lobby groups such as the RIAA and IFPI, are pushing for anti-piracy legislation without consulting the artists they claim to represent. Radiohead, who used BitTorrent to leak one of their songs, went as far as being willing to show up as a witness against the RIAA in court.
In a new MIDEM interview, Radiohead guitarist Ed O’Brien stands up for file-sharers once again, stating that piracy is not killing the music industry in his view.
O’Brien is no stranger when it comes to piracy. “There’s a very strong part of me that feels that peer-to-peer illegal downloading is just a more sophisticated version of what we did in the 80s, which was home taping,” he said, something the music industry strongly discouraged at the time.
“If they really like it, some of them might buy the records,” he said, adding that if they don’t buy the albums they might buy a concert ticket, t-shirt or other merchandising.
“I have a problem about it when people in the industry say ‘it’s killing the industry’, it’s the thing that’s ripping us apart’,” O’Brien said, adding: “I don’t believe it actually is.”
According to O’Brien the music industry is using analogue business models in a digital age. “You’ve got to license out more music, more Spotifys, more websites selling more music. You’ve got to make it slightly cheaper as well to get music in order to compete with the peer-to-peers.”
Radiohead’s guitarist says he’s surprised that the music industry is still struggling with the digital transition, and urges the labels to “move quicker” and get their content out there at a fair price.
Article from: TorrentFreak, check out our new blog at FreakBits.