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Top 10 Most Pirated Movies of The Week – 05/23/16

lundi 23 mai 2016 à 09:19

zootopiaThis week we have three newcomers in our chart.

Zootopia, which was released as Bluray rip this week, is the most downloaded movie.

The data for our weekly download chart is estimated by TorrentFreak, and is for informational and educational reference only. All the movies in the list are BD/DVDrips unless stated otherwise.

RSS feed for the weekly movie download chart.

Ranking (last week) Movie IMDb Rating / Trailer
torrentfreak.com
1 (6) Zootopia 8.3 / trailer
2 (1) Captain America: Civil War (TC) 8.4 / trailer
3 (…) Gods of Egypt 5.6 / trailer
4 (…) Triple 9 6.4 / trailer
5 (3) The Huntsman: Winter’s War (Webrip) 6.2 / trailer
6 (…) X-Men: Apocalypse (HDCam) 7.7 / trailer
7 (2) How To Be Single (Web-DL) 6.2 / trailer
8 (7) Deadpool 8.6 / trailer
9 (4) London Has Fallen (Web-DL) 6.0 / trailer
10 (8) Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (TS) 7.5 / trailer

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

Fair Use Needs Protecting & All Abusers Need to Be Punished

dimanche 22 mai 2016 à 23:45

copyright-bloodFor readers unfamiliar with her work, Ellen Seidler is a multi-talented filmmaker, journalist, lecturer and photographer based in the United States. She is also one of the web’s most outspoken critics of online piracy.

Seidler’s crusade began following the release of her movie “And Then Came Lola” in 2010 which, along with every other movie ever, was pirated online. It’s clear from her posts on Vox Indie that this was a turning point and her motivation to highlight piracy’s harms at every opportunity.

This week Seidler published a piece titled ‘BOGUS fair use claims hurt creators already victimized by piracy‘ in which she continued her full frontal assault on Google/YouTube and its users, something that has become a feature of her writing in recent times.

“There was a lot of talk about fair use and takedown abuse at last week’s U.S. Copyright Office Section 512 roundtables in San Francisco. Many of those who spoke, bemoaned how poor, innocent uploaders were victimized, time after time, by malicious DMCA takedowns,” Seidler wrote.

“It’s a tried and true talking point, convenient, but disingenuous all the same. Some of us, myself included, tried to make the point that creators, whose work is routinely (and massively stolen), are often (doubly) victimized by malicious fair use claims.”

Although not mentioned directly, it’s likely that Seidler was referencing efforts by groups such as Fight For The Future and Channel Awesome to ensure that fair use is protected following any revision of the DMCA. They were at the discussions last week doing just that and to suggest those kinds of efforts are disingenuous is pretty unfair. But lets rewind.

As explained in her article, Seidler’s problem stems from the fact that some of YouTube’s users are uploading copyright-infringing content (in this case a full movie whose creator Seidler represents) and making it available via the platform. In this instance YouTube’s own ContentID system flagged the work correctly and the video was blocked. However, that wasn’t the end of the story.

“This YouTube user didn’t seem to think the rights holder had the right to block the full, infringing copy and promptly disputed the block,” Seidler wrote.

“Approval from copyright holder is not required,” the user reportedly wrote in a counter-notice. “It is fair use under copyright law. I don’t need to explain.”

Needless to say, this wrongful claim of fair use had Seidler seeing red.

“Despite all the testimony at last week’s roundtable about fair use and how copyright holders seek out to punish those who claim it using malicious takedowns, it’s worth pointing out, yet again, that for every legit ‘fair use’ claim, there are also false, and rather malicious, abuses of that defense. It’s a fact conveniently overlooked by the anti-copyright apologists,” she wrote.

The above paragraph is somewhat frustrating. People wanting to exercise their legal right to fair use absolutely have a right to protest when they fear that right is under threat. Furthermore, people making fair use claims on a full movie have no connection with those using snippets of content for commentary, parody, criticism or news reporting purposes. That being said, Seidler definitely has a point.

Someone uploading a full movie to YouTube and then claiming ‘fair use’ absent of any of the defining features should not be allowed to do so without repercussions. If fair use is worth protecting then it stands to reason that supporters should not allow it to be abused. There’s little doubt that people claiming fair use in these circumstances hurt the cause.

So here’s a proposal. If we are to protect the sanctity of fair use then abusers need to be held to account, that means that people uploading full movies to YouTube and then filing for bogus fair use protection should have a strike put against their account and eventually terminated from the site.

In return, those who file bogus copyright claims against those who have a legitimate fair use defense should be held to exactly the same standards. File an erroneous claim against a legitimate video, get a strike against your Content ID account. Do it several more times, lose the right to file copyright complaints on YouTube.

Of course, this proposal is never likely to be accepted by the entertainment industries since they all screw up regularly and that would put them in a position of not being able to protect their works. While that would be unfortunate, the exercise illustrates a point.

Protecting content such as that published on Channel Awesome, for example, is just as important as protecting content pushed out by the studios. Therefore, if we are to deal with abuses of the DMCA and fair use then the same rules simply must apply to everyone – no exceptions.

Strikes on one side must be matched by strikes on the other. Deal?

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

Paramount Will End Case Against Fan-Funded Star Trek Film

dimanche 22 mai 2016 à 20:12

axanarEarlier this year Paramount Pictures and CBS Studios filed a lawsuit against the makers of a Star Trek inspired fan film, accusing them of copyright infringement.

The dispute centers around the well-received short film Star Trek: Prelude to Axanar and the planned follow-up feature film Axanar.

Among other things, the Star Trek rightsholders claim ownership over various Star Trek related settings, characters, species, clothing, colors, shapes, words, short phrases and even the Klingon language.

While the legal battle has barely got going it now appears it will soon end. During a Star Trek fan event on Friday, director J.J. Abrams announced that the case will be over soon, thanks to Star Trek Beyond director Justin Lin.

“We started talking about this realizing that this is not an appropriate way to deal with the fans. The fans should be celebrating this thing,” Abrams said.

“Fans of Star Trek are part of this world. So Justin went to the studio and pushed them to stop this lawsuit and now, within the next few weeks, it will be announced this is going away, and the fans will be able to work on their project,” he adds.

The news is welcomed by Axanar director Alec Peters, who posted a short message on Facebook a few hours ago.

“A huge THANK YOU to JJ Abrams and Justin Lin for their announcement last night that Paramount is dropping the suit against Axanar,” he writes.

However, the case isn’t completely over yet. The parties are still working on finalizing a settlement agreement and no official paperwork has yet been filed in court.

A settlement means that the case won’t be dismissed outright, but that the parties are coming to an agreement they are all satisfied with. Whether they intend to release any details on the nature of their agreement remains unclear at this point.

When Paramount and CBS filed the lawsuit earlier this year they accused the makers of exploiting the Star Trek franchise, so it’s likely that they are looking for financial compensation.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

New Game of Thrones Episode Leaks Online Early

dimanche 22 mai 2016 à 11:46

got6More than twenty-four hours before its official premiere, the fifth episode of the latest Game of Thrones season is already widely available on torrent and streaming sites.

According reports from several viewers, HBO Nordic accidentally made the episode available on its site a few hours ago.

“It’s online right now, if you want to go and watch it, but they might remove it soon. Someone probably messed up by putting it there,” Reddit user Ozires writes (spoiler warning).

After this it didn’t take long before someone ripped the show, and soon after many links to pirated copies started to appear.

TorrentFreak can confirm that the leak is indeed legitimate. The quality of the pirated copy we’ve seen is rather low, but it nonetheless receives a lot of attention from Game of Thrones fans.

It’s rather ironic that HBO itself appears to be the source for this leak. The company decided to stop releasing promotional screeners this year, fearing that outsiders would leak these. Perhaps the company should take a good look at its internal policies as well.

Episode 5 on HBO Nordic

hbonordicleak

For several years in a row Game of Thrones has been the most pirated TV-show, and this year the interest is once again overwhelming.

While it’s too late to stop today’s leak from getting out, HBO has increased its efforts to combat piracy. In recent weeks thousands of pirates have received warnings in their mailboxes, and the company is also fervently taking down links to pirated copies of the show.

Screencap from the latest episode

gotleak4

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

TorrZan Allows You to Download Torrents Via Telegram

dimanche 22 mai 2016 à 10:28

telegramWith 100 million active users, Telegram is one of the most used messaging services, but it’s much more than that.

The application, which is supported by all leading operating systems, also allows developers to create nifty bots. This can come in quite handy.

The new TorrZan bot, for example, can grab torrents directly from the messaging application. With a series of simple commands it’s easy to find or add popular torrents, which can then be downloaded with a simple click.

The torrent files are not shared over the user’s local network, but from TorrZan’s servers. Once a download is complete the files can be downloaded to a local device, or played directly if they are streamable.

We tried the free version, which allows people to test three torrents up to 10GB without speed restrictions. Downloading a copy of the film Sintel took just a few minutes and after it was completed an https link to the mp4 video played seamlessly on both iPhone and PC.

The developers of TorrZan say they created the service to provide an easy and convenient tool for people to download torrents, while keeping user privacy in mind.

“We created this bot only because we believe that it is the most convenient and easiest way to download torrents across all platforms that are supported by Telegram, which includes Android, iOS, Windows Phone, PC, Mac and Linux,” TorrZan’s team informs TorrentFreak.



torrzanex

TorrZan doesn’t record or store any logs of your downloading activity, which is good to know. As an added privacy bonus, it uses external servers to download the torrents so users’ local IP-addresses are not visible to the public.

Besides adding torrents or magnet links manually, users can also use the bot to search for files. This appears to work nicely for well-known titles, and avoids the extra step of having to search for links on third-party sites.

“We integrated a search feature that displays torrents from popular torrent sites right inside our bot. This means that our users don’t have to jump through hoops, they can simply find torrents and download them directly inside the same interface,” the TorrZan team says.

The bot is still in the early stage of development and the team is planning to introduce several new features and updates in the future. Among other things, they want to make it easier to integrate video and audio playback with local devices.

For now, anyone can test the service for free without any restrictions. However, the services uses a freemium model and after three torrents non-paying users are limited to 1 GB of storage and a 50 KB\s download limit.

Those interested in giving it a free spin can visit the official TorrZan site.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.