August 27th, 2010 08:00
admin
An anonymous reader writes “This week TPB got a very unusual e-mail. It was a ‘Notice of Ridiculous Activity‘ from a company that had found one of its apps cracked and listed as a torrent on TPB. The app in question is called Memories, developed by Coding Robots. Memories is marketed as the easiest way to keep a journal on your Mac. It costs $29.99 to buy after you’ve enjoyed a 30-day free trial. That, of course, didn’t stop someone from cracking the software and making it available for free as a torrent. Dmitry Chestnykh, founder of Coding Robots, noticed the cracked torrent and decided to download it to see what had been done. After using it, he was upset — not because the cracked version was available, but because the cracker (named Minamoto) had done such a bad job of cracking it. The best section of the e-mail has to be this: ‘I demand that you don’t remove this torrent, so that people can laugh at Minamoto and CORE skills. However, I also demand the[sic] better crack to be made, so that it doesn’t cripple the user experience of my beautiful program.’”
Source: Developer Demands Pirate Bay Not Remove Torrent


Categories: slashdot Tags: anonymous reader, coding, cracked version, Mac, memories, Pirate Bay, program source, robots, source developer, torrent, tpb
August 9th, 2010 08:17
admin
baronvoncarson and a few other readers sent in the unconfirmed report that the Russian torrent site TorrentReactor had bought the Russian town of Gar for $148,000, on the condition that the town rename itself Torrentreactor.net. Torrent Freak notes circumspectly that TorrentReactor has been known in the past for — how best to put this? — publicity stunts and hoaxes. And Torrent Freak at the time of writing had no confirmation from any Russian authority that the purported cash-for-renaming deal is genuine. Here is the announcement on TorrentReactor’s site, which contains this explanation of how Gar was chosen: “We’ve picked a few thousands of godforsaken places around the world that are close to operating nuclear reactors to make a connection to the name of our company. The list was numbered and a random number was picked by a generator. The number 377 was a lucky one for Gar village. We think it was a good choice since Gar citizens are very kind and generous people.” The whole (purported) transaction is reminiscent of the dot-com boom, when in 1999 the not-yet-launched Half.com offered $100,000 to a small town, Halfway, Oregon, if it would rename itself for the company. It did. The record is vague as to whether the money was ever actually paid, as Half.com was acquired by eBay just over a year later.
Source: TorrentReactor Reportedly Buys, Renames a Russian Town


Categories: slashdot Tags: advertising, eBay, freak, Gar, idle, nuclear reactors, Oregon, publicity stunts, Russia, russian authority, site, Topeka, torrent, torrentreactor, torrents, town
July 28th, 2010 07:09
admin
Stoobalou writes “A directory containing personal details about more than 100 million Facebook users has surfaced on an Internet file-sharing site. The 2.8GB torrent was compiled by hacker Ron Bowes of Skull Security, who created a web crawler program that harvested data on users contained in Facebook’s open access directory, which lists all users who haven’t bothered to change their privacy settings to make their pages unavailable to search engines.”
Source: 100 Million Facebook Pages Leaked On Torrent Site


Categories: slashdot Tags: 100 million, directory, Facebook, open access, privacy settings, Ron Bowes, security, site, Social, Stoobalou, torrent, web crawler
July 26th, 2010 07:51
admin
Caledfwlch writes with a followup to news we discussed a couple days ago about a study that found only 0.3% of torrents to be legal. (A further 11% was described as “ambiguous.”) TorrentFreak looked more deeply into the study and found a number of flaws, suggesting that the researchers’ data may have been pulled from a bogus tracker. Quoting:
“Here’s where the researchers make total fools out of themselves. In their answer to the question they refer to a table of the top 10 most seeded torrents. … the most seeded file was uploaded nearly two years ago (The Incredible Hulk) and has a massive 1,112,628 seeders. The torrent in 10th place is not doing bad either with 277,043 seeds. All false data. We’re not sure where these numbers originate from but the best seeded torrent at the moment only has 13,739 seeders; that’s 1% of what the study reports. Also, the fact that the release is nearly two years old should have sounded some alarm bells. It appears that the researchers have pulled data from a bogus tracker, and it wouldn’t be a big surprise if all the torrents in their top 10 are actually fake.”
They also take a cursory look at isoHunt, finding that 1.5% of torrent files come from Jamendo alone, “a site that publishes only Creative Commons licensed music.”
Source: Major Flaws Found In Recent BitTorrent Study


May 22nd, 2010 05:19
admin
suraj.sun writes with this excerpt from NewTeeVee: “Judge Stephen Wilson of the US District Court of California, Southern District issued a permanent injunction [PDF] against the popular torrent site Isohunt yesterday, forcing the site and its owner Garry Fung to immediately prevent access to virtually all Hollywood movies. The injunction theoretically leaves the door open for the site to deploy a strict filtering system, but its terms are so broad that Isohunt has little choice but to shut down or at the very least block all US visitors. … The verdict states that they have to cease ‘hosting, indexing, linking to, or otherwise providing access to any (torrent) or similar files’ that can be used to download the studios’ movies and TV shows. Studios have to supply Isohunt with a list of titles of works they own, and Isohunt has to start blocking those torrents within 24 hours.”
Source: Federal Court Issues Permanent Injunction For Isohunt


Categories: slashdot Tags: Court, filtering system, Garry Fung, Hollywood, injunction, Internet, isoHunt, Judge Stephen Wilson, media, p2p, permanent injunction, site, Southern District, stephen wilson, torrent, torrents, US, us district court
April 29th, 2010 04:16
admin
An anonymous reader writes “Cory Doctorow tells us that ‘[i]n 2007, John Goerzen scraped every gopher site he could find (gopher was a menu-driven text-only precursor to the Web; I got my first online gig programming gopher sites). He saved 780,000 documents, totalling 40GB. Today, most of this is offline, so he’s making the entire archive available as a .torrent file; the compressed data is only 15GB. Wanna host the entire history of a medium? Here’s your chance!’ Get yourself a piece of pre-Internet history (torrent).”
Source: All of Gopherspace Available For Download


Categories: slashdot Tags: anonymous reader, archive, Cory, Doctorow, gopher, history, Internet, internet history, John Goerzen, reader, torrent, torrent source
April 25th, 2010 04:31
admin
An anonymous reader writes “The x264 project has announced the first free software encoder to be able to generate Blu-ray compliant video. In addition, the announcement comes with a torrent of an x264-encoded Blu-ray disc containing entirely free content, such as the Open Movie Project videos. While there are still no free software Blu-ray authoring tools, hopefully this will change now that video and audio are taken care of so that everyone will be able to make their own Blu-rays without expensive proprietary software. Additionally, it seems the Criterion Collection is a friend of free software, having sponsored the effect to confirm x264′s compliance with the Blu-ray spec.”
Source: X264 Project Announces Blu-ray Encoding Support


Categories: slashdot Tags: anonymous reader, authoring tools, Blu-ray, bluray, criterion collection, developers, media, opensource, project, proprietary software, reader, software, technology, torrent, video
March 31st, 2010 03:04
admin
suraj.sun writes with this excerpt from Ars Technica: “The founder of popular Bit Torrent site IsoHunt, Gary Fung, has been ordered to remove the .torrent files for all infringing content — an order that could result in the site shutting down. US District Judge Stephen Wilson issued the order last week after years of back-and-forths over the legality of IsoHunt and Fung’s two other sites (Torrentbox and Podtropolis). Fung claims he’s still hoping for a more agreeable resolution that won’t result in IsoHunt closing its doors, but for now, things aren’t looking good for the torrent site.”
Source: IsoHunt Told To Pull Torrent Files Offline


Categories: slashdot Tags: agreeable resolution, ars technica, Court, Gary Fung, Internet, isoHunt, Judge Stephen Wilson, order, p2p, piracy, podtropolis, site, suraj, torrent, torrent files, torrents, US District
March 30th, 2010 03:02
admin
Hugh Pickens writes “The Hollywood Reporter reports that more than 20,000 individual movie torrent downloaders have been sued in the past few weeks in Washington DC federal court for copyright infringement and another lawsuit targeting 30,000 more torrent downloaders on five more films is forthcoming in what could be a test run that opens up the floodgates to massive litigation against the millions of individuals who use BitTorrent to download movies. The US Copyright Group, a company owned by intellectual property lawyers, is using a new proprietary technology by German-based Guardaley IT that allows for real-time monitoring of movie downloads on torrents. According to Thomas Dunlap, a lawyer at the firm, the program captures IP addresses based on the time stamp that a download has occurred and then checks against a spreadsheet to make sure the downloading content is the copyright protected film and not a misnamed film or trailer. ‘We’re creating a revenue stream and monetizing the equivalent of an alternative distribution channel,’ says Jeffrey Weaver, another lawyer at the firm.”
The difference between the MPAA’s past approach and the new one being offered by the US Copyright Group is that the MPAA took a less targeted approach going after a smaller sampling of infringers in a single suit for multiple films, to send a message. In contrast, the US Copyright Group is using the new monitoring technology to go after tens of thousands of infringers at a time on a contingency basis in hopes of coming up with the right cost-benefit incentive to pursue individual pirates.”
Source: New Litigation Targets 20,000 BitTorrent-Using Downloaders


Categories: slashdot Tags: contingency basis, copyright, Court, download, entertainment, group, Hollywood, Hugh Pickens, intellectual property lawyers, Jeffrey Weaver, litigation targets, money, movie, movies, mpaa, privacy, Thomas Dunlap, torrent, torrent downloaders, Washington
March 8th, 2010 03:15
admin
An anonymous reader writes “I was scanning conference proceedings to come up with ideas for a reading group I run at my workplace, and I noticed an interesting paper from the new IEEE WIFS forensics conference. Researchers from the University of Colorado have published a technique for tracking BitTorrent users (PDF) by joining and actively probing torrent swarms using low-cost cloud computing services. They claim their methods allowed them to monitor the entire Pirate Bay torrent set for as little as $13/mo using EC2. But that’s not even the interesting part. Their work appears to have been ‘funded in part through gifts from PolyCipher’ — a broadband ISP consortium. That’s right; three major national ISPs funded this round of BitTorrent tracking research, not the MPAA/RIAA. Could this be evidence of ISP support for ACTA and a global three-strikes law?”
Source: Major ISPs Help Fund BitTorrent User Tracking Research


Categories: slashdot Tags: anonymous reader, BitTorrent, Communications, conference, conference proceedings, Internet, national isps, networking, part, Pirate Bay, pirate bay torrent, porn, research, three strikes, torrent, yro
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