Meet OUYE, China’s Answer to the Xbox One, PS4, and OUYA

Copyright infringement in gaming is nothing new, but in China, it takes on a different meaning.Meet OUYE, a console that combines the PS4’s chassis, with the Xbox One’s controller, and then tops it off by ripping off both OUYA’s name and hardware desig…



Copyright infringement in gaming is nothing new, but in China, it takes on a different meaning.

Meet OUYE, a console that combines the PS4's chassis, with the Xbox One's controller, and then tops it off by ripping off both OUYA's name and hardware design.

Submitted to China's own version of Kickstarter, the Shenzhen based company claims the Android based micro gaming console (not too dissimilar to OUYA) features a "unique" design that took the company six months to design.

If the project does get off the ground, the console will cost project backers less than USD $70 to own (that's $29 cheaper than OUYA).

The machine will run Android 4.4.2 using an eight-core A80 processor, with a 64-bit Power VR G6230 GPU. It even includes 4K support via the HDMI 1.4 connector.

China recently lifted a 13 year ban on imports of foreign game consoles, paving the way for the real PS4 and Xbox One to enter the lucrative Chinese gaming market.

RIAA Asks BitTorrent Inc to Help Combat Piracy, Hints at Filtering

The RIAA has written a letter to BitTorrent Inc. CEO Eric Klinker, asking the company to do more to stop piracy.BitTorrent Inc, not to be confused with the peer-to-peer, and public domain file transfer protocol BitTorrent, publishes the popular uTorren…



The RIAA has written a letter to BitTorrent Inc. CEO Eric Klinker, asking the company to do more to stop piracy.

BitTorrent Inc, not to be confused with the peer-to-peer, and public domain file transfer protocol BitTorrent, publishes the popular uTorrent client. The company itself invented and developed the BitTorrent protocol, but does not have any control over the files being shared via the protocol (much like how the inventors of the HTTP protocol does not control all web page content), many of which include infringing content.

But the RIAA argues that the uTorrent client, one of the most popular BitTorrent clients available, is responsible for 75% of the "over 1.6 million torrent based infringement of our members' works last year in the US". The RIAA letter, penned by the RIAA's VP for piracy Brad Buckles, also includes other statistics showing the massive level of piracy that occurs on BitTorrent networks.

BitTorrent Inc, however, has always maintained that the company has no control over what is being transferred over the protocol they invented back in 2001, but that there is no infringement occurring on the "BitTorrent ecosystem" they do have control over.


The RIAA concludes the letter with a list of verified hashes of BitTorrent downloads that includes infringing works owned by RIAA members, and mentions setting up a process to share hashes with BitTorrent Inc. This is possible a hint at the RIAA's wish for BitTorrent Inc to start filtering and blocking the sharing of certain files on its uTorrent client, perhaps opening a new battleline in the creative industry's pro-censorship anti-piracy war strategy. 

Responding to the letter, BitTorrent Inc spokesperson Christian Averill told Arstechnica that the RIAA are targeting the wrong people.

"They are barking up the wrong tree, as it seems they were with their approach to CBS last week," says Averill, referring to another letter written by the RIAA regarding YouTube and other video streaming ripping tools published on the CBS owned Download.com. 

"There is a distinction between the BitTorrent protocol and piracy. We do not host, promote, or facilitate copyright infringing content and the protocol, which is in the public domain, is a legal technology," explained Averill.

Weekly News Roundup (16 August 2015)

From an unexpected new codec to the expected music industry overreaction to a new piracy problem, read this and other news stories for the week ending 16 August 2015
Continue reading …



From an unexpected new codec to the expected music industry overreaction to a new piracy problem, read this and other news stories for the week ending 16 August 2015

Continue reading ...

RIAA Accuses CNET of Offering Piracy Tool Downloads

Copyright groups linked to the music recording industry have accused CNET owned Download.com of offering software downloads that are inducing people to music piracy.A coalition of 16 music groups including the Recording Industry Association of America …



Copyright groups linked to the music recording industry have accused CNET owned Download.com of offering software downloads that are inducing people to music piracy.

A coalition of 16 music groups including the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) have written a letter to the CEO of CNET's parent company, CBS, asking the website to review their policy in regards to "ripping" software.

The copyright groups say that CNET's Download.com offers downloads that rip YouTube streams, including legally uploaded music videos, and other software that rips audio from video files.

The group says that using these software for their intended purposes amounts to music piracy, as the music contained in these music videos have only been licensed for use in these videos, and taking the audio out of these videos is not permitted.

"[CNET's Download.com] has made various computer, web, and mobile applications available that induce users to infringe copyrighted content by ripping the audio or the audio and video from what might be an otherwise legitimate stream," the letter reads.

"We ask that you consider the above in light of industry best practices, your company’s reputation, the clear infringing nature of these applications, and your role in creating a safe, legitimate, and innovative Internet ecosystem," the groups add.

CBS, however, does not agree with these groups' assessment, at least from a legal point of view.

Speaking to Billboard, CBS says that "all of the software indexed on Download.com is legal", and that if users decide to use the software for illegal purposes, that's an issue between the rights-holder and the user.

This is not the first time CBS and CNET have been accused of inducing piracy by offering related downloads. CNET was previously sued for offering LimeWire, uTorrent and other file sharing tools, but a judge eventually ruled in favor of the download portal.

Cisco to Create New Video Codec to Offer Alternative to 'Expensive' HEVC

Networking giant Cisco has announced plans to create a new open source, royalty free video codec to compete with HEVC, the industry accepted de facto choice for the next generation of video applications.HEVC, or H.265, is already being used by Netflix …



Networking giant Cisco has announced plans to create a new open source, royalty free video codec to compete with HEVC, the industry accepted de facto choice for the next generation of video applications.

HEVC, or H.265, is already being used by Netflix to deliver 4K content, and will be supported by the next generation Ultra HD Blu-ray disc format (to be available to buyers before Christmas). But the proprietary nature of the codec, and the fact that licensing has become increasingly complex for the codec, meant that an royalty free alternative is desperately needed got applications and software that cannot work with HEVC's licensing model.

This exact situation was already an issue with HEVC's predecessor, H.264. The problem is now even worse, according to Cisco, since there are now two distinct patent licensing pools for HEVC, with many license holders not represented in either. What this means that licensing cost for HEVC could be up to sixteen times more expensive than H.264, per unit. To make matters worse, there is no upper limit on yearly costs, meaning that many applications are being priced out of being able to use HEVC.

This is why Cisco has decided to create their own open source, royalty free codec, called Thor. Cisco hopes Thor will find a place within other open source and freely distributed software applications, or within freemium products like Cisco's own WebEx or Cisco Spark, all products precluded from using HEVC based on the codec's current licensing terms.

Cisco says that the work has been going on for some time, but the company felt that now was a good time to reveal to the world its existence. 

"The effort is being staffed by some of the world’s most foremost codec experts, including the legendary Gisle Bjøntegaard and Arild Fuldseth, both of whom have been heavy contributors to prior video codecs. We also hired patent lawyers and consultants familiar with this technology area. We created a new codec development process which would allow us to work through the long list of patents in this space, and continually evolve our codec to work around or avoid those patents," a post on Cisco's official blog read.

To better standardise the codec, Cisco is working with the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) via its NetVC workgroup. The NetVC workgroup, of which Mozilla is also a contributor with their own Daala codec, will work to extract the best elements from inputs from groups like Mozilla and Cisco, with the end goal being to unify these developments into a single codec.

Blu-ray sales stats for the week ending 25th July 2015

The results and analysis for Blu-ray (and DVD) sales for the week ending 25th July 2015 is in. The week’s top selling new release was Wild Horses, but it only managed to get to 11th place on the Blu-ray sales charts (last week’s number one, T…



The results and analysis for Blu-ray (and DVD) sales for the week ending 25th July 2015 is in. The week's top selling new release was Wild Horses, but it only managed to get to 11th place on the Blu-ray sales charts (last week's number one, The Longest Ride, retained top spot for the week).

You can read the rest of the stats and analysis here

United Airlines Inflight Entertainment Requires DRM Install

The inflight entertainment on United Airlines flights may require users to install potentially insecure DRM on their laptops.Most airlines limit inflight entertainment to seatback devices, but on flights without such devices, or if passengers prefer to…



The inflight entertainment on United Airlines flights may require users to install potentially insecure DRM on their laptops.

Most airlines limit inflight entertainment to seatback devices, but on flights without such devices, or if passengers prefer to use their own devices, United Airlines offers them the ability watch a pre-selected list of movies and TV shows on their laptop.

But to the dismay of tech entrepreneur Brian Fitzpatrick, a passenger on a recent United flight, passengers choosing to use their own laptop has to install a third party DRM plug-in first before they are allowed to watch movies such as "Gone Girl" and "Big Hero 6".

As Techdirt investigates, the Panasonic Marlin DRM plug-in required by United is coded using the NPAPI architecture, support of which was phased out in Google's Chrome browser in 2014 because "NPAPI's 90s-era architecture has become a leading cause of hangs, crashes, security incidents, and code complexity".

In addition, passengers have to install the Flash plugin in order to watch the movie. Recently discovered vulnerabilities in the Flash plugin has forced browser makers to drop default support for the plug-in.

The DRM requirement for the inflight entertainment most likely comes at the behest of Hollywood studios, who insists on the implementation of technical measures to protect their content, regardless of how unlikely it is for passengers on a flight to steal movies via the inflight entertainment system.

Blu-ray on the Slide, Lowest Weekly Revenue Since September 2010

Weekly Blu-ray revenue has fallen to its lowest level since September 2010, according to the latest figures released by Home Media Magazine for the US market.The revenue figures for the week ending the 11th July 2015 was only $17.36 million, …



Weekly Blu-ray revenue has fallen to its lowest level since September 2010, according to the latest figures released by Home Media Magazine for the US market.

The revenue figures for the week ending the 11th July 2015 was only $17.36 million, and one has to go back to September 2010 to find a lower figure for Blu-ray sales. 

While weekly Blu-ray revenue is largely determined by that week and recent week's release slate, and the first and second week in July is usually a low point for sales due to Independence Day closures, the Blu-ray revenue figures were still lower than similar "Fourth of July" weeks in the recent past.

The revenue figure was also significantly below the 2015 average, which before the record low week, was at $32.56 million. The 2014 average, up to the same point in the year, was at a higher $38.69 million. 

Notable new releases for the week included the Arnold Schwarzenegger film 'Maggie' and 'Woman in Gold', the former is estimated to have earned less than $200,000 at the US domestic box office.

Weekly Blu-ray market share, the share of Blu-ray sales compared to total disc (Blu-ray and DVD) revenue, also fell to the lowest level since August 2013.

Blu-ray beat te Toshiba's HD DVD format in a much publicized format war to become the de facto HD disc format, but even the format's biggest backer, Sony, has revealed doubt about the format's future. More recently, prominent Blu-ray producers have also blamed studios for poorly marketing and failing to support the format.

Blu-ray sales stats for the week ending 11th July 2015

The results and analysis for Blu-ray (and DVD) sales for the week ending 11th July 2015 is in. A very bad week for Blu-ray, as revenue falls to the lowest level since September 2010. Maggie was the best selling new release for the week.
You can read th…



The results and analysis for Blu-ray (and DVD) sales for the week ending 11th July 2015 is in. A very bad week for Blu-ray, as revenue falls to the lowest level since September 2010. Maggie was the best selling new release for the week.

You can read the rest of the stats and analysis here

Google Penalizes KickassTorrents, Promotes Scam Sites to Top Positions

Google has applied some kind of penalty to Torrent website KickassTorrents (KAT) to make it completely disappear from its index, a situation that now means scam sites pretending to be the torrent indexer now tops popular search terms.Google algorithm, …



Google has applied some kind of penalty to Torrent website KickassTorrents (KAT) to make it completely disappear from its index, a situation that now means scam sites pretending to be the torrent indexer now tops popular search terms.

Google algorithm, which determines how high sites will rank in search results, has long been demoting piracy related results (based on the number of DMCA requests each site receives). However, the demotion penalty is only meant to lower the position of the site's pages in search result, it was never meant to complete remove results.

The KAT team told TorrentFreak that they've been aware of the penalty for some time, but things apparently have escalated recently.

"It's already about five or six months since we started to experience some kind of penalty from Google. The issue is that we were not performing any SEOactivities at all," KAT says.

The removal of all official KAT results from Google now means that unofficial and unaffiliated results now occupy to the top positions for all KAT related keywords. Depending on your location, the top spot for the keyword "kickasstorrents" is now occupied by either kickasstorrents.pw or kickasstorrents.eu. The former serves adult advertising over what appears to be a copy of the KAT site, while the later promotes an unrelated download that may be malware.

The KAT team is still investigation the possible cause of the penalty, and urges users to visit the official Facebook and Twitter to find information on the latest official domain name for the site.