Top 10 Most Pirated Movies of The Week – 12/14/15

The top 10 most downloaded movies on BitTorrent are in again. ‘Pan.’ tops the chart this week, followed by ‘The Martian’ ‘The Intern’ completes the top three.

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

panThis week we have five newcomers in our chart.

Pan 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 (…) Pan 6.0 / trailer
2 (…) The Martian (Subbed HDRip) 8.2 / trailer
3 (…) The Intern (Webrip) 7.4 / trailer
4 (1) Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials 6.8 / trailer
5 (2) Goosebumps (Webrip) 6.8 / trailer
6 (3) Hate Story 3 (DVDscr) 5.0 / trailer
7 (…) Crimson Peak (Web-DL) 6.9 / trailer
8 (…) The Ridiculous 6 (Webrip) 5.2 / trailer
9 (5) The Man from U.N.C.L.E. 7.5 / trailer
10 (9) Inside Out 8.4 / trailer

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

Digital Signage: Wenn die Werbetafel nur dich meint

Werbung auf der Straße, am Flughafen oder im Kaufhaus, die jedem etwas anderes zeigt – sogar verschiedene Preise: Die Werbebranche hat große Pläne mit Digital Signage. Denn es funktioniert. Aber wollen wir das auch? (Digital Signage, Wirtschaft)

Werbung auf der Straße, am Flughafen oder im Kaufhaus, die jedem etwas anderes zeigt - sogar verschiedene Preise: Die Werbebranche hat große Pläne mit Digital Signage. Denn es funktioniert. Aber wollen wir das auch? (Digital Signage, Wirtschaft)

Microsoft: Kunden können 15 GByte kostenlosen Onedrive-Speicherplatz behalten

Wegen Kundenprotesten will Microsoft den Speicherplatz seines Cloud-Dienstes Onedrive nun doch nicht einschränken. Eigentlich sollten künftig nur noch 5 statt 15 GByte kostenlos genutzt werden können. (Onedrive, Microsoft)

Wegen Kundenprotesten will Microsoft den Speicherplatz seines Cloud-Dienstes Onedrive nun doch nicht einschränken. Eigentlich sollten künftig nur noch 5 statt 15 GByte kostenlos genutzt werden können. (Onedrive, Microsoft)

Landkreise und Kommunen: Große Nachfrage nach Subventionen für Internetausbau

Verkehrsminister Dobrindt will am heutigen Montag die ersten Förderbescheide für den Internetausbau an 31 Kreise und Städte übergeben. Das Interesse nach Förderung für schnelle Internetverbindungen auf dem Land ist hoch. (Alexander Dobrindt, Glasfaser)

Verkehrsminister Dobrindt will am heutigen Montag die ersten Förderbescheide für den Internetausbau an 31 Kreise und Städte übergeben. Das Interesse nach Förderung für schnelle Internetverbindungen auf dem Land ist hoch. (Alexander Dobrindt, Glasfaser)

Brandgefahr: Amazon nimmt gefährliche Hoverboards aus dem Sortiment

Amazon und andere Onlinehändler nehmen elektrische Hoverboards aus dem Handel, weil sich Brände und Unfälle mit den zweirädrigen angetriebenen Scootern häufen. Einige Fluggesellschaften nehmen die E-Boards nicht mehr mit. (Hoverboard, Amazon)

Amazon und andere Onlinehändler nehmen elektrische Hoverboards aus dem Handel, weil sich Brände und Unfälle mit den zweirädrigen angetriebenen Scootern häufen. Einige Fluggesellschaften nehmen die E-Boards nicht mehr mit. (Hoverboard, Amazon)

North Carolina citizenry defeat pernicious Big Solar plan to suck up the Sun

Town council votes to deny zoning permit that would allow solar farm development.

We looked for solar panel farms in Woodland, N.C., but didn't find any. (credit: Google Maps)

The citizens of Woodland, N.C. have spoken loud and clear: They don't want none of them highfalutin solar panels in their good town. They scare off the kids. "All the young people are going to move out," warned Bobby Mann, a local resident concerned about the future of his burg. Worse, Mann said, the solar panels would suck up all the energy from the Sun.

Another resident—a retired science teacher, no less—expressed concern that a proposed solar farm would block photosynthesis, and prevent nearby plants from growing. Jane Mann then went on to add that there seemed to have been a lot of cancer deaths in the area, and that no one could tell her solar panels didn't cause cancer. “I want information," Mann said. "Enough is enough."

These comments were reported not in The Onion, but rather by the Roanoke-Chowan News-Herald. They came during a Woodland Town Council meeting in which Strata Solar Company sought to rezone an area northeast of the town, off of US Highway 258, to build a solar farm. The council not only rejected the proposal, it went a step further, voting for a complete moratorium on solar farms.

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How Fargo’s midwestern UFOs became pop culture’s “realest” alien depiction

We have no idea what extraterrestrial life is like, and Fargo doesn’t pretend to.

Streetlights in Minnesota are just captivating. (credit: FX)

Warning: this piece contains minor spoilers to several episodes of the show. 

By now everyone knows Fargo's famous disclaimer—"This is a true story." The Coen Brothers' 1996 classic starts the same way each episode of the TV series it inspired on FX does, but just because something is true doesn't mean it can't get a little fuzzy or downright weird. And the currently-in-progress-season two is playing with pop culture's favorite oddity—aliens. UFOs, technically.

Then again, were there UFOs in this season's penultimate episode last Monday? The cop (Lou Solverson, played by Patrick Wilson), the villain (Angus Sampson as Bear Gerhardt), and everyone in-between sure seemed to stop mid-firefight to stare at something, but only the in-over-her-head beautician (Kirsten Dunst as Peggy Blumquist) said anything: "It's just a flying saucer, hon." This is the same person who hallucinated a Lifespring coach in her basement one week earlier.

Fargo, obviously, is not a true story. The people are made up, the intercity travel times fudged, the Midwest accents exaggerated. But among other things making its current season an all-time great is that its brand of aliens feels different. Rather than having any scientific or nefarious purposes or creature-like appearances, Fargo's aliens are... a mystery. That's what makes this season the most realistic pop culture depiction of extraterrestrial life to date.

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Bad reviews for Taser documentary on Amazon, iTunes seem to come from Taser employees

Reviewers didn’t feel it necessary to disclose their affiliation, or even watch the film.

(credit: Nick Berardini)

One of the best bits of the modern world is the way that anything you buy online inevitably comes with a bunch of user reviews telling you why your purchase does or doesn't suck. Sometimes the compulsion to leave such a review can strike even in situations that most of us would probably feel are a little inappropriate, with employees of Taser International, maker of the occasionally lethal stun guns, apparently the latest to leave reviews without the kind of disclosure that professional reviews might be expected to contain.

Some one-star reviews posted on Amazon and iTunes for Killing Them Safely, a documentary film looking at the Taser stun guns and the safety issues around them, appear to have been posted by Taser International employees, using their own names. The dangers of Tasers are contested by the manufacturer and law enforcement agencies deploying the weapons, and the employees seem to be taking to the user reviews to express their dissatisfaction with the film.

The film's director, Nick Berardini, spotted one dubious review on iTunes, purporting to come from one Uriel Halioua. The review complains that the film is "poorly narrated"—in true user review form, Halioua appears not to have even watched the film, as Berardini says it has no narration—and concludes that it's "swill." The name Uriel Halioua is an uncommon one, but one person who does appear to be blessed with it just happens to work as a pre-sales systems engineer at Taser International. Peculiarly, that review seems now to have been deleted and reposted by a different user, "BobRossRocks."

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Launch Mode: Tesla S mit Software für kontrollierte Kavalierstarts

Elektroautos haben prinzipbedingt eine gute Anfangsbeschleunigung und hängen die meisten Fahrzeuge mit Verbrennungsmotoren an der Ampel ab. Tesla Motors hat für das Model S ein Softwareupdate vorgestellt, damit diese Ampelstarts nicht im Straßengraben enden. (Elektroauto, GreenIT)

Elektroautos haben prinzipbedingt eine gute Anfangsbeschleunigung und hängen die meisten Fahrzeuge mit Verbrennungsmotoren an der Ampel ab. Tesla Motors hat für das Model S ein Softwareupdate vorgestellt, damit diese Ampelstarts nicht im Straßengraben enden. (Elektroauto, GreenIT)

WebTorrent Brings BitTorrent to the Web, Impresses Netflix

BitTorrent currently transfers petabytes of data across the Internet every month, but with the shift to online streaming it’s losing prominence. Stanford University graduate Feross Aboukhadijeh is bridging this gap with WebTorrent and has already piqued the interest of Netflix, other tech companies, and many enthusiastic developers.

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

webtorrent1When BitTorrent was first launched in 2002 it was a breakthrough technology.

At the time it was virtually impossible to share large files with millions of people over the Internet, something BitTorrent can do very effectively.

Today, the standard BitTorrent clients have lost most of their shine. While it’s still one of the best ways to transfer data from A to B, they became somewhat old-fashioned with the rise of video streaming sites and services.

But what if there was a technology that could combine the two? Smooth and instant streaming in the browser powered by BitTorrent’s core technology. That’s in short what WebTorrent does.

WebTorrent is a project launched by Feross Aboukhadijeh, a Stanford University graduate who has already booked quite a few successes in his career. After graduating he founded PeerCDN, a P2P-assisted content delivery network, which was sold to Yahoo at the end of 2013.

Feross then focused on WebTorrent, convinced that it could revolutionize how the web works today.

“I felt that the idea of ‘people-powered websites’ – websites that are hosted by the visitors who use them – was too revolutionary to keep locked up as proprietary software, and I wanted to do more to push the idea forward,” he tells TF.

“Imagine a video site like YouTube, where visitors help to host the site’s content. The more people that use a WebTorrent-powered website, the faster and more resilient it becomes.”

Simply put, WebTorrent is a BitTorrent client for the web. Instead of using standalone applications it allows people to share files directly from their browser, without having to configure or install anything.

WebTorrent

webt

This opens up BitTorrent technology to virtually any website that deals with a lot of data, and expands the userbase by hundreds of millions of people who already have compatible browsers such as Chrome or Firefox installed.

“WebTorrent is the first torrent client built for the web. It’s written completely in JavaScript – the language of the web – and uses WebRTC for true peer-to-peer transport. No browser plugin, extension, or installation is required,” Feross tells TF.

Over the past two years WebTorrent has matured into a project that’s slowly starting to win over several major tech companies.

Netflix, for example, contacted Feross to discuss his technology which they may use to stream their videos. A few months ago Netflix specifically mentioned WebTorrent in a job application, which shows that the video giant is serious about P2P-assisted delivery.

Feross believes that companies such as Netflix could benefit greatly from WebTorrent. Currently, streaming performance goes down during peak hours but with WebTorrent this shouldn’t be a problem.

“If Netflix uses WebTorrent, customers would see higher video quality during peak hours. WebTorrent would allow customers with the same ISP to share video pieces with each other without leaving the ISP’s network,” Feross says.

“This ensures the best quality, even during peak Netflix usage hours when the network link between the ISP and Netflix is fully saturated,” he adds.

Netflix aside, there are already various noteworthy implementations of WebTorrent. The project’s homepage, for example, shows how easily it can stream video and βTorrent offers a fully functioning torrent client UI.

Other examples include File.pizza, which uses WebTorrent to share files in the browser. The same technology is used for server-less websites by PeerCloud and Webtorrentapp, while GitTorrent uses it to decentralize source control.

In addition to the examples above, the Internet Archive is also looking into the technology for its video distribution, and another major tech company is considering adding WebTorrent support to their web browser.

It’s not all roses though and there are still several challenges to overcome. Not all browsers support WebRTC yet, most notably, Internet Explorer. In addition, WebTorrent can’t talk to traditional torrent clients which use UDP and TCP instead of WebRTC.

BitTorrent – WebTorrent

bittorrent-webtorrent

There are several hybrid clients such as Playback, but ideally WebTorrent should be more tightly integrated into the standard BitTorrent protocol, which is something Feross is currently working on.

It’s clear that WebTorrent has a lot of potential and it will be interesting to see how it develops over the years to come. If it’s up to Feross, it will play a major role in the future of the web.

“I like to think of WebTorrent as core Internet infrastructure. It’s an efficient way to transfer files between users on a website, and I expect we’ll continue to see many more creative uses for the protocol,” he says.

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