MPAA Takedown Efforts Target Legal Popcorn Time Spin-Offs

Popcorn Time’s ‘legal’ spin-off Butter is at risk of losing access to its codebase hosted at GitHub. The developer platform has informed several projects that some of their code has been flagged by the MPAA as copyright infringing, including a fork managed by the Brazilian Ministry of Culture.

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

popcorn-butterWhen the MPAA shut down the main PopcornTime.io fork late last year, many of its developers switched to the project’s ‘legal’ spin-off Butter.

Unlike Popcorn-Time, Butter doesn’t include any links to pirated movies and TV-shows. Instead, it acts as a general purpose streaming tool and actively promotes content that’s freely published by indie filmmakers.

Despite this neutral setup, a recent series of takedown requests Hollywood’s MPAA sent to GitHub threatens to pull the project’s code offline.

Correspondence seen by TorrentFreak shows that the MPAA has been asking GitHub to remove the repository of the recently revived PopcornTime.sh, as well as all related forks.

“There are multiple ‘forks’ of Popcorn Time, all of which are 100% unlicensed and infringing, and many of which have been subject to litigation and court orders around the world confirming their infringement,” the MPAA informs GitHub.

“Popcorntime.sh is one of the more recent infringing ‘forks,’ and we attached several specific examples of that site’s infringement to our prior letter. The Project provides to any member of the public the software needed to develop and release additional infringing Popcorn Time forks, and thereby enables infringement on a massive scale.”

Interestingly the notices don’t mention any Butter related projects by name. But since the PopcornTime.sh fork uses code from Butter, Github has also involved several ‘legal’ spin-offs.

In their notices the MPAA lists several files that are “most clearly and unambiguously designed” to deliver or find infringing content, including package.json and torrent_collection.js which are sourced from Butter. Several of the other files that are mentioned have nothing to do with Butter.

MPAA’s takedown request

mpaa-demand

A few hours ago the notices were forwarded to several Butter related projects, including a fork operated by the Brazilian Ministry of Culture, giving the operators 24 hours to respond before their entire codebase is pulled.

Leo Germani, a representative of the Brazilian Ministry of Culture, informed us that they have already responded to GitHub.

“We answered GitHub clarifying that our project is a fork of the Butter project, not Popcorn Time, which we believe is totally unrelated to Popcorn Time and does not have any code that infringes copyright,” Germani says.

“We have been discussing and researching the use of P2P protocols for content distribution and we were excited when we got in touch with the Butter project, which aims to use the power of P2P to distribute licensed audiovisual content,” he adds.

Brazilian technology company Hacklab informed TorrentFreak that one of their repositories was targeted as well.

“Butter is a great technology that can reduce the cost of distributing videos and has the potential to boost the development of our local film industry. As a digital technology company we have to keep up with the most promising technology trends, and Butter is one of these,” Hacklab’s Luis Fagundes says.

“This notification is insane, as it’s directed to a different project and cites a bunch of files that do no violation at all. Unfortunately, the cost of this irresponsibility is high: it causes harm to developers and businesses who, instead of producing value to society, have to respond to a takedown threat,” he adds.

Talking to TorrentFreak, another developer explained that the MPAA’s description of the files is not totally accurate. The package.json file, for example, is not infringing and merely serves as the main entry point for the application.

The torrent_collection.js file, which isn’t enabled by default, allows users to add random torrent files to Butter but doesn’t link to any specific infringing material. The developers hope that their response will be sufficient to keep the project online.

Strangely enough, the people behind the PopcornTime.sh fork itself have not yet been contacted by GitHub and their repository remains online at the time of writing.

Finally, it’s worth mentioning that GitHub is treating the issue very carefully. The MPAA has sent several requests over the past several weeks and Github has repeatedly requested further clarification and additional details.

However, despite GitHub’s vigilance the MPAA isn’t giving up, urging the developer platform to go above an beyond the DMCA to help combat potential copyright infirngements.

“We hope you agree that GitHub’s responsibility to not knowingly assist in a massive copyright infringement operation does not end with its DMCA policy,” the MPAA told the platform.

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

Deals of the Day (3-15-2016)

Deals of the Day (3-15-2016)

Google’s Nexus 5X smartphone has a 5.2 inch display, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 808 processor, and the latest version of Google’s Android software… not only does it ship with Android 6.0, but it’s also one of the few devices to officially support the Android N Developer Preview. When I reviewed the phone, I liked the design, […]

Deals of the Day (3-15-2016) is a post from: Liliputing

Deals of the Day (3-15-2016)

Google’s Nexus 5X smartphone has a 5.2 inch display, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 808 processor, and the latest version of Google’s Android software… not only does it ship with Android 6.0, but it’s also one of the few devices to officially support the Android N Developer Preview. When I reviewed the phone, I liked the design, […]

Deals of the Day (3-15-2016) is a post from: Liliputing

VR Score: Neuer D3D12-Benchmark von Crytek für Virtual Reality

Basemark und Crytek haben den VR Score vorgestellt: Der Benchmark basiert auf der Cry-Engine, nutzt Direct3D 12 und prüft Head-mounted Displays auf ihre VR-Tauglichkeit. Dazu gehören diverse Frametime-Tests, aber auch 3D-Audio, 360-Grad-Videos und Hardware. (Benchmark, Crytek)

Basemark und Crytek haben den VR Score vorgestellt: Der Benchmark basiert auf der Cry-Engine, nutzt Direct3D 12 und prüft Head-mounted Displays auf ihre VR-Tauglichkeit. Dazu gehören diverse Frametime-Tests, aber auch 3D-Audio, 360-Grad-Videos und Hardware. (Benchmark, Crytek)

LTE Advanced: Vodafone beginnt den 1,5-GHz-Bereich zu nutzen

Ericsson und Vodafone gehen in Deutschland den neu ersteigerten Frequenzbereich von 1,5 GHz an. Der Bereich diene vor allem dazu, höhere Downlink-Kapazitäten zur Verfügung zu stellen. (Netzpolitik, Long Term Evolution)

Ericsson und Vodafone gehen in Deutschland den neu ersteigerten Frequenzbereich von 1,5 GHz an. Der Bereich diene vor allem dazu, höhere Downlink-Kapazitäten zur Verfügung zu stellen. (Netzpolitik, Long Term Evolution)

CDC just says no to opioid prescriptions for chronic pain

New guideline aims to crack down on “doctor-driven” epidemic of overdose deaths.

(credit: frankieleon)

To help curb “one of the most pressing public health issues” of the day—the epidemic of opioid addiction and overdoses—the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released broad, first-of-its-kind guidelines for the use of the deadly medications.

Of the 12 recommendations in the agency’s guidance, the most prominent is the suggestion that doctors refrain from giving opioid prescriptions for chronic pain—the drugs are OK to use for palliative care, cancer patients, and end-of-life treatments. Patients suffering from chronic pain should explore alternative treatment plans and strategies, such as non-opioid medications and exercise therapy, the agency says. And if a doctor feels an opioid should be used for chronic pain management in a patient, it should be done very thoughtfully and with close monitoring, including urine tests for undisclosed opioid use.

“Plainly stated, the risks of opioids are addiction and death, and the benefits for chronic pain are often transient and generally unproven,” CDC Director Tom Frieden said in a press briefing Tuesday.

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Food delivery startup SpoonRocket, which raised $13.5M, shuts down

Firm blames “downturn of market and lack of interest in on-demand companies.”

(credit: Frank Farm)

On Tuesday, San Francisco-based on-demand food delivery SpoonRocket told customers that it had closed its doors over the weekend. The company’s closure is one of the latest signs that there’s been a financial slowdown in Silicon Valley. The startup offered a short list of relatively inexpensive food options (under $10) and could deliver them in under 10 minutes in many parts of the Bay Area.

"Despite our efforts, unfortunately, the downturn of market and lack of interest in on-demand companies like SpoonRocket from the venture community has forced us to shut down prematurely before we are able to grow into a viable business," SpoonRocket wrote.

TechCrunch reported that the company had raised $13.5 million in venture capital through Y Combinator and other angel funds, as well as some Series A funding.

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Comcast’s gigabit cable has a data cap—unless you sign 3-year contract

As Google Fiber enters Atlanta, Comcast pushes long-term commitments.

Comcast is mailing this flyer to Atlanta residents. (credit: TheBen91)

Comcast has begun selling its new gigabit cable service in parts of Atlanta, and the company is heavily pushing customers toward three-year contracts as it tries to fend off a challenge from Google Fiber.

Customers will be able to buy the Internet service for $70 a month and not face any data caps if they sign a three-year deal that has an early termination fee. Without a contract, customers would have to pay $139.95 a month and face a 300GB-per-month data cap.

Customers on the no-contract option can upgrade to unlimited data for an extra $35 a month. Thus, Comcast's gigabit Internet service with unlimited data costs $70 per month with a contract and about $175 without. (A DSLReports article described the data cap details today, and Comcast confirmed them to Ars.)

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Big-name sites hit by rash of malicious ads spreading crypto ransomware [Updated]

New malvertising campaign may have exposed tens of thousands in the past 24 hours.

Enlarge / If you're a gamer (or anyone else), this is not a screen you want to see. (credit: Bromium Labs)

Mainstream websites, including those published by The New York Times, the BBC, MSN, and AOL, are falling victim to a new rash of malicious ads that attempt to surreptitiously install crypto ransomware and other malware on the computers of unsuspecting visitors, security firms warned.

The tainted ads may have exposed tens of thousands of people over the past 24 hours alone, according to a blog post published Monday by Trend Micro. The new campaign started last week when "Angler," a toolkit that sells exploits for Adobe Flash, Microsoft Silverlight, and other widely used Internet software, started pushing laced banner ads through a compromised ad network.

According to a separate blog post from Trustwave's SpiderLabs group, one JSON-based file being served in the ads has more than 12,000 lines of heavily obfuscated code. When researchers deciphered the code, they discovered it enumerated a long list of security products and tools it avoided in an attempt to remain undetected.

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Early look at Intel’s Compute Stick with a Core M Skylake processor

Early look at Intel’s Compute Stick with a Core M Skylake processor

Intel’s Compute Stick line of computers are tiny PCs that are small enough to slide into your pocket, but powerful enough to plug into the HDMI port of your TV to run Windows 10 on virtually any display. In 2015 Intel launched a model with an Intel Atom Bay Trail processor, and earlier in 2016 the […]

Early look at Intel’s Compute Stick with a Core M Skylake processor is a post from: Liliputing

Early look at Intel’s Compute Stick with a Core M Skylake processor

Intel’s Compute Stick line of computers are tiny PCs that are small enough to slide into your pocket, but powerful enough to plug into the HDMI port of your TV to run Windows 10 on virtually any display. In 2015 Intel launched a model with an Intel Atom Bay Trail processor, and earlier in 2016 the […]

Early look at Intel’s Compute Stick with a Core M Skylake processor is a post from: Liliputing