Top 10 Most Pirated Movies of The Week on BitTorrent – 01/29/18

The top 10 most downloaded movies on BitTorrent are in again. ‘Thor Ragnarok’ tops the chart this week, followed by ‘The Shape of Water’. ‘Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle’ completes the top three.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN discounts, offers and coupons

This week we have three newcomers in our chart.

Thor Ragnarok 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 Web-DL/Webrip/HDRip/BDrip/DVDrip unless stated otherwise.

RSS feed for the weekly movie download chart.

This week’s most downloaded movies are:
Movie Rank Rank last week Movie name IMDb Rating / Trailer
Most downloaded movies via torrents
1 (2) Thor Ragnarok 8.1 / trailer
2 (1) The Shape of Water (DVDScr) 8.0 / trailer
3 (3) Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle (HDTS) 7.3 / trailer
4 (…) Bright 6.5 / trailer
5 (4) Blade Runner 2049 8.9 / trailer
6 (…) Murder on the Orient Express (Subbed HDrip) 6.7 / trailer
7 (…) Downsizing (Subbed HDrip) 5.8 / trailer
8 (5) Geostorm 5.4 / trailer
9 (8) Justice League (Subbed HDRip) 7.1 / trailer
10 (7) Coco (DVDscr) 8.9 / trailer

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN discounts, offers and coupons

Onlinetraining: Fitnesstracker Strava verrät Lage von Militärstützpunkten

Strava ist der Hersteller einer Fitnesstracking-App, die via GPS von Smartphones verfolgt, wann und wo ein Benutzer trainiert. Ziel ist eine Art soziales Netzwerk für Sportler. Damit können jedoch auch militärische Geheimnisse verraten werden. (Securit…

Strava ist der Hersteller einer Fitnesstracking-App, die via GPS von Smartphones verfolgt, wann und wo ein Benutzer trainiert. Ziel ist eine Art soziales Netzwerk für Sportler. Damit können jedoch auch militärische Geheimnisse verraten werden. (Security, Internet)

Leserumfrage: Wie gefällt Ihnen Golem.de?

Wir wollen Golem.de noch besser machen, und dafür brauchen wir Ihr Feedback: Wie nutzen Sie die Seite, was interessiert Sie und was fehlt? Bitte beantworten Sie uns dazu ein paar Fragen – es dauert nur fünf Minuten. (Golem.de, Internet)

Wir wollen Golem.de noch besser machen, und dafür brauchen wir Ihr Feedback: Wie nutzen Sie die Seite, was interessiert Sie und was fehlt? Bitte beantworten Sie uns dazu ein paar Fragen - es dauert nur fünf Minuten. (Golem.de, Internet)

Australien: Segeldrohnen sollen Südpolarmeer erforschen

Große Drohnen, die nicht fliegen, sondern schwimmen, sollen das Meer und seine Bewohner untersuchen. Eine australische Forschungsorganisation will so das Südpolarmeer erforschen. (Schiff, Technologie)

Große Drohnen, die nicht fliegen, sondern schwimmen, sollen das Meer und seine Bewohner untersuchen. Eine australische Forschungsorganisation will so das Südpolarmeer erforschen. (Schiff, Technologie)

Elektroautos: VW-Aufsichtsratschef findet Ladeinfrastruktur mangelhaft

Volkswagens Aufsichtsratschef Hans Dieter Pötsch kritisiert die schlechte Ladeinfrastruktur in Deutschland als Haupthindernis für die Elektromobilität. Ein ausreichend hohes Ladetempo sei für viele Autofahrer entscheidend. (Elektroauto, Technologie)

Volkswagens Aufsichtsratschef Hans Dieter Pötsch kritisiert die schlechte Ladeinfrastruktur in Deutschland als Haupthindernis für die Elektromobilität. Ein ausreichend hohes Ladetempo sei für viele Autofahrer entscheidend. (Elektroauto, Technologie)

Außerordentliches Update: Microsoft deaktiviert Spectre-2-Patches für Windows

Alle Windows-Rechner mit noch unterstütztem Betriebssystem und einem Broadwell-, Haswell- oder Skylake-Chip bekommen ein außerplanmäßiges Update – das ein vorheriges Update deaktiviert. Microsoft will es erst wieder freigeben, wenn Intel Probleme behob…

Alle Windows-Rechner mit noch unterstütztem Betriebssystem und einem Broadwell-, Haswell- oder Skylake-Chip bekommen ein außerplanmäßiges Update - das ein vorheriges Update deaktiviert. Microsoft will es erst wieder freigeben, wenn Intel Probleme behoben hat. (Microsoft, Prozessor)

California, Colorado governors target electric vehicle sticking point—charging

States recognize charging facilities are an issue.

Enlarge / Closeup of Chargepoint electric-vehicle charger at Google headquarters in Silicon Valley (Photo by Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images). (credit: Getty Images)

Last week, California Governor Jerry Brown announced one of the most ambitious electric vehicle (EV) incentive plans in the country. Colorado's Governor John Hickenlooper also announced plans to improve infrastructure for battery-powered cars last week. Although EVs are still less than 1 percent of the total US passenger fleet, the two announcements show that state leaders are thinking about a second phase of EV rollout, as federal incentives are projected to run out for some automakers but climate change concerns grow increasingly urgent.

West coast

In California last week, Brown signed an Executive Order directing the state to adopt policies that could result in 5 million EVs on the road by 2030. That goal replaces an October 2016 goal put forward by Brown targeting 1.5 million EVs on California's roads by 2025.

California has aggressive emissions goals and has been one of the major champions of renewable energy buildout. But the state's transportation profile is still excessively reliant on gas and diesel. According to the Governor's Office, transportation makes up 50 percent of the state's greenhouse gas emissions.

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Piracy Can Help Music Sales of Many Artists, Research Shows

A new academic paper published in the Information Economics and Policy journal shows that piracy can help many artists to sell more music. Results from the peer-reviewed paper are consistent for both digital and physical sales and affect mid-tier artists. Top musicians are not so lucky, as they sell less.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN discounts, offers and coupons

The debate over whether online piracy helps or hurts music sales has been dragging on for several decades now.

The issue has been researched extensively with both positive and negative effects being reported, often varying based on the type of artist, music genre and media, among other variables.

One of the more extensive studies was published this month in the peer-reviewed Information Economics and Policy journal, by Queen’s University economics researcher Jonathan Lee.

In a paper titled ‘Purchase, pirate, publicize: Private-network music sharing and market album sales’ he examined the effect of BitTorrent-based piracy on both digital and physical music sales.

We covered an earlier version of the study two years ago when it was still a work in progress. With updates to the research methods and a data sample, the results are now more clear.

The file-sharing data was obtained from an unnamed private BitTorrent tracker and covers a data set of 250,000 albums and more than five million downloads. These were matched to US sales data for thousands of albums provided by Nielsen SoundScan.

By refining the estimation approach and updating the matching technique, the final version of the paper shows some interesting results.

Based on the torrent tracker data, Lee finds that piracy can boost sales of mid-tier artists, both for physical CDs and digital downloads. For the most popular artists, this effect is reversed. In both cases, the impact is the largest for digital sales.

“I now find that top artists are harmed and mid-tier artists may be helped in both markets, but that these effects are larger for digital sales,” Lee tells TorrentFreak. “This is consistent with the idea that people are more willing to switch between digital piracy and digital sales than between digital piracy and physical CDs.”

The findings lead to the conclusion that there is no ideal ‘one-size-fits-all’ response to piracy. In fact, some unauthorized sharing may be a good thing.

This is in line with observations from musicians themselves over the past years. Several top artists have admitted the positive effects of piracy, including Ed Sheeran, who recently said that he owes his career to it.

“I know that’s a bad thing to say, because I’m part of a music industry that doesn’t like illegal file sharing,” Sheeran said in an interview with CBS. “Illegal file sharing was what made me. It was students in England going to university, sharing my songs with each other.”

Sheeran sharing on TPB

Today, Sheeran is in a totally different position of course. As one of the top artists, he would now be hurt by piracy. However, the new stars of tomorrow may still reap the benefits.

According to the researcher, the music industry should realize that shutting down pirate sites may not always be the best option. On the contrary, file-sharing sites may be useful as promotional platforms in some cases.

“Following above, a policy of total shutdown of private file sharing networks seems excessively costly (compared with their relatively small impact on sales) and unwise (as a one-size-fits-all policy). It would be better to make legal consumption more convenient, reducing the demand for piracy as an alternative to purchasing,” Lee tells us.

“It would also be smart to experiment with releasing music onto piracy networks themselves, especially for up-and-coming artists, similar to the free promotion afforded by commercial radio.”

The researcher makes another interesting extrapolation from the findings. In recent years, some labels and artists have signed exclusive deals with some streaming platforms. This means that content is not available everywhere, and this fragmentation may make piracy look more appealing.

“Here you can view piracy as a non-fragmented alternative platform to Spotify et al. Thus consumers will have a strong incentive to use a single non-fragmented platform (piracy) over having multiple subscriptions to fragmented platforms,” Lee says.

It would be better for the labels to publish their music on all platforms, and to make these more appealing and convenient than the pirate alternative.

The data used for the research was collected several years ago before the big streaming boom, so it might be that the results are different today. However, it is clear that the effect of piracy on sales is not as uniform as the music industry often portrays it.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN discounts, offers and coupons

Garmin Speak Plus review: Alexa is just a passive road-trip buddy

How much does Alexa elevate a dash cam’s usefulness?

Enlarge (credit: Valentina Palladino)

Amazon's Alexa is quickly seeping into all parts of life thanks to clever partnerships with OEMs, and Garmin was one of the most unexpected partnerships announced last year. The maker of navigation systems, dash cams, and wearables debuted the Garmin Speak at the tail-end of 2017. For $119, you get a miniature Echo Dot-like device that puts Alexa in the car with you.

At CES this year, Garmin added another device to that new family—the $199 Speak Plus. Instead of simply acting as a home for Alexa, the Speak Plus also includes an embedded dashboard camera, making it a more practical car accessory than the original Speak. While dash cams are undoubtably useful, the usefulness of Alexa in the car is debatable. Alexa rose to fame as a virtual assistant for the home, and the Garmin Speak Plus doesn't make the strongest case for it to be a necessary part of your daily commute yet.

Design

Specs at a glance: Garmin Speak Plus
Price $199
Dimensions 37.5 mm x 37.7 mm (1.47 x 1.48 inches)
Display 17.2 mm x 9.6 mm (0.67 x 0.37 inches),114 x 64 pixels OLED circle
Camera 82-degree FOV, shoots up to 1080p at 30fps
Mics 2 mics, beamforming technology
Built-in speaker Yes
Built-in Alexa Yes, when connected to Garmin Speak mobile app
Dash cam features Forward collision warnings, lane departure warnings, accident detection (G-sensor), go alerts

The Speak Plus' footprint is so small, it'll easily disappear behind your rear-view mirror if you don't position it properly. The short cylinder measures 1.47 x 1.48 inches and has a 114 x 64-pixel OLED screen surrounded by an LED light ring on one end and a camera lens on the other. The screen shows simple direction cues like arrows and measurements that you can follow while you're driving, but you don't necessarily need to see the screen since Alexa reads out directions as well.

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