‘Pirate’ Cyberlocker Sites Vulnerable to Takedown, Study Finds

A study carried out by Queen Mary University of London has found that streaming piracy sources are vulnerable to takedown. The research, which sampled 33 cyberlocker sites during 2017, found that just two hosting providers hosted 58% of the videos. Targeting these hosts could remove 71% of the servers from the data set, the study found.

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

While BitTorrent indexing sites dominated the landscape until just a few years ago, streaming is now the most visible form of online video piracy.

Through networks of hosting platforms and indexing sites, pirate streaming is now available to any Internet user, as long as he or she can operate a web browser. It’s a far cry from the complex file-sharing world of yesterday.

This shift prompted researchers at Queen Mary University of London to examine this relatively new ‘pirate’ ecosystem. Titled ‘Movie Pirates of the Caribbean: Exploring Illegal Streaming Cyberlockers‘, their study finds a “remarkably centralized system with just a few networks, countries and cyberlockers underpinning most provisioning.”

Co-author Dr Gareth Tyson informs TF that after previously looking at technologies like BitTorrent, the team decided to take a closer look at the role cyberlockers are playing in the distribution of copyright media.

“At first, we weren’t really sure about how they were being used. So we decided to dig into things a little bit and found that there were hundreds of them, but lacking the types of search functionality of YouTube,” Dr Tyson explains.

“This piqued our interest and we decided to dig a bit deeper, which led us to the indexing sites. I suppose the short answer is that it seemed a pretty interesting ecosystem that nobody had looked at before, so we got curious.”

While simple on the surface, the cyberlocker ecosystem isn’t entirely straightforward. Most hosting sites don’t allow users to search directly, which means visitors are often redirected from indexing platforms that are more specific about the content that’s available.

“This has created an interesting ecosystem where cyberlockers depend on third party (crowd-sourced) indexing websites that create a searchable directory of direct links (URLs) to the videos. These two types of website operate hand-in-hand with a symbiotic relationship, collectively underpinning a global network of online piracy,” the researchers write.

Given the scale of the ecosystem, examining everything would prove impossible. Instead, the researchers homed in on three indexing sites – Putlocker.is, Watchseries.gs and Vodly.cr – which were found via Google and selected for their regular appearances in search results.

Also under the spotlight where 33 cyberlockers including Movshare, NowVideo, and Openload, whose content was accessed via the indexing sites.

“We started off by scraping the indexing sites because it seemed that they were the main ‘entry point’ to the cyberlockers,” Dr Tyson informs TF.

“This was because many of the cyberlockers had fake front pages (i.e. they didn’t show their real content – presumably to hide all the copyright stuff) and they lacked search features to find it. Hence, it was pretty much impossible to access the copyright infringing content by visiting the cyberlocker alone.”

Between January and September 2017, monthly crawls collected information from the indexers and scraped related data from the cyberlockers, including file availability and where the videos were hosted. This revealed some interesting data indicating a potential weakness for the cyberlockers when defending against enforcement attempts.

“A key finding is the apparent centralization of these portals, with a small
set of dependencies vulnerable to attack from copyright enforcers. For example, we observe that 58% of all videos are located within just two hosting providers [M247 and Cogent/LeaseWeb], despite being spread across 15 cyberlockers,” the researchers reveal.

“M247 is based in Romania, which (as a country) hosts the largest share of streaming servers, containing 42% of the total streaming links witnessed. Similarly Cogent/Leaseweb are based in the Netherlands which hosts 23% of streaming links.”

The team cites previous research which found that a lack of copyright enforcement coupled with high capacity Internet infrastructure may drive sites to use these territories. However, putting all eggs in one basket could be a risky strategy, if the tides begin to turn.

“A sudden increase in copyright regulation within these countries may see a shift in this behavior and, again, we argue that this dependency on individual countries poses a resilience challenge for the cyberlockers,” they note.

Also of interest are the researchers’ findings that the same sets of pirates could be behind multiple websites, with DaClips, GorillaVid and Movpod put forward as candidates.

“These three cyberlockers alone host 15% of observed content. Again, this suggests a distribution model that is far less resilient than its decentralized P2P counterparts,” they add.

Digging deeper, the researchers say at least one-fifth of the cyberlocker domains in the study are actually operated by just two organizations/individuals, something which confirms a “remarkable dependency on just a small number of stakeholders.”

Also under the researchers’ spotlight was the number of takedown notices issued against the domains in the study. Using LumenDatabase, 21.8m allegedly infringing URLs were identified across 49,829 individual complaints sent by 304 organisations.

To see how the cyberlockers react to copyright complaints, six were chosen for their mixture of behaviors. Openload.co, Estream.to and Streamin.to are said to have reacted “positively” to copyright complaints with 75% of videos being deleted within a month of reports being registered on Lumen. Vidzi.tv and TheVideo.me earned a poor report, with less than 30% of videos deleted within the same period.

Finally, the researchers reveal some interesting findings in respect of where infringing content is hosted and how that relates to takedowns.

“We observe that the videos that are not deleted from openload.co, estream.to,
vidzi.tv are all hosted in Romania on M247. That said, it would be unwise to draw conclusions here, as Romania hosts both the cyberlocker that ignores the most complaints and the cyberlocker that acts upon most complaints,” they write.

“Overall, the country hosting content that least frequently respects complaints is
the Netherlands, where only 6% of requests are acted upon. Hence, the diversity seen within individual countries suggests that the decision to act upon a complaint is largely driven by the individual cyberlockers.”

Aware that research of this type can often have links to rightsholders, TF asked the team at Queen Mary University of London if their research had in any way been funded or shared with content industry groups.

“No, the research was performed independently,” Tyson confirmed. “The research was not funded by any movie studios and the university received no external funding for this particular stream of research.”

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

Duplex: Google Assistant gibt sich am Telefon zu erkennen

Google hat ein neues Video seines telefonierenden Sprachassistenten veröffentlicht. Die auf der I/O 2018 vorgestellte Funktion namens Duplex identifiziert sich jetzt eindeutig am Anfang eines Telefonats. Dadurch wirken die menschlichen Gesten irgendwie…

Google hat ein neues Video seines telefonierenden Sprachassistenten veröffentlicht. Die auf der I/O 2018 vorgestellte Funktion namens Duplex identifiziert sich jetzt eindeutig am Anfang eines Telefonats. Dadurch wirken die menschlichen Gesten irgendwie unpassend. (Google Assistant, Google)

The Crew 2 im Test: Nordamerika als Spielplatz für Raser

Hochgeschwindigkeits-Verkehrsverbund USA: In The Crew 2 rasen wir mit dem Auto durch die Innenstadt, wechseln dann zum Flugzeug und brettern anschließend noch mit dem Boot entlang der West- oder Ostküste. (The Crew, Spieletest)

Hochgeschwindigkeits-Verkehrsverbund USA: In The Crew 2 rasen wir mit dem Auto durch die Innenstadt, wechseln dann zum Flugzeug und brettern anschließend noch mit dem Boot entlang der West- oder Ostküste. (The Crew, Spieletest)

Baltimore’s police department is a technological disaster

With few resources and a radio system about to drop off support, Baltimore PD IT is flailing.

Enlarge (credit: MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images)

As part of the consent decree reached in the Justice Department investigation that followed the death of Freddie Gray and the ensuing unrest, an assessment team from the National Police Foundation recently completed a study taking inventory of the Baltimore Police Department's technology infrastructure. The study meant to determine what work needs to be done in order for the department to meet the reporting and other requirements set by the decree. The study's findings—coming just months after Baltimore's 911 center was struck by a ransomware attack—paint a damning picture of how tech has been managed by the eighth-largest city police force in the country.

Over the past year, the Baltimore Police Department (BPD) has moved its IT department up and down within the organizational structure three time. The Information Technology Section has been put in charge of maintaining systems it had no hand in acquiring, because the director of ITS is not part of BPD's executive staff. Core technologies used by the department are no longer supported by software vendors, with some over 20 years old. And the Motorola radio system used for mobile communications by the force, including 911 dispatch, will no longer be supported after this year—and there are no plans in place to replace it.

These are symptomatic of a larger problem the survey team noted:

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7:57:148—Volkswagen makes racing history with record-breaking electric race car

Electric power beats the internal combustion engine fair and square in major motorsport.

Enlarge (credit: VW Motorsport)

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.—All it took was two visits to the annual Pikes Peak International Hill Climb for it to steal our hearts. The second-oldest motor race in the United States—only the Indy 500 predates it—is unlike virtually every other professional motorsports event we cover. And this year's edition proved to be novel in its own right.

Last weekend, we were on hand to witness French racing driver Romain Dumas and car maker Volkswagen stamp their authority on all 12.4-miles (19.99km) of the course, destroying the course's existing record and setting the first sub-eight minute time in race history. What makes the feat even more interesting around Ars is that the car in the record books is all-electric, marking perhaps the first time in major motorsport that a battery electric vehicle has beaten the internal combustion engine fair and square.

In retrospect, if any car has an advantage at Pikes Peak it's the EV. The start line is already at 9,390 feet (2,862m) above sea level; the finish line is an even higher 14,110 feet (4,300m) and much of the course is above the tree line where there's 40 percent less oxygen to breathe. Consequently, internal combustion engines will lose power—significantly—as they climb the route, even with the aid of forced induction or crafty fuel mixtures.

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Bug: Samsungs Messenger-App verschickt ungewollt Fotos

Nutzer von Samsung-Smartphones berichten über einen unangenehmen Bug der Messenger-App: Die Anwendung verschickt offenbar ungewollt und ohne Benachrichtigung an den Nutzer Fotos, teilweise ganze Galerien. Bisher scheint es nur Workarounds zu geben und …

Nutzer von Samsung-Smartphones berichten über einen unangenehmen Bug der Messenger-App: Die Anwendung verschickt offenbar ungewollt und ohne Benachrichtigung an den Nutzer Fotos, teilweise ganze Galerien. Bisher scheint es nur Workarounds zu geben und noch keine echte Lösung. (Samsung, Instant Messenger)

Google researchers created an amazing scene-rendering AI

A neural network from Google’s DeepMind has impressive spatial reasoning skills.

Enlarge (credit: DeepMind)

New research from Google's UK-based DeepMind subsidiary demonstrates that deep neural networks have a remarkable capacity to understand a scene, represent it in a compact format, and then "imagine" what the same scene would look like from a perspective the network hasn't seen before.

Human beings are good at this. If shown a picture of a table with only the front three legs visible, most people know intuitively that the table probably has a fourth leg on the opposite side and that the wall behind the table is probably the same color as the parts they can see. With practice, we can learn to sketch the scene from another angle, taking into account perspective, shadow, and other visual effects.

A DeepMind team led by Ali Eslami and Danilo Rezende has developed software based on deep neural networks with these same capabilities—at least for simplified geometric scenes. Given a handful of "snapshots" of a virtual scene, the software—known as a generative query network (GQN)—uses a neural network to build a compact mathematical representation of that scene. It then uses that representation to render images of the room from new perspectives—perspectives the network hasn't seen before.

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This case works like an airbag for your smartphone (prototype)

Most smartphone cases are designed to protect your mobile device from minor scrapes, bumps, or falls… but drop your phone screen-first onto concrete and you’re probably out of luck unless you’ve got some serious screen protection. The…

Most smartphone cases are designed to protect your mobile device from minor scrapes, bumps, or falls… but drop your phone screen-first onto concrete and you’re probably out of luck unless you’ve got some serious screen protection. The AD Case could change that. It’s like a mobile airbag for your smartphone, with a set of springs […]

The post This case works like an airbag for your smartphone (prototype) appeared first on Liliputing.

Rocket Report: Small sat market surging, Proton dying, Falcon Heavy certified

It was a super busy week for small rocket news.

Enlarge / We need your help to produce a new newsletter to chronicle the dynamic launch industry. (credit: Aurich Lawson/background image United Launch Alliance)

Welcome to Edition 1.06 of the Rocket Report! We're coming to you this week from Kourou, French Guiana, where the European Space Agency has its spaceport. We're here at the agency's invitation to see the facilities, better understand its launch program, speak with key officials about the Ariane 6 booster, and more. Expect much coverage in the days and weeks to come on Ars Technica.

As always, we welcome reader submissions, and if you don't want to miss an issue, please subscribe in the box below. Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift rockets as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the calendar.

Small-satellite market may reach $62 billion by 2030. The demand for small-satellite launches for both new constellations and replacement missions is estimated to grow to 11,631 by 2030, Satellite Today (aka Via Satellite) reports, citing a Frost & Sullivan analysis. The report details the demand and supply for small-satellite launches, and it forecasts the number of smallsats, payload mass, and launch revenue based on defined scenarios.

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Razer Blade 15 im Test: Schlanker 15,6-Zöller für Gamer gefällt uns

Das Razer Blade 15 ist ein gutes Spiele-Notebook mit flottem Display und schneller Geforce-Grafikeinheit. Anders als im 14-Zoll-Formfaktor ist bei den 15,6-Zoll-Modellen die Konkurrenz aber deutlich größer. Ein Test von Marc Sauter (Razer Blade, Busine…

Das Razer Blade 15 ist ein gutes Spiele-Notebook mit flottem Display und schneller Geforce-Grafikeinheit. Anders als im 14-Zoll-Formfaktor ist bei den 15,6-Zoll-Modellen die Konkurrenz aber deutlich größer. Ein Test von Marc Sauter (Razer Blade, Business-Notebooks)