Hyperloop Pod Competition: Warr gewinnt erneut den Hyperloop-Wettbewerb

Immer noch hyperloopt keiner so schnell wie die Münchener: Der Pod des Teams Warr war auch bei der dritten Hyperloop Pod Competition von SpaceX mit Abstand der schnellste. Während die Konkurrenten mit technischen Problemen kämpften, stellte Warr einen …

Immer noch hyperloopt keiner so schnell wie die Münchener: Der Pod des Teams Warr war auch bei der dritten Hyperloop Pod Competition von SpaceX mit Abstand der schnellste. Während die Konkurrenten mit technischen Problemen kämpften, stellte Warr einen Geschwindigkeitsrekord auf. (Hyperloop, Technologie)

Top 10 Most Pirated Movies of The Week on BitTorrent – 07/23/18

The top 10 most downloaded movies on BitTorrent are in again. ‘Escape Plan 2: Hades’ tops the chart this week, followed by ‘Rampage’. ‘Tully’ completes the top three.

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

This week we have two newcomers in our chart.

Escape Plan 2: Hades is the most downloaded movie again.

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 articles of the recent weekly movie download charts.

This week’s most downloaded movies are:
Movie Rank Rank last week Movie name IMDb Rating / Trailer
Most downloaded movies via torrents
1 (4) Escape Plan 2: Hades 3.9 / trailer
2 (1) Rampage 6.3 / trailer
3 (…) Tully 7.2 / trailer
4 (2) Ready Player One 7.7 / trailer
5 (3) Overboard 5.6 / trailer
6 (9) Avengers: Infinity War (HDCam) 9.1 / trailer
7 (5) How It Ends 8.8 / trailer
8 (…) Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (HDTC) 6.5 / trailer
9 (6) A Quiet Place 7.8 / trailer
10 (8) Sanju 8.8 / trailer

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

Glasbruch: Gorilla Glass DX soll Wearables schützen

Corning hat mit Gorilla Glass DX und DX+ Schutzgläser für Wearables entwickelt, die nicht nur vor Kratzern schützen, sondern auch Antireflexionseigenschaften haben. Außerdem sollen sie das Kontrastverhältnis verbessern. (Gorilla-Glas, Display)

Corning hat mit Gorilla Glass DX und DX+ Schutzgläser für Wearables entwickelt, die nicht nur vor Kratzern schützen, sondern auch Antireflexionseigenschaften haben. Außerdem sollen sie das Kontrastverhältnis verbessern. (Gorilla-Glas, Display)

Wemo: Einfache Homekit-Authentifizierung für Altgeräte

Belkin ist der erste Hersteller, der Apples neues Software-Authentifzierungsverfahren nutzt, um ein Smart-Home-Produkt der Serie Wemo nachträglich Homekit-kompatibel zu machen. Weitere Hersteller könnten folgen. (Homekit, Apple)

Belkin ist der erste Hersteller, der Apples neues Software-Authentifzierungsverfahren nutzt, um ein Smart-Home-Produkt der Serie Wemo nachträglich Homekit-kompatibel zu machen. Weitere Hersteller könnten folgen. (Homekit, Apple)

LimeTorrents Fights Blocking Efforts With New Domain and Homepage

Torrent site LimeTorrents has changed its domain name and updated its homepage in response to various blocking efforts. The site hopes to bypass ISP blockades, at least temporarily, but also to counter a Google ban. While the site is determined to stay online, its operator says that running a torrent site is not getting any easier.

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

Founded in 2009, LimeTorrents has been a familiar name in the torrent ecosystem for nearly a decade.

The site is regularly listed as one of the ten most-visited torrent sites on the Internet. However, as a prime source of pirated content, it has also seen plenty of trouble over the years.

During the site’s early days, music group IFPI seized its servers, for example, and a few years later the site’s operator got dragged into a lawsuit by Lionsgate over the Expendables 3 leak.

Despite these issues, the site remains alive and well. That said, running a torrent site isn’t exactly getting any easier.

Earlier this week LimeTorrents switched to a new domain, limetorrents.io, with a new homepage. This is a direct response to the ISP blocking efforts around the world. In addition, the new domain should also get the site’s homepage back in Google’s search index.

“We changed our domain to .io because [the site is] blocked in many countries like India, UK, Australia, and also because our old homepage was removed from Google’s search index,” LimeTorrents’ operator tells TF.

The new version of the homepage no longer lists direct links to pirated material. This means that copyright holders have no reason to ask Google to remove it from the search index, as previously happened with the old version.

The new homepage

With this new look and domain, LimeTorrent hopes to set itself apart from the many copycats that have appeared. According to the operator, there are several “fake” LimeTorrents copies trying to steal traffic, only to generate revenue for themselves.

People who can’t use the official domains can use the official proxies Limetorrents.info, Limetorrents.asia, Limetorrents.zone, the site’s operator says, but he cautions users who choose other sites.

In addition to the torrent index, the operator also runs the torrent cache itorrents.org, which many other sites rely on. ITorrents hosts torrents without a search interface and is used by other torrent sites such as 1337x.to and the mobile version of The Pirate Bay.

LimeTorrents’ operator tells us that iTorrents currently stores over 20 million unique torrents and many more are added every day.

While this may sound positive, operating a torrent site certainly hasn’t become any easier. It gets harder and harder to make revenue, and income has dropped drastically since the early years.

“Earnings dropped around 60 to 70% because affiliate sites are no longer paying webmasters well. Popups and ads are not working either because of ad-blockers,” LimeTorrents’ operator says.

“We keep the sites running because we have some traffic. It’s covering the hosting costs and brings in some extra bucks for other expenses.”

It’s also become harder to find stable hosting, which is likely the result of increased enforcement. However, there is a threat from within the piracy ecosystem as well.

Ten years ago torrent sites were dominating the piracy landscape but today more and more traffic is flowing to streaming sites.

That being said, LimeTorrents’ operator says that people know where to come when they want to get content first, noting that many streaming sites use torrent portals as their source.

“People who know how to find things know where it comes first. If torrent sites die, streaming sites will also be hit hard because they can’t find content to upload to their sites, as torrent sites are their source,” the operator tells us.

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

Uber, Lyft driver booted after newspaper reveals he was livestreaming passengers

“An unseen online audience watches, evaluating women’s bodies…mocking conversations.”

Enlarge / Jason Gargac, seen here in April 2018. (credit: Jason Gargac)

A St. Louis Uber and Lyft driver has been kicked off both companies' platforms after the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported Friday night that he had been livestreaming his passengers for months without their consent.

According to the newspaper, Jason Gargac, a 32-year-old man from Florissant, Missouri, had been giving hundreds of rides since March—and he has streamed nearly all of them live, under the Twitch handle "JustSmurf." (His Twitch account has also been shuttered.)

As the Dispatch wrote:

Read 8 remaining paragraphs | Comments

US considers tariffs on uranium imports

Only 5 percent of uranium used in US energy production comes from the US.

Enlarge / Rail trucks loaded with uranium ore wait for transportation at the uranium mine operated by Geam, a division of Diamo S.P. mining company, in Rozna, Czech Republic, on Monday, Dec. 13, 2010. Photographer: Vladimir Weiss/Bloomberg via Getty Images (credit: Getty Images)

This week, the US Department of Commerce opened an investigation into the nature of uranium imports, ostensibly with an eye to imposing tariffs on ore and other uranium products.

Uranium is used in the production of nuclear energy, and currently only five percent of uranium used in the US nuclear energy industry comes from the US. The remaining 95 percent is imported from a variety of countries, with Canada leading, followed by Australia, Russia, and Kazakhstan.

The investigation announcement invokes Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act, which allows the federal government to assess imports on the basis of national security. Section 232 has been seldom used since it was signed by President John F. Kennedy in 1962, but it was used most recently this March by the Trump administration to levy tariffs on steel and aluminum.

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Two years later, Darkest Dungeon is completely different for the better

New DLC is just part of what makes surviving the perma-death strategy RPG worth it.

Enlarge / The deeper you go, the more alien the Endless Harvest becomes. (credit: Red Hook Games)

Darkest Dungeon’s newest DLC isn’t quite like anything else in the game prior. The expansion, called “The Color of Madness,” is a clear homage to an H.P. Lovecraft story—“The Colour Out of Space”—in a game already full of such homages. But it also incorporates a whole new style of endless mission into Darkest Dungeon’s grueling grind.

Also, there are aliens.

Like the story on which it’s based, “The Color of Madness” starts with a comet crash landing into a farmstead. The impact spreads strange, slimy crystals across the surrounding land and its inhabitants, morphing them into a new enemy faction called Husks. Husks aren’t particularly tough but make up for their weakness with numbers. “The Color of Madness” mostly plays out as an endless, wave-based horde mode, granting better rewards the longer a single team survives the thronging masses. And if your team dies? It’ll just be temporarily lost in time and space, keeping its items and progress without that pesky perma-death.

Read 14 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Risky Thailand cave rescue relied on talent, luck—and on sticking to the rules

Professional safety diver Chris Peterman explains the joys and terrors of cave diving.

Enlarge (credit: Getty / Aurich Lawson)

Last week, the world was riveted by the successful rescue of a youth soccer team as they and their coach were pulled out of a flooded cave in Thailand. The team had been stranded on a narrow rock shelf in the dark for two weeks, the way out blocked by turbid stormwater. The rescue involved far more than a few divers putting on gear and heading into the cave—it required a tremendous amount of technical skill and posed extreme danger.

But why, exactly, was it so dangerous? And what would it feel like to dive in those kinds of conditions?

I’m a professional diver with 16 years of dive experience, including safety diving and cave diving, and I have trained numerous scuba instructors. I also work full-time in a safety diving role, so answering the first question from a technical perspective is easy enough. The short answer is that all cave diving is dangerous (we'll dig into why below).

Read 29 remaining paragraphs | Comments