Plex is a Pirate’s Dream But Could Also Build Bridges to Legal Content

Popular media server Plex is an entirely legal tool to arrange movies, TV shows and other content and present them in a Netflix-beating interface. Some have described Plex as a pirate’s dream, especially when its augmented with little-known third-party ‘pirate’ services. But Plex also has grand plans that could help to build bridges between content pirates and media companies that might otherwise prove impossible.

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

A little while back, Bijan Stephen over at The Verge published a well-received piece on the topic of Plex, the popular media server software. It’s well worth a read for those who aren’t already familiar with this incredibly sleek tool.

For those in need of a quick summary, Plex comes in two parts. A server component that does all the hard work behind the scenes on the host computer and a client, which can be typically run on a smart TV, Firestick-like device, tablet, phone or indeed another computer. The latter is used to access the former.

In brief (and from a video consumption perspective) people can dump all of their properly named movies and TV shows into a folder, adjust a few settings, wait a minute or three and have this uninspiring bleak landscape…

Before…

….transformed into something like this:

After…

Users of software like Popcorn Time or Showbox will probably wonder what all the fuss is about – but that’s only if they haven’t used Plex.

When properly configured (and it isn’t hard) its search and curation features blow Netflix’s out of the water. Search by genre, actor, director, running time – almost anything is possible. As a bonus, Plex has one of the most beautiful interfaces ever made for media consumption.

What Plex doesn’t have, when people first install it, is any movie or TV show content in its library – especially of the kind shown above. The company behind Plex is completely above board, providing a tool that’s no more responsible for piracy than Windows or Android. Nevertheless, plenty of users build their own self-hosted Netflix-beaters with Plex, sometimes with the help of others.

The article in The Verge explains how some Plex users solve this problem by teaming up with other Plex users to share their own libraries. It a system that operates in a manner not dissimilar to the way smaller BBS admins of yesteryear traded and obtained content for their own platforms.

As The Verge put it, “as streaming offerings become more expensive and convoluted, people are setting up their own smaller, more intimate platforms.” And indeed they are, but there’s more to this rodeo.

There is a side to Plex use (copyright holders and indeed Plex itself will argue ‘abuse’) that isn’t small at all. It doesn’t involve sharing any of your own content either, it’s a simple case of handing over a few dollars, euros, or pounds and suddenly everything is a click away.

If one knows where to look, so-called P4S (Plex For Share) services are available that make Netflix’s multi-billion dollar offering look like a second-class citizen. And after handing over the cash or requesting a free trial, users can be accessing huge – HUGE – libraries of content in a matter of minutes.

The smaller and cheaper shares (a few hundred movies and TV shows, a handful of simultaneous users) are probably being run on home connections. The bigger and more expensive ones are entirely more professional, offering thousands of video files to many concurrent users.

Just as an example, one particular service (for less than $10) per month, lists more than 11,000 movies in HD and above (including 4K) plus 2,000 TV shows. Others prefer to list content in terabytes, with more than 200TB not being particularly uncommon. These big boys utilize CDNs to ensure content is delivered seamlessly to subscribers, wherever they may be.

The big deal here isn’t just the volume of content available, it’s the nature and breadth. Given that professional P4S offers don’t have politics to deal with or business models to protect, the movies on offer range from old classics to the very latest blockbusters. And Friends will not be removed because somebody offered a better deal.

The world of Plex shares is nothing new and for those thinking that their existence should be kept under the radar, it’s already too late. Dutch anti-piracy outfit BREIN, which is affiliated with Hollywood studios, has already taken action against people offering these services to the public. The cat is well and truly out of the bag, it’s just a question of how far it will run.

But while Plex might be a pirate’s dream, the company is doing some very interesting things to ensure that rightsholders get in on the act. Late last month, Plex announced it had struck a deal with Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution to supply free, ad-supported movies and TV shows to Plex users.

The company reportedly has plans for its software to become a “one-stop-shop” for content and has grand plans to begin reselling subscription content in 2020 along with video on demand products. This opens up the possibility of introducing pirates to premium products in an interface they are already very familiar with.

While some will naturally object, this could be clever bridge-building in action. Big content companies would never try to tempt pirates by putting movies or TV shows on The Pirate Bay, for example, but Plex and the company behind it are so neutral, politics can be kept to a minimum. Let’s see how it plays out, things could get very interesting.

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

Lufttaxi: Volocopter hebt in Stuttgart ab

In Stuttgart ist der Volocopter erstmals in einer europäischen Innenstadt abgehoben. Rund vier Minuten befand sich das Flugtaxi in der Luft. Für kommerzielle Flüge fehlt jedoch noch die Genehmigung. (Lufttaxi, Startup)

In Stuttgart ist der Volocopter erstmals in einer europäischen Innenstadt abgehoben. Rund vier Minuten befand sich das Flugtaxi in der Luft. Für kommerzielle Flüge fehlt jedoch noch die Genehmigung. (Lufttaxi, Startup)

Pixel: Googles neue Kamera-App vom Pixel 4 geleakt

Programmierer haben sich die geleakte neue Version von Googles Kamera-App genauer angeschaut und einige Verbesserungen in der Benutzerführung entdeckt. Zudem sollen Nutzer die automatischen Hinweise während der Aufnahme abschalten können. (Google, Andr…

Programmierer haben sich die geleakte neue Version von Googles Kamera-App genauer angeschaut und einige Verbesserungen in der Benutzerführung entdeckt. Zudem sollen Nutzer die automatischen Hinweise während der Aufnahme abschalten können. (Google, Android)

How a basement hacker transformed Donkey Kong for the Atari 2600

Garry Kitchen’s unlikely story is told in this excerpt from the book Arcade Perfect.

[UNVERIFIED CONTENT] Atari CX2600A from the year 1980 made in Hong Kong.

Enlarge / If you're unfamiliar with the name, "Atari 2600," fellow kids, have a gander at this piece of hardware. (It actually worked, promise.) (credit: Wahyu Ichwandardi / Getty Images)

The following excerpt comes from Arcade Perfect: How Pac-Man, Mortal Kombat, and Other Coin-Op Classics Invaded the Living Room by David L. Craddock.

Sickly green light washed over the stubble and pale complexion of the man hunched in front of his computer monitor. Beside it sat a television, black except for five horizontal, crimson-colored bands running from top to bottom like lines on notebook paper.

Garry Kitchen closed his eyes, but the straight red lines were burned into the backs of his eyelids. Behind him came a steady pounding: poundpound-pound-pound. He didn’t rise to the bait. He knew what he’d see. On the arcade cabinet’s screen, a giant ape the size of King Kong had just scaled a construction site made of straight red girders. With every stomp, the platforms had twisted and bent until they were slanted like ramps. Standing tall at the top, the ape intoned his grating, mechanical laugh.

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Wikileaks: Assange kommt nicht frei

Eigentlich endet Julian Assanges Freiheitsstrafe am 22. September. Eine Richterin entschied jedoch, dass er auch nach dem Verbüßen seiner Haftstrafe im Gefängnis bleiben muss. (Julian Assange, Wikileaks)

Eigentlich endet Julian Assanges Freiheitsstrafe am 22. September. Eine Richterin entschied jedoch, dass er auch nach dem Verbüßen seiner Haftstrafe im Gefängnis bleiben muss. (Julian Assange, Wikileaks)

Trampoline mirror may push laser pulse through fabric of the Universe 

Simply changing a mirror may allow physicists to poke a hole in the universe.

Pictured: Definitely not a possible universe-altering fancy trampoline.

Enlarge / Pictured: Definitely not a possible universe-altering fancy trampoline. (credit: Nazar Abbas Photography / Getty Images)

Scientists want to rip the Universe apart. At least that is what a Daily Mail headline might read. Lasers can now reach power in the petawatt range. And, when you focus a laser beam that powerful, nothing survives: all matter is shredded, leaving only electrons and nuclei.

But laser physicists haven’t stopped there. Under good experimental conditions, the very fabric of space and time are torn asunder, testing quantum electrodynamics to destruction. And a new mirror may be all we need to get there.

On average, the amount of power used by humans is about 18 terawatts. A petawatt is 1,000 times larger than a terawatt. The baddest laser on the planet (currently) produces somewhere between 5 and 10 petawatts, and there are plans on the drawing board to reach 100 petawatts in the near future. The trick is that the power is not available all the time. Each of these lasers produces somewhere between 5-5000 J of energy for a very very short time (between a picosecond—10-12s—and a few femtoseconds—10-15s). During that instant, however, the power flow is immense.

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New clues show how Russia’s grid hackers aimed for physical destruction

2016 Russian cyberattack on Ukraine intended to cause far more damage than it did.

Transmission lines.

Enlarge (credit: Joshua Lott/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

For nearly three years, the December 2016 cyberattack on the Ukrainian power grid has presented a menacing puzzle. Two days before Christmas that year, Russian hackers planted a unique specimen of malware in the network of Ukraine's national grid operator, Ukrenergo. Just before midnight, they used it to open every circuit breaker in a transmission station north of Kyiv. The result was one of the most dramatic attacks in Russia's years-long cyberwar against its western neighbor, an unprecedented, automated blackout across a broad swath of Ukraine's capital.

But an hour later, Ukrenergo's operators were able to simply switch the power back on again. Which raised the question: Why would Russia's hackers build a sophisticated cyberweapon and plant it in the heart of a nation's power grid only to trigger a one-hour blackout?

A new theory offers a potential answer. Researchers at the industrial-control system cybersecurity firm Dragos have reconstructed a timeline of the 2016 blackout attack [PDF] based on a reexamination of the malware’s code and network logs pulled from Ukrenergo’s systems. They say that hackers intended not merely to cause a short-lived disruption of the Ukrainian grid but to inflict lasting damage that could have led to power outages for weeks or even months. That distinction would make the blackout malware one of only three pieces of code ever spotted in the wild aimed at not just disrupting physical equipment but destroying it, as Stuxnet did in Iran in 2009 and 2010 and as the malware Triton was designed to do in a Saudi Arabian oil refinery in 2017.

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Apple TV+: Disney-Chef tritt aus Apple-Verwaltungsrat zurück

Nach acht Jahren ist Disney-Chef Bob Iger aus dem Verwaltungsrat von Apple zurückgetreten – pünktlich zur Ankündigung von Apple TV+. Die Konkurrenz zum eigenen Disney Plus dürfte den Manager zu der Entscheidung bewegt haben. (Apple TV+, Apple)

Nach acht Jahren ist Disney-Chef Bob Iger aus dem Verwaltungsrat von Apple zurückgetreten - pünktlich zur Ankündigung von Apple TV+. Die Konkurrenz zum eigenen Disney Plus dürfte den Manager zu der Entscheidung bewegt haben. (Apple TV+, Apple)

iPhone: PIN-Sperre in iOS 13 umgangen

Der Sperrbildschirm in iOS 13 kann mit einem einfachen Trick umgangen werden. So kann auf das Adressbuch des Besitzers zugegriffen werden. iOS 13 soll am 19. September veröffentlicht werden – die Lücke möchte Apple bis dahin nicht schließen. (Apple, In…

Der Sperrbildschirm in iOS 13 kann mit einem einfachen Trick umgangen werden. So kann auf das Adressbuch des Besitzers zugegriffen werden. iOS 13 soll am 19. September veröffentlicht werden - die Lücke möchte Apple bis dahin nicht schließen. (Apple, Instant Messenger)

Apple: Microsoft Office auf neuem iPad nicht mehr kostenlos nutzbar

Das neue, günstige iPad hat eine Display-Diagonale von 10,2 Zoll – und ist damit zu groß, um Microsofts Office-Apps kostenlos verwenden zu können. Die Grenze liegt bei 10,1 Zoll, die 0,1 Zoll zu viel werden für die Nutzer nicht ganz billig. (iPad, Appl…

Das neue, günstige iPad hat eine Display-Diagonale von 10,2 Zoll - und ist damit zu groß, um Microsofts Office-Apps kostenlos verwenden zu können. Die Grenze liegt bei 10,1 Zoll, die 0,1 Zoll zu viel werden für die Nutzer nicht ganz billig. (iPad, Apple)