Plex Slammed By Huge Copyright Coalition For Not Policing Pirates

Plex has become the latest neutral technology to get slammed for not doing enough to prevent movie and TV show piracy. According to pro-copyright lobby group CreativeFuture, which represents more than 560 companies and organizations, Plex – like Kodi – is a “dangerous digital media player” that has joined the ranks of “internet heavyweights who refuse to take responsibility for the criminal behavior on their platforms.”

Drom: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, torrent sites and more. We also have an annual VPN review.

In days gone by, living rooms around the world could be found stacked with video cassette tapes full of films and TV shows. Some bought, others recorded at home, these copies would need to be waded through, to find whatever content the owner fancied watching that day.

With the rise of digital technology, however, such physical collections have largely disappeared, replaced by copies that occupy virtually zero space, with thousands of movies, TV shows, music tracks, and photographs effortlessly stored on relatively cheap hard drives.

Paper-based indexing systems, for those who cared to maintain them in the analog age, have now been replaced by software that not only does all the hard work but also makes collections a thing of beauty. While there are alternatives, Emby for example, the clear market leader is Plex. However, the company behind the software is now facing a backlash for failing to control how people interact with its creation.

According to CreativeFuture, a pro-copyright coalition of more than 560 companies and organizations, Plex – which is basically a pretty media player – is helping to fan the flames of piracy. While there are some exceptions which we’ll come to shortly, people generally need to be in physical possession of movies or TV shows to watch them using Plex, with torrents providing the necessary material.

“[T]he problem now finds itself on a dangerous precipice where it could easily slip right back into becoming a crisis again, as it was in the mid-2000s – before streaming was all the rage,” Creative Future writes.

“Thanks to a rapidly growing media application called Plex, torrent-based piracy is back in vogue, and better than ever (for criminals who have no problem with profiting from content that doesn’t belong to them, that is).”

To set the scene, that Plex is some kind of ‘rogue’ application, CreativeFuture (CF) aligns the media player with another piece of software, one that has also suffered reputational damage as a result of its users’ activities. The choice of adjective to describe both is particularly interesting.

“To understand what Plex is and how it functions, it is helpful to look at Kodi – another dangerous digital media player that we have written about repeatedly here at CreativeFuture,” CF notes.

The claim that Plex is dangerous is supported by an article published in The Verge, which reported on so-called ‘Plex shares’. Without going into the minutiae, ‘shares’ effectively allow Plex users to access content on other users’ Plex servers which, in some cases, could have been obtained illegally.

That some Plex users allow others to access huge libraries of pirated content is a fact, with some being targeted by anti-piracy groups such as BREIN. But, in common with so many piracy controversies in recent years, CF feels that if Plex users are doing something illegal, then the company behind the Plex software should be held responsible for their actions.

In this respect, CF claims that like “most” tech platforms, Plex is doing what it can to avoid accountability.

“In turning a blind eye to its piracy problem, Plex has joined the ranks of internet heavyweights who refuse to take responsibility for the criminal behavior on their platforms,” the copyright coalition notes.

“With heightened scrutiny on the biggest platforms, lawmakers across the country, and abroad, have increasingly demonstrated less tolerance for tech companies that sidestep law and order in their relentless quest for user growth.”

Quite what CF believes Plex should do isn’t covered. If we take current industry strategies as a benchmark, we might guess that the organization would encourage the use of some kind of pro-active filtering mechanism, which would prevent Plex users from adding potentially infringing material to their own computers.

Of course, that would mean massive implications for end-user privacy, almost impossible calculations to determine who is allowed to add content to a library within the law in multiple jurisdictions, plus an inevitable backlash and migration to other platforms that reject such intrusions. It would also require the company behind Plex to get deeply involved and therefore acquire ‘knowledge’ of infringing user behavior, something that raises all kinds of red flags.

The piece, which deserves to be read in its own right, also accuses or Reddit of being a “notorious piracy-enabling outlet”. What it fails to mention, and probably should’ve done, however, is that Plex is already making progress with various entertainment industry groups to tackle piracy in the best way possible – providing users with easy access to licensed content.

In 2019, Plex announced it would begin streaming thousands of free movies, TV shows and music documentaries from within the app, after striking deals with relevant rightsholders. The content is ad-supported and the hope is to expand the offering in the future.

“Over time, we’ll be adding more stuff from different studios and creators — from Oscar-winning Hollywood movies to the latest from India, Russia, China, Japan, Africa, Latin America, Australia, New Zealand, and Europe to really cool independent movies fresh off the festival circuit,” the company said.

That Plex now finds itself in the firing line isn’t really a surprise – if Reddit is a “notorious” enabler of piracy, then any company with end users could find itself tarred with the same brush. TorrentFreak contacted the software developer for its opinion on the latest set of claims but at the time of publication, Plex chose to remain silent.

Drom: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, torrent sites and more. We also have an annual VPN review.

Rocket Report: Psyched up for Falcon Heavy, Another SLS launch delay

“The problem with the MK1 stuff was that I didn’t have my eye fully on the ball.”

A Falcon 9 rocket launches from Vandenberg Air Force Base.

Enlarge / A Falcon 9 rocket launches from Vandenberg Air Force Base. (credit: SpaceX)

Welcome to Edition 2.35 of the Rocket Report! There's lots to get to this week, especially in the realm of heavy-lift rockets. I also want to let readers know that there will be no report next week due to range maintenance, errr, a family vacation. See you in two weeks!

As always, we welcome reader submissions, and if you don't want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site). 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.

Relativity Space expands Mississippi testing. In a feature published this week, Ars revealed that Relativity has expanded its portfolio at NASA's Stennis Space Center to encompass two test cells at the E-2 complex. The California-based company now controls two thirds of the rocket-engine test stands at the NASA facility. Relativity acquired the 20-year leases through a competitive process.

Read 28 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Raspberry Pi Imager: Pi-Tool vereinfacht Erstellen einer Installations-SD-Karte

Auf Basis des Noobs-Tools hat die Raspberry Pi Foundation ein kleines Programm erstellt, mit dem Nutzer einfach und schnell Installationsimages auf SD-Karten für den Raspberry Pi erstellen können. Das Tool kommt für Windows, MacOS und Ubuntu. (Raspberr…

Auf Basis des Noobs-Tools hat die Raspberry Pi Foundation ein kleines Programm erstellt, mit dem Nutzer einfach und schnell Installationsimages auf SD-Karten für den Raspberry Pi erstellen können. Das Tool kommt für Windows, MacOS und Ubuntu. (Raspberry Pi, Linux)

Starring Nick Offerman as bearded tech-bro enigma, FX’s Devs has a lot going on

Ex-Machina scribe Alex Garland’s FX show continues his skepticism of things beyond control.

Sci-fi writer/director Alex Garland has some strong feelings about modern science and technology. If you haven't yet seen his visually stunning and ideologically complex films, Ex-Machina and Annihilation, let's just say he holds some skepticism about things that evolve beyond human control. But Garland evidently also has some feelings about dealing with film studios and production companies (many of which may not fancy the unflinching outcomes of his stories). So for his latest idea, he turned to the mini-series masters at FX to make his TV debut: Devs, an eight-part miniseries that seems to take Garland's emerging mythos and apply it to the tech/research industry itself.

A quantum leap

Devs boils down to the story of an individual against an organization. Software engineer Lily (Sonoya Mizuno, the actor behind Kyoko in Ex-Machina here again working with Garland) works at Amaya, an ambiguous but clearly industry-leading quantum-computing company. CEO Forest (Nick Offerman, Parks & Recreation) started Amaya with a clear vision unbeknownst to most employees after the death of his young daughter (hence the company name), and now he employs the best talent he can find no matter the cost or the unorthodoxy involved. Staff includes folks like former political-security-vet-turned-chief-of-security, Kenton (Zach Grenier), devs both young and old like teen-ish Lyndon (Cailee Spaeny) and maybe-old-boomer Stewart (Stephen McKinley Henderson), and Lily's talented Russian boyfriend Sergei (Karl Glusman).

Things get moving when Sergei gets some big news. After demonstrating an algorithm able to predict the movements of a simple yet living organism several seconds into the future, he's promoted immediately to Amaya's devs team. Most Silicon Valley companies have a devs team, of course, but at Amaya this is the absolute cream of the crop—and the team remains a mystery to all unworthy of the office. Whereas most of Amaya sits in modern architecture among a beautiful Northern Californian forest, the devs' facility is a decent distance from the rest of the campus. Its foreboding, highly secured design makes it look like a hybrid of Fort Knox and the Parthenon. (The production design of this facility is a highlight; it's over-the-top, indulgent, and looks like a temple, which subtly emphasizes the importance of what's happening and how team members should revere this project.) When Sergei gets invited, he immediately accepts—but he can't tell anyone anything about the process or work, including Lily.

Read 11 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Cypress Semiconductor: Trump soll Infineon-Übernahme in USA blockieren

Das Komitee für Auslandsinvestitionen (CFIUS) der USA stuft nach Huawei nun auch den deutschen Halbleiterhersteller Infineon als Sicherheitsrisiko ein. Eine Übernahme von Cypress Semiconductor wird wohl blockiert. (Infineon, PC-Hardware)

Das Komitee für Auslandsinvestitionen (CFIUS) der USA stuft nach Huawei nun auch den deutschen Halbleiterhersteller Infineon als Sicherheitsrisiko ein. Eine Übernahme von Cypress Semiconductor wird wohl blockiert. (Infineon, PC-Hardware)

Brennstoffzellenauto: Pack die Metallhydrid-Tabletten in den Tank

Hohen Druck oder eine niedrige Temperatur braucht es, um Wasserstoff in den Tank eines Brennstoffzellenautos zu bringen. Eine neue Technik, die Forscher in Norddeutschland entwickeln, soll den Umgang mit dem Wasserstoff deutlich vereinfachen. VW testet…

Hohen Druck oder eine niedrige Temperatur braucht es, um Wasserstoff in den Tank eines Brennstoffzellenautos zu bringen. Eine neue Technik, die Forscher in Norddeutschland entwickeln, soll den Umgang mit dem Wasserstoff deutlich vereinfachen. VW testet den Tank bereits. Ein Bericht von Werner Pluta (Brennstoffzellenauto, Technologie)

Ähnliche Domains: Facebook verklagt Namecheap

Facebook will an die Daten von 45 Domaineigentümern, die Domains wie facebo0k-login.com bei Namecheap registriert haben. Der Domainhändler wirft Facebook die Umgehung rechtlicher Standards vor. Nun hat Facebook Klage eingereicht. (Domain, Soziales Netz…

Facebook will an die Daten von 45 Domaineigentümern, die Domains wie facebo0k-login.com bei Namecheap registriert haben. Der Domainhändler wirft Facebook die Umgehung rechtlicher Standards vor. Nun hat Facebook Klage eingereicht. (Domain, Soziales Netz)

Smart TV: Samsungs Top-8K-Fernseher kostet bis zu 12.000 US-Dollar

Samsung hat die Preise seines TV-Portfolios für das Jahr 2020 bekanntgegeben: An der Spitze steht der 8K-Fernseher Q950T, der bis zu 12.000 US-Dollar kostet. Bei den 4K-Geräten gibt es verglichen mit den Vorjahresmodellen Preissenkungen, die Fernseher …

Samsung hat die Preise seines TV-Portfolios für das Jahr 2020 bekanntgegeben: An der Spitze steht der 8K-Fernseher Q950T, der bis zu 12.000 US-Dollar kostet. Bei den 4K-Geräten gibt es verglichen mit den Vorjahresmodellen Preissenkungen, die Fernseher sind aber technisch auch etwas reduziert. (Samsung, Heimkino)

Clearview AI: Kunden nutzen Gesichtserkennung als Party-Gag

Statt zur Verbrechersuche haben Kunden der Gesichtserkennungssoftware Clearview AI ihren Zugang wohl auch für private Zwecke genutzt. Eigentlich sollten Polizisten die Software für Untersuchungen nutzen. (Gesichtserkennung, KI)

Statt zur Verbrechersuche haben Kunden der Gesichtserkennungssoftware Clearview AI ihren Zugang wohl auch für private Zwecke genutzt. Eigentlich sollten Polizisten die Software für Untersuchungen nutzen. (Gesichtserkennung, KI)

Playstation Productions: Das erste The Last of Us wird zur TV-Serie

HBO und Playstation Productions arbeiten an einer TV-Serie auf der Basis von The Last of Us, auch das Entwicklerstudio Naughty Dog ist beteiligt. Bei dessen Actionspiel Uncharted tut sich derzeit viel bei der Verfilmung – unter anderem bei den Schauspi…

HBO und Playstation Productions arbeiten an einer TV-Serie auf der Basis von The Last of Us, auch das Entwicklerstudio Naughty Dog ist beteiligt. Bei dessen Actionspiel Uncharted tut sich derzeit viel bei der Verfilmung - unter anderem bei den Schauspielern. (The Last of Us, Sony)