Coronavirus Lockdown Boosts Interest in Pirate Sites and Services

In response to the coronavirus threat, Italy has issued a countrywide lockdown, forcing many people to stay indoors. This policy has led to an increase in Internet traffic, including a spike in interest for pirate sites. At the same time, the coronavirus continues to raise interest in the movie Contagion, which reappeared in the weekly list of ten most pirated films after nearly a decade.

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

The coronavirus pandemic is leading to unprecedented situations around the world, with governments implementing far-reaching measures to contain the threat.

These measures are creating new realities affecting many industries. However, most people understand and agree that they’re being taken in their best interest.

Health care workers are putting in extra hours, something they are being rightfully applauded for. At the same time, however, other people are being encouraged or even ordered to stay indoors to limit infection spread.

In Italy, the government ordered a lockdown of the entire country last week. Dozens of millions of people must stay indoors and are only allowed to go outside when it’s absolutely necessary. With this measure, the authorities hope to flatten the spread of the virus.

Mandatory home confinement has a strong effect on society as a whole but while health and security are the top priorities, people are also looking for news and entertainment to get through the days. As a result, Internet traffic is rising.

According to Cloudflare, traffic to its northern Italy node has grown more than 30% compared to earlier this year. While part of this is the result of remote working and news consumption, there also appears to be a spike in video streaming.

Looking at Italy’s Google search trend for the term “Netflix,” we see an obvious increase over the past several days, as clearly shown below. Apparently many people are passing the time by watching movies and TV-shows.

This effect isn’t limited to legal streaming options either. All large pirate streaming services in Italy are noticing increased interest as well. Searches for popular local sites such as Guardaserie, Filmpertutti, Altadefinizione, CB01, and Eurostreaming, all skyrocketed over the past few days.

All of these sites are among the top pirate sites in the country, where local pirate sites traditionally overshadow international ones.

Italy is not the only country where extreme precautions are being taken. In Spain, a lockdown has also been in place since last weekend. There is no recent Google trend data to measure the effect yet, but we may see a similar spike there.

TorrentFreak spoke to the owner of one of the largest torrent sites on the net. Contrary to the trend reported above, he isn’t seeing a massive spike in Italian visitors. However, the site in question never had many visitors from Italy.

The coronavirus does appear to have a broader effect on the file-sharing ecosystem though. Download and streaming service Real-Debrid is reporting a significant uptick in traffic, breaking new records.

“Corona virus has an impact on the traffic we have on our service but also peering capabilities of many ISPs, we had a traffic spike yesterday night (new record), we expect to get this amount of traffic for quite some time but, for now, we still have enough capabilities,” they reported on Twitter.

After installing a new server, Real-Debrid reported another 20% boost in traffic a few hours later.

Not only has traffic to pirate sites and services increased, but the nature of the current pandemic has also raised the interest in specific content. We previously reported that the number of downloads of the movie “Contagion” had increased significantly, and this trend continues.

After the popular torrent release group YTS released two new rips of “Contagion” last week, the movie was downloaded hundreds of thousands of times, enough to earn a spot in our weekly top 10 of most pirated films.

This is an unprecedented listing, as the movie is almost a decade old. Never before has an older movie made its way into the top list, years after it was first featured.

It’s clear that the coronavirus outbreak is affecting most parts of the world, severely disrupting society. While these changes in piracy habits and streaming patterns are worth documenting, they are of course entirely insignificant in the grand scheme of things.

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

F1 drivers and other pros switch to esports in the age of coronavirus

Stars of F1, NASCAR, and IndyCar went digital on Sunday in three esports events.

As we're all settling into this new reality of working from home and social isolation, lots of people will be looking for distractions to take their minds off the most serious global public health crisis since the H1N1 pandemic more than a century ago. That's made a little harder with the cancelation of just about every televised sporting event, but perhaps in the age of coronavirus, esports might step in and fill that gap. On Sunday, we got a taste of how that might work, as professional racers from F1, IndyCar, and other series took things digital, drawing big crowds on YouTube and Twitch in the process.

Sunday was supposed to be a big day in racing. If we weren't experiencing a terrifying pandemic, my plan was to start off in the morning with Formula 1, which was supposed to kick off its 2020 season with the Australian Grand Prix. F1 had already postponed a race in China set to take place in April, while the Bahrain Grand Prix (scheduled for March 22) was going to take place with no spectators. Then, on the eve of the Australian event, the McLaren team announced one of its team members had tested positive for coronavirus. What followed was most undignified, as Formula 1, the race promoter, and the regional government all tried to hide from their responsibility to the public, before eventually bowing to the inevitable and canceling the event even as fans were lining up to get in.

Sunday afternoon was going to involve watching the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, which was supposed to be the start of IndyCar's 2020 season. As coronavirus fears grew in the preceding weeks, IndyCar had decided to go ahead and run the event without spectators, but it too had to face reality, announcing last week that it would hold off on racing in March and April.

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Trump reportedly offered $1B to poach coronavirus vax for US use only

A vaccine made in Germany would be “for the whole world,” health minister said.

Closeup photograph of hands in protective gear manipulating medical equipment.

Enlarge / A man pipettes a blue liquid in a laboratory of the biopharmaceutical company Curevac in Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany, Feb. 24 2020. (credit: Sebastian Gollnow | picture alliance | Getty Images)

Scientists around the world are on the hunt for a vaccine to protect against novel coronavirus disease COVID-19—and apparently, the Trump administration has been trying to poach some of those scientists to make the United States first to market, should a vaccine successfully be developed.

German pharmaceutical firm CureVac since January has been researching a potential vaccine for countering the novel coronavirus that is grinding daily life in dozens of nations to a halt. Over the weekend, German newspaper Welt am Sonntag reported US President Donald Trump offered CureVac about $1 billion to obtain the vaccine "only for the United States." The report also said Germany was trying to counter-offer.

The offer "arose from a March 2 meeting" at the White House, The New York Times reported. President Trump as well as Vice President Mike Pence were in attendance for at least part of the meeting, as was CureVac CEO Daniel Menichella.

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Javascript: Github übernimmt NPM

Nach einem turbulenten Jahr wechselt die Javascript-Registry NPM zum Codehoster Github. Der Dienst soll kostenfrei bleiben und integriert werden. (Github, Javascript)

Nach einem turbulenten Jahr wechselt die Javascript-Registry NPM zum Codehoster Github. Der Dienst soll kostenfrei bleiben und integriert werden. (Github, Javascript)

French antitrust watchdog hits Apple with its biggest fine ever: $1.2 billion

Two wholesalers that worked with Apple were also fined. Apple plans to appeal.

Enormous, circular complex surrounded by suburban sprawl.

Enlarge / The Apple Park campus stands in this aerial photograph taken above Cupertino in October 2019. (credit: Sam Hall/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Apple has been fined $1.2 billion by a French antitrust watchdog for anticompetitive activities. It is the largest fine ever processed by France’s antitrust regulators, and it follows eight years of preparation on the part of the watchdog.

The decision involves not just Apple but two wholesalers named Tech Data and Ingram Micro, which were fined 76 million and 63 million, respectively. A statement from the French regulator cited the following activity as the basis for the fine:

Apple and its two wholesalers agreed not to compete with each other and to prevent distributors from competing with each other, thereby sterilizing the wholesale market for Apple products.

Explaining the record-high fine, the regulator wrote:

Read 8 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Daily Deals (3-16-2020)

The UE Blast portable Bluetooth speaker with Amazon’s Alexa voice assistant baked in has a list price of $180, but Verizon is currently selling it for $43… and throwing in a charging dock as part of the deal. Meanwhile, Amazon’s selli…

The UE Blast portable Bluetooth speaker with Amazon’s Alexa voice assistant baked in has a list price of $180, but Verizon is currently selling it for $43… and throwing in a charging dock as part of the deal. Meanwhile, Amazon’s selling a pair of Plantronics wireless headphones for 75-percent off, eBay if offering 15-percent off a […]

Verily’s COVID-19 screening site goes live, is already over capacity

There’s an extremely simple three-question survey and only two testing sites.

Google, its sister company Verily, and the US government are teaming up to create two separate information and screening websites for COVID-19. The websites were clumsily announced over the weekend by President Donald Trump and Google public relations, and today the first website, a Verily-developed site for the Bay Area, has gone live.

The announcement of the site was very disorganized and confusing. Normally we would expect Google and the government to have a simultaneous announcement for a project like this, but Google PR seemed to be caught by surprise by Trump's Rose Garden press conference and took two hours to respond to the news on Twitter. When Google did respond to the president's announcement, it disputed the description of a "nationwide" site, saying the site was in the "early stages of development" and that the site would roll out in the Bay Area for testing. A day later, Google communications took a second swing at making a statement, indicating that, actually, two sites were being made by the Alphabet family, one nationwide and one for the Bay Area.

In its second statement, Google communications said that Google, not Verily, would be "partnering with the US government in developing a nationwide website that includes information about COVID-19 symptoms, risk, and testing information." Google said that this nationwide site was "In addition to... work being done by our sister company Verily to launch a pilot website that will enable individuals to do a risk assessment and be scheduled for testing at sites in the Bay Area." A report from The New York Times indicates that this effort is just as improvised behind-the-scenes as it seems from the outside: the Times reports that Google only started recruiting employees for its project the day before Trump's announcement, and as of Wednesday, Verily's site was described internally by Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai as "a planning effort."

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments

The virus has gone global—so what happens to the launch industry?

“At this time, we do not expect an impact to the launch of AEHF-6.”

United Launch Alliance hoists its Atlas V booster onto the mobile launch platform adjacent to Space Launch Complex-41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. The rocket will launch the AEHF-6 communications satellite.

Enlarge / United Launch Alliance hoists its Atlas V booster onto the mobile launch platform adjacent to Space Launch Complex-41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. The rocket will launch the AEHF-6 communications satellite. (credit: United Launch Alliance)

As the coronavirus pandemic continues to sweep the country, it is beginning to affect the global launch industry. As with pretty much every other aspect of life in this age of uncertainty and COVID-19, conditions can change on a day-by-day, if not hourly, basis.

But as of early afternoon on Monday, here's the state of play at major spaceports around the world.

Cape Canaveral, Florida

The Florida-based launch pads operated by NASA and the US Space Force in Florida remain open for business, for now. On Sunday morning, at T-0 in the countdown of a Falcon 9 rocket launch, an automatic abort triggered due to an engine power issue. The mission from Launch Complex 39A at Kennedy Space Center has been reset to launch no earlier than Wednesday.

Read 12 remaining paragraphs | Comments