Twitch streamers make thousand by literally just sleeping

You snooze you win.

Twitch streamers make thousand by literally just sleeping

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Moments before falling asleep live on Twitch, streamer Matthew “Mizkif” Rinaudo thought about how pissed off his mom would be if he told her that he made money sleeping.

“She thinks I do nothing now,” Rinaudo joked to his live viewers. “Wait until she finds out I literally slept and made money.”

Rinaudo enabled a bot that let his viewers submit videos if they made a cash donation, and went to bed. On the top right of the screen, the clips played on, while most of the display was taken up by Rinaudo resting on his back or side. Many hours and many cringy videos later, he woke up $5,600 richer. To show he wasn’t blind to how the whole stunt came off, Rinaudo gave a Nintendo Switch away to one of his patrons.

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New Anti-Piracy Campaign Piles On The Scare Tactics But Who’s Scared?

Yet another major anti-piracy campaign launched last week declaring that visiting pirate sites exposes passwords, photos, plus financial and medical records to criminals intent on ruining people’s lives. This scare tactic approach is gaining momentum around the globe, with claims that it has a positive effect on the public. But does it, or should it, really?

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

Anyone who creates creative content has the right to protect that work from unauthorized wholesale reproduction. It is their work, their investment, and they should be able to benefit from the toils of their labors, copyright law dictates.

The reality, of course, is that while people can claim their rights all day long, there are plenty of avenues to obtain that content online without paying for it. As a result, entertainment industry groups are relentless in their efforts to disrupt and discourage such behavior.

One of the tried-and-tested methods is the anti-piracy campaign. Often in the form of short videos, trailers and clips presented online, within physical media, and on TV, these presentations get around 30 seconds to make an impact on the public. That is not a long time and as a result, the creatives behind these projects have to get well….creative….for want of a better word.

In recent years, the many ‘creative’ approaches are now diverging into what appears to be a coordinated global effort to physically scare people away from piracy. All is fair and love and war, they say, but these campaigns take the truth and bend into another dimension. Take the headline message from the new anti-piracy campaign launched online and on TV by Creative Content Australia, for example.

“Accessing pirate sites to download movies and TV exposes your financial and medical details, passwords, photos and more to criminals. So not only is pirating illegal, you become a victim of your own crime. Is it really worth it, just for some free content?” the campaign material reads.

Here’s the accompanying TV advert for additional context;

The video appears to portray a member of the public seeking help from the ‘police’ after he got hacked and had his passwords and photos stolen. However, when the authorities find out he’d visited a pirate site they basically said: “Screw you, it’s your own fault, you’re on your own.”

Thirty seconds isn’t a long time to get your message over but claiming that “pirate sites expose you to hackers” simply can’t be the experience of the majority of people who use them. If this was indeed the case, people wouldn’t be flocking to them every day in their millions.

The fact that a succession of campaigns are declaring pirate sites as unsafe havens filled with hackers is a clear indicator that someone feels the message just isn’t getting through to pirates. Which, when you think about it, is pretty strange.

No campaign on planet earth will ever be able to drive the message home more effectively than actually being hacked and having your personal details stolen. Victims of such crimes rarely need to be told twice which is a fairly obvious indicator that this campaign is aimed at the vast majority who have no such problems. And if the vast majority have no issues, why all the panic?

Let’s be clear here, this isn’t a pro-piracy rant at the expense of people simply trying to make some money off the back of their hard work. This is a reaction to scare tactics that are not only insulting to people’s intelligence but are also unlikely to reach their goals. Fact: if visiting pirate sites leads to all of the things being claimed, people wouldn’t use them. If people didn’t use them, the campaign wouldn’t be needed.

These claims of ‘people’ falling victim to criminals are problematic too. Last week we reported on a huge survey carried out in the UK, which also covered public attitudes towards various types of anti-piracy campaigns. One of the suggestions was that instead of making vague claims, it might help to present real-life examples of people who became victims of hacking as a result of visiting pirate sites.

Of course, this latest campaign – just like all the others – makes no effort to do that. Instead it uses actors and well-known activists to drive home the message that people who visit such platforms get what they deserve.

“If you visit pirate websites, even the law can’t protect you,” warns Graham Burke AO, Chairman of Creative Content Australia.

“You are going to a criminally dangerous neighborhood. Pirate sites are big businesses and exist solely to make money by robbing you, or worse. This is an area where your cyber security is in danger and malware, blackmail and identity theft are commonplace.”

It’s true that pirate sites can indeed have terrible ads and of course, malware can be present in downloads, most commonly software releases where such things are easily hidden. But blackmail and identity theft are such serious crimes that one would think that if a pirate site had been involved in such things, the police would’ve got involved and we would’ve heard about it. We haven’t.

On the other hand, it is extremely easy to find reports of people getting scammed via methods that have nothing to do with pirate sites, such as by telephone or phishing attacks. This is where things start to break down and make nightmarish anti-piracy campaigns lose credibility.

The awful experiences being described in most of these campaigns aren’t the experiences of the majority of people who use these sites. If truth be known, most people reading this article have probably had more attempts to have their identities stolen via email in the past three months than anywhere else on the Internet, pirate sites included.

Indeed, when we spoke to security company MalwareBytes on this topic in 2018, the company told us that pirate sites aren’t the biggest risk at all – email is.

“These days, most common infections come from malicious spam campaigns and drive-by exploit attacks,” said Adam Kujawa, Director of Malware Intelligence.

In response to claims in another dubious anti-piracy campaign in the same year, security expert Mikko Hypponen from F-Secure told us that it was false to claim that pirate sites are the number one source for malware online. He again pointed to email as the number one risk.

“Pirate sites are not the most common source for infections, and it hasn’t been since the early 1990s,” he informed TorrentFreak. “Today, the most common ways of getting infected are via malicious email attachments, browser plugins and extensions and web exploit kits.”

The bottom line here is that there is absolutely nothing wrong with anti-piracy campaigns per se but they must be believable and based in fact, not a twisted version of the truth. Also, the companies behind them might also consider being a little less cynical.

While one can’t expect a guide on how to pirate safely, campaigns that only warn of the dangers without offering some advice beyond “don’t use pirate sites” suggest that there’s no genuine concern about the safety of Internet users. In fact, the message in this campaign is actually “you’re on your own and nobody will help you.”

If only on a subconscious level, that won’t go unnoticed. Somehow, these messages need to move forward more positively. It’s become a cliche but all of the content in one place at a fair price from a legitimate source is the best way to stop people visiting pirate sites. Or at least powerful enough to stop a significant number from preferring them, especially when considering all of the horrors that lie within….

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

Study: building a better super-capacitor out of super-stinky durian fruit

Durian and jackfruit make better, cheaper aerogels for super-capacitors

Widely known and revered in southeast Asia as the "king of fruits", the durian is distinctive for its large size, strong odor (often compared to rotten onions, raw sewage, or turpentine), and formidable thorn-covered husk

Enlarge / Widely known and revered in southeast Asia as the "king of fruits", the durian is distinctive for its large size, strong odor (often compared to rotten onions, raw sewage, or turpentine), and formidable thorn-covered husk (credit: Danita Delimont/Getty Images)

The ubiquity in the modern world of consumer electronics has created a corresponding demand for better super-capacitors for energy storage, thereby enabling rapid charging for our mobile phones, tablets, laptops, and electric cars. But the best materials for building high-performance super-capacitors are often costly. Now scientists from the University of Sydney in Australia have successfully created a low-cost alternative, building electrodes for super-capacitors out of waste scraps from durian and jackfruit, according to a new paper in the Journal of Energy Storage.

"Durian waste, as a zero-cost substance that the community wants to get rid of urgently due to its repulsive, nauseous smell, is a sustainable source that can transform the waste into a product to substantially reduce the cost of energy storage through our chemical-free, green synthesis protocol," said co-author Vincent Gomes of the University of Sydney in Australia.

Scientists have typically relied on a variety of carbon-based materials as electrodes when building super-capacitors: activated carbon, carbon nanotubes, and graphene sheets, for example. It's best to use materials that boast high porosity, since they help diffuse electrolytes through the electrodes, and to maximize surface area.

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Virgin Media breach outs some customers’ porn, gore, and gambling habits

Virgin says the information accessed was limited. Some customers would beg to differ.

Virgin Media breach outs some customers’ porn, gore, and gambling habits

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Virgin Media, the British telecom and Cable TV provider, has suffered a breach that allowed unauthorized access to customer data, some of which reportedly linked subscribers to porn, gambling, and extreme violence content.

Virgin Media said in a post that unauthorized access was to a marketing database that included “limited contact information such as names, home and email addresses, and phone numbers” for about 900,000 subscribers. The company went on to say that the breached database contained no passwords or financial information.

Despite Virgin Media characterizing the accessed data as limited contact information, the Financial Times and the BBC reported that the compromised database also included details of some 1,100 customers who had used an online form to request that specific websites be blocked or unblocked. Some of those sites offered content involving porn, gambling, and extreme gore videos.

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The Ars 13: Our top indie game picks from PAX East 2020

VR swordfights, historical dramas, shark simulations, and everything in between.

I’ve been writing about games long enough to remember when the concept of an “indie game” was new and odd. It seems like just yesterday that getting a game to market without the help of a major publisher or console maker was so rare as to border on impossible. Today, though, increased access to digital distribution, easy-to-learn game development tools, and cheap game development hardware has produced thousands upon thousands of independent game developers, all fighting for a small portion of gamers’ limited attention spans.

Nowhere is that battle more apparent than at PAX East, where the crowded Boston Convention Center floor is packed to the gills with hundreds of indie game booths that range from single-person development teams to mini-conglomerate indie publishers like Devolver Digital, Tiny Build, and Annapurna Interactive.

Playing every indie game at a modern PAX East would take multiple weeks; a four-day show just doesn't offer enough time to take it all in. But we did our best, sampling from a wide variety of the most interesting indie prospects. Here, in alphabetical order, are 13 indie games that stood out from the PAX East crowd.

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Lotus Evija: Lotus’ Zwei-Millionen-Euro-Sportwagen für 2020 ausverkauft

Es gibt für alles einen Markt – auch für Autos, die weit über zwei Millionen Euro kosten: Lotus hat die Jahresproduktion 2020 seines Elektrosportwagens Lotus Evija verkauft, noch bevor sie gestartet ist. (Elektroauto, Technologie)

Es gibt für alles einen Markt - auch für Autos, die weit über zwei Millionen Euro kosten: Lotus hat die Jahresproduktion 2020 seines Elektrosportwagens Lotus Evija verkauft, noch bevor sie gestartet ist. (Elektroauto, Technologie)

Hackers can clone millions of Toyota, Hyundai, and Kia keys

Encryption flaws in common anti-theft feature expose vehicles from major OEMs.

The all-new Toyota Camry. It's lower and wider and sleeker than before, and we think that from this angle it succeeded in making it look quite sporty.

Enlarge / The all-new Toyota Camry. It's lower and wider and sleeker than before, and we think that from this angle it succeeded in making it look quite sporty. (credit: Jonathan Gitlin)

Over the past few years, owners of cars with keyless start systems have learned to worry about so-called relay attacks, in which hackers exploit radio-enabled keys to steal vehicles without leaving a trace. Now it turns out that many millions of other cars that use chip-enabled mechanical keys are also vulnerable to high-tech theft. A few cryptographic flaws combined with a little old-fashioned hot-wiring—or even a well-placed screwdriver—lets hackers clone those keys and drive away in seconds.

Researchers from KU Leuven in Belgium and the University of Birmingham in the UK earlier this week revealed new vulnerabilities they found in the encryption systems used by immobilizers, the radio-enabled devices inside of cars that communicate at close range with a key fob to unlock the car's ignition and allow it to start. Specifically, they found problems in how Toyota, Hyundai, and Kia implement a Texas Instruments encryption system called DST80. A hacker who swipes a relatively inexpensive Proxmark RFID reader/transmitter device near the key fob of any car with DST80 inside can gain enough information to derive its secret cryptographic value. That, in turn, would allow the attacker to use the same Proxmark device to impersonate the key inside the car, disabling the immobilizer and letting them start the engine.

The researchers say the affected car models include the Toyota Camry, Corolla, and RAV4; the Kia Optima, Soul, and Rio; and the Hyundai I10, I20, and I40. The full list of vehicles that the researchers found to have the cryptographic flaws in their immobilizers is below:

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Cloud Gaming: 2K Games verlässt Nvidias Dienst Geforce Now

Kein Civilization und Bioshock mehr auf Geforce Now: Mit 2K Games zieht ein weiterer wichtiger Publisher seine Spiele von Nvidias Spiele-Streaming-Dienst zurück. (Geforce Now, Spielestreaming)

Kein Civilization und Bioshock mehr auf Geforce Now: Mit 2K Games zieht ein weiterer wichtiger Publisher seine Spiele von Nvidias Spiele-Streaming-Dienst zurück. (Geforce Now, Spielestreaming)

Coronavirus: Technologie-Konferenz SXSW abgesagt, Verschiebung möglich

Zu viele Besucher, zu enger Kontakt: Aus Sorge vor einer weiteren Ausbreitung des Coronavirus hat die Stadt Austin veranlasst, die Konferenz SXSW am geplanten Termin ausfallen zu lassen. Die Veranstalter erwägen eine Verschiebung auf einen späteren Zei…

Zu viele Besucher, zu enger Kontakt: Aus Sorge vor einer weiteren Ausbreitung des Coronavirus hat die Stadt Austin veranlasst, die Konferenz SXSW am geplanten Termin ausfallen zu lassen. Die Veranstalter erwägen eine Verschiebung auf einen späteren Zeitpunkt. (Coronavirus, Google)

Coronavirus Outbreak Triggers Surge in Pirated Downloads of the Film ‘Contagion’

The Coronavirus outbreak continues to dominate the news worldwide. While health experts and governments are working hard to contain the threat, the public is eager for information. In addition to news and traditional media, the interest also spread to pirate sites, with downloads of Steven Soderbergh’s 2011 classic ‘Contagion’ skyrocketing.

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

Like any other Hollywood movie, pirated copies of the movie “Contagion” appeared on pirate sites around the world at the end of 2011.

At the time, it was briefly listed among the most pirated movie titles but, as time went by, interest waned.

That pattern is all too common. Over the past few years, the movie was downloaded a few hundred times per day, at most. In January, however, something changed.

When the Coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak started to hit the mainstream news, some people started to link it to the fictional “MEV-1” pandemic depicted in “Contagion.” Although the two can hardly be compared, besides being virus outbreaks, interest in the 2011 movie suddenly spiked.

Google Trends reveals that searches for the phrase “contagion movie” started to rise in January, reaching a peak around the end of that month. Later in February, as the Coronavirus started to spread globally, searches flared up again.

The increasing demand directly impacted sales. Over the past days, Buzzfeed and other several news outlets reported that movie rentals for “Contagion” had gone up, putting the movie in the top 10 of iTunes movie rental chart, as well as the trending list.

Since sales patterns are typically not too different from piracy trends, we decided to take a look at the popularity of the movie on torrent sites. This idea was opted by Julia Alexander of The Verge, and with help from IKnowWhatYouDownload, we were able to get some hard data.

As mentioned earlier, before the Coronavirus reached the mainstream news the film was being downloaded roughly 200 times a day. On January 24, this went up to 1,543, and a day later 9,369 downloads were recorded. A week later, more than 25,000 people downloaded the movie during a single day.

This download pattern is very similar to the Google Trends chart. Both show the same initial peak, with interest picking up again at the end of February.

Tracking BitTorrent downloads is a complicated process so IKnowWhatYouDownload’s numbers are likely not 100% precise. But the trend is obvious – there’s a massive increase in “Contagion” piracy.

Looking at the geographical data we see that most downloads came from South Korea initially. On the first day of February, 22% came from South Korea, which is the country that’s most affected by the Coronavirus after China. Only 6% of the downloads came from the US, and fewer than 1% from the UK.

A month later this changed a little. The US (10%) took over from South Korea (9%), and interest in the UK went up, which was good for 4% of the downloads on March 1.

The numbers reported here only apply to BitTorrent downloads, which represent only a fraction of the entire piracy landscape. With direct download and streaming sources added to the mix, the download figures may be several times higher.

Overall it’s clear that the Coronavirus outbreak has raised the interest in “Contagion,” both through legal and illegal channels. It’s important to keep in mind, however, that the film has very little to do with the challenges the world’s facing today.

After all, nothing spreads like fear….

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