Russian Cinemas Are Showing Pirated Movies Downloaded From Torrents

In response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, several Hollywood studios announced the immediate suspension of new releases in Russia. Unexpectedly, some Russian theaters are still able to show movies such as The Batman on the big screen but this isn’t down to the studios. The movies are sourced from illegal torrent sites and few seem afraid to admit it.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Pirate KeyAs the horrors caused by Russia’s invasion of neighbor Ukraine continue, the geopolitical and financial implications are being felt throughout the world.

Dozens of countries aligned with the defense of Ukraine have implemented unprecedented sanctions. From withering restrictions on Russia’s banking system to a simple refusal to do business, the desire is to restrict Putin’s ability to wage war.

On a public level, US and EU entertainment companies have also suspended business, meaning that Netflix, Spotify and similar services are a thing of the past. Hollywood studios Paramount, Disney, Warner Bros., and Sony announced a suspension of new movie releases, meaning that at least for the foreseeable future, blockbusters such as The Batman won’t be seen on Russia’s big screens.

Well, that was the plan at least.

Russia’s Cinema Industry Sounds Alarm Bells

In the wake of Hollywood’s unprecedented suspension of new releases, Russia’s Association of Cinema Owners issued a powerful statement. Representing 700 cinemas and 2,600 screens across the country, the group said that the collapse of the entire film industry was on the horizon.

“We express concern about the high probability of liquidation of the entire film industry in the country in the context of the introduction of large-scale and unprecedented sanctions by a number of states against the Russian Federation, including those directly related to cinemas,” the Association warned.

“Unfortunately, the quantity and quality of Russian films released to the public does not meet the full demand of cinemas for content. In addition, the release of some Russian films, for reasons unknown to us, has been postponed from the next dates or completely canceled despite the fact that these films received state support for production.”

With predictions of an 80% loss in revenue, the Association called on the Ministry of Culture to offer assistance. Whether any was given is unclear but in the meantime, some cinemas have been taking drastic action to put people in seats.

Where There’s The Will, There’s a Way

Around the middle of April, posts on social media sites popular in Russia (VK, Telegram) suggested that cinemas in several regions would begin screening big Hollywood movies, including ones that should not be available. The Batman (Warner Bros.), Don’t Look Up (Netflix) and I’m Blushing (Pixar) were just some of the titles mentioned.

Just days later, screenings in several Russian cities were in full swing. On April 21, a special event at the WIP contemporary art center in Moscow featured The Batman. Tickets cost around 500 rubles (US$7.00) with the organizers framing the screening as an art performance with artistic commentary on Hollywood’s departure from the Russian market.

The source for the movie was unofficial, of course. The pirated copy – complete with Russian dubbing – was downloaded from an unnamed torrent site. Utilizing the same or similar source, additional movie screenings took place at several other venues, including the Grinvich Cinema in Yekaterinburg.

pirate-cinema russia

At the time of writing, the cinema is still allowing customers to book online to watch pirated movies, including The Batman which has five performances today alone.

Who is Behind These Illegal Screenings?

Given that movie piracy is illegal in Russia (despite recent news reports stating the opposite), it’s no surprise that some cinemas are attempting to distance themselves from illegality.

In the image above, the Grinvich Cinema notes that the listing for The Batman was “compiled and posted” by the organizers of a private event. A comment from the venue’s press office stressed that “The Grinvich Cinema doesn’t show Batman” but admitted it had reached an agreement with “companies” to rent three of its screens.

While liability for the screenings would be for a court to decide, several groups in Russia are publicly driving them. Among the most prominent are ‘Kino Non-Stop’ (Cinema Non-Stop) and ‘World Movies On the Big Screen’ which advertise screenings of movies on their VK social media accounts (1,2).

batman-russia-nonstop

Smaller screenings are also being arranged less formally, with cinema-goers squeezing into small rooms and being charged nothing for the privilege. But whatever the scale, industry consensus is that such screenings are illegal and represent a return to the “dark days” of Russian cinema.

Cinema Industry Condemnation

“The illegal public demonstration of pirated, or rather, stolen, copies of films in cinemas takes the Russian cinema business out of the legal arena and returns us to the dark days of the illegal business of the 1990s,” a statement from the Association of Cinema Owners reads.

“We understand that such cases are primarily caused by panic in the industry due to the lack of an effective government response to the current critical situation of Russian cinemas and the inability of the Russian film industry in the short term to offer spectacular films that are interesting to a wide audience of cinemas, despite the impressive support of the film industry at the expense of the state budget.”

Noting that there have been no changes to Russian copyright law that permit piracy, the Association says that unlicensed screenings breach both civil and criminal law.

“We condemn the practice of illegal screening of films in Russian cinemas and call on the entire professional film community to prevent such practices,” the Association concludes.

How this problem will be solved without a halt in hostilities is unclear. Reports of fans traveling to other countries to watch the latest movies at great expense are already emerging, but that is neither practical nor sustainable.

It appears that mass piracy is now firmly back on the public agenda and it seems unlikely that Western companies will be able to do much about it. Many social media posts express support for piracy, arguing that if Western movie companies hadn’t pulled out, there would be no need for illegal screenings.

While in simple terms that is broadly true, addressing why they pulled out in the first place also provides a clear roadmap for returning to some kind of normality.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

DIY Apple Studio Display uses 2014 iMac to save $730

YouTuber strips old iMac of its components and turns it into a 5K monitor.

DIY Apple Studio Display uses 2014 iMac to save $730

Enlarge (credit: Luke Miani/YouTube)

Apple's Studio Display is much less expensive than its $5,000 Pro Display XDR. But with a starting price of $1,600, it's not cheap. For those who need 14,745,600 pixels, though, like video editors and graphic designers, there are few options besides Apple's costly monitor, especially since Apple discontinued its 27-inch 5K iMac desktop upon announcing the Studio Display in March.

That didn't stop YouTuber Luke Miani from finding an old iMac and turning it into a makeshift Studio Display for about $870, webcam and 5K included.

In a video describing the process, Miani noted that the panel performance of the Studio Display is similar to what Apple has been offering for years, so he opted to use a 2014 iMac rather than the most recent 2020 27-inch iMac for his project. The iMac cost Miani $620, he said.

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Daily Deals (5-02-2022)

Today in why you should probably never pay full price for an Amazon Kindle, Fire, or Echo Device, Amazon is running one of its many annual sales on products in all of those categories. From now through Mother’s Day, you can save up to 50% on select Amazon devices. Among other things, you can save […]

The post Daily Deals (5-02-2022) appeared first on Liliputing.

Today in why you should probably never pay full price for an Amazon Kindle, Fire, or Echo Device, Amazon is running one of its many annual sales on products in all of those categories. From now through Mother’s Day, you can save up to 50% on select Amazon devices. Among other things, you can save up to $50 on Amazon Fire tablets or Kindle eReaders.

But if you’re looking for something a bit more powerful, Lenovo’s running a deal on its Yoga 13 Android tablet with a 13 inch display, a Snapdragon 870 processor and 8 GB of RAM. Normally priced at $680, you can pick one up for just $400 at the moment. And when you’re not using it as a tablet, it also doubles as a portable display.

Lenovo Yoga Tab 13 for $400

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

 

Amazon Fire Tablets

Android Tablets

Chrome OS Tablets

eReaders

Media Streamers

Networking

Smart Speakers & Displays

Downloads & Streaming

The post Daily Deals (5-02-2022) appeared first on Liliputing.

Apple slammed by EU for denying Apple Pay rivals access to iPhone’s NFC tech

Apple accused of violating EU antitrust law by only letting Apple Pay use NFC.

European Commission Executive Vice President Margrethe Vestager speaking at a press conference. The backdrop behind her says

Enlarge / European Commission Executive Vice President Margrethe Vestager speaks to reporters on May 2, 2022, in Brussels, Belgium. (credit: Getty Images | Thierry Monasse )

Apple has "abused its dominant position" to give Apple Pay an advantage over competitors on iPhones and other iOS devices, the European Commission said Monday. The EC informed Apple of its view in a Statement of Objections.

The preliminary finding "takes issue with the decision by Apple to prevent mobile wallets app developers from accessing the necessary hardware and software ('NFC input') on its devices, to the benefit of its own solution, Apple Pay," the EC said. "We have indications that Apple restricted third-party access to key technology necessary to develop rival mobile wallet solutions on Apple's devices," said EC Executive Vice President Margrethe Vestager.

"Tap and go" technology that uses near-field communication (NFC) "enables communication between a mobile phone and payments terminals in stores," the EC noted. But "Apple Pay is the only mobile wallet solution that may access the necessary NFC input on iOS. Apple does not make it available to third-party app developers of mobile wallets," the announcement said.

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Online retailers are offering rare, endangered bugs

As insects decline globally, there’s a need for regulating their sale online.

Image of a website that has a specific category for selling rare insects.

When a rare species is a product.

Alive or dead, rare or mundane, bugs are weirdly easy to find for sale online. However, in some cases, the insects or spiders sold through the various e-commerce sites, both niche and large-scale, may be of dubious provenance. Some may be bred and reared in sustainable programs. Others might be taken from wild populations that are at risk, according to new research out of Cornell University that was published last week.

“It’s not always clear… if they’re sustainable or not,” John Losey, a Cornell entomology professor and one of the paper’s authors, told Ars. “There are sites out there that are definitely not providing documentation that what they’re selling is being done sustainably.”

According to Losey, some websites will provide no documentation or proof showing that a rare pinned butterfly specimen or pet tarantula was collected in a way that doesn't pose a risk for wild populations. Some of them could very well have been reared in a sustainable program, Losey said—there's just no way to tell.

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Microsoft is testing a free 1GB-per-month VPN service in its Edge browser

Service is free but requires a Microsoft account sign-up.

Microsoft is testing a free 1GB-per-month VPN service in its Edge browser

Enlarge (credit: Microsoft)

A couple of years ago, Microsoft reformulated its Edge web browser with a backend based on Google's Chromium codebase. Since then, the company has tried to make Edge stand out primarily by adding on extra features, mostly related to privacy, security, and online shopping.

One interesting new experimental feature that could be coming to Edge soon is a Cloudflare-powered VPN feature, according to a support document published last week. A VPN (or virtual private network) provides an encrypted tunnel for all of your network traffic, shielding it from the view of other devices on the same network.

Using the VPN service, dubbed the "Microsoft Edge Secure Network," requires you to be signed in with a Microsoft account, just like cross-device syncing of bookmarks and extensions and plenty of other features. It provides up to 1GB of data per month, with no option to get more data if you want or need it—Edge will track your data usage and let you know when you're getting close to your limit.

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