Streaming: Googles neuer Chromecast kommt in Kürze

Die dritte Generation von Googles Chromecast wird wohl bald auf den Markt kommen. In einer Elektronikmarktkette in den USA steht das Streaminggerät bereits in den Regalen. Derzeit können Käufer damit aber nichts anfangen. (Chromecast, Google)

Die dritte Generation von Googles Chromecast wird wohl bald auf den Markt kommen. In einer Elektronikmarktkette in den USA steht das Streaminggerät bereits in den Regalen. Derzeit können Käufer damit aber nichts anfangen. (Chromecast, Google)

Anti-Piracy Group Wipes ‘Torrent9’ From Google With ‘Dubious’ Requests

A ‘carpet-bomb’ of DMCA takedown requests has all but wiped Torrent9 from Google’s search results. French anti-piracy outfit SACEM targeted hundreds of thousands of URLs in a few days. An effective strategy, but one that relies on several dubious reports, including takedowns targeting open source software.

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

With millions of visitors per week, Torrent9 is a force to be reckoned with.

The site is most popular in French-speaking countries, which hasn’t gone unnoticed to local copyright holders.

Last year, the Paris Court of First Instance ordered French ISPs to block the site. However, Torrent9 was quick to take countermeasures and moved to a new domain name.

Quite recently, it was operating from Torrent9.blue. This went fine until the site’s owner started to notice that Google traffic had tanked. The torrent site used to get roughly 20% of its visitors through the search engine, but that suddenly dropped to less than 5%.

As it turned out, the French anti-piracy outfit SACEM had sent takedown requests for hundreds of thousands of URLs in the span of a few days. Google then removed these from the search engine, adding a downranking punishment on top.

SACEM’s ‘carpet-bomb’ of takedown requests was clearly targeted and massive in scope. In one week in August, the group asked Google to remove over 350,000 torrent9.blue URLs. For comparison, The Pirate Bay usually gets a tenth of that, from all copyright holders combined.

Torrent9.blue takedowns

While we were taking a closer look at the notices in question, we spotted another peculiarity.

It almost looks like the French anti-piracy group submitted each and every URL they could find, regardless of whether it actually points to works from their music industry members.

Some URLs do indeed point to music, but there are also plenty of others, targeting movies, TV-shows, games, and software. In some cases, the torrents are not even infringing, such as the open source copy of Ubuntu listed below.

Pirated Ubuntu?

Google appears to have removed nearly all URLs including the ones that don’t point directly to copyright infringing content of SACEM members.

The removals were probably automated, but they certainly warrant a closer look. There is no question that Torrent9 offers links to pirated content, but should such broad takedown requests be permitted?

This endeavor left Torrent9 no other choice than to move to another new domain. At the time of writing the torrent site is operating from Torrent9.ph, but this could easily change again in the near future, as SACEM has already started to target the new domain with another carpet-bombing of ‘dubious’ DMCA takedown notices.

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

Musk settles—out as Tesla chairman, owes $20 million in penalties

Avoiding a court case allows Musk to remain as Tesla CEO.

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Enlarge (credit: Joshua Lott/Getty Image)

Elon Musk reached a settlement today with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on a charge of securities fraud. Within the next 45 days, Musk will have to step down as chairman of Tesla and will be ineligible to return to that post for the next three years. However, Musk can continue in his role as the company's CEO. Additionally, Tesla was charged with "failing to have required disclosure controls and procedures relating to Musk’s tweets"—a matter which it promptly settled.

In August, Musk tweeted that he was taking the car maker private and had "funding secured" to do so at the price of $420 a share. The result was a significant spike in Tesla's share price that was reversed when it turned out that there was no such funding—nor much possibility of taking Tesla private under the circumstances Musk had promised.

The SEC was deluged with comments from investors—both short and long—who lost out as a result of Musk's tweets. The agency quickly began an investigation into the matter and proposed a settlement with Musk that he rejected, at which point the SEC sued him for fraud. Had that case gone to trial—a process in which the SEC overwhelmingly wins—the consequences for Musk could have been much greater; the SEC could have barred Musk from serving as an officer or director in any public company.

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World’s Oldest Torrent Still Alive After 15 Years

The world’s oldest active torrent file turned fifteen-years-old this week, a remarkable achievement. TorrentFreak catches up with the creator of “The Fanimatrix” torrent file, who saw BitTorrent as the only affordable option to share the Matrix fan film with the world.

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

In 2003 the ‘world wide web’ was an entirely different place than it is today.

This was especially true for streaming video. YouTube had yet to be invented, while Netflix only sent out films via the postal service.

It was at this time that a group of New Zealand friends was shooting a fan film of The Matrix, appropriately titled “The Fanimatrix.” With a limited budget of just $800, of which nearly half went into a leather jacket, they managed to complete the project in nine days.

There was a problem though. As video streaming services were still non-existent, distribution was a challenge. The makers managed to reduce the filesize down to 150MB, but even that was too expensive.

TorrentFreak spoke to the film’s ‘IT-guy’ Sebastian Kai Frost, who also had a bit part in front of the camera, in addition to being a wire-work counterweight, gopher, and light holder. According to Frost, regular centralized hosting was not an option.

“In New Zealand this would have resulted in a completely unaffordable amount of bandwidth to be used sharing the file via traditional HTTP or FTP methods. Especially given that the entire bandwidth in and out of the country at the time was less than a modern WiFi link,” Frost tells TorrentFreak.

With no budget left they had to find something cheap, or free. Frost, who was working as a network administrator at the time, went looking for a solution and stumbled upon a new technology that could help. Something called “BitTorrent.”

“It looked promising because it scaled such that the more popular the file became, the more the bandwidth load was shared. It seemed like the perfect solution,” Frost says, looking back.

After convincing the crew that BitTorrent was the right choice, Frost created a torrent on September 28, 2003. He also compiled a tracker on his own Linux box and made sure everything was running correctly.

That was fifteen years ago. Today, this torrent is still up and running with a handful of seeders. As far as we know, it’s the oldest active torrent on the Internet. A real piece of history.

Fanimatrix torrent created 15 years ago

In a way, Fanimatrix became one of the first showcases of what BitTorrent can do.

Sure, at the time people were already sharing movies and TV-shows on sites such as Suprnova.org, Donkax.com, Bytemonsoon.com, and Torrentse.cx, but that was mostly pirated stuff. For the Fanimatrix, BitTorrent was a necessity.

“It turns out that using BitTorrent was a really really good idea because the file was downloaded over tens of thousands of times in the first week and then REALLY took off based off feature news articles on both New Zealand and American TV news,” Frost recalls.

In a New Zealand Herald report from 2003, the film’s director Rajneel Singh noted that the torrent had been downloaded 70,000 times is just one week. An impressive statistic, even by today’s standards.

BitTorrent was not only able to handle all the downloads, but it was also a serious cost saver. The film crew did some back-of-the-napkin calculations at the time which showed that BitTorrent saved them roughly $550,000 in bandwidth bills during the first month alone.

Frost and the team were blown away by the experience. And while the film is dated by today’s special effect standards, it’s good to see that people are still interested. Whatever their reason may be.

“The fact that people still seed it after all these years is a good feeling. Though I suspect a lot of people are on board now because they want to be part of keeping the world’s oldest active torrent going. Which is in itself pretty cool,” Frost says.

Frost plans to keep a restored version of the original site and the torrent up and running during the decade to come. It’s a piece of Internet history, after all.

“At the time we had no idea how popular this ‘BitTorrent’ thing would become, but being there at the beginning, and having it still operating and seeding even now is a pretty awesome thing.

“I intend to keep it going as long as I have a seed left to give,” Frost concludes.

Note: If anybody knows of any torrents that beat this record, feel free to let us know.

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

Tesla is outgrowing Elon Musk

Op-ed: Elon Musk is a brilliant entrepreneur—but he’s not a great manager.

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Enlarge / Elon Musk in 2004, the year he became chairman of the board at a tiny electric car startup called Tesla. (credit: Paul Harris / Getty)

Tesla's battle with the Securities and Exchange Commission could be the company's biggest crisis in almost a decade. And it all started with a tweet.

"Am considering taking Tesla private at $420," Musk wrote on August 7. "Funding secured."

Tesla shares soared. But it quickly became apparent that Musk didn't actually have a commitment from anyone to fund a buyout—at least not in writing. That caught the SEC's attention. The SEC quickly began investigating Musk's tweets for possible violation of securities laws, which prohibit manipulating markets by publishing inaccurate information.

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Tesla is outgrowing Elon Musk

Op-ed: Elon Musk is a brilliant entrepreneur—but he’s not a great manager.

Article intro image

Enlarge / Elon Musk in 2004, the year he became chairman of the board at a tiny electric car startup called Tesla. (credit: Paul Harris / Getty)

Tesla's battle with the Securities and Exchange Commission could be the company's biggest crisis in almost a decade. And it all started with a tweet.

"Am considering taking Tesla private at $420," Musk wrote on August 7. "Funding secured."

Tesla shares soared. But it quickly became apparent that Musk didn't actually have a commitment from anyone to fund a buyout—at least not in writing. That caught the SEC's attention. The SEC quickly began investigating Musk's tweets for possible violation of securities laws, which prohibit manipulating markets by publishing inaccurate information.

Read 30 remaining paragraphs | Comments

HAIKU R1 Beta 1 released (open source operating systems)

Open source operating system HAIKU is a lightweight, fast, and relatively simple operating system that picks up where the discontinued BeOS left off when its development ceased in 2001. This weekend the HAIKI team released HAIKU R1 Beta 1, which is kin…

Open source operating system HAIKU is a lightweight, fast, and relatively simple operating system that picks up where the discontinued BeOS left off when its development ceased in 2001. This weekend the HAIKI team released HAIKU R1 Beta 1, which is kind of a big deal when you consider that the last major release of […]

The post HAIKU R1 Beta 1 released (open source operating systems) appeared first on Liliputing.

This could be the 3rd-gen Google Chromecast

Google launched its first Chromecast media streamer in 2013 and the company introduced an upgraded model with a faster processor and a new design in 2015. Now it looks like the company is getting ready to launch a 3rd-gen Chromecast. Redditor GroveStre…

Google launched its first Chromecast media streamer in 2013 and the company introduced an upgraded model with a faster processor and a new design in 2015. Now it looks like the company is getting ready to launch a 3rd-gen Chromecast. Redditor GroveStreetHomie went to Best Buy to pick up a Chromecast this weekend, and wound […]

The post This could be the 3rd-gen Google Chromecast appeared first on Liliputing.

Root is a terrific—and fully asymmetric—woodland wargame

One of 2018’s hottest board games… involves birds, cats, and a little raccoon?

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Enlarge (credit: Charlie Theel)

Welcome to Ars Cardboard, our weekend look at tabletop games! Check out our complete board gaming coverage at cardboard.arstechnica.com.

Root does something special: it breaks a conflict-heavy wargame with fully asymmetric roles into easily digestible chunks, then wraps these complex bits in stylized fur and medieval garb.

It’s a sophisticated design that owes as much to Brian Jacques’s charming Redwall series of animal books as it does to GMT's COIN series of wargames.

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