TorrentFreak’s 20 Most Read Articles of 2020

With 2020 nearing its end, we take a look at the most-read news articles published by TorrentFreak this year. There was a lot of interest in enforcement actions, including the SPARKS raids and indictments. At the same time, articles about trouble at pirate sites were popular as well.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more. We have some good VPN deals here for the holidays.

best visited top 10 torrent sites 2020Every year we write hundreds of articles here at TorrentFreak. While they’re all worth reading, some get more exposure than others.

On the brink of the new year, we look back at 2020 by going over the 20 most-read news items of the year.

There are a few major themes in this overview. The biggest story of the year was perhaps the SPARKS raid and indictments, which makes an appearance with two separate entries.

As always, downtime and troubles at various pirate sites generate a lot of interest too. The weeks of downtime at The Pirate Bay earlier this year for example, and the trouble at Mangadex.

Needless to say, 2020 was a controversial year, dominated by COVID. The good news is, however, that our rundown of the most read articles is COVID-free, and we’d like to keep it that way in 2021.

Best wishes to all!

1. Court Suspends ‘Copyright Troll’ Lawyer From Practicing Law

Copyright lawyer Richard Liebowitz has been repeatedly sanctioned by federal courts. The controversial attorney has a long track record of disregarding court orders. In December, the grievance committee of the Southern District of New York decided to suspend Liebowitz to protect the public from future missteps.

2. YesPornPlease and VShare.io Go Offline Following Massive Copyright Lawsuit

YesPornPlease, an adult-focused video site that serviced more than 100 million visitors per month, disappeared in March following the filing of a lawsuit in the United States. The complaint, filed by Mindgeek-owned MG Premium, also targeted hosting site VShare.io, demanding a broad injunction and potentially hundreds of millions of dollars in damages.

3. Vicious Headbutt Video Meets Bogus DMCA Notices and the Streisand Effect

A man from the US became a hero last year when a video of him subduing a man who had headbutted someone in the face went viral. The video was reposted numerous times but is regularly taken down following bogus copyright complaints. However, the censorship efforts massively backfired in April when someone tried to delete a Reddit thread using a DMCA anti-circumvention notice. Duh…

4. The Pirate Bay Uses Downtime to ‘Rewrite Some Code’

In March, The Pirate Bay’s regular domain became unreachable for weeks. Initially, it was unclear what had caused the trouble, but TorrentFreak was informed that the downtime was caused by a technical problem and that the tech admin was taking the opportunity to rewrite some code.

5. The Pirate Bay’s Main Domain ‘Returns’ After a Month of Downtime

After a month, The Pirate Bay was accessible once again through its main domain name. The unannounced comeback came after the domain sent traffic to a black hole for nearly a day. Initially, Cloudflare’s nameservers were removed from Whois records but the site soon was reachable again through a new set of Cloudflare nameservers.

6. US Indictments and Raids of Piracy Group Members in ‘The Scene’ Throw Top-Tier Piracy World Into Chaos

The top-tier piracy world, known as The Scene, was plunged into turmoil in August. US law enforcement targeted key members of release group SPARKS and several linked and affiliated groups including GECKOS, DRONES, ROVERS and SPRINTER. Sources informed TF that there were several raids across Europe, mainly focused on Norway and Sweden.

7. Meet FitGirl, The Repack ‘Queen’ Of Pirated Games

Repacked games are in high demand on pirate sites as they save considerable bandwidth. One of the leading names in this niche is FitGirl. In recent years, the Russian-born repacker transformed from a home archivist into the best-known releaser on the Internet. In June, we unpacked part of this fascinating story.

8. MangaDex Returns Under a New Domain, Confirms Legal Issues

After several days of downtime, manga scanlation giant MangaDex reappeared online in January. In addition to confirming the existence of a DMCA subpoena, MangaDex said it had legal issues that had resulted in the temporary loss of its .org domain and removal from Cloudflare.

9. MangaDex Targeted by DMCA Subpoena, Now Migrating Servers

Before the comeback mentioned above, MangaDex suffered extended downtime, with a host migration and maintenance cited as the official reasons. However, TorrentFreak also learned that a DMCA subpoena was granted to copyright holder Viz Media in December 2019, one that ordered Cloudflare to give up the identity of MangaDex’s operator.

10. GitHub Reinstates Popcorn Time Code Despite MPA ‘Threat’

In May, an MPA takedown notice pulled Popcorn Time’s GitHub repository offline. The Hollywood group, which also represents Netflix, argued that the code facilitates mass copyright infringement. While that may be the case, Popcorn Time filed a counternotice arguing that they own the code. Faced with contradicting requests, Github reinstated the repository.

11. The Pirate Bay Suffers Extended Downtime

As mentioned earlier, The Pirate Bay’s main domain became inaccessible in March. There was no communication from the operators initially, but the site’s many proxies and its official Tor domain were still working fine.

12. Torrentz2.eu Domain Suspended by Registry on Public Prosecutor’s Order

In June, popular torrent meta-search engine Torrentz2 stopped working through its main .eu domain name. The domain was suspended by the EURid registry pending an investigation, triggered by a Public Prosecutor’s order. Torrentz2 was still accessible through its alternative .is domain but eventually disappeared.

13. Nintendo Lawyers File Copyright Complaints Against Super Mario 64 PC Port

Early May, a fan-made PC port of Nintendo 64 classic Super Mario 64 appeared online, wowing fans with its 4K resolution and ultra widescreen support. Somewhat inevitably, however, Nintendo’s lawyers and representatives began to take action, filing copyright complaints with Google and YouTube to make the recreation disappear.

14. SPARKS Piracy Busts: Facts, Rumors & Fear Point to Something Huge

The raids and arrests in August targeting piracy release group SPARKS caused chaos in The Scene, with members and groups going into hiding and new releases dropping like a stone.

15. Don’t Use the Word ‘Did’ or a Dumb Anti-Piracy Company Will Delete You From Google

In 2018, the owner of Two-Bit History, a site dedicated to computer history, wrote a successful article about mathematician Ada Lovelace, who some credit as being the first computer programmer. Sadly, some idiotic anti-piracy company had it deleted because it dared to use the word ‘did’.

16. RIAA’s YouTube-DL Takedown Ticks Off Developers and GitHub’s CEO

An RIAA takedown request, which removed the YouTube-DL repository from GitHub in October, was met with outrage. Numerous people responded by copying and republishing the contested code, including in some quite clever ways. Meanwhile, GitHub’s CEO expressed annoyance as well, offering his help to get the repo reinstated.

17. Activision Subpoenas Reddit to Identify Call of Duty Warzone ‘Leaker’

In response to the many Call of Duty Warzone leaks appearing online in February, Activision filed aggressive takedowns on copyright grounds. According to documents obtained by TorrentFreak, the gaming giant was served with a DMCA subpoena from a US court, compelling Reddit to hand over the personal details of a user who allegedly posted a leaked image to the site.

18. Model Sues Cloudflare and Thothub in Mass Piracy Lawsuit

Texas-based model Deniece Waidhofer, known for selling access to sexy photos of herself online, took action against Thothub, a site that published leaked copies of her work. The site, its members, and services it worked with, including Cloudflare, were accused of copyright infringement. Thothub shut down soon after.

19. Massive Pirate Anime Site Uses Visitors’ Connections to DDoS Competitor

With around 40 million visitors per month, 9anime.to is a formidable force in anime piracy. In October, however, a dispute with competitor Animixplay.to spiraled out of control when 9anime added code to its own site that made every visitor an unwitting participant in a DDoS attack on its rival.

20. Mystery as PortalRoms Disappears Leaving 4 Million Gaming Visitors in the Dark

PortalRoms, a popular index for ROM and emulators for a wide range of gaming systems, disappeared without a trace in January. The site previously serviced more than four million visitors per month with links to download content via torrents.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more. We have some good VPN deals here for the holidays.

An den Nachdenker unter den Schnelldenkern

Florian Rötzer geht nach 25 Jahren als Chefredakteur von Telepolis in den Ruhestand. Zeit für ein Dankeschön an einen brillanten Zeitgeist-Analytiker

Florian Rötzer geht nach 25 Jahren als Chefredakteur von Telepolis in den Ruhestand. Zeit für ein Dankeschön an einen brillanten Zeitgeist-Analytiker

Silvester ohne Feuerwerk?

Trotz Verkaufsverbot dürfen Privatpersonen in vielen Bundesländern Raketen abfeuern. Dabei würde nicht nur das Gesundheitswesen von einem Feuerwerksverbot profitieren.

Trotz Verkaufsverbot dürfen Privatpersonen in vielen Bundesländern Raketen abfeuern. Dabei würde nicht nur das Gesundheitswesen von einem Feuerwerksverbot profitieren.

That time physicist John Wheeler left classified H-bomb documents on a train

The whereabouts of the documents remains a mystery to this day.

In 1953, the eminent physicist and H-bomb advocate took an ill-fated overnight train from Philadelphia to Washington, DC, that would indirectly lead to the Robert Oppenheimer security hearing.

Enlarge / In 1953, the eminent physicist and H-bomb advocate took an ill-fated overnight train from Philadelphia to Washington, DC, that would indirectly lead to the Robert Oppenheimer security hearing. (credit: Michail_Petrov-96/iStock/Getty Images)

There's rarely time to write about every cool science-y story that comes our way. So this year, we're once again running a special Twelve Days of Christmas series of posts, highlighting one science story that fell through the cracks in 2020, each day from December 25 through January 5. Today: the story of how physicist John Wheeler once left classified documents about the newly developed H-bomb on a Pullman train.

In the popular science world, physicist John Wheeler is probably best known for popularizing the term "black hole," although his research spanned a broad range of fields, including relativity, quantum theory, and nuclear fission. He also worked on Project Matterhorn B in the early 1950s, the controversial US effort to develop a hydrogen bomb. In January 1953, Wheeler accidentally left a highly classified document concerning that program on a train as he traveled from his Princeton, New Jersey home to Washington, DC. It was a stereotypical "absent-minded professor" moment, and one with significant national security implications.

Alex Wellerstein told the story in detail late last year in an article in Physics Today. Wellerstein is a historian of science at the Stevens Institute of Technology in New Jersey, where his research centers on the history of nuclear weapons and nuclear history. (Fun fact: he served as a historical consultant on the short-lived TV series, Manhattan.) His forthcoming book, Restricted Data: The History of Nuclear Secrecy in the United States, is slated for publication in April 2021 by the University of Chicago Press.

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Corellium notches partial victory in Apple iOS copyright case

Security firm’s actions both may and may not qualify under fair use, judge held.

Just some of the iDevice types that Corellium didn't break one law—but may still have broken another—by emulating.

Enlarge / Just some of the iDevice types that Corellium didn't break one law—but may still have broken another—by emulating. (credit: Kristin Lee | Getty Images)

Security firm Corellium, which develops software that researchers can use to analyze Apple products, has been handed a partial victory in Apple's lawsuit against it, as a judge ruled that its creation of virtual iOS environments does not violate Apple's copyrights.

Corellium has since 2017 been creating iOS environments that can run on desktop computers, for use as a research and development tool. Apple sued Corellium in 2019, alleging, "Corellium's true goal is profiting off its blatant infringement" of iOS, and claiming that the firm "encourages its users to sell any discovered information [about system vulnerabilities] on the open market to the highest bidder."

Earlier this year, Apple amended the suit to include allegations that Corellium's work violated the Digital Millennium Copyright Act's (DMCA) prohibition circumventing or breaking DRM.

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Lilbits: Nintendo 64 cut down to size, Gazelle ends trade-ins, Pixel camera ported to non-Pixel phones

Some folks interested in playing classic console games on the go are content to run an emulator on their phones or tablets. Others actually trim the original motherboard of old game consoles and stuff them into new bodies. One YouTuber has taken that …

Some folks interested in playing classic console games on the go are content to run an emulator on their phones or tablets. Others actually trim the original motherboard of old game consoles and stuff them into new bodies. One YouTuber has taken that to extremes with a Nintendo 64 that’s been modified to become a […]

The post Lilbits: Nintendo 64 cut down to size, Gazelle ends trade-ins, Pixel camera ported to non-Pixel phones appeared first on Liliputing.