Monday, October 18, 2021

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Dune Leaked on Pirate Sites Before US Theatrical & HBO Max Release
Andy Maxwell, 18 Oct 10:33 AM

Dune 2021Dune (also known as Dune: Part One) is the first installment of a planned two-part adaption of the 1965 sci-fi book written by Frank Herbert. The movie has been in the planning for years, with filming eventually taking place between March and July 2019.

Dune had its world premiere at the 78th Venice International Film Festival on September 3, 2021, and Warner Bros. released the movie internationally on September 15, which did not include key markets such as the US and UK.

The movie will launch simultaneously in theaters and on HBO Max on October 21, a day earlier than originally planned. However, the controversial decision to have a day-and-date release in the US is already being overshadowed by another type of distribution.

Dune Released on Pirate Sites

During the early hours of Sunday, the P2P release group known as EVO released a 10.6GB file claiming to be an 'HDRip' of Dune. This means that the copy was not obtained from a 'cammed' or camcorder copy of the movie shown in theaters but has been ripped from some other source.

Some torrent sites have the release marked up as a WEBRip, which suggests an online streaming source but at the time of writing, EVO has not yet responded to TorrentFreak's request for comment. From the NFO file released with the movie what we can confirm is that the resolution is a reported 1920×780 and the running time is 2 hours and 30 mins, five minutes less than the 155 minutes listed on IMDb.

Update: A source familiar with the release says the runtime discrepancy is explained by the source of the leak, which is a European VOD/DCP leak with a higher framerate.

Dune screenshot

As the image above shows, the quality could be better and indeed, some pirates will prefer to wait until October 21 to obtain a copy of the movie ripped from HBO Max. In the meantime, however, that isn't stopping pirates in their droves from obtaining the release.

From One Copy, Many Others Spawn

After the original 10.6GB release, other EVO branded variants appeared online in smaller file sizes including 4.4GB and around 1.8GB. These easier-to-consume copies are popular with pirates, with tens of thousands getting in on the action in the first few hours alone. As a result, Dune is clearly well on its way to becoming one of the most pirated movies of the year.

Dune Streaming

It will take some time to properly assess how many times the film will be grabbed via torrents but it's less easy to estimate to what lengths the movie will be pirated overall.

Unauthorized streaming sites now account for a huge part of the unofficial market so even if there have been hundreds of thousands of downloads thus far (which seems likely), that figure could be dwarfed in the days to come.

Dune Release Latest in High-Profile Leaks from EVO

The leaking of Dune by the EVO peer-to-peer group is the latest to make headlines for the shadowy entity. Last month, EVO was also responsible for leaking copies of 'The Power of the Dog' and 'The Guilty'. These Netflix movies were apparently obtained from film festival screeners and published well before their official release dates.

The exact source of the Dune leak is currently unknown but coming just days before its simultaneous release in US theaters and HBO Max will come as a blow to Warner Bros. and indeed director Denis Villeneuve, who has already urged people to watch the movie in theaters, not on the small screen.

"The way it happened, I'm still not happy. Frankly, to watch Dune on a television, the best way I can compare it is to drive a speedboat in your bathtub. For me, it's ridiculous. It's a movie that has been made as a tribute to the big-screen experience," he said recently, commenting on the day-and-date release.

Villeneuve says that the big enemy of the cinema "is the pandemic" but right now, another type of viral distribution could be an even bigger concern.

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

Anti-Piracy Outfits Still Target Pirate Sites That Shut Down Years Ago
Ernesto Van der Sar, 17 Oct 07:29 PM

thrillerOver the past decades, hundreds of popular 'pirate' sites have come and gone. This includes the likes of isoHunt, ExtraTorrent, and KickassTorrents.

These shutdowns have a serious impact but, as time passes, estranged users eventually move on. The same can't be said for all anti-piracy organizations.

Hunting Pirate Ghosts

As it turns out, sites that have long disappeared are still seen as a 'threat'. That is, judging from the takedown notices they send to Google. While browsing through the Lumen Database this week we spotted a takedown notice targeting NYAA.se, for example.

While the NYAA brand is still used today by a different operation, the original NYAA.se site shut down more than four years ago. At the time of writing Google no longer indexes any NYAA.se URLs. However, that doesn't stop takedown notices from coming in.

nyaa

This unusual request prompted us to take a deeper dive into the matter to see if other dead sites are still alive in anti-piracy circles. We didn't have to look very far to get confirmation.

KickassTorrents and ExtraTorrent

Five years ago marked a turbulent time for the torrent ecosystem as some of the top sites were taken offline. This includes KickassTorrents, which was shut down following a criminal investigation from US law enforcement.

At the time, the site was operating from KAT.cr which immediately went offline. While someone else picked up the domain name after it expired, the site never returned in its original form.

When we look through Google's DMCA takedown database, however, it's clear that anti-piracy organizations still see a threat. The domain was targeted in dozens of requests this year, filed by multiple reporting agencies. This includes the one below that came in this week.

kickasstorrents takedown

We see a similar pattern for ExtraTorrent.com, which decided to go offline in 2017, a few months after KickassTorrents disappeared. While Google no longer indexes any ExtraTorrent links after all these years, new takedown requests continue to come in.

Defunct Pirate Bay Domains

We can repeat these findings for pretty much every prominent piracy site that shut down in recent years. Not just that, it also works for domain names that were suspended or abandoned, including those of The Pirate Bay.

Thepiratebay.se domain, for example, was previously the main domain of the notorious torrent site. After a legal battle, it was eventually handed over to the Swedish police in 2017. However, hundreds of new takedown notices come in for this domain every month.

While the reported links lead nowhere, the anti-piracy groups may have a better reason here, as there are still several ancient Thepiratebay.se links indexed by Google's search engine.

How Far Can We Go Back

Google only started reporting its takedown requests ten years ago so we can't go back indefinitely. However, we can certainly go beyond 2016, starting with FilesTube, which once was the top target for Google takedown notices.

FilesTube transformed itself into a legal platform in 2014 and later it disappeared completely. Today, takedown notices for FilesTube are rare, but we were still able to spot six separate reports this year. The most recent one was filed last month.

If we go back yet another year, we arrive at 2013, when Hollywood took down Hotfile and isoHunt, which many considered to be pirate sites as well.

After roughly eight years, anti-piracy groups haven't forgotten about these two either. Both continue to be targeted occasionally. For example, just this week Google was asked to remove an isoHunt.com URL from its search engine, which probably hasn't been indexed for over half a decade.

The main question we have is why these sites are still being reported?

It's clear that reporters don't always confirm that the links are actually live. We will ask some of the reporting agencies to shed a light on this, so perhaps we'll find out more on that in the near future.

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

 
 
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