Tuesday, August 23, 2022

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GOT Prequel "House of the Dragon" Premiered Early on Pirate Sites
Ernesto Van der Sar, 23 Aug 10:52 AM

house dragonWhen it comes to piracy records and juicy headlines, the original Game of Thrones series holds the crown.

The popular TV series still holds the record for the largest torrent swarm and its releases caused a significant boost in global piracy traffic.

Game of Thrones also made headlines on several occasions when episodes leaked online before their official premiere. This is a hard track record for the prequel "House of the Dragon" to compete with, but early signs show that the 'leak' tradition continues.

"House of the Dragon" Piracy Premiere

The first "House of the Dragon" episode premiered on Sunday 9 pm Eastern Time in the United States and it was simulcasted in many other countries around the world. However, when fans were getting ready for the official release, many pirates had already finished the episode.

Pirated copies of the highly anticipated release surfaced roughly 15 hours before the official release. The source of 'leak' is unknown, but it appears to come from an official HBO feed that was made available early.

Whatever the source, fans were quick to spot this surprise release. While many preferred to wait until the official release was out, hundreds of thousands were not that patient and chose to download or stream the pirated version instead.

Massive Interest

Before the official premiere, hundreds of thousands of people had already grabbed a 'leaked' copy through torrent sites. In addition, many more used pirate streaming sites to watch the "House of the Dragon" premiere.

house of the dragon twitter

As a result, the early release of "House of the Dragon" was the most pirated TV show on Sunday, even before the official version came out. The piracy figures don't rival any records set by Game of Thrones just yet, but the show is on its way to becoming one of the most pirated shows of the year.

There has been plenty of interest through legal channels as well. In fact, some people indicated that they preferred to wait until the official version came out.

dragon-reddit

HBO Max Crashes

According to HBO, millions of people 'legally' tuned into the show on Sunday evening, which is a lot for a show premiere. While torrents generally benefit from widespread attention, the same can't be said for centralized streaming platforms.

This resulted in some small problems, including HBO crashing on Fire TV devices. Whether any of these Fire TV users turned to pirate alternatives out of frustration is unknown, but HBO may want to fix this problem before the next episode comes out.

The early signs suggest that "House of the Dragon" will be good for some piracy headlines going forward. In addition to the early premiere, HBO previously had its hands full with a mystery Reddit user who leaked plot summaries for the upcoming season.

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

OG GTA Dev: Rockstar Hit My GTA Prototype Videos With DMCA Notices
Andy Maxwell, 22 Aug 07:15 PM

gta-wastedIt's no longer a surprise when big videogame developers take escalating legal action against fan coders. Nintendo, for example, has a long history of stomping on projects on the basis they infringe intellectual property rights.

From Nintendo's perspective, there's nothing to discuss. It enjoys the full support of the law when it decides to protect its intellectual property rights, game over. From the side of fans who love Nintendo's work so much that they spend years of their lives paying tribute to its work, it tends to feel a bit different.

The same is true for people who decide to fix bugs in games like GTA by giving them a major overhaul, completely free of charge. At a moment's notice, they can find themselves being sued, with much of the gaming community looking on, asking: "Really?"

On a Scale of One to Petty, Things Can Get Worse

Mike Dailly is the designer of Lemmings, a game that appeared in most Commodore Amiga owners' collections during the early 90s. The game was created by DMA Design, which began as a four-man development team featuring Dailly and former classmates David Jones, Russell Kay, and Steve Hammond.

DMA Design is known today as Rockstar North, a brand synonymous with Grand Theft Auto, one of the most famous game series of all time. GTA's roots reach all the way back to the game's first iteration in 1997, which was developed by DMA Design and powered by Mike Dailly's graphics engine.

A quarter of a century is not only a huge slice of videogame history, it's a culturally significant period deserving of preservation. Unfathomably, however, it seems that Rockstar has decided that pieces of that history should be erased from Dailly's YouTube channel, even though it relates directly to his work on the original GTA.

Rockstar Strikes GTA Prototype Videos

Dailly isn't known for sugarcoating his opinions, so when Rockstar targeted videos on his channel, it was only a matter of time before he made that public. On Sunday he took to Twitter and did just that.

"I see Rockstar are going full fuckers mode again, issuing copyright strikes to any GTA video they can find – including both my prototype videos. So now they're trying to block all release of anyone's work on a game – and any old development footage," he wrote.

mike dailly-tweet-gta

Dailly's YouTube channel is a step back in time with a future twist, perfect for those who love videogame history but want to drive the artform forward. There's even a video of DMA Design's 1993 Christmas party and a tour of their offices.

Anyone wanting to see the GTA prototype videos will, of course, be disappointed. The videos are relatively easy to find elsewhere using basic search skills but, those happy to see how Dailly's uploads used to appear on YouTube, a screenshot should suffice.

deleted gta vids

Dailly says that Rockstar's complaints to YouTube carried an explanation for the takedowns. According to them, Dailly did not obtain permission from Rockstar to post development footage. Busted.

Friction Between Rockstar and Coding Veteran

The GTA prototype videos posted by Dailly were part of a series of similar posts related to the early development of GTA. But last evening Dailly decided he must resign history to history, adding that all of his posts had been deleted and he wouldn't be posting any further information.

"For those asking – yes, I've now removed all GTA dev stuff. Only direct examples of my own work are left – work that was never used in GTA, but 'inspired' parts of its evolution. You can thank Rocksuck," he added.

While there's no reason to think he'll go back on his word, Dailly isn't easily silenced. An hour later he tweeted what appears to be the front cover of GTA game design recommendations report, adding that it would never see the light of day.

dailly-gta-tweet2

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

 
 
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