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      NASA scientist on 2023 temperatures: “We’re frankly astonished.”

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 12 January - 18:33

    A global projection map with warm areas shown in read, and color ones in blue. There is almost no blue.

    Enlarge / Warming in 2023 was widespread. (credit: NOAA NCEI )

    Earlier this week, the EU's Earth science team came out with its analysis of 2023's global temperatures , finding it was the warmest year on record to date. In an era of global warming, that's not especially surprising. What was unusual was the way 2023 set its record—every month from June on coming in far above any equivalent month in the past—and the size of the gap between 2023 and any previous year on record.

    The Copernicus dataset used for that analysis isn't the only one of the sort, and on Friday, Berkeley Earth , NASA , and NOAA all released equivalent reports. And all of them largely agree with the EU's: 2023 was a record, and an unusual one at that. So unusual that NASA's chief climate scientist, Gavin Schmidt, introduced his look at 2023 by saying, "We're frankly astonished."

    Despite the overlaps with the earlier analysis, each of the three new ones add some details that flesh out what made last year so unusual.

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      2023 in Review: RARBG, Zoro, Z-Library, Flawless, IPTV and AI

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Sunday, 31 December - 12:06 · 6 minutes

    12 o clock The new year can’t start without reflecting the current one, looking back at the major stories of the past 12 months.

    For writers and readers, the news often passes by, with major headlines swiftly fading into the background.

    At times like these, it’s good to realize that for people who are featured or closely involved, those events are often life-altering. But perhaps i’m getting sentimental .

    Below is a compilation of some of the key stories this year. It’s by no means comprehensive or exhaustive, but a decent reflection of what can happen in a year. And it never stops.

    RARBG Shuts Down

    Pirate sites come and go, often without being noticed by the public at large. That was certainly not the case when RARBG said its goodbyes in late June .

    The popular torrent site had millions of daily users spread across several domain names. This included the flagship .to domain, where the usual torrent index was replaced by a farewell message.

    rarbg farewell message

    The surprise shutdown of RARBG and its tracker was made worse by the fact that RARBG was also one of the most used torrent distribution groups, which secured a steady stream of movie and TV-show releases across the broader piracy ecosystem .

    As is often the case, others tried to hijack or take over the RARBG brand in the months that followed, but none come close to the original. Other torrent sites did notice a big traffic spike though.

    Flawless IPTV Prosecution

    In May, five men behind pirate IPTV service ‘Flawless’ were sentenced to more than 30 years in prison , the result of a private prosecution by the Premier League.

    Operating from 2016 until 2018, the Flawless IPTV service served over 50,000 UK households while generating millions in revenue by selling cheap subscriptions.

    Follow-up reports revealed that the service itself costs hundreds of thousands of pounds to run. It further showed that Flawless invested significant resources to circumvent the Premier League’s blocking program.

    Z-Library’s Resilience

    Z-Library’s very existence was put to the test last year when U.S. law enforcement seized over 200 domain names connected to the site. Two alleged Z-Library operators from Russia were arrested in Argentina as part of a criminal investigation.

    The shadow library continued to operate from the dark web and made a full comeback on the clearnet in February. Since then, the site has launched a variety of new features and initiatives , including a dedicated desktop application.

    zlibrary 2023 roundup

    The legal problems are not over though. The U.S. Government continued to seize Z-Library domain names through the year. Meanwhile, the two arrested suspects continue to fight the criminal copyright infringement allegations and their requested extradition.

    IPTV Scaremongering

    The past year has seen no shortage of IPTV-related news. All over the world sellers and operators of pirate IPTV services were arrested, signaling that this activity is not without risk.

    Meanwhile, users are put on notice as well. This includes obligatory warnings that people may not get what they paid for. But there are more direct threats as well, some of which border on the ridiculous.

    Several UK newspapers warned that police were knocking on the doors of 1,000 suspected pirate IPTV subscribers earlier this year. This massive exaggeration, paired with the suggestion that police used special pirate stream detector cars , falls firmly in the scaremongering camp.

    Police car stream trackers?

    While watching pirate IPTV streams in the UK is definitely unauthorized, the suggestion that offenders will be prosecuted and jailed en masse , was a bit much.

    AI Copyright Troubles

    Over the past year, artificial intelligence enjoyed its mainstream breakthrough. The instant success of ChatGPT and follow-up releases of other large language model-based tools kick-started what many believe is a new revolution.

    The AI boom also triggered a host of copyright issues. Several lawsuits were filed against OpenAI, Meta, Google, and others who used copyrighted materials to build their AI models. In some cases, these companies stand accused of using libraries from pirate sites as training materials.

    Meanwhile, lawmakers around the world are trying to figure out how to handle this rapidly evolving technology from a copyright perspective. These efforts, and the associated lobbying, will continue in the new year.

    In addition to lawsuits and lobbying, rightsholders are also keeping an eye on individuals who tinker with artificial intelligence. This included a widely popular AI Hub server on Discord which was pulled offline after repeated copyright complaints.

    Pikashow Stunt

    In January, rightsholders pulled out all the stops to take down the popular piracy app PikaShow. This happened a few weeks after its operators pulled one of the biggest stunts in piracy history.

    During Asia Cup 2022, a cricket tournament watched by hundreds of millions of people, PikaShow was the official sponsor of Afghanistan’s national cricket team. This resulted in hours of primetime pirate advertising, marketing the brand to a massive TV audience of millions.

    PikaShow sponsoring

    pikashow-sponsor

    Fast forward nearly a year and PikaShow remains a problem today. According to the MPA , the application has been downloaded 10 million times across various app stores and Telegram.

    IPTV Datacenter Raid

    IPTV raids and arrests are nothing new but, last May, Dutch fiscal police (FIOD) was the first enforcement authority to shut down an entire datacenter .

    Information obtained by FIOD showed that the pirate IPTV operation was run from the GLOBE Datacenter in Den Helder, where more than 1,200 servers were taken offline. Several people were arrested and the main suspect remains in custody according to the latest reports.

    The authorities didn’t mention any specific IPTV services but the operation was massive. Local anti-piracy group BREIN reported that TVs in hundreds of thousands of homes went dark due to the raids. Europol, which also assisted in the operation, said that the service had over a million users across Europe.

    GLOBE Datacenter (via)

    GLOBE servers

    Faced with an operation of this size, law enforcement initially failed to see that the websites of innocent companies were also taken down in the process. The problem was addressed after TorrentFreak requested clarification.

    Zoro.to ‘Takedown’

    The Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment (ACE) shut down numerous sites and services this year. Their biggest victory came in July when it took over the domain name of piracy giant Zoro.to .

    The anime streaming site was arguably the largest pirate site on the Internet at that time, with over 200 million monthly visits. However, ACE would soon learn that they secured little more than a domain name.

    A few days before ACE stepped in, Zoro.to had been ‘acquired’ by an unknown party that rebranded the operation to Aniwatch. Unsurprisingly, that site is now one of the most visited pirate sites on the Internet.

    Omi, EVO, Mega

    We’ll end this brief and selective overview with a few key cases that started earlier, but saw some (preliminary) conclusions in 2023.

    In March, Bill Omar Carrasquillo, better known online as Omi in a Hellcat, was sentenced to 66 months in prison for several crimes related to his now-defunct pirate IPTV services. In addition, he was ordered to pay $11m in restitution while $30 million in possessions were forfeited.

    Omi in a Hellcat

    omi in a hellcat fbi

    As mentioned earlier, this year we also learned that the alleged operator of piracy release group EVO was arrested in Portugal . This action is likely one of the main reasons why we haven’t seen any leaked movie screeners this year.

    Finally, 2023 also brought closure for two of the Megaupload defendants; Mathias Ortmann and Bram van der Kolk. The High Court in Auckland, New Zealand, handed down prison sentences of 31 and 30 months respectively . The pair avoided extradition to the United States by pleading guilty, which didn’t help Kim Dotcom’s position.

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

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      ‘The Last of Us’ Is The Most Pirated TV Show of 2023

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Monday, 25 December - 20:13 · 1 minute

    last of us At the end of every year, we take a look at the most-downloaded TV shows among torrenting pirates.

    For several years in a row, the list was headed by Game of Thrones but that reign came to an end after the series ended.

    In the years that followed, Disney+ releases stepped in to fill the void, with ‘Wandavision’ and ‘The Mandalorian’ taking wins in 2020 and 2021 respectively. This takeover didn’t last, however, as HBO’s ‘Game of Thrones’ prequel ‘House of the Dragon’ snatched the title last year .

    With no dragon-themed series in the mix, it was hard to predict this year’s winner. However, the data leave little room for doubt. HBO’s ‘The Last of Us’ is the most pirated TV show of 2023.

    Competition for the remaining slots was fierce, with several Disney+ series in contention. “The Mandalorian” eventually settled for second place, one spot higher than “Loki”, with newcomer “Ahsoka” not far behind.

    What stands out most is that video subscription service content dominates the top ten. With the current streaming landscape being so fragmented, it appears that many people prefer to pirate instead of paying for ‘another’ subscription.

    Interestingly, Netflix releases are noticeably absent. Without speculating too much, it seems likely that Netflix users are less likely to give up their subscriptions, as it’s the dominant streaming platform in most parts of the world.

    In closing, we should note that the chart is based on BitTorrent traffic, which represents a small portion of the piracy landscape. Most people use streaming sites and services nowadays, which generally do not report viewing stats.

    Below we have compiled a list of the most-torrented TV shows worldwide released in 2023 (per episode). The ranking is estimated based on sample data from several sources, including I Know .

    Most downloaded TV-shows on BitTorrent, 2023
    rank last year show network
    torrentfreak.com
    1 (…) The Last of Us HBO
    2 (…) The Mandalorian Disney+
    3 (…) Loki Disney+
    4 (…) Ahsoka Disney+
    5 (…) Secret Invasion Disney+
    6 (…) Silo Apple TV
    7 (…) Monarch: Legacy of Monsters Apple TV
    8 (…) Tulsa King Paramount+
    9 (…) Gen V Amazon Prime
    10 (…) Ted Lasso Apple TV

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

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      Matter was more of a nice smart home concept than useful reality in 2023

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Saturday, 23 December - 12:35 · 1 minute

    Illustration of Matter protocol simplifying a home network

    Enlarge / The Matter standard's illustration of how the standard should align a home and all its smart devices. (credit: CSA)

    Matter, as a smart home standard , would make everything about owning a smart home better. Devices could be set up with any phone, for either remote or local control, put onto any major platform (like Alexa, Google, or HomeKit) or combinations of them, and avoid being orphaned if their device maker goes out of business. Less fragmentation, more security, fewer junked devices: win, win, win.

    Matter, as it exists in late 2023, more than a year after its 1.0 specification was published and just under a year after the first devices came online, is more like the xkcd scenario that lots of people might have expected. It's another home automation standard at the moment, and one that isn't particularly better than the others, at least how it works today. I wish it was not so.

    Setting up a Matter device isn't easy, nor is making it work across home systems. Lots of devices with Matter support still require you to download their maker's specific app to get full functionality. Even if you were an early adopting, Matter-T-shirt-wearing enthusiast, you're still buying devices that don't work quite as well, and still generally require a major tech company's gear to act as your bridge or router.

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      The lightning onset of AI—what suddenly changed? An Ars Frontiers 2023 recap

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 24 May, 2023 - 23:31 · 1 minute

    Benj Edwards (L) moderated a panel featuring Paige Bailey (C), Haiyan Zhang (R) for the Ars Frontiers 2023 session titled

    Enlarge / On May 22, Benj Edwards (left) moderated a panel featuring Paige Bailey (center), Haiyan Zhang (right) for the Ars Frontiers 2023 session titled, "The Lightning Onset of AI — What Suddenly Changed?" (credit: Ars Technica)

    On Monday, Ars Technica hosted our Ars Frontiers virtual conference. In our fifth panel, we covered "The Lightning Onset of AI—What Suddenly Changed?" The panel featured a conversation with Paige Bailey , lead product manager for Generative Models at Google DeepMind, and Haiyan Zhang , general manager of Gaming AI at Xbox, moderated by Ars Technica's AI reporter, Benj Edwards .

    The panel originally streamed live, and you can now watch a recording of the entire event on YouTube. The "Lightning AI" part introduction begins at the 2:26:05 mark in the broadcast.

    Ars Frontiers 2023 livestream recording.

    With "AI" being a nebulous term, meaning different things in different contexts, we began the discussion by considering the definition of AI and what it means to the panelists. Bailey said, "I like to think of AI as helping derive patterns from data and use it to predict insights ... it's not anything more than just deriving insights from data and using it to make predictions and to make even more useful information."

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      La parole à… Nicolas Marques, directeur général de l’Institut Molinari – « L’Agirc-Arrco aurait vocation à gérer un système par capitalisation »

      tests.marevalo.net / Institut economique Molinari · Thursday, 26 January, 2023 - 20:29

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      Réforme des retraites: et si les séniors passaient à la caisse?

      Institut économique Molinari · tests.marevalo.net / Institut economique Molinari · Friday, 13 January, 2023 - 16:13