Hollywood Studios Reportedly Using BitTorrent To Pirate Movies

hollywood Hollywood Studios Reportedly Using BitTorrent To Pirate MoviesMovie studios and record labels have always lamented how online piracy is destroying the industry and as we have seen in the past, these media giants have gone to rather extreme measures to punish individuals who have allegedly downloaded copyrighted material illegally. Interestingly it seems that despite their stance on the whole issue of piracy, it would seem as though some Hollywood studios might be guilty of pirating movies themselves. The folks at TorrentFreak are reporting that they are using BitTorrent monitor Scaneye to track down IP addresses they believe are associated with Hollywood studios.

Based on their results, they have found that IP addresses associated with Paramount Pictures, Warner Bros., 20th Century Fox, and Walt Disney were using BitTorrent in order to access copyrighted material illegally. For example they found that someone over at Paramount was downloading an illegal copy of The Hunger Games, while someone at Disney was caught downloading an episode of Downton Abbey. It’s rather ironic when you think about it – granted these are probably individuals working at these studios who were doing the downloading as opposed to some conspiracy theory, but you would think that these studios would have some sort of security measure in place to prevent the downloading of torrents, right?

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Samsung Teases Its New Smart TV Bound For CES 2013 In Video, Google Testing “Quick View” On Mobile Search Results,

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Twitter has been making a giant push for expanded tweets from content providers. It’s only a short logical leap from that to Twitter providing the content itself, and that’s exactly what AdWeek claims may well happen. Its unconfirmed tipsters have the microblog taking a page from YouTube by pitching Hollywood movie and TV studios on “several” original shows that would live in followers’ feeds, including the seemingly inescapable reality show. While Twitter wouldn’t have someone in the director’s chair, it might still play a role by letting viewers affect the show as it’s happening — and of course, running ads. Silence is the only official response to the rumor from Twitter so far; don’t plan your viewing schedule just yet, but do brace yourself in case Twitter breaks out a Horse ebooks cameo to boost ratings in mid-season.

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Twitter rumored to be pitching in-feed video shows to studios originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Jul 2012 14:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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