The old adage tells us that if something is just too good to be true then it probably is. So it was with the free file sharing system Ares Destiny that I tried out recently. I’d heard mixed reviews and just wanted to give it a test run. It’s free so I thought that it wouldn’t hurt to try. How wrong I was: it hurt a lot. First off the Ares Destinysoftware is nothing special. There is nothing particularly wrong with it either: it is just mid range stuff that is easily bettered by searching around. This didn’t surprise me a great deal since Ares Destiny is relatively new to the market and I didn’t expect them to get it spot on first time around. The big surprise – and it is not one of those nice surprises like you would expect on a birthday or at Christmas – is that during installation (which was, unsurprisingly in hindsight, pretty much an automatic affair) it had managed to squeeze Dealio onto my computer. Dealio is spyware, pure and simple, and unless you really like popups every few minutes it will get annoying very, very soon. As a parting shot, it turns out that Dealio is pretty much impossible to get rid of. Steer well clear of Ares Destiny!

p2pnet news view | P2P | Movies :- “Hollywood fears that the pirating of movies will become as common as the illicit sharing of music files.” Clearly, the auld grey heads who run Time-Warner, Fox, Disney, Columbia, Paramount and MGM haven’t been near the P2P networks, lately. There, the sharing of movies continues to be prolific, thanks to a significant extent to Hollywood insiders who supply screeners, work prints, preview releases and other ‘product’ for online consumption. On top of that, the many millions of DVDs routinely pumped out for retail sale serve as templates for organised criminal counterfeiters and duplicators who sell the results on underground and black markets, as well as the street corners and flea markets of the world.

See original here:
Major Hollywood ‘anti-piracy’ shake up




BMC