Game of Thrones premiere sets piracy record
HBO's mythical drama “Game of Thrones” set a record for modern-day piracy after its Sunday night premiere, as viewers around the globe scrambled to watch the season 3 debut episode that aired on the premium cable network.
Piracy tracker TorrentFreak says that more than 1 million viewers downloaded the episode in the first day after it aired. At one point, more than 163,000 people were simultaneously sharing a single torrent -- a new record. The previous record, of just under 145,000 simultaneous file-swappers, was set by the “Heroes” season 3 debut in 2008.
The heavy demand for the premiere episode is no surprise, given that TorrentFreak says “Game of Thrones” was the most pirated show of 2012. According to its estimate, 4.3 million people downloaded the season finale last year; nearly a half-million more than downloaded the second-most pirated show, the Showtime drama “Dexter.”
London is the city with the most illegal downloads of the episode, TorrentFreak said, while the country with the heaviest downloads was the United States, followed by the UK and Australia.
Those downloading the file were using BitTorrent, a free software system that lets users swap large media files. Hollywood is concerned about illegal downloads, but HBO programming president Michael Lombardo told Entertainment Weekly recently that the network sees the piracy of “Game of Thrones” as a sign of success more than a problem.
“I probably shouldn't be saying this, but it is a compliment of sorts,” Lombardo said ahead of the season 3 premiere. “The demand is there. And it certainly didn't negatively impact the DVD sales. [Piracy is] something that comes along with having a wildly successful show on a subscription network.”
In a recent interview with CNN's Jake Tapper, “Game of Thrones” co-creator David Benioff speculated about all the special effects he could buy if those who illegally pirated the show were paying 99 cents or so per download. “You do kind of think, God, if we just had a little bit of that, we could have had that extra scene with the dragons,” he said.
Fans who might be willing to cough up that 99 cents for a pay-per-episode purchase of the new season don't have any opportunity to do so. New “Game of Thrones” episodes are available only to HBO subscribers, through its cable channel and its HBO Go on-demand app.
Source: CNN
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