How do we know that this is the official website, and not simply a clone with (possibly) malicious content. The official popcornti.me site had that exact issue back in March:<p>"@mediatemple hey they cloned our site getpopcornti.me in <a href="http://getpopcorntime.com" rel="nofollow">http://getpopcorntime.com</a> - they linked some downloads as virus - watch out!" - <a href="https://twitter.com/getpopcornapp/status/442519692067241984" rel="nofollow">https://twitter.com/getpopcornapp/status/442519692067241984</a>
This one is popcorn-time.tv, the old one that is still down is <a href="http://getpopcornti.me" rel="nofollow">http://getpopcornti.me</a><p>The last commit is "Disabled the updater", looks like someone just forked it, stopped the player from updating (presumably since it would poll a set URL they don't have control over) and launched a new website.
I really don't understand all this waffling. Why would you start a project like this in 2014 without considering legal responses and having prepared for them?
Keep getting this: <a href="https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/1090458/2602971/3c5eab00-bb28-11e3-9b8b-401dc49d569a.png" rel="nofollow">https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/1090458/2602971/3...</a>
everytime I run Popcorn time or similar clones(Time 4 popcorn, Popcorn time yify etc.). Why is this happening only with me. Infact I think it's happening with all node.js desktop apps. Any clues why is it happening?
Has the repo been moved from here?
<a href="https://github.com/popcorn-team/popcorn-app" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/popcorn-team/popcorn-app</a>
A radical solution, I know, but why not just <i>pay for your content</i>? And, if it's not available at the right price/format/location, <i>find other content</i>?<p>And, to those saying "This is for non-copyright/author approved stuff", I say "I was not born yesterday".
popcorn time listed on www.createsetgo.com in entertainment section - it is a social network for consumers looking to plug into the latest & greatest ideas - hope the connecting with the end users helps your BETA. cheers!