Category: Tater News

  • Aylo Wins $90 Million Default Judgment Against Porn Piracy Network

    📰 New article from TorrentFreak

    Aylo Wins $90 Million Default Judgment Against Porn Piracy Network

    https://torrentfreak.com/aylo-wins-90-million-default-judgment-against-porn-piracy-network/

    Aylo just scored a $90 million win—against a ghost.

    The parent company of Pornhub, Brazzers, and MOFOS sued an elusive pirate operator named Anton Popravkin for running eight adult sites that streamed over 9,000 of its copyrighted videos. Popravkin? Never showed up in court. So Aylo got a default judgment—a legal win by default, like winning a race because everyone else quit.

    The math was wild: Aylo initially asked for $150 million ($15K per video). The judge said, “Nice try,” and cut it to $90 million—still enough to make pirates sweat. But here’s the twist: Aylo knows they’ll never collect a dime. Popravkin’s probably sipping cocktails somewhere with no U.S. assets.

    So why bother? Domains. The real win: the court ordered eight pirate domains—FreshPorno, Kojka, you name it—to be handed over to Aylo. Verisign’s already been told: transfer control. In a few days, those sites will go dark
 or worse, become Aylo-branded PSA portals. (“Hey, why pirate when you can subscribe?”)

    It’s less about the money and more about sending a message: We own the content. You don’t get to steal it—and we’ll take your URL too.

    Bottom line: The lawsuit was a legal stunt. The domain seizure? That’s the knockout punch.

  • Top 10 Most Pirated Movies of The Week – 01/26/2026

    📰 New article from TorrentFreak

    Top 10 Most Pirated Movies of The Week – 01/26/2026

    https://torrentfreak.com/top-10-most-torrented-pirated-movies/

    This week, Zootopia 2 stole the spotlight—literally. After dethroning last week’s champ, The Rip, Disney’s furry sequel is now the most-pirated movie on the planet. And honestly? We’re not surprised. Who wouldn’t want to watch a sly fox and an overzealous bunny team up again
 in 4K, on a Tuesday night?

    But here’s the twist: One Battle After Another (IMDb 8.1) is quietly climbing the ranks like a Netflix underdog with a gym membership. Meanwhile, Wicked: For Good and Avatar: Fire and Ash are still drawing crowds—probably because people can’t wait to see if the sequels live up to the hype (or just want free tickets).

    The real mystery? Sinners and Bugonia—two titles with no prior ranking—are suddenly everywhere. Are they hidden gems? Or just really good at sneaking into pirated bundles? Either way, someone’s binge-watching in the dark.

    Fun fact: Rental Family (7.7) is #7—and if you’re pirating a movie about fake families
 maybe it’s time to call your real ones. đŸ“șđŸ’„

    (Disclaimer: We’re not encouraging piracy—we just find it weirdly fascinating.)

  • Retro Handhelds Weekly: Retroid Pocket 6, Anbernic RAM Swap, BanjoRecomp, and More

    📰 New article from Retro Handhelds

    Retro Handhelds Weekly: Retroid Pocket 6, Anbernic RAM Swap, BanjoRecomp, and More

    https://retrohandhelds.gg/retro-handhelds-weekly-edition-83/

    Retro Handhelds Weekly: RAM Swaps, Banjo Rebirth, and Mario’s Pixel Power Move

    Let’s be real—when you drop $200 on a retro handheld, you don’t expect the RAM to suddenly become a ghost story. Anbernic’s RG34XXSP just got downgraded from 2GB to 1GB, and the community is side-eyeing the invoice like it’s a bad cheat code. Meanwhile, Retroid Pocket 6? Delayed—not because of bugs, but screen calibration issues. Turns out, making a perfect 4.5-inch display is harder than it looks.

    But wait—there’s magic in the software corner. Banjo-Kazooie just got a full PC remake called BanjoRecomp, and fans are weeping into their N64 controllers. And in the weirdest twist of 2026? Nintendo once told Sega, “Mario must always be one pixel ahead of Sonic” in promotional art. Not metaphorically. Literally. One foot forward. Pixel by pixel. The gaming gods are petty, and we love them for it.

    On the hardware front: TrimUI’s Brick Pro is rumored to have joysticks. Yes, you read that right. The handheld world’s favorite chunky little box might finally grow up.

    And yes—Prince of Persia: Sands of Time remake? Cancelled. But Banjo lives. So do we.

    Subscribe to Retro Handhelds Weekly for more chaos, cheese, and controller nostalgia. 🎼

  • DSPico – Open Source NDS Flash Cart

    📰 New article from RetroRGB

    DSPico – Open Source NDS Flash Cart

    https://retrorgb.com/dspico-open-source-nds-flash-cart.html

    If you’ve ever longed to relive your NDS days without hunting down dusty cartridges, say hello to DSPico—the world’s first open-source NDS/DSi flash cart, and it’s actually real.

    Created by the LNH Team, DSPico isn’t just a nostalgia trip—it’s a full-blown upgrade. Think custom firmware, save states, homebrew support, and even region-free play—all without needing a modded console. And because it’s open source? The community can keep improving it forever. Tito from Macho Nacho Productions didn’t just show it off—he geeked out over the insane level of documentation, which is basically a love letter to DIY enthusiasts.

    You can preorder it now via AliExpress or PhenomMod (US), and if you’re wondering why this matters: open-source hardware thrives when people can actually buy it. No more “this looks cool but I don’t have the tools to build it.” DSPico fixes that.

    Bonus: It looks like a tiny, sleek NDS cartridge. No ugly cables. Just pure, unadulterated DS magic—reinvented.

    Get one before your old DS cart turns to dust. đŸ•č

  • Small Ultrasonic Cleaner Review

    📰 New article from RetroRGB

    Small Ultrasonic Cleaner Review

    https://retrorgb.com/small-ultrasonic-cleaner-review.html

    You know that moment when you’re holding a grimy, decades-old controller and think, “What if I just
 sonically bathed it?”

    Enter the OSLTWI ultrasonic cleaner — a tiny, $30 machine that turns your junk drawer into a high-tech spa for old electronics. It’s perfect for cleaning PCBs, buttons, or even that one controller you’ve been too grossed out to touch since 2017. And yes, the video shows tobacco products (because of course it does).

    Big ultrasonic cleaners? Yeah, they cost $1,000. This one? Less than your last coffee run. But here’s the twist: it’s so small, you can’t even fit a SNES motherboard in there. Still — if your stuff fits? Total win. The reviewer admits he’ll probably use it more for his coffee cup than his NES, but hey, clean bowls are a win too.

    The real takeaway? It’s not about power — it’s about accessibility. You don’t need a lab-grade tank to make your retro gear shine. Just a little buzz, some soap, and the confidence that yes, you can revive that dusty Game Boy without a toothbrush.

    Space is the real bottleneck — but if you’ve got a shelf and a curiosity? This little guy’s worth every penny.

  • Adviser of EU’s Highest Court Backs VPN Neutrality in Anne Frank Copyright Battle

    📰 New article from TorrentFreak

    Adviser of EU’s Highest Court Backs VPN Neutrality in Anne Frank Copyright Battle

    https://torrentfreak.com/adviser-of-eus-highest-court-backs-vpn-neutrality-in-anne-frank-copyright-battle/

    Here’s the newsletter-ready version—punchy, human, and just a little sassy:

    —

    When Anne Frank’s diary goes geo-blocked
 and VPNs get dragged into WWII-era copyright drama

    Let’s be real: if you’re trying to read The Diary of Anne Frank online—and you’re in the Netherlands—you get a polite “sorry, not today” message. Why? Because copyright law is weirdly stuck in 1945, even though Anne died in 1945. The Swiss-based Anne Frank Fonds claims rights until 2037 in the Netherlands, even though it’s public domain everywhere else. So the Dutch Anne Frank Foundation built a fancy geo-block to keep locals out. Smart move.

    But then came the twist: The Fonds sued
 because people used VPNs to sneak in. They argued if it’s possible to bypass the block, then the site is liable. Cue the EU’s top legal adviser, Advocate General Rantos: “Nope.” In a rare moment of digital common sense, he said geo-blocking is fine—if it’s not laughably broken. And VPNs? They’re just
 pipes. Not copyright cops.

    TL;DR: If you use a VPN to read Anne Frank’s words, you’re the one breaking rules—not the tool you used. Unless the VPN company is screaming, “Hey, bypass this!” at you. Then it’s on them.

    Final ruling from the CJEU is coming later this year. If they side with Rantos? Streaming services, publishers, and libraries everywhere breathe a sigh of relief. If not? Welcome to the internet where every click could be a lawsuit.

    —

    P.S. Anne Frank’s voice deserves to be heard. Not buried under legal loopholes.

  • NeoSD PRO – Vengeance Hunters Edition

    📰 New article from RetroRGB

    NeoSD PRO – Vengeance Hunters Edition

    https://retrorgb.com/neosd-pro-vengeance-hunters-edition.html

    Let’s be real: if you’re shellin’ out $700 for a single game, you’re either a hardcore Neo Geo collector
 or you really, really love beat ’em ups with style.

    Stone Age Gamer’s new Vengeance Hunters bundle pairs the full NeoSD Pro (a slick, reprogrammable ROM cart) with a digital copy of the game—$50 more than just buying the cart alone. So if you already own a NeoSD Pro? Congrats, you just bought a very expensive USB stick with one game on it.

    The twist? The standalone Vengeance Hunters ROM cart used to cost $400—basically a NeoSD Pro with one game preloaded. Now they’re bundling the same cart with a digital download, but still charging $700. It’s like buying a Tesla and being told the key fob is sold separately
 but only works with one song.

    Sure, it’s clever to reuse hardware. But when the physical version costs more than a Switch or Steam copy ($20), you start wondering if this is collectible art—or just a very shiny tax on nostalgia.

    Bottom line? If you need that authentic AES/MVS experience, go for it. Otherwise? Steam. Switch. YouTube demo. Your wallet will thank you.

  • The Future is Now: Are We Reaching Handheld End-Game?

    📰 New article from Retro Handhelds

    The Future is Now: Are We Reaching Handheld End-Game?

    https://retrohandhelds.gg/the-future-is-now-are-we-reaching-handheld-end-game/

    You ever stare at a shelf of handhelds and think, “Wait
 I literally own every console that ever existed
 in my pocket?”

    Nick from Retro Handhelds did. And he’s worried we’ve hit peak handheld. The AYN Odin 3? Unreal. Retroid Pocket G2? Shockingly capable. ROG Ally? A full PC in your lap. PS3 games? Almost there. Switch 2 emulation? Coming soon. We’re not just playing retro—we’re running Hollow Knight on three different devices and still debating which one to pick.

    The problem? There’s no “next level” left to chase. Emulation, cloud streaming, FEX PC translation—it’s all here. And with RAM and GPUs costing more than your first console, why upgrade? The $400 handheld that runs Elden Ring is now the new baseline.

    The future isn’t about more power—it’s about more cleverness. Think Lossless Scaling, smarter ports, and devs squeezing magic out of aging hardware. The real innovation? Not the next device
 but learning to love the one you’ve got.

    So go ahead—play Hollow Knight on your Odin 3. Or your Switch. Or your phone. We’re not choosing consoles anymore. We’re choosing how we want to feel while playing them.

    And honestly? That’s the real upgrade.

  • Anbernic’s New Controller Tracks Your Heart Rate Mid-Rage Quit

    📰 New article from Retro Handhelds

    Anbernic’s New Controller Tracks Your Heart Rate Mid-Rage Quit

    https://retrohandhelds.gg/anbernics-new-controller-tracks-your-heart-rate-mid-rage-quit/

    You’re rage-quitting again? Good. Now your controller knows.

    Anbernic just dropped the RG G01 — a retro-style controller with a tiny screen, customizable macros, and
 heart rate monitoring. Yes, really. Sensors in the grips track your pulse as you scream at a 16-bit boss fight, then flash a little warning when your ticker’s doing the cha-cha. It’s like a fitness tracker that hates you for losing to Bowser Jr.

    The 2.5D display lets you tweak buttons mid-game, no PC needed — and with haptic feedback so good it’ll make your thumbs weep, this thing’s basically a power-up for the neurotic gamer. But hold up: how accurate is it? Is your heart data just sitting on the controller like a sweaty secret? And what if you’re playing Celeste and it alerts you to “elevated stress levels”? Are we now supposed to breathe deeply before attempting that final platforming gauntlet?

    Still, it’s weirdly brilliant. A controller that doesn’t just respond to your thumbs
 but your soul. The RG G01 launches soon — and if you’ve ever yelled “I HATE THIS GAME” while your pulse hit 140? You already know this is the future. đŸ«€đŸŽź

  • OpenKSK – Open Source Sega CD Laser Board Replacement

    📰 New article from RetroRGB

    OpenKSK – Open Source Sega CD Laser Board Replacement

    https://retrorgb.com/openksk-open-source-sega-cd-laser-board-replacement.html

    If your Sega CD’s laser died mid-“Sonic CD” run, you’re not alone—these 90s laser boards are turning to dust faster than your old SNES cartridges. Enter OpenKSK, the open-source hero we didn’t know we needed.

    Developer starlightk7 just dropped a 1:1 replica of the Sony KSK laser board—fully open-source (CERN-OHL-S, no less)—and it’s already in stock. No more hunting eBay for dying parts or praying to the Console Gods. Just plug it in, boot up, and relive your CD-era glory days without the dreaded “No Disc” error.

    This isn’t just a fix—it’s preservation. The project covers KSK-1200A (Sega CD Model 1), KSK-1310A (Model 2), and Neo Geo CD frontloaders. More models are coming
 if you’ve got a KSK-11 lying around, please, for the love of Sonic, donate it. Starlight’s on a mission to save every variant.

    Pro tip: Check out 1upRestorations’ install video. It’s basically a retro tech spa day for your Sega CD.

    And hey—if you’ve got a working KSK board or just appreciate this kind of magic? Support the maker. These aren’t just parts
 they’re time machines.