![]() ![]() Hey internets, apparently thinks we're dead, are we ? That said, the app has seen active development quietly being made on Github for weeks and the updater is using a domain that appears to be in someone else’s control. It’s entirely possible (though unlikely) that the MPAA could be trying to use the app as a honeypot to track movie pirates. ![]() It gets weirder - a number of the domains being used by the app are still controlled by the MPAA, yet the project still uses private keys that match the original team’s for distribution. Torrentfreak talked to the original team, which claimed to have nothing to do with the revived app - and are still actively being sued by the MPAA. What’s strange, however, is that nobody seems to know who is behind the updated app. The Website also reappeared, at a different domain name, as well as the official GitHub becoming active again and the original Twitter account tweeting the news. The original app suddenly started functioning again today - and received an update titled “Hail Hydra” with a number of bug fixes. Popcorn Time suddenly went offline last year with the Motion Picture Association of America claiming it had successfully shut down the service by catching the people behind it.
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