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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Fast Five', 'Hangover II' and 'Thor' Named the mainly Pirated Movies in 2011

What are the most pirated movies in 2011? "Fast Five" came out ontop in the list of 2011's most-pirated movies on BitTorrent, according to data unconfined by TorrentFreak on Friday, December 23. illegitimately downloaded for 9.3 million times this year, it was followed by "The Hangover Part II" and "Thor". 

The continuation of "The Hangover" landed #2 with 8.8 million downloads, while the Chris Hemsworth-starring movie ranked #3 with 7.9 million downloads. Oscar-winning film "The King's Speech" placed #9 with 6.3 million downloads, while "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part II" rounds up the top ten with 6 million downloads. 

"127 Hours" and "Sucker Punch", which box office grosses were relatively unassuming, also made it into the list. Other big movies, such as "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides" and "Transformers: Dark of the Moon", astoundingly couldn't be found in the Top 10 list. 

even though "Fast Five" topped the list this year, its number of downloads was way below last year's most-pirated film, "Avatar", which was accessed criminally for more than 16 million times. The usual number of downloads for the entire top 10 list is also lower than that of last year. 


Crown 10 a large amount Pirated Movies in 2011:
"Fast Five" - 9.3 million downloads
"The Hangover Part II" - 8.8 million downloads
"Thor" - 8.3 million downloads
"Source Code" - 7.9 million downloads
"I Am Number Four" - 7.7 million downloads
"Sucker Punch" - 7.2 million downloads
"127 Hours" - 6.9 million
"Rango" - 6.5 million downloads
"The King's Speech" - 6.3 million downloads
"Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part II" - 6 million downloads




Watch video: fast and furious!!!

Comet Lovejoy, as Seen from the International Space Station

Today in pretty space pics: Comet Lovejoy, still alive and heading back out toward the far reaches of the solar system, as seen from the International Space Station. This photograph was snapped yesterday as the ISS passed over Australia by Dan Burbank, one of the station’s current crew members. And needless to say, it’s one of those once-in-a-lifetime shots