
The newly released production in theaters was fully disclosed through accounts on the network.
Since businessman Elon Musk bought Twitter, he has been trying to obtain financial income from the social network. However, the established changes and the reduction of the company’s employees made the platform’s environment facilitate undue postings, such as copies of movies.
This fact was noticed recently, with the pirated publication of the movie “ Super Mario Bros “
Twitter and ease of piracy
Recently, Nintendo released the movie of one of its most famous game franchises among generations: “Super Mario Bros.”. The production debuted in April (6) and all fans are curious to know how the story of the plumbers was portrayed in the animation.
Whenever a movie opens in theaters, there are some people who are willing to record the screens clandestinely and share them on the networks. These publications were seen on several sites created for this purpose, and which are often offline.
However, to the surprise of some, this time the illegal content had another dissemination platform: Twitter. Understand what made possible the pirated publication of the movie “ Super Mario Bros ”.
Twitter changes
With the payment of the “Blue” subscription, Twitter allows the publication of longer content, such as, for example, movies. That’s how the bootleg recording of “Super Mario Bros.” was disclosed in total in more than one account of Blue subscribers.
In addition, there were cuts in the company’s employees, which reduced the number of specialists for evaluating and controlling content shared on the network. This is because, although the publication of long videos is available, the reproduction of films without proper authorization is a criminal act that violates the rules of Twitter itself.
Thus, after the purchase and restructuring of the company, the platform became a space without an adequate security team to identify this type of error, with a focus on financial gains. The film in its entirety is still available on many of the responsible accounts.