The copy protection of the British streaming provider BBC iPlayer was bypassed by the P2P group BLUTONiUM. They released the first episode of the exclusive documentary series "Seven Worlds, One Planet" in English: "Seven Continents - One Planet". This is the first movie that was taken directly from the BBC iPlayer.

None of the existing streaming providers is more secure from accessing the scene. Now BLUTONiUM has released the first episode of the documentary series of the BBC Natural History Unit. The documentary is considered extremely complex with 1,500 employees, almost 1,800 shooting days and locations in 41 different nations of the world. The state broadcaster BBC has spared no expense and effort in the production. The film music was contributed by the popular German musician Hans Zimmer.

BBC iPlayer: ripped nature documentary covers 8 GB

The problem: Naturalist and speaker Sir David Attenborough presents the first episode no longer exclusively on BBC iPlayer, but virtually everywhere on the Internet. The P2P Group has recently released the series as a web DL in the finest quality with almost 8 GB in size. This means that the material was taken directly from the stream without any loss of quality. Until the work ends up in the Usenet, at the P2P indexers or on the hard drives of the Filehoster, usually not much time passes.

Previously, other release groups such as FaiLED, LiNKLE and QPEL have released their own webrips, just not in this extremely high quality and not from this source. The next illegal releases will not be long in coming ...

If you want to take a look at it with a lower resolution, we recommend a look at this thread at Reddit . The streaming provider BBC iPlayer is incidentally in good company. Even Apple TV + , Netflix and Hulu all have the same problem. They do not manage to protect the offered films from access by third parties. Disney + will also be no exception, because you want to use an already known and cracked copy Protection.