


The video player also provides support for subtitles, Chromecast, Airplay and DLNA. The video quality will also be largely dependent on the user's Internet connection speed. The streaming will only start, however, if it is able to find peers who have the content, through trackers, DHT and PEX. Another pop-up will also appear that will ask the user if they want to use a Virtual Private Network for a fee, of course, but this can be skipped, says the report. If the plug-in is already installed, a video player will directly open and play the torrent video. When a user activates streaming through Torrents Time and the browser plug-in is not yet installed, there will be a prompt that will let the user install the plug-in. The report said that with KAT implementing the tool, it has become "the Netflix of torrents," allowing its users access to their torrent videos through a dedicated section called "Online Streaming with Torrents Time." According to a Tech Times report, Kickass Torrents recently allowed Torrents Time to stream their torrents, following Pirate Bay's earlier implementation of the tool on their own site. With the appearance of a browser plug-in called Torrents Time, these torrent sites can now allow their users to stream videos without the use of a torrent client. It looks as if copyright advocates have more work cut out for them as torrents sites are still very much up and running, despite several attempts to shut them down.
