Look, the only reason we even know about Meta torrenting books is because they're getting sued. Evidently they're not getting away with it, unless they win this case
0range
Yeah, video storage is what prevents corporations from creating YouTube competitors, and it also prevents decentralized users from competing
Google going bankrupt would almost certainly mean YouTube disappears. Which can happen, but it's not a good thing
I asked this question and was linked a github that keeps an up-to-date list of trackers that work. That, as far as i can tell, is the best i can do.
They're public torrents, if people don't want it then there's not much i can do
I don't think ideas are the problem, it's that new forms of distribution are causing the industry to panic. Producers are making safer bets (sequels, remakes, franchises) so original ideas, which tons of people have, aren't getting funded.
Also worth noting that producers these days are less Hollywood and more Wall Street, they don't really understand movies so they make calls based on numbers and precedent that let them estimate profitability.
Yeah i'll run out of space one day, but the more popular movies will be the first to go because i know i can get them again.
Still plenty of chance for someone to seize my lonely booty
No, it's movies, and it's largely smaller lower-quality RARBG releases. They used to have a range of qualities available and the middle was always more popular, their highest and lowest quality releases used to be harder to seed, and that was years ago before they shut down
Beats me. I get peers from DHT, from trackers, and a few from PEX, but once they're in a lot of them time out. A lot of them return "Connection reset" too.
Happens a lot less when i set up port forwarding properly, but it still happens. Could be a lot of things, and i don't have the technical knowledge to even know about most
~~No i haven't tried that yet, my assumption is that this only includes the settings and not the actual transfers. If it did include the transfers then Tixati users would just do that, instead i was always told to transplant core2.dat~~
Wait, now that i read that, it DOES include transfers! I did not know that, that's a solid lead thank you
EDIT: It works, all the transfers are backed up; this is a lot better, especially because i preserves dates (Created, Completed, Bits uploaded, Ratio, etc).
BUT, the file locations are also backed up. This is a problem because i'm switching from Windows to Linux, so i can't recreate the file structure because it starts with D:/ instead of starting with /media
Once i update the file location, it triggers a force check, which is the point where some of them fail and display 99% even though they were 100% before. That problem is still unsolved, and i now realize it probably can't be solved.
Overall though this is great, you made me notice something i didn't and it's way better than what i was doing, thanks!
EDIT EDIT: yeah i've come to the conclusion that those who were 100% and are now 99% are just corrupted.
Aside from that, yeah, the file paths are different on Linux and Windows so you'll have to rebind the locations. At this point you'll get "error file missing" for no reason, you can force check to get rid of that.
Yes i do set up port forwarding every time, but no i don't know if those even have peers. They should because i don't think RARBG is that dead, but maybe they just don't.
Then again most peers i do get come back as "Timed out connecting" and "Connection reset", so it does make me wonder if i'm just doing it wrong. It seems to happen whether or not the VPN is on.
EDIT: i'm using Proton and this is how i set up port forwarding, i do notice a difference
Tried qBittorrent and Transmission, they don't do better, in fact they see the same number of peers as Tixati does. And i don't know what would happen if i had two clients try to download the same file, probably nothing good.
Are you trying to do this too?
If, like me, you just wanted to know what the Bob Dylan defence, is: