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How To Torrent: A Redux
A few years ago, I wrote a post on how to torrent for beginners. It gave poor advice and isn't worth reblogging. Unfortunately, I can't make the thing unrebloggable, so instead I'm writing a new one.
You will need: A working internet connection A copy of qbittorrent An adblocker, ideally uBlock Origin Especially if you're in Germany or the USA, a vpn. I recommend mullvad (though make sure to use a p2p server).
Can a smart person explain why torrenting stuff is so much faster than downloading stuff through an internet browser?
As streaming services are scaming us left and right, torrenting becomes a more and more valuable option...
Of course, you should NEVER do it. It's illegal and WRONG.
This is how these thieves are doing this... it's honestly awful how easy it is... 💔
These evil people need a VPN. And they can even get it for free. OperaGX has a free VPN!
Thieves would need to download a torrent client. Again, there are many free options! How awful! Qbittorrent is a free program! How dare they!
Now they would need to find a reliable torrent website. There are many options and to find them they would only have to search something like: "best torrent websites 2025"
When they downloaded a torrent file they would have to put it in the torrent client. And they will have movies, TV shows, series. Literally anything they want, for free! Fucking disgusting!
It's so scary, evil, terrible, that torrenting is so easy! DON'T EVER DO IT. IT'S SO BAD. You would be a very very very bad person! How dare you steal like that from helpless big corporations! 😭💔
To all of Apple's victims:
Apple fucked you over. They showed you who they were. You do not matter to them because they are artificially supported by the financial and political apparatus globally but especially from the imperial core. They needed your happiness to get your money but they have been such a huge corporation for so long with so much influence, they are beyond that.
Do not let them keep victimizing you. You deserve better. You are smarter than they think and you are more capable than you realize. Many people suddenly were unable to pay for groceries, kids unable to get a ride home, people stranded while traveling. Why weren't you warned?? Because it was an ambush to force your hand: give apple your credit card number (because apparently the ID stuff isn't working half the time, conveniently) and all your personal info, FOR THE CHILDREN. Apple has never been good about privacy, and never will be.
You must fight back! Stop supporting this system! Get a fairphone, use a custom operating system like LineageOS, use Fdroid or Obtanium instead of google play store, support open source free software, start sharing files by torrenting, and decentralize as much as you can. Do not roll over and take this. You deserve tech that works. You deserve privacy. You deserve dignity.
There are tutorials for all this online. Please practice the skill of asking for help, reading documentation, using Ctrl+f on pages to quickly find stuff by keywords, and don't forget: it is propaganda that some people are smart and thus techy/mathy and that some people are just stupid. If other humans can do it, you can too. If you care to. Please do not let them tell you who you are and what you are incapable of. I don't come from a techy background AT ALL and I'm completely degoogled and decentralized.
I believe in you. FOSS forever.

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Piracy 101 for beginners
Hello friends, it is I, your favourite anti-capitalist. After a lot of interest from people looking to get into piracy, I have compiled a guide for anyone who wants to become a pirate but doesn't know where to start. This is a long post, so I'm gonna put a cut here, but if you want to find out, keep reading!
This information is all up to date as of October 2024.
"don't post links to pirate sites" as a security through obscurity strategy seems... weak. if a pirate site is so obscure that almost nobody can find it, it's also essentially pointless.
but yes, if a pirate site is common knowledge, the feds will be working on destroying it. so the idea is i assume to achieve an intermediate level of obscurity, where you have to have a certain amount of talent for asking the right people or searching the right things to find it. but... whatever capacity for research you are asking people to have on that front, the feds are equally capable of it, and they have a whole lot more time on their hands for tracking down pirate sites! security through obscurity is a losing game for piracy. the perfect sweet spot where people can find your pirate resource but the feds cannot is something of a mirage.
if not that, than what?
the current piracy system involves a few different tiers of accessibility, and various components that are more or less decentralised.
torrents are the most resilient tech because to stamp out a torrent (with DHT enabled) you have to suppress every seed. so, you have big public torrent trackers like TPB; these are well known and rely on hopping domains and redundancy for security. the ratio of seeds to leeches tends to be low, but the number of users is large enough that there will be at least a few seeds out there for most stuff. torrent clients have gotten a lot better at seeding strategies that take into account your seed ratio and what's currently available in the swarm, so if you just leave everything on seed and open your torrent client fairly often (use a VPN though lol), you don't really need to think about it.
then you have private trackers; these operate on an invite basis. the problem with this is that when the pool of users is so small, the odds of a given seed being online are also small. to prevent torrents dying, they gamify it: you get points for seeding and if you don't have enough points you can't download anything until you seed more. to help people get back in the game there will be 'freeleech' events. being active on a private tracker takes a bit of work.
and of course you have to get in in the first place, which tends to require a proven track record of seeding on other private trackers, and some kind of interview with the operators. getting involved in private trackers is a much bigger ask, you have to figure out where to get your foot in the door, and work your way up to the more insular trackers. it's like a mini subculture. it's valuable, but not scalable.
at the top level of inaccessibility is the warez scene. this is a whole subject that i'm not even gonna get into, go read wikipedia. historically this is where the files actually come from, before getting distributed on public trackers, usenet etc. but good luck getting in there lmao, they are understandably quite paranoid.
of course, for stuff to get on pirate sites you need somebody to go the effort of ripping and encoding it. this is where a major point of failure exists. when RarBG went down recently, the biggest loss was not the existing archive of torrent links, which can be backed up - it was that they were very active at converting scene releases into torrents with a decent balance of file size and quality, which then filter out into the various public trackers. that is much harder to replace! but what killed RarBG wasn't even suppression by authorities - according to their statement, it was a bunch of the admins getting covid or dying or fighting in the Russia-Ukraine war, which made the whole operation impossible to continue. so despite the thousands of people who download RarBG torrents, this single point of failure was overstressed and broke.
as far as the ethics of spreading links to pirate sites go... if it's something like a mega drive, yeah, the chances of a takedown are pretty high if it gets noticed! no question. but those things are by nature short-lived; if you want to use that for archival you're building on sand. there's also databases like emuparadise, but there was no saving that through obscurity, it just took Nintendo a minute to bring the case.
in this kind of centralised case, the clock is ticking from day 1. what we want is to maximise the number of people who are able to save copies while it's up, and then some of those people can put it up again somewhere else and keep the authorities playing whack-a-mole. (for a small collection of files, a sensible measure would be to make a torrent and a mega drive side by side, so that people can download the mega drive and then add the torrent to their client to seed if it gets nuked.)
as for torrent sites, the thing is that torrents rely for effectiveness on a swarm that is either very large or very responsible about seeding. if it's a public tracker, it has to be well known or it's pointless. instead of security through obscurity, the form of security for these sites is try to make the resource itself hard to take down - operating the tracker/archive in countries that don't have copyright treaties, maintaining mirrors, and of course distributing as many seeds as possible so the torrent can stay alive even if the site goes down.
the major problem with a dead torrent site is discoverability. if it's harder to find the torrent, fewer people will download it, the existing seeds will gradually go offline, and of course you can't download a torrent that you don't know exists. and while you could imagine a system of broadcasting metadata about a torrent (title, encoding etc.) in a DHT-like way but that would be so vulnerable to fakes and spam. maybe some kind of cryptographically signed 'this torrent is good' declaration is possible? I know certain torrent clients tout discovery features, but honestly I don't know how well they work. I'm sure there are projects that are way ahead of the game than me on this question.
but yeah anyway trying to browbeat people into not sharing links to pirate media is 1. futile, by the time you see it the cat is out of the bag 2. not a sustainable strategy for security. if you wanna lecture people, 'use a VPN and seed your torrents' is evergreen ;p