Limit your upload speed to 1KB/s? As good as not seeding at all.
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Limit your upload speed to 1KB/s? As good as not seeding at all.
At 1 kb/s your still technically uploading which usually is the thing lands you in hot water because you are still sending data out and that is how watchdog groups get your ISP. With direct downloads you don't upload so there is no way a third party could detect you downloading from these sites.
But I have no idea if your ISP monitors this kind of traffic or the government.
Direct downloads and torrents both have the ability to be risky as each other. In my experience it pays to be cautious with all forms of downloads
Entirely untrue. Torrents themselves are entirely legal. It's only the content that is illegal. If you're using a torrent to download/upload something that is a) your own, completely original, non-derivative, work or b) public domain, it's entirely legal. The transmission medium is irrelevant in terms of legality. That's how the companies behind BitTorrent, uTorrent, and all the other clients have survived this long.
I guess people dont use usenet because you have to pay... I use it and i dont know how i survived via torrents... I still use Demonoid for stuff i cant find on usenet, but you just need to find the right newsgroup (kinda like a tracker for torrents)
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I used to hammer usenet for new release 360 games since my ISP gives free usenet access with 7 days retention. Not the best, but decent enough to grab new release/posted items without having to pay. :P
Sometimes you might download a torrent that has a keygen or crack that registers as a false positive on your virus scan. So you just put the file on the ignore list when it shows up on a scan. Other than that I haven't really had any problems getting viruses from torrents, but I have gotten them multiple times from direct downloads. From my experience, torrents are safer as long as you keep an eye out and read the comments posted about it. It is just a misinformation campaign against filesharing, spreading rumors of it not being safe, or as safe. And I say its plenty safe enough as long as you use good judgement in which torrents you download.
Same goes for direct downloads, if you get a pop up that says you just won, click here and you get a trojan, then that is nobody's fault but your own. Anyone dumb enough to get trojans like that either needs to wise up about the internet, or just shouldn't be using a PC at all.
I much prefer torrents to direct downloads, for one, my speed isn't capped and get WAY better DL speeds providing its seeded, and you can stop/resume download any time you want. Not all sites let you stop/resume downloads, but all torrents let you do that.
As far as them tracking down pirates? I am not the slightest bit concerned. There is just too much of a volume of traffic on the internet for them to have the manpower to monitor every person. But they really go after people who burn copies of pirated material and sell them for profit on a larger scale, those people they can track and go after. I don't even think my government is competent enough to organize such an operation even if they did have the manpower, desire and the resources to monitor and catch everyone using filesharing.
Because (in most countries) downloading is not illegal. Suppose you click a link to direct download an .MP3 files, the ISP knows NOTHING of what's going on. Heck, there could be a background song on the website (HTML5) that loads the MP3 file and plays them. There is nothing illegal about displaying what should be displayed.
Torrents, on the other hand, are evil to ISP's. Where downloading is not illegal, uploading is. Torrents are a share-based protocol (peer 2 peer) in which you upload to others what you downloaded from others. The fact that you redistribute copywrited material puts you at risk.
And for the people who think they're so 1337 because they can limit their upload speed at 1kb/s, well good for you... You completely defeat the purpose of p2p protocols. IE: that's the reason that there is absolutely NOTHING going on at http://bt.emuparadise.org:6969/... People leech and leave, not considering other people might share their interests.
PS: Oh and another thing: BT is not BitTorrent, but rather Bittorrent Tracker. Logs are kept, not to put you in danger, that's just the way torrents work... the tracker needs to keep a list of all people who are active on the torrent so they can send that list to people who want to download it. An ISP could acquire the list for like "Windows 8 Leaked Torrent x86!" and check see if any of the IP addresses belong to them, and send them kind letters in exchange. Also, the BT Ports are probably watched... (Direct Download is in HTTP (port 80, like a website), Usenet is in HTTPS (secure download, like banking/paypal) and torrents have their own port... Easily tracable...
What do you mean I don't use NZB files? I create them dynamically on binsearch.info...
As far as speed is concerned they're looking at all around speed. hence the torrent name. If they're isn't any pressure (yea yea I know water reference) their isn't going to be any flow (whether it be water or dl speed) Your uploading isn't gonna affect your download speed only other people's download speeds.
That's not true, I've seen clients that limit your download speed depending on your upload speed... These are mostly a 90%-10% ratio, but I have seen 50%-50%... Meaning that if you upload at 1kb/s, your download should be around 9kb/s (I stopped using Azureus because of that...)