In the world of file sharing, BitTorrent has long been hailed as the go-to protocol for its efficient initial distribution capabilities. However, when it comes to maintaining availability and ensuring the longevity of shared files, BitTorrent falls short. There are several alternative platforms that make it much easier to share files, allowing the seeder to reorganize the files to their hearts’ content without losing the ability to keep seeding to a torrent. Fopnu, eMule, DC++, and Nicotine+ are some of the better alternatives that make sharing a breeze.
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Wow, what a cunt.
However, when it comes to maintaining availability and ensuring the longevity of shared files, BitTorrent falls short.
And
Why I Would Never Seed a Torrent
I wonder if there’s a correlation!
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You can’t complain about a supposed problem… When you yourself are actively making a it a problem… “Sherlock”
Edit: This is akin to punching yourself and wondering why you have a black eye.
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I’m sorry, but that’s factually not what you stated. And even then… it’s irrelevant.
DHT and PEX exist. You don’t need a central torrent tracker to use the torrent protocol. Much in the same way that ed2k+kad works.
So who maintains these alternatives? A centralized server?
Private trackers usually have very healthy torrents :)
I’m assuming you’ve never been a member of a private tracker then? They would boot you off in a heartbeat. And after this post, no one is going to want to send you an invite.
I seed 160 TB, but not over BitTorrent. I certainly don’t need access to private trackers to find what I want, and I have even less interest in contributing to them since I think they are elitist. Information shouldn’t be hidden behind an invitation. That’s no better than a subscription or paywall in my book.
I agree information shouldn’t be behind an invitation, but it does solve 3 important things:
- Keeps the law out of your hair
- Seed requirements ensure torrents stay alive
- Incentivizes strict quality control and uploading new content
I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve downloaded something from a public source and it’s been crap quality, or isn’t even the thing I wanted to download. Sometimes the file is fine but it takes 3 weeks to download because it has one seeder with a 10kbps upload rate. That’s a big “if” on if I can find it at all if it’s something more obscure.
Until someone solves those 3 issues in another way, I don’t see a better solution.
out of curiosity, which network do you use to seed?
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You can just use hardlinks
What’s the best current eMule client? Can cosign dc++ and Soulseek/nicotine those are my main sources these days rarely torrent
I use mldonkey 3.1.7 for ed2k/kad and bittorrent, in the past I have used dc++ for a short time, but I prefer the idea of ed2k/kad.
While I find it annoying that I can’t rename files and think that could have easily been avoided in the original bittorrent design, it’s not too inconvenient to just copy the files and leave the originals in a “seed” folder.
You can rename through the client but it would be nice if the clients could also use a hash, then when it detects a file is missing it could just scan the dir for a matching file automatically.
BitTorrent v1 does not hash the files, it hashes chunks (pieces), and they can span multiple files
I seed 160 TB. What you are suggesting is only feasible if you share a small number of files.
You know that Bittorrent was invented to replace these, right?
Soulseek eMule and I think dc++ are younger than the BitTorrent protocol although not by much