Gun Smith Cats
magnet:?xt=urn:btih:49cdf5b7cff1db1b81ef42a1159423a79c244da9&dn=%5bDekkai%5d%20Gunsmith%20Cats%20%5bDVD%20568p%20AC3%5d&tr=http%3a%2f%2fnyaa.tracker.wf%3a7777%2fannounce&tr=udp%3a%2f%2fopen.stealth.si%3a80%2fannounce&tr=udp%3a%2f%2ftracker.opentrackr.org%3a1337%2fannounce&tr=udp%3a%2f%2ftracker.coppersurfer.tk%3a6969%2fannounce&tr=udp%3a%2f%2ftracker.leechers-paradise.org%3a6969%2fannounce
Torrents are cancer. They expose your ip address and allow (((isp))) and (((copyright holders))) to annoy you with hundreds of infringement notices.
Does anyone think that having a program that simply uploads a bunch of chunks (perhaps encrypted) to a large number of file upload services is better?
>>795 File upload services are unlikely to all go down at once, especially if you choose varying geographic locations.
Torrents without seeders die just as badly, anyway.
>>794 They aren't inherently cancer, there just isn't a client that is particularly secure. A lot of the concern about them seems to be IP leaks from things like uTorrent (lol). Though I don't know if qbittorrent or proper clients have the same IP leak issues when using a VPN. Either way the fundamentals of torrenting is by far the best way to distribute decentralized data. We should be looking to make the system more anonymous rather than abandoning it for a bunch of sites that have the ability to remove the content you post on them at any given moment.
>>794 >cancer
Oh my, being that cucked.
You download shit if you are getting infringement notices.
I download and upload for years without vpn, only quality european stuff+some american music that artists themselves has copyright etc. and without any problem so far.
but I have blocklist and don't connect to any trackers >>796 this
>>797 Have you ever seen file upload service without javascript or direct linking?
>>834 I know about mixtape and similar, all have limits and still are not suitable. I was actually hoping someone will know about something like mega but without js first, you have to reupload and distribute the new link if you want the file/s being around
second, it's still centralized and relies on third-party actor, doesn't matter how trustworhy he is
third, there are not many of them and the size limit is way too small
If only people seeded after downloading and uploaders tagged and encoded their shit properly/future-proof with knowing it will be around maybe their entire life. I had access to few private trackers, and still have to two, and they are/were worse than public trackers in terms of tagging/quality. Have you ever looked at tpb or other pirate forums?
Anyway, who the fuck would want to shit on torrents just beacuse they torrent shit like (((metart))) and almost any american anything?
>>861 i2p is pozzed java browsershit, need to set a lot of settings manually in order to get any sort of good privacy out of i2p, which makes it slow as fuck.
But I suppose it's good for torrenting. No reason to not just use public torrents and download them publicly, nobody really cares.
i mean, there's animetosho which has a script that does that but as the other anon said, every upload site is filled with ads and trackers and they get taken down and files removed quickly because it's not encrypted.
IRC XDCC are pretty good and dont require exposing IP if you set our account up right.
Usenet is also pretty great but also requires annoying setup.
The best balance of ease of use/privacy/speed/selection is definitely a seedbox imo.
>>921 Which vpn do you use? I'm seriously thinking of CyberGhost as it's rated highest on deepdot35wvmeyd5 and is cheap as fuck, ~90 eurodollars for three years.
>>924 Private trackers are botnet. VPNs are not allowed and they apparently pass around the fucking stylometric analysis of banned users around the cartel.
>>925 >quality content
>closed community
>depending on site, difficult to get invite
Yeah passing info around the cartel is absolutely disgusting but it's the best we have right know when it comes to file-sharing. Until we get anonymous p2p that is centralized enough to keep quality control and decentralized to not cuck users at the same time we'll stick to it.
>>925 >VPNs are not allowed
I've literally never been on a tracker that bans VPNs. In fact virtually every single one I'm on has active advertising for VPNs and seedboxes.
>>923 >PIA
Isn't that US based? It's best to avoid very popular VPNs that normalfags flock to as they get them banned on just about every website in existence. Anything that requires you to configure openvpn should be obscure enough to avoid this problem.
>>926 Public trackers are good enough for me to be honest. I can wait for a week to leech a torrent from someone in the middle of Africa or something as long as random peers can't get my IP. Maybe our priorities are different.
>>927 You can use VPNs and seedboxes while leeching from/seeding to other peers but they won't let you use a VPN to connect their own tracker. I understand this is for moderation but they are taking it too far. I'm just glad that they don't require fucking sending a photo of my government issued ID to register.
>Isn't that US based?
Yes it is hosted in US but good enough for torrents, proven so in courts.
>>924 Be glad that you are at least getting those threat letters. In my country there's nothing like that, one day your isp calls they terminate your contract and that police is on their way to fuckin raid you. It's not even funny. They handle your data to police without any questions, faggots. Doesn't matter if big or small isp, they all log shit for six months and are cooperating with police too, they keep you seeding etc and then when the damage is so big that they can jail you they raid you. Fuckin fuckers.
From ~500 cases each year, only about ~50 go without scratch. Guess full disk encryption works on zogbots. IP proves nothing and as long as you have locked bios, mac adress too. outrageous
and just in case you don't know, you can easily check your p2p ip adress here ipmagnet.services.cbcdn.com it's operated by kopimifags
>>932 What's funny about it is that everybody in my country pirates and zogbots are no exception. And even more people download from sharewarez sites since downloading audio/visual entertaiment isn't illegal as long as you don't share it with anybody.
What's even more funny is that you should be able to share and copy whatever you want since you didn't sign anything or didn't even rented the license which legally binds you.
>>938 >civilized shithole
>not civilized enough to adapt I2P as a main medium of communications on the internet
My contempt against normal human beings heightens by the day.
>>792 i'm in the process of ripping wangan midnight. can post here once i'm done. threads seem to be slow so it's all good.
>>794 lul what's the alternative?
>>959 IPFS seems promising given that it supports Tor and I2P, but its still in heavy development so I wouldn't recommend anyone to install it directly to their main computer. At least until it matures enough.
Hey guys. I just discovered an anime streaming website that offers 1080p downloads, and works through Tor and without javashit/cookies.
https://4anime.to It reminds me a bit of 9anime tbh, which offered similar services but was shutdown by jewgle, and then the creators were losing huge amounts of money by paying for non-jewgle hosting so it eventually went down.
Perhaps 4anime will share the same fate, but until then I will use it to download high quality anime.
>>1125 <1080p
Most anime is not made in 1080p though. Also since you are downloading from a streaming site, you are likely getting a copy with a lowered bitrate on what you are watching.
>>1126 I don't really care tbh. I pipe it into ffmpeg while downloading to knock the resolution down to 480p since I usually watch on my phone while camping or travelling.
It beats (((paying))) for VPNs and seedboxes.
>>1127 >streaming 1080p (over Tor) just to convert it to 480p immediately
Never watch so much anime that it gives you brain damage, anon. There are streaming websites with quality options.
The CD is very very rare and so are lossless digital encodes of it. This is unfortunate historically since a portion of the songs in this OST were composed by Shiro Sagisu: the composer of a portion of Neon Genesis Evangelion's OST.
I am currently the only person seeding this torrent, too.
>The CD is very very rare and so are lossless digital encodes of it
I don't know about the rarity of the CD, but I could easily find a FLAC of it.
>I am currently the only person seeding this torrent, too.
Well for that specific torrent for the soundtrack.
>>1133 >I could easily find a FLAC of it
Where? As I meant by saying "-and so are lossless digital encodes of it", the FLAC encodes of it are equally as rare as the CD. I've never found any outside of this torrent.
>for that specific torrent for the soundtrack
I guess both. Since, as far as I'm aware, there is no public instance of the soundtrack in FLAC anywhere else.
I see that no one told you that you don't need to post all of that useless junk parameters that do nothing except adding some well known public trackers that don't matter at all because you all use DHT and peer exchange anyway.
You simply copy
> 49cdf5b7cff1db1b81ef42a1159423a79c244da9
or
> magnet:?xt=urn:btih:49cdf5b7cff1db1b81ef42a1159423a79c244da9
for the less smart people. If you wrote what it is in your post, there is no need to include "dn" part, as it is purely decorative.
Only newfags can discuss file hosting services, you have to have zero experience in life, and never encounter dead links from 2, 5 or 10 years ago to believe in them. Honestly, even back in the days people did realize that. On the contrary, I still seed some torrents from DATorrents (of which you probably haven't heard).
Torrent hash is another important property when you search for something old in junk copies, file listings, and forum archives, it helps sorting out which torrents were the same, which files got to AniDB, etc.
>>1141 Thanks for the advice, oldfag. I already knew the superiority of a hash, though. Call me a larping faggot if you must, but I have no idea why I posted the full magnet instead.
Out of curiosity, what's DATorrents, oldfag? You guessed right.
NyaaTorrents (the old one) wasn't the only popular anime tracker and torrent catalogue, some groups had their own ones, some shared them with others or everyone. TokyoTosho was made to allow people to search among torrents from different sites. If you check the old releases, you'll see that torrent links point to many now defunct websites. (I recall that TT lost or purged some very old torrents some years ago, though.)
Mind that it had all started before magnet links became fashionable (in Bittorrent clients, as other filesharing networks had already been using hash links), so you had to have a working tracker server for your torrents (even if it was just an Azureus running on some member's personal system with a DynDNS domain name) or use a general purpose one, like The Pirate Bay (IIRC, mostly used by licensed DVD ripping groups).
What I mean it that no one needs a special format or website to share hashes, it's just a piece of text you can post anywhere. Maybe someone with a seedbox that is set up to scan some directory for torrent files needs the actual files, and someone who is using bittorrent through TCP proxy needs trackers to be able to download anything at all, as DHT won't work, but these are the only cases that come to my mind. Oh, and there's always a chance that a lone seed of an old torrent has disabled DHT ten years ago for some reason, but it also might be trying to get peers from dead trackers anyway, and you won't be able to connect.
Post magnets
Gun Smith Cats
magnet:?xt=urn:btih:49cdf5b7cff1db1b81ef42a1159423a79c244da9&dn=%5bDekkai%5d%20Gunsmith%20Cats%20%5bDVD%20568p%20AC3%5d&tr=http%3a%2f%2fnyaa.tracker.wf%3a7777%2fannounce&tr=udp%3a%2f%2fopen.stealth.si%3a80%2fannounce&tr=udp%3a%2f%2ftracker.opentrackr.org%3a1337%2fannounce&tr=udp%3a%2f%2ftracker.coppersurfer.tk%3a6969%2fannounce&tr=udp%3a%2f%2ftracker.leechers-paradise.org%3a6969%2fannounce