Wednesday, 5 June 2013
Tuesday, 4 June 2013
TOP TORRENT SITES:-
1. The Pirate Bay
To many people The Pirate Bay is the equivalent to BitTorrent. The site was founded in 2003 and is still expanding, despite the various legal troubles and new blockades in the UK and the Netherlands. The Pirate Bay currently has well over a billion page views a month.
2. KickassTorrents
KickassTorrents was founded in 2009 and has moved up in our top 10 year after year. Responding to increasing worries over domain seizures, the site moved from its kickasstorrents.com domain to kat.ph in 2012. This year the site continued to grow, despite being blocked by italian internet providers.
3. Torrentz
Torrentz has been the leading BitTorrent meta-search engine for many years. Unlike the other sites featured in the list Torrentz does not host any torrent files, it merely redirects visitors to other places on the web. The site uses several domain names with the .eu being the most popular.
4. IsoHunt
Two years ago isoHunt became the first search engine forced to implement a keyword filter provided by the MPAA. Despite this setback, isoHunt continues to be listed among the world’s top torrent sites. isoHunt is currently trying to get rid of the filter through the Appeals Court.
5. ExtraTorrent
ExtraTorrent continues to gain more traffic and has moved up again in the top 10, now being the 5th most visited torrent site. This success didn’t go unnoticed to rightsholders groups such as the RIAA and MPAA who have called out ExtraTorrent as one of the top pirate sites recently.
6. 1337x
1337x focuses more on the community aspect than some competitors. The site’s owners say they started 1337x to “fill an apparent void where it seemed there was a lack of quality conscience ad free torrent sites with public trackers.” The site moved up from spot 10 last year to 6th in 2013.
7. EZTV
Unlike the other sites in the top 10, TV-torrent distribution group EZTV is a niche site specializing in TV content only. It was one of the newcomers last year despite being around for more than 7 years, and is relatively popular among Australians. Because of its focus on TV-content EZTV’s traffic varies in line with the TV-seasons.
8. Bitsnoop
BitSnoop is one of the largest BitTorrent indexes, claiming to index a massive 19,091,736 torrent files at the time of writing. The site’s traffic continues to grow steadily, as do theDMCA notices that it receives.
9. TorrentReactor
TorrentReactor is back in the top 10 after dropping off last year. A few months ago the site was blocked by a court order in Italy, but the site nonetheless continues to gain visitors.
10. H33t
H33T has been around for many years and has built a dedicated user base, mostly in Europe and Asia. Despite the wishes of the music industry, the site isn’t yet blocked by any court orders. The site made the news a few months ago when its owner took a stand against the avalanche of copyright takedown requests.
WARNINGS
- Make sure you check the comment section before downloading, if there is one, to see if the torrent is real or not.
- In most countries, using torrents to download copyrighted material is against the law.
- Downloading torrents can slow your computer down. Recommended specs for each client vary, but on average you should have at least 512 MB of RAM and a 1 GHz CPU. You will also need space for the files you want to save.
- Keep your virus protection program up to date. Software downloaded from unknown sources on the Internet can be home to some pretty nasty viruses. There are free anti-virus applications, as well as top-of-the-line apps such as Microsoft Security Essentials, AVG, and Avast. If you do happen to get a virus, remove it (see Remove a Virus).
- Downloading torrents can slow your overall internet connection down if you don't properly tweak your upload rate. DSL and Cable modems have problems downloading if you're uploading at your maximum rate. Set your clients maximum rate to 80% of your maximum upload rate if you can adjust it. If you set your upload rate too low, your downloads will slow to a crawl.
- As with any bandwidth intensive application, make sure you know how much data you've transferred if your ISP implements a quota system (90 GB/mth). Remember that finished torrents are seeded (uploaded to others) when the torrent job is running and you might exceed your ISP quota unintentionally.
- Torrenting is a bandwidth intensive act which is frowned upon by some ISPs, leading them to throttle any torrent traffic, slowing down your downloads or even stopping them altogether. Traffic encryption can solve this, but it may or may not work in your specific circumstances.
- In certain jurisdictions it is illegal to download content through peer to peer networks such as bittorrent.
Tips And Tricks For Torrents
- Most torrent programs will resume the download process automatically when you start them back up. If the download doesn't resume automatically, there should be an option to start downloading by either right clicking on the file and choosing Start, or a button somewhere in the program.
- When looking for torrent files, look for those with plenty of seeders so that the file downloads quickly. When searching for torrents, you can often sort the results by seeds, simply by clicking on the seeds column header.
- A practical tip is to stick with downloading torrents that have a large user base. This means download only those torrents that many people have downloaded and uploaded, or that have been active for a long time. The logic here is that nobody will seed a torrent that has a virus in it and therefore the torrent won't be very popular and won't be seeded. Be wary of the week old torrent with one or two people seeding it.
- You can leave the torrent program running overnight to download while you're away from the computer, or close it and turn off the computer to save power. Most torrent programs will have an option in Preferences to start up with your computer and this option can be enabled or disabled by opening "Run..." from the Start Menu and typing in msconfig.
- Leechers (Peers) : Leechers are people who are currently downloading a file. Leechers can become seeders after downloading the full file.
- There are other torrent clients (programs) that can be used so do your research on these also. The most popular torrent programs are uTorrent, Azureus and BitTorrent. use uTorrent because they port forward for you now, useful if you have a home network.
- Seeders (Seeds): Seeders are people who have a complete copy of the torrent's files and are uploading (sending) data to the people who are downloading (receiving).
- There are Torrent search engines that search the popular torrent clients (programs). This saves you time by not having to search each individual torrent client site.
- You can set the options in your web browser to download to a specific folder and then, using the options in your torrent client, enable torrents to be automatically loaded from that same folder you have chosen. This way, the torrents will automatically load for you with minimal effort.
Find a torrent client application that will suit your needs. The BitTorrent protocol lets you exchange or distribute data over the Internet. There's no central server involved, i.e.data is downloaded from other users. What you need is a client application that will connect to the host and manage the download. There are plenty of client applications available. Some of the most common are:
- µTorrent
- Deluge
- Vuze
- Take a look at how each one works, and download the one that best fits your needs.
- Follow the instructions on downloading and installing your chosen client./
step 2
Find a torrent file. The .torrent file is the first thing you need. This is a small file that points to the main file that you are wanting to download.
- To find a torrent site, go to Google or Bing and enter "torrents" or simply click here.
- You can even search for torrent files using one of the many torrent search engines. Here are several popular ones:
- www.zoozle.org
- www.torrentz.eu
- www.piratebay.se
- www.zoozle.org
- Search for your desired file (movies, mp3, games, software etc.) and choose a link from the results list.
- Click on the "Get torrent" link in the page of your chosen file.
- A download manager window will appear, asking you how you would like to open the file. Choose Bit torrent or any torrent software you've downloaded.
- Change settings in the appearing window if you want. Click OK.
- The torrent will start downloading.
- If it doesn't open that way, just save the .torrent file in the download manager window, to an easy to locate place. Then open your torrent client and use the "Open Torrent" feature. Most torrent clients support drag-and-drop to add a torrent to the list.
- step 3
- The download will start automatically. You may now go and do something to pass the time. Torrents download in the background, and while they do not require your attention, they will require a fair amount of time. Hours, in many cases.
- 4
- step 4 Some websites have "magnet links"(the above stated "Get torrent link"), which are customized URL's that communicate directly with BitTorrent applications. These links download the .torrent files from the "swarm"—other people uploading and downloading the file. Magnet links can be easier than traditional .torrent files, but may take a few seconds longer to start downloading as the metadata is generated.
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