Blog That Converts 20 Download Torrent Warez Direct

Torrent2DDL is a free service that lets you convert your torrents to direct download links. File size limit is 20GB. Maximum speed with resuming download. They are also available in PDF, text, doc and the crowd’s favorite ePub version. Without further ado, let’s take a look at 20 additional places you can download free ebooks from. Read Also: Best Websites To Download Free EBooks – Part I & Part II. Kobo Free eBooks. Kobo has over 1 million free eBooks. This is a place, where you can find downloadable warez and get them on your PC whenever you want. We will give you all the needed information about hosts, which are uploading files and you will download them in no time.

So, you scratched up your $500 Adobe CD and now it's unreadable. You could go buy a new one, but you already purchased it! Searching The Pirate Bay and downloading some Adobe software can usually be easy enough, but what should you watch out for?

And what about your movies? What are the best backups to use for DVD collections? Why is all this DRM being cracked? Yes ladies and gentleman, I am going to teach you how to find and download your backups. So grab your eyepatch and peg leg and let's get down to it.

A word of caution. This might be frowned at in your country, and in fact, might even be illegal for some people. Folks living in the Police States of America should take special note to watch out. I am only providing this information for the sake of knowledge. It is assumed you're downloading copies of media you already own.

It's Like Stealing a Car... Or Making a Copy of It... Kinda

Imagine someone boosted your brand new car overnight, but when you came out in the morning to head off to work, it was still there! Yes, piracy is less like stealing and more like just making a free copy of something.

Copyright infringement happens when you acquire or redistribute a protected work without the expressed consent of whoever might own it. When you download and burn that copy of Windows Vista Pirated Edition and give it to your dorm matey who then installs it on his or her computer, you are breaking the law and performing software piracy. While it is not required to talk in a pirate accent whilst downloading your backups, it is encouraged.

However, you are allowed to backup your own legally purchased software for your own private use, so long as it is not distributed in any way. Because we do not endorse copyright infringement, the information being presented is for your personal use in obtaining backups of lost or damaged software.

Null Byte's Super Quick Breakdown for New Friends

You need a few things, mostly a program to handle the torrents and a tracker site to give you the file data and let you enter swarms to start downloading. Windows users can use Utorrent and *nix users can use whatever they are comfy with. If you are using Linux, I expect you know what a torrent is already and have a favorite.

Most of the time, files that are grouped and compressed will be in a .rar format. You might need to download WinRAR to handle these. Think of them as another kind of .zip file.

Now, let's take a look into the various types of media out there so you know what to look for.

Movies

Movie releases come in several flavors and forms depending on the time frame of normal release. Quality can very from grainy and unwatchable to high definition. You will see these types in the name of the file you are downloading, giving you the background on it.

  • Cam - A copy made in a cinema using a camcorder or mobile phone. The sound source is the camera microphone. Cam rips quickly appear after the first preview or premiere of the film. The quality ranges from terrible to pretty good, depending on the group of persons performing the recording and the resolution of the camera used. The main disadvantage is the sound quality, it's usually poor as the microphone does not only record the sound from the movie, but also any background noise. These are very common.
  • Telesync - This was shot in an empty cinema or from the projection booth with a professional camera mounted on a tripod, directly connected to the sound source. The professional camera source is then synchronized with audio source fed directly from the cinema's sound system, or captured from an FM radio transmission intended for hearing-impaired customers. These are not as common as others, but you will find them from time to time. Usually decent quality.
  • Workprint - A copy made from an unfinished version of a film produced by the studio. Typically WPs have missing effects and overlays and often differ from its theatrical release. Some have a time index marker running in a corner or on the top edge and some also include watermarks. These are very rare and you usually will not encounter them on the open market. Having scene connections might get you access.
  • Telecine - A copy captured from a film print using a machine that transfers the movie from its analog reel to digital format. Telecine has basically the same quality as DVD, since the technique is same as digitizing the actual film to DVD. However, the result is inferior because the source material is usually a lower quality reel. Telecine machines usually cause a slight left-right jitter in the picture and have inferior color levels compared to DVD. I have personally come across these twice.
  • Screener - These are early DVD or BD releases of the theatrical version of a film, typically sent to movie reviewers, Academy members, and executives for review purposes. Disney has started encrypting the screener releases so they can only be played on special hardware, but this has not taken on industry wide as of this writing. A screener normally has a message overlaid on its picture, with wording similar to: The film you are watching is a promotional copy, if you purchased this film at a retail store please contact 1-800-NO-COPIES to report it.
  • R5 - The R5 is a retail DVD from region 5. Region 5 consists of the Indian subcontinent, Africa, North Korea, Russia and Mongolia. R5 releases differ from normal releases in that they are a direct telecine transfer of the film without any of the image processing. If the DVD does not contain an English-language audio track, the R5 video is synced to a previously released English audio track. This audio quality varies based on who is doing the new syncing.
  • DVD-Rip - A final retail version of a film, typically released before it is available outside its originating region. Often after one group of pirates releases a high-quality DVD-Rip, the race to release that film will stop. Because of their high quality, DVD-Rips generally replace any earlier copies that may already have been circulating. No one usually bothers with the lesser versions afterwards.
  • TVRip - TVRip is media captured from an analog capture card (coaxial/composite/s-video connection). Digital satellite rip (DSR) is a rip that is captured from a non-standard definition digital source like a satellite. In both of these cases, the best description would be they are pirating it off their TVs and sat boxes.
  • BRRip - This is similar to DVD-Rip, only the source is a Blu-ray Disc. A BD/BR Rip in DVD-Rip size often looks better than a same-size DVD rip because encoders have better source material. It is Blu-ray, after all. What is commonly misunderstood among pirates is that a BDRip and a BRRip are really the same thing. A BDRip comes directly from the Blu-ray source, and BRRip is encoded from a prerelease, usually from a 1080p BDRip from another group. BD Rips are available in DVD-Rip sized releases, usually between 700MB and 1.5GB.

DVD Region Codes

  • R0 - No region coding
  • R1 - United States of America, Canada
  • R2 - Europe, including France, Greece, Turkey, Egypt, Arabia, Japan, and South Africa
  • R3 - Korea, Thailand, Vietnam, Borneo, and Indonesia
  • R4 - Australia and New Zealand, Mexico, the Caribbean, and South America
  • R5 - India, Africa, Russia, and former USSR countries
  • R6 - Peoples Republic of China
  • R7 - Unused
  • R8 - Airlines and cruise ships
  • R9 - Expansion (often used as region-free)

R1 and R2 usually offer the best quality, though R4 releases can be solid, as well.

Music

Music is a little less complex due to the rather open distro channels and ease of ripping and converting audio formats. MPEG-2 Audio Layer III, aka MP3, is still the common and default format for transferring music around. Things don't look to change there for the time being.

Tools range from ripping videos off YouTube, to more complex P2P works like GTK-Gnutella.

And of course, you can always just download entire albums as a torrent, so long as you own the original version legally.

Software

Here we get to the real fun stuff for the nerds out there.

Software cracking is a very complex programming project and the scene is divided into groups that perform this function. Usually, when a new version of some hot software is released, the race starts between these informal groups to crack the DRM protecting it and release the new version. Typically, this is achieved by cracking the executable file that would start the program, bypassing functions and routines that might be calling protection related code.

However, this is just a simple explanation of a complex topic. The side effect of this is that new versions usually need new cracks and it is a back and forth battle between the development teams and the black hats.

It should also be noted that not every file you see out there is safe, and proper safety should be practiced. This is a huge vector for malware and spyware, so only work with trusted sources.

In Closing

Kickasstorrents

And there we have it, your guide to the high seas of software and media backups. Hopefully, this will keep you from wasting your time on that crappy CAM release, or maybe you can get your hands on that video editing software you desperately need for school but lost last semester.

Any questions about what we covered? Concerns? Shoot me a message or start a thread up in our forum.

Looking for more breaking security news and other gems? Follow us on Twitter!

Images by BlackhatGuide, SoftD, Elreplicante, uberchicchic
Part of a series on
File sharing
Technologies
Video sharing sites
BitTorrent sites
Academic/scholarly
File sharing networks
P2P clients
Streaming programs
Anonymous file sharing
Development and societal aspects
By country or region
Comparisons

This is a timeline of events in the history of networked file sharing.

  • 42000s
  • 52010s

1970s[edit]

Free
  • 1976 – Xmodem a point-to-point binary transfer protocol by Ward Christensen.
  • February 1978 – Ward Christensen's CBBS becomes the first Bulletin board system.[1] BBS access is limited to phone lines until the early 1990s.
  • 1979 – Usenet conceived by Tom Truscott and Jim Ellis at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Duke University.[2] Its primary purpose is to facilitate focused discussion threads within topical categories (Usenet newsgroups), but it also allows the transfer of files. As of 2016 alt.binaries.* newsgroups continue to serve files.

1980s[edit]

Most file sharing in this era was done by modem over landline telephone, at speeds from 300 to 9600 bits per second. Many file systems in use only supported short filenames. Computer memory and speed was very limited, with 50 MHz CPUs only being accessible to consumers at the end of the decade.

  • 1981 – Kermit (protocol) – a binary protocol that can be used with telnet or other BBS systems to transfer binary data.
  • January 1984 – In Sony Corp. of America v. Universal City Studios, Inc.,[3] the Supreme Court of the United States finds that making individual copies of complete television shows for purposes of time-shifting is fair use. This case would create some interpretative challenges to courts in applying the case to more recent file sharing technologies available for use on home computers and over the Internet.
  • 1984 – Fidonet, an inter-BBS protocol that was widely available prior to IP based, is founded by Tom Jennings.[4]
  • October 1985 – File Transfer Protocol is standardized in RFC 959, authored by Postel and Reynolds.[5] FTP allows files to be efficiently uploaded and downloaded from a central server.
  • 1985 – Ymodem – a minor improvement to Xmodem.
  • 1986 – Zmodem – another point-to-point binary transfer protocol, which had superior long-distance (high latency) transmission.
  • August 1988 – Internet Relay Chat is created by Jarkko Oikarinen.[6]

1990s[edit]

FTP, IRC and Usenet were the main vehicles for file sharing in this decade. Data compression technologies for audio and video (like MP3, AAC and MPEG) came into use towards the end of the 1990s. Copper wire was common with fibre optic cable only becoming available late in the decade.

  • 1990 - Michael Sandrof adds Client-to-client protocol functionality to IRC clientircII allowing users to share files.
  • November 1990 – The World Wide Web is formally proposed by Tim Berners-Lee and Robert Cailliau.[7]
  • December 1991 – The Moving Pictures Experts Group chooses an audio codec developed by Karlheinz Brandenburg and his colleagues at Fraunhofer Society with input from AT&T and Thomson to serve as the MPEG-1 Audio Layer 3 (MP3) ISO/IEC standard. This allows songs on CDs to be converted into small computer files.[8][9][10]
  • June 1992 - RFC 1341 establishes the Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions(MIME) standards for sending audio and images by email, paving the way for the alt.binaries hierarchy on Usenet.[11]
  • 1992 – Software Publishers Association runs an anti-copyright infringement campaign Don't Copy That Floppy
  • July 1994 - The Fraunhofer Society released the l3encmp3 encoding software as shareware, the first of its kind.[12]
  • September 1995 - The Fraunhofer Society released WinPlay3, the first software mp3 player for Windows.
  • June 1996 - Mp3 warez group Rabid Neurosis founded. Using connections inside record companies, they rip pre-release music CDs, and make the mp3's available for others to download.[13]Mirabilis developed ICQ a chat client for Windows that can do file transfers up to 2 GBs.
  • 1997 – Scour Inc. is founded by five UCLA Computer Science students. Early products provide file search and download using the SMB protocol, as well as a multimedia web search engine released in 1998. Scour attracted early attention and support from media industry insiders before declaring bankruptcy in October 2000.[14]
  • April 1997 – Winamp audio player is released,[15] including the ability to make playlists, leading to increased use of MP3 files.
  • May 1997 - AOL launches AOL Instant Messenger with file transfer capabilities.[16]
  • August 1997 – Hotline is announced at MacWorld,[17] and allows chat, forums, and file transfers. It becomes popular among Mac users.
  • September 1997 - Windows Media Player 6.1 includes support for mp3 playback for the first time.
  • November 1997 – MP3.com is founded by Michael Robertson and Greg Flores.[18] Initially an FTP search engine, MP3.com becomes a hosting service for unsigned artists. It serves 4 million audio file downloads per day at its peak and becomes the largest technology IPO in July 1999. The release of My.MP3.com in January 2000, which allowed users to stream their own files, would prompt litigation. In May 2000, UMG v. MP3.com, would be ruled in favor of the record labels. MP3.com would settle for $200 million and discontinue the service.[19]
  • January 1998 - Musicmatch Jukebox is released providing easier to use CD-ripping software for creating mp3's on Windows.[20]
  • March 1998 – The MPMan F10, the first portable MP3 player, is launched.[21]
  • July 1998 - SoundJam MP released allowing mp3 playback and CD-ripping on Macintosh computers. In 2000, Apple bought this program, and used it as the basis for iTunes.
  • September 1998 – Rio PMP300 MP3 player is shipped by Diamond Multimedia.[22] Its popularity leads the RIAA to file a temporary restraining order in October, without success.[23][24]
  • October 1998 – Digital Millennium Copyright Act is unanimously passed by the US Senate. DMCA provides a 'safe harbor' ensuring that Internet Service Providers cannot be sued for the activities of their users.
  • November 1998 – Audiogalaxy is created by Michael Merhej.[25] Initially an FTP search engine, the Audiogalaxy Satellite P2P client would reach 1 million downloads in 2001. In May 2002, a suit by the RIAA would force Audiogalaxy to block sharing of illegal songs. In June 2002, Audiogalaxy would settle the suit for an undisclosed amount and make its services opt-in. In September 2002, Audiogalaxy would discontinue P2P services in favor of Rhapsody, a pay streaming service.
  • December 1998 – MP3 Newswire, the first digital media news site, is launched.[26]
  • February 1999 - China's Tencent launches QQ, a chat client with file transfer capability.[27]
  • June 1999 – Napster was created by Shawn Fanning. Napster let users search across all users' shares. Napster provided a centralized server that indexed the files, and carried out the searches.[28] Individual files, however, remain on the hosts' computers and were transferred directly from peer to peer.
  • November 1999 - The Direct Connect network is created.
  • November 1999 - iMesh is launched.
  • December 1999 - The first lawsuits were filed against Napster.[29]

2000s[edit]

In computer science terms, modern file sharing begins in the 2000s. Several file sharing protocols and file formats were introduced, along with nearly a decade in protocol experimentation. Towards the end of the 2000s, BitTorrent became subject to a 'man in the middle' attack in TCP mode – and this has led most file sharing protocols to move to UDP towards the very end of the decade. Client and tracker software in this era was in development as much as the transmission protocols, so the file trading software was not always as reliable as it could have been.

2000[edit]

  • January – My.MP3.com is released by MP3.com.[30]
  • March – Scour Exchange is released as a P2P file exchange service to compete with Napster. In addition to audio files, it also supports sharing of other media as well as software.[31]
  • March – Gnutella becomes the first decentralized file sharing network with the release of a network client by Justin Frankel and Tom Pepper of Nullsoft.[32] Like Napster, users could share large numbers of files at once, and search across the entire network for files.
  • March – Phex (formerly FURI) Gnutella client released.[33]
  • May – UMG v. MP3.com causes My.MP3.com to shut down. MSN Messenger 3.0 becomes the first version to include file transfer capability.[34]
  • June – Slyck.com (originally Slyway.com) launches.[35]
  • July – Freenet is created by Ian Clarke. Its goal is to provide freedom of speech through a peer-to-peer network which focuses on protecting anonymity. Files are distributed across the computers of Freenet's users. Ian Clarke's paper would become the most-cited computer science paper of 2000.[36] Freenet would become a darknet in 2008.
  • September – eDonkey2000 client and server software is released by Jed McCaleb, introducing hashing into decentralized file sharing.
  • October – Scour Exchange is shut down as Scour Inc. files for bankruptcy in the face of copyright infringement litigation.[37]
  • October – Napster is credited with driving Radiohead's Kid A album to the top of the Billboard charts.[38]
  • December - Peer-to-peer file sharing client WinMX 1.8 beta is released, providing users with another way to connect to Napster (later OpenNap) networks.[39]

2001[edit]

  • February – A&M Records, Inc. v. Napster, Inc.
  • February – Napster peaks at 26.4 million users.
  • March – Kazaa and the FastTrack proprietary protocol are released by Niklas Zennström, Janus Friis, and Priit Kasesalu. The Kazaa Media Desktop client came bundled with malware. Legal action in the Netherlands would force an offshoring of the company, renamed Sharman Networks. In September 2003, the RIAA would file suit against private individuals allegedly sharing files via Kazaa. In September 2005, UMA v. Sharman would be ruled against Sharman by the Federal Court of Australia. Sharman's non-compliance would prompt censorship of the program in Australia. In June 2006, the MGM Studios, Inc. v. Grokster, Ltd. would cause Sharman to settle for $100 million and convert Kazaa to a legal-only file sharing program.
  • April – Morpheus is released by MusicCity (later StreamCast), after licensing the FastTrack protocol.[40][41] MusicCity had previously operated OpenNap servers. Morpheus would become a popular FastTrack client, with 4.5 million users, until licensing disputes and a protocol switch in February 2002. In March 2003, the Morpheus client was re-released to operate on Gnutella, using Gnucleus servant as its core. In June 2005, a redesigned Morpheus client would be released. In June 2006, MGM Studios, Inc. v. Grokster, Ltd. would be decided against StreamCast. In June 2008, the Morpheus client would become no longer available for download.
  • April – gtk-gnutella client is released.[42]
  • July – Napster shuts down due to injunction. Many former Napster users move to OpenNap servers.[43]
  • July – Audiogalaxy Satellite client reaches 1 million downloads.[citation needed]
  • July 1 – BitTorrent released by Bram Cohen.[44] Users only upload one or a small number of files at a time, but all peers are forced to seed to other peers from the parts of a file they have received so far. Initially, programs did not include a search function, so indexing sites sprung up. Downloads for popular files tend to be faster than on many other networks.
  • August – ShareReactor eDonkey network index site founded. It would be taken down by police in March 2004.
  • September - Sony Music Entertainment admitted that they had included digital rights management software on Michael Jackson's You Rock My World single, perhaps the first such scheme to be implemented.[45]
  • October – Mutella client is released. By 2007, it would no longer be functional.
  • October - Apple released the first iPod, which would eventually become the most popular portable mp3 player.[citation needed]
  • October - Windows Media Player 8 includes the ability to rip CDs to mp3 for the first time.[citation needed]
  • November – GNUnet is first publicly announced.
  • November – DC++ is created for the Direct Connect network and would become the most popular client.

2002[edit]

  • January – JASRAC and RIAJ vs Yugen Kaisha Nippon MMO in Tokyo district court, causing File rogue(ファイルローグ) ordered to shut down on April 9.[46][47][48][49][50]
  • February – The Kazaa protocol switch shuts out Morpheus.
  • May – eMule is released[51] and soon[specify] becomes the eDonkey2000 network's most popular client[citation needed]
  • May – Audiogalaxy takes steps to block illegal files due to RIAA lawsuit.
  • May 27 – RapidShareone-click hosting service was founded by Christian Schmid.
  • June – Audiogalaxy settles RIAA suit for undisclosed amount, its file sharing becomes limited.
  • June – First release of Shareaza by Michael Stokes.
  • June – Applejuice released.
  • July – Overnet introduced by the creators of eDonkey2000 implementing Kademlia protocol.
  • July – Soribada (소리바다) was closed on July 11 by Suwon District Court South Division.[52]
  • August – P2Pnet is founded by Jon Newton. Apple releases OS X 10.2 including the iChat client which includes file transfer capabilities.
  • September – Audiogalaxy discontinues P2P services.
  • October – Soulseek file sharing program released.
  • October – Suprnova.org torrent index goes online.
  • November – Gnutella2 protocol is announced.

2003[edit]

  • January – isoHunt torrent index founded by Gary Fung. As of 2008, it serves over 40 million unique searches per month.
  • March – The Open Music Model is published, advocating a business model for the recording industry based on file sharing
  • April – Demonoid torrent index founded. As of 2008, it is the second-largest public torrent tracker in the world.
  • May – Poisoned is released. It is the first Kazaa client for the Mac OS X platform.[citation needed]
  • May – The iTunes Music Store is launched by Apple, selling music by individual tracks, with digital rights management to prevent file sharing
  • May 15 - First hearing before House Committee of Government Reform on inadvertent file sharing, Overexposed: The Threats to Privacy & Security on File Sharing Networks.[53] Inadvertent File Sharing was a security concern detailed by researcher Nathaniel Good at HP Labs describing how user interface issues contributed to users of KaZaA inadvertently sharing personal and confidential information over p2p networks.[54][55][56]
  • June 17 - Second congressional hearing before Senate Judiciary Committee on inadvertent file sharing The Dark Side of a Bright Idea: Could Personal and National Security Risks Compromise the Potential of P2P File-Sharing Networks?[57]
  • September – the RIAA begins filing lawsuits against individuals allegedly sharing files on Kazaa.
  • September – TorrentSpy is registered. It would be shut down in March 2008, and in May 2008 it would be ordered to pay the MPAA $110 million in damages.
  • November – Winny source code is confiscated by the Kyoto Police
  • November 21 – The Pirate Bay (TPB) bittorrent tracker is founded by Gottfrid Svartholm, Fredrik Neij, and Peter Sunde. It is based in Sweden. It has remained active despite numerous legal actions and a police raid in May 2006. As of February 4, 2013, it is the 73rd most popular site on the Internet according to Alexa.
  • 2003 – eMule introduces the Kad network, which implements the Kademlia protocol. Invisible Internet Project (i2p) is launched to provide an anonymizing layer for p2p programs.

2004[edit]

  • January 17 - The initial version of the Advanced Direct Connect protocol is introduced for the Direct Connect network.
  • March 10 – ShareReactor shut down by Swiss Police.
  • May 10 – Winny developer Isamu Kaneko is arrested for suspected conspiracy to commit copyright violation.[58]
  • June 1 – Shareaza becomes open source with the release of v2.0 of the software.[59] As of 2008, almost all of the major clients on its supported networks (gnutella, Gnutella2, eDonkey) are open source.
  • October 28 – The RIAA files an additional 750 lawsuits aimed at alleged copyright violations from file sharing.
  • December 14 – Suprnova and many other torrent indexes closed after cease and desist orders by MPAA.
  • December 14 – LokiTorrent refuses to comply with cease and desist orders, quickly gains 680,000 users, and $40,000 in legal fund donations. Its legitimacy would later be questioned and it would be taken over by MPAA in February 2005.
  • December 15 - US Federal Trade Commission Peer-to-Peer File-Sharing Workshop entitled Peer-to-Peer File-Sharing Technology: Consumer Protection and Competition Issues[60]

2005[edit]

  • January – Mininova torrent index goes online as a successor to Suprnova. It has served 5 billion downloads as of May 2008.[61]
  • January – eXeem goes online and rumored/adversed as 'the revenge of suprnova'. The program failed to gain popularity and was eventually abandoned months later.
  • February – LokiTorrent indexing service shut down and is taken over by MPAA.
  • March - WinMX reported as the most popular music service with 2.1 million users followed by iTunes and LimeWire with 1.7 million users.[62]
  • March – Avalanche BitTorrent alternative proposed.[63] Is criticized by BitTorrent creator Bram Cohen.[64]
  • March 21 – Megauploadone-click hosting service is launched.
  • May - TV show torrent tracker/search engine eztvefnet.org is launched.
  • June - A redesigned Morpheus client would be released.
  • June – A busy CD music MP3 download site Boxup closed down and membership transfer to coxoo, then discontinued 2006/03.[65][66][67][68][69]
  • June – Grokster developers are found guilty by the United States Supreme court of encouraging copyright infringement[70]
  • June 30 – EzPeer[71] wins its case vs IFPI Taiwan[72] in Shihlin district court. The high court would later reject an appeal, but ezPeer would settle with IPFI Taiwan. As of 2008, it is a legal music download service.
  • August - Yahoo! Messenger adds drag and drop file sharing capability with version 7.
  • September 5 – UMA v. Sharman[73]
  • September 13 – WinMX servers owned by Frontcode are shut down due to a cease and desist letter from the RIAA. Developer groups would set up new servers days later.[74]
  • September 9 – Kuro (酷樂) loses its case vs IFPI Taiwan in Taipei local court. It would also lose its case vs Push Sound Music & Entertainment on December 19, 2006.[75] Kuro would lose its appeal in the Taiwan high court on July 16, 2008. Chairman Chen Shou-ten (陳壽騰), CEO James Chen (陳國華), president Chen Kuo-hsiung (陳國雄), and one of Kuro's 500,000 members Chen Chia-hui (陳佳惠), were sentenced to fine and jail.[76] It shut down its P2P services in 2006, and has become a legal music download service.[77]
  • September 28 – MetaMachine Inc. discontinues the development and maintenance of the original eDonkey2000 client and of the Overnet network following a cease and desist letter from the RIAA.
  • October - Programmer Mark Russinovich revealed on his blog that Sony Music Entertainment had started shipping music CD's that surreptitiously install a rootkit on Windows PCs designed to prevent copying.[78] Developers at Delft University of Technology and VU University Amsterdam release Tribler, a Bittorrent client which tries to provide anonymity for seeders and downloaders.[79]
  • November – Bram Cohen, the author of the peer-to-peer (P2P) BitTorrent protocol and the BitTorrent program, made a deal with the MPAA to remove links to illegal content on the official BitTorrent website. The deal was with the seven largest studios in America. The agreement means the site will comply with procedures outlined in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.[80]
  • November 12 - TorrentFreak is launched.[81]

2006[edit]

Pro-file sharing demonstration in Sweden after the police raid against The Pirate Bay, 2006.
  • February 21 – Razorback2, a Swiss indexing server and one of the biggest on the eDonkey network, is raided and taken down.[82]
  • May 31 – The servers of the Swedish website The Pirate Bay are raided by 50 Swedish police officers, causing it to go offline for three days.[83]
  • June 27 – MGM Studios, Inc. v. Grokster, Ltd. is decided.
  • June, July - AT&T and Comcast stop offering Newsgroups. Sprint, Time Warner Cable and Verizon drop the alt.* or alt.binaries.* hierarchy.[84]
  • October - YouTube announced the introduction of a 'content identification architecture' which allows them to locate videos under copyright, and remove them. If copyright holders choose to leave the video up, YouTube agrees to pay them a share of the advertising revenue. Universal Music Group, Sony Music Entertainment and Warner Music Group all agree to this approach.[85]Mediafire, file host, is launched.
  • 2006 - Anonymous friend-to-friend client Retroshare is first released.

2007[edit]

  • EMI gave up using digital rights management on their audio CD's, the last music company to do so.[86]
  • August 9 - Microsoft launches Windows Live SkyDrive in the United Kingdom and India.[87] They gradually made it available in more countries, and in January 2014, the service was renamed OneDrive.[88]
  • August 21 – Suprnova.org is relaunched by The Pirate Bay.[89][90]
  • September - Amazon.com begins selling mp3's free of digital rights management.[91]
  • October 12 – RIAA files a lawsuit against Usenet.com, accusing it of being an illicit peer-to-peer file sharing site.[92][93]
  • October 23 – OiNK's Pink Palace BitTorrent Tracker is raided and shut down by a joint effort between Dutch and British police.[94]
  • October 24 – The civil-court jury trial for Capitol v. Thomas, the first lawsuit by major record labels against an alleged file sharer, concludes with a verdict for the plaintiffs and a statutory damage award of US$9,250 for each of 24 songs, for a total of $222,000. This was vacated due to an error in jury instruction, and a new trial was held in 2009.
  • November 9 – The Demonoid BitTorrent tracker shuts down until April 2008 citing legal threats by the CRIA.
  • December 20 – Shareaza.com, the homepage of Shareaza, is taken over by Discordia Ltd., a company closely related to the RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America). It now distributes software containing spyware and adware.[95]

2008[edit]

  • Sony BMG opens up their music catalog for sale over internet DRM-free, the last music company to allow this.[96]
  • January 10 – A trademark claiming the name Shareaza is filled by Discordia Ltd.[97]
  • March 24 – TorrentSpy shuts down citing hostile legal climate.[98]
  • April 11 – Demonoid comes back online.
  • May 7 – TorrentSpy is ordered to pay $110 million in damages by US court.
  • May 8 – Freenet darknet rewrite is released.
  • August 8 – Italy prevents their citizens from accessing The Pirate Bay and forwards their traffic to IFPI instead.[99]
  • September - Dropbox launches to the public.[100]
  • October 10 – An appeal by The Pirate Bay's lawyers succeeds in lifting the Italian ban.
  • October 29 – Morpheus website taken down; client is no longer available.
  • November 27 – A Danish court rules that ISPs must block access to the website The Pirate Bay.[101][102]
  • December 16 – ShareReactor is reopened by The Pirate Bay.[103]
  • December 19 – The RIAA claims to have ended its P2P litigation campaign against individuals in the U.S., which had been losing money,[104] in favor of a three strikes campaign.[105][106] However, some new lawsuits continued to be filed.[107]

2009[edit]

Protestors demonstrating against The Pirate Bay trial on February 16, 2009.
  • January - Apple's iTunes store began offering all of its digital tracks free from Digital Rights Management.[108]
  • February 16 – The Pirate Bay trial starts.[109]
  • February 23 – OneSwarm is released.
  • April 17 – The Pirate Bay trial concludes with a guilty verdict; each defendant is sentenced to one year in jail and a total of 30 million SEK (3.6 million USD, 2.7 million EUR) in fines and damages. The people behind The Pirate Bay declare they will appeal the ruling.[110]
  • April 24 – Legal fees in record industry lawsuits cause SeeqPod to sell its technology; the site closes until it finds a buyer.[111]
  • June 15 – In the retrial of the 2007 Capitol v. Thomas case, a jury again finds in favor of the plaintiffs, and awards statutory damages of $80,000 per song, for a total of $1.92 million.
  • June 30 – Swedish gaming company Global Gaming Factory says it has an interest in purchasing The Pirate Bay. Global Gaming factory eventually lose funding to do so. (GGF).[112]
  • September 9 - 6 alleged members of the mp3 warez group Rabid Neurosis were indicted on charges of conspiracy to commit copyright infringement. Two were acquitted. Four pleaded guilty, and served 3-month prison sentences.[113][114]
  • September 14 – Demonoid experiences hardware damage from power outages causing a three-month downtime.[115]
  • September 30 – Global Gaming Factory fails to produce the funds to purchase The Pirate Bay and the deal is put to an end.[116]
  • November 26 – Mininova has removed torrents to all copyrighted content that it does not have official agreements for.[117]
  • December – BtChina and about 530 other sites registered in China were closed down.[118][119]
  • December 13 – Demonoid is back online.[120]

2010s[edit]

In computer science terms, there have been few significant developments in the 2010s. The BitTorrent protocol and clients have become more stable, adopting UDP to defend against transmission problems related to TCP. IPv6 support increased with clients and trackers.

2010[edit]

  • October 26, 2010 – US federal court judge Kimba Wood issued an injunction forcing LimeWire to prevent 'the searching, downloading, uploading, file trading and/or file distribution functionality, and/or all functionality' of its software (see Arista Records LLC v. Lime Group LLC).[121][122] As a result, LimeWire May 5, 2011 and newer have been disabled using a backdoor installed by the company.
  • November 9, 2010 – First release of a modified version of LimeWire Pro with all undesirable components removed (such as ad- and spyware, as well as dependencies to LimeWire LLC servers) under the name of 'LimeWire Pirate Edition', enabling access to all advanced features of the professional version for free.[123]
  • November 26, 2010 – The verdict in The Pirate Bay trial was announced. The appeal court shortened sentences of three of the defendants who appeared in court that day. Neij's sentence was reduced to 10 months, Sunde's to eight, and Lundström's to four. However, the fine was increased from 32 to 46 million kronor.[124]

2011[edit]

  • March 2011 – A case involving LimeWire is announced, with an attempt to sue the company for up to $75 trillion.[125]
  • June 2011 – Malaysia government blocked 10 file sharing sites.[126]
  • October 2011 – Foxy (P2P) shut down. British Telecom received a court order to block access to Newzbin2.[127]

2012[edit]

  • January 2012 – The office of EX.UA was raided and service shut down. It was restored in February.
  • February 2012 – The domain names of the popular one-click hosting service Megaupload were seized and the site was shut down by the United States Department of Justice, following the indictment and arrests of the owners for allegedly operating as an organization dedicated to copyright infringement.
  • February 2012 – FileServe and Filesonic, both popular file sharing sites voluntarily stop all sharing services, while another site, uploaded.to, begins blocking all IP addresses from the U.S.
  • February 2012 – Btjunkie, one of the most popular BitTorrent sites voluntarily shuts down.
  • April 2012 - Google launches its Google Drive service.[128]
  • June 2012 - FDzone in Hong Kong and Macau was shut down.
  • August 2012 - Seized DemonoidBitTorrent sites up for sale.[129] Filesonic, which previously disabled its sharing services following Megaupload's shutdown, goes completely offline.[130]
  • September 2012 - The file sharing site uploaded.to switches its domain to uploaded.net; in addition, it starts allowing IP addresses from the U.S.[131]

2013[edit]

  • January 2013 - Mega, the successor to Megaupload, was launched from New Zealand.
  • October 2013 - As part of a settlement with the MPAA, Gary Fung shuts down Torrent index site Isohunt,[132] but mirrors soon pop up.
  • December 2013 - Hotfile shuts down following a settlement made with the Motion Picture Association of America.[133]

2014[edit]

  • May 2014 - Infinit launched its Windows app (Public Beta).[134]
  • November 2014 - Tencent, the Chinese internet company behind QQ and WeChat sued Netease for streaming 623 songs it claims it held exclusive licenses for.[135] At the time, Netease was offering a Grooveshark-like free music service.
  • December 2014 - The Pirate Bay source code freed.[clarification needed]

Blog That Converts 20 Download Torrent Warez Direct Free

2015[edit]

  • January 2015 - Launch of anonymous P2P network ZeroNet, which relies on TOR for anonymity
  • March 2015 - RapidShare - once the most famous file hosting service - shuts down
  • April 2015 - Grooveshark, music streaming site, shuts down
  • August 2015 - Video sharing website Openload.co comes online.[136]
  • The FBI seize the file sharing site ShareBeast and arrest its administrator, Artur Sargsyan.[137][138] The Recording Industry Association of America considered it America's most prolific file sharing site.[138]

Blog That Converts 20 Download Torrent Warez Direct Youtube

2016[edit]

Download Torrent For Pc

  • July 2016 - The world's largest torrent site KickassTorrents shuts down.
  • August 2016 - Torrent meta-search engine Torrentz.eu takes its torrents down, but is soon replaced by torrentz2.eu.
  • November 2016 - Private music tracker what.cd shut down.

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External links[edit]

Kickasstorrents

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