No, not yet, this question was probably posted by me. I’m one of the provocators to switch to the new protocol.
The thing is the most tracker admins are:
Too lazy to implement it.
Have too little information about its benefits.
Only heard downfalls associated by compatibility problems, which were exxagerated by people who don’t like to update their software.
I even created a tool called tmrr. Which allows you to extract, compare and calculate file hashes (BTMR hash precisely — BitTorrent Merkle Root, hence it differs from a regular sha256) name for BitTorrent v2 compatible .torrents.
Which already shows some advantages of use of the protocol in user environment, like finding same torrents contents with different names, reviving dead torrents, preserving historical Internet artifacts’ hashes.
The final feature I’m going to release is the ability to download torrents without duplicates (first time in the history of BitTorrent), saving time, storage and bandwidth. Imagine downloading site, page dumps, libraries, video/photo archives and other uncategorized materials without duplicate files.
Easily finding how much user storage specific game and its developers wasted due to ineffective coding.
This feature is ready, but there are some problems in libtorrent (library that qBittorrent uses), which should be fixed by the next release (this year probably) to make it work.
Hope this will get attention from users and accelerate the switch.
I can’t speak to current state; but with any luck we are approaching / entering the post-tracker era. DHT handles the actual “tracking”, and other components are (very slowly) coming out to handle search and reputation.
bittorrent.org
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