piracy

Magazyn ze zdalnego serwera może być niekompletny. Zobacz więcej na oryginalnej instancji.

OsrsNeedsF2P, w This file has 16 detections, is it safe to install it?

Malicious files can still be uploaded to trusted sites, but in general apks are well sendboxed so it’s difficult to get a trojan on a non-rooted, up to date Android phone.

What is the apk supposed to be for?

Aresff,

It’s a mod apk file for the game sproggiwood 1.3.2. The file seems to be modded by the site itself though, so if it’s malicious I guess the site is not trustable.

MalReynolds, w please help debug my qbittorrent socks5 setup with nordvpn
@MalReynolds@slrpnk.net avatar

Consider containers. Gluetun makes it easy to establish a wireguard connection to Nord, then use qbittorrent docker on the network that glutun provides, same for all your *arrs. Safer, faster, self-contained. Connect your web-browser to gluetun’s proxy. Just sayin’

AlboTheGuy, w Pirate Pro
@AlboTheGuy@feddit.nl avatar

My main issue with seeding is that I don’t always have my pc on and would rather not keep it always on

Pulp,

No need for that?

padge,

You can just set your torrent program to open at startup, as long as you use your computer somewhat often you’ll be fine. Or you can look into a seedbox, it’s cheap

CaptainAniki, w Pirate Pro

deleted_by_author

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  • Zuberi,
    @Zuberi@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    I mean most of them are free you just need to be fair and upload your share.

    CaptainAniki,

    deleted_by_author

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  • HeneryHawk,

    I’m on a few private trackers, never paid a penny towards any of them, and have high ratios in all of them

    It did take me a little work and spent some time seeding stuff I didn’t really want but I got there with a shitty home connection (my connection is pretty good now but I built those ratios with dog shit speeds)

    Zuberi, (edited )
    @Zuberi@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    I’m genuinely surprised to see that opinion in a privacy piracy sub, ngl.

    CaptainAniki,

    deleted_by_author

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  • Zuberi,
    @Zuberi@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    Edited to correct my typo

    nova_ad_vitum,

    I sort of agree. When everyone is trying to seed to up their ratio, getting stuff is easy and fast. But maintaining your ratio is a nightmare. The place is essentially starved of downloaders because even people who want stuff can’t get it for fear of ruining their ratio. The only reason I had a positive ratio on what.cd was that they occasionally had freeleech days where you could download freely and only uploads counted. On those days I would just get the most popular torrents on the site and upload the shit out of them.

    While these problems exist in any private tracker, I do still miss what.cd.

    spez, w Pirate Pro

    I don’t do much torrenting but only direct downloads (3rd world baby!) What are trackers really?

    Venomnik0,

    omg its spez. How does it feel to run reddit to the ground?

    spez,

    Yup, it’s spez from fucking Brazil

    IvanOverdrive, (edited ) w Pirate Pro

    Here’s my experience with 99% of private trackers:

    “You haven’t upload enough. Download a free-leech to upload more”. So I download it, and no one downloads it from me.

    mark7869,
    @mark7869@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

    yup same experience with the freeleech

    HeneryHawk,

    You’re downloading old and/or unpopular stuff. For you to upload content someone has to be actively downloading that content (that’s how the bit torrent protocol works at the most basic level). If you choose some 5 year-old FL of a Game of Thrones pack with 7,000 seeders, that’s on you

    allocsb,

    The incentive structure just doesn’t seem designed well. It creates a zero sum game. When downloading you can either:

    1. Not seed to 100%. This damages your ratio
    2. Seed to exactly 100%. In terms of ratio maintenance across all seeders this option makes the most sense
    3. Seed past 100%. You build up your own ratio but deny other downloaders from reaching 100% which hurts their ratio. They must spend longer seeding the torrent to reach 100%, which further decreases the likelihood of subsequent downloaders from reaching 100% when seeding

    When you seed past 100%, you essentially have to rely on bad actors to create more upload work for good actors. If there are no bad actors then seeding past 100% is to the detriment of other good actors, who you want to protect because you also rely on them for system health. And private trackers aim to minimize the number of bad actors.

    EddyNottingham,

    Some great private trakers implement a system where users are rewarded for the time they spend seeding rather than the amount of data seeded. This creates an incentive towards keeping torrents available to everyone for a long time, which makes the whole system healthier.

    Aetherion,
    @Aetherion@feddit.de avatar

    which private trackers are engaging this approach. Seems worth to join them.

    Pulp,

    Most

    IDeserveToBeLoved,

    polishsource (polish general tracker) requires you to only seed 48 hours within a week from downloading and nothing more

    allocsb,

    That’s smart!

    reddithalation,

    and some other trackers completely ignore all of that and make it extremely hard to gain ratio. if they all had a bonus points system that would be great though

    Pulp,

    Basically RED only

    reddithalation,

    yeah its red im talking about, they are kinda essential for getting higher up, but i just dont want to deal with it

    Pulp,

    Yeah, RED guarantees access, but it’s also possible to gain access without it; it just takes longer. Sites like TorrentLeech can serve as valid proof for certain sites during applications, for example. Additionally, AlphaRatio also has some recruitment.

    reddithalation,

    yeah, but i would like to get in BLU or AB, and they just don’t take applications or registrations

    Pulp,

    BLU took applications a month ago though

    reddithalation,

    wait what? :| i shoudve checked more

    Pulp,

    Bonus points?

    padge,

    I got around this by just downloading some big freeleech porn packs or a couple new release shows/movies. My highest ratio item is an anime episode I downloaded minutes after release

    GoumLeChat, (edited )

    Use Sonarr or Radarr, it will download content for you as soon as it is available on the tracker. Since people are mostly looking for new stuff it works really well to boost your ratio. I have at least a ratio of 10 (first episode is closer to 20) for every Ahsoka and Futurama episodes. For Asteroid City I’m currently at 18.

    toxictenement,
    @toxictenement@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    Sonarr and Radarr actually take a bit after the initial upload to discover it, autobrr can grab quicker because it relies on the irc announce channel of the tracker.

    IvanOverdrive,

    I’ll look into it. Thanks

    bremen15, w please help debug my qbittorrent socks5 setup with nordvpn

    I got it to work by using a different soccks5 server. Those in the Netherlands didn’t work.

    PeachMan, w Re-Encode Advice?
    @PeachMan@lemmy.one avatar

    For broad compatibility and good quality+compression, h265. I use Handbrake’s Nvidia encoder and it works great. I’m not sure about the differences between AAC and AC3.

    entropicdrift,
    !deleted5697 avatar

    AAC is generally more modern and better for lower bitrates, but AC3 (also known as Dolby Digital) has the advantage of being able to be transmitted in 5.1 over SPIDF optical connections, so it can allow for surround sound in older setups that may not otherwise be able to recieve digital surround sound.

    Opus is slightly better than AAC at matched bitrates, slightly less commonly supported, and totally open-source. It’s a fine choice as well.

    Also of note because of its use for anime encodes is FLAC, which is lossless and therefore results in much larger files, but will always have the exact same quality as the original audio it encoded, so it’s excellent for archival quality.

    drwankingstein, w Re-Encode Advice?

    Av1 is pretty well supported now on a lot of devices thanks to dav1d, and it’s the video codec with the best quality:compression ratio. “broad device compatibility” will be up to you and your devices, I would seriously look into it. It’s what I personally encode all my stuff to.

    as for audio Opus or AAC, AC-3 is bad

    MasterBuilder,

    Why is AC-3 bad? It’s pretty much compatible with everything, holds Dolby Digital and atmos. Especially if the source is already encoded in AC-3, would it be wise to re-encode it?

    drwankingstein,

    if you already have AC-3 content you can leave it as is, however as a codec itself, it is worse then aac and opus in terms of fidelity:size

    MasterBuilder,

    I agree that if it is already AAC, it should not be changed as it has the highest fidelity and best compression.

    While AC-3 is not the best, it and AC-4 are the only formats i know that can encode TrueHD and Atmos metadata, so that should be kept it it is there.

    Any transcode will lose fidelity unless the target codec is lossless, and I don’t think AAC has a lossless mode.

    drwankingstein,

    yeah but OP is wondering about transcoding their stuff. there is no reason to encode to AC3. I would just use traditional surround if you plan kn transcoding it.

    Conyak, w Pirate Pro

    Could someone explain the benefits? I use public sites and download everything I’ve ever wanted and rarely have to wait more than a few minutes for them to finish. I’m no expert by any measure so I’m probably missing something.

    AceFuzzLord,

    It’s more of a broader benefit for everyone, but there are seems to usually be (a) rule(s) stating you have to seed a minimum amount of torrents to a specific ratio, which I don’t fully understand how that works past it helping torrents from completely dying.

    Other than that, I don’t have a clue since I have never been apart of one.

    athos77,

    There are three types of private trackers: general, specialty, and niche. A general tracker has most of the newest of everything - tv and movies and music and games, etc. A specialty tracker focuses on a specific media - movies or comics or audiobooks or TV, etc. And a niche tracker focuses on a specific interest - British television, or horror movies, or dnb music.

    A general tracker has very similar content to public trackers, though they tend to be more secure. And like public trackers, while they'll have the latest items, and old popular items, they tend to have retention issues.

    Since a specialty tracker has a narrower focus, it tends to have deeper archives for it's content. A movie tracker, for example, instead of having just the most recent movies and a back-catalog of older blockbusters, will have those plus a catalog of older, more obscure, less popular content, and it will often offer that content in multiple formats and sizes.

    And a specialty tracker goes even deeper for those that have a particular passion for the subject that's covered.

    Do you need a private tracker? IMO, most people don't. Most people are happy with what they have, or are happy with what they get from public trackers and other places. It's really only if you're finding yourself unhappy with public trackers - you're not comfortable with the lack of privacy, for example, or you're often looking content that you can't find - that I would suggest looking into private trackers.

    MonkderZweite,

    Where do i find private trackers? For Ghibly movies in german?

    athos77,

    I don't speak German and I don't watch anime, so I'm probably not the best person to ask. Your best bet would probably be German tracker; if it doesn't have the content, they can likely direct you to where it is.

    The other option would be to join a tracker that specializes in movies, but they tend to be somewhat difficult to get into; I would be hopeful that German trackers are easier.

    hottari,

    Makes a difference when you want to get something that’s a bit more older or more obscure, you’ll notice few to 0 seeds on these public torrents. If you find these titles on a private tracker, you will find it well seeded with high speed peers as most people use seedboxes for seeding the torrents.

    dystop, (edited )

    First is speed. I’ve been able to get speeds of ~50MBps (not Mbits) on private trackers, granted this is dependent on Internet connection more than anything but I get 20-50% of that speed on public trackers.

    Second is retention and breadth of selection. If you’re trying to download the latest Marvel movie then every tracker is gonna have that, but if you’re looking for an older movie then it’s much harder to find on a public tracker. And if you do find one, it’s likely to be seeded by 1 person and you can only squeeze 10KBps out of it.

    Zuberi, (edited )
    @Zuberi@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    Hard disagree. Plenty of private trackers have massive communities of request systems. You want some stupidly obscure movie and it has to be dubbed in Romanian? Private tracker.

    Edit: My comment no longer makes sense after the edit :)!

    Pulp,

    I think it was a typo

    dystop,

    Oh i meant private has better retention. Oops. Editing

    Faresh,

    I’m looking for a german dub of The Last Unicorn. The only torrent I found no longer has any seeders. What private tracker could have it and is it worth it to join a private tracker to just relive a childhood memory?

    Pulp,

    The Last Unicorn

    The Last Unicorn 1982 2D+3D GER BluRay 1080p DTS-HD MA 5 1 is on hd-torrents

    Pulp, w Re-Encode Advice?

    I recommend using H.265 and Opus for audio. In my opinion, encoding to H.264 in 2023 is not a wise choice. AV1 is a good option, especially with hardware encoding and compatible devices.

    poudi8,
    @poudi8@reddthat.com avatar

    Also, software enfolding only, hardware encoding really isn’t as good.

    Pulp,

    I would say good enough for personal use unless you have good cpu

    HumanPerson, w Re-Encode Advice?

    First, just to be clear because codec terminology can be weird, x264 is a h264 encoder, not a separate codec. H265 is not an open standard so it may not play back properly if you use a Firefox or a Firefox based browser. I would recommend av1 if you can encode it, as it is good for quality and file size, however only new GPUs can encode it. CPUs can encode it slowly, but if you don’t have a new gpu (like 40 series Nvidia, arc, or AMD 7000 and maybe 6000) I would recommend vp9. It is a bit worse for file size but it won’t take a year to encode and should be compatible with most browsers.

    Rodrigo_de_Mendoza,

    Thanks for the clarification on 264. I have an AMD 3700x with Radeon 470 graphics card. I’d like a decent balance between CPU/GPU encoding so not to put too much stress on just the CPU. I know nothing about AV1. Can Smart TVs read the AV1 or VP9 codec? I know my LG will take H.264 & H.265 but I haven’t tried the others?

    HumanPerson,

    I am not too knowledgeable on different encoders, but I don’t know if using cpu and gpu is an option. Av1 and vp9 are open standards, meaning basically anything can implement them, but av1 is new so older devices haven’t. The tv will probably handle vp9 fine, but I would still recommend transcoding a test video and looking if it plays back natively. With that gpu av1 is definitely not supported so I would recommend vp9.

    Faceman2K23,
    @Faceman2K23@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

    AV1 is only just appearing in TV chipsets, and software support and stability will lag behind there for some time. if you only use your videos on a modern PC or a new-ish phone, then sure go for it, it’s pretty great.

    Personally though, as good as AV1 is, I’d be avoiding it for something like a plex/emby/jellyfin library purely because while computers and phones now have decent support, many TVs and streaming boxes do not, the software on those that do is lacking support or is patchy, broken or unstable, and you can run into difficulty even transcoding those files for playback on unsupported devices because of the transcoder backends having their own support problems depending on your server hardware, operating system, and server software choice.

    H265 10bit is the current best for those sorts of media libraries, just about any TV or streaming box from the last 5 years will support it just fine and it is still somewhat easy to encode with hardware acceleration.

    I recently ran some of my less critical libraries through fileflows to convert a small subset of oversized H264 files to H265 10bit and with roughly 17000 files processed in those libraries I’ve saved about 5tb. that is skipping small H264 files and files already in H265, and has a few encoding tiers based on file size and some handling of reprocessing outputs that end up larger than the original, which can happen with the lower RF values that I am using.

    Output quality has been perfectly acceptable, but i still have many thousands of files that I would prefer to keep in the highest quality possible, regardless of file size.

    entropicdrift,
    !deleted5697 avatar

    Yep, this. This is why I’m still favoring HEVC over AV1 or even VP9 right now: player compatibility and ease of Jellyfin transcoding.

    Rodrigo_de_Mendoza,

    I see what you mean about the other CODECs like VP9 and AV1. The future looks good for them but for a Plex library not so much. I tried converting a single ~20 minute TV episode and it took about ~16mins for AOM-AV1 and VP9 was somewhat over an hour or so. But, H265 zips right along in ~5 mins or less an ep with not as much strain on the CPU. Probably be going down the H265/AAC route. Thanks for the data & information. It’s helped very much!

    Faceman2K23,
    @Faceman2K23@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

    That will be down to your GPU having hardware acceleration for certain codecs and not others, because a pure CPU encode of those codecs on anything but an Epyc or other ball tot he wall top end CPU is going to take hours.

    Rodrigo_de_Mendoza,

    My Radeon 470 had Kronos Open CL but I think some of my system drivers have gone crazy because the option to use it has disappeared. I’m really considering a new build even though my system’s only 3.5 yrs old.

    entropicdrift, w Re-Encode Advice?
    !deleted5697 avatar

    I’m favoring h265 10-bit for my library recently. Whether SDR or not, it seems to provide a slightly better compression ratio and fewer banding artifacts than 8-bit. Any player that can handle 4K streaming content can decode h265 10-bit, so there’s a ton of forward compatibility for the foreseeable future

    Rodrigo_de_Mendoza,

    So, any device that handles 4K should be able to handle H.265. Good informattion to know. Thanks for the input!

    Faceman2K23, w Barbie WEBDl is out with HC korean subs
    @Faceman2K23@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

    There is a clean version available now. roughly 8.8gb.

    Edit: not quite, it’s a crop.

    ancoraunamoka,

    saw this yesterday with my relevant other. Very enjoyable even if a crop. The movie is dogshit though

    iHUNTcriminals, w please help debug my qbittorrent socks5 setup with nordvpn

    I believe I had this working once but unfortunately I don’t recall having to troubleshoot anything.

    Right now I just use a stack and put all my apps the need VPN in that docker stack and use kasm Firefox with ipleak to double check the VPN.

    The reason I use the VPN container (gluetun) is I think I can specifically connect it to the nord p2p servers… Is that possible with the proxy settings?

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