• ShinkanTrain@lemmy.ml
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    6 days ago

    What, you never downloaded a game divided in 40 100MB chunks off of MegaUpload before only to find out part 27 is broken🫠

  • webghost0101@sopuli.xyz
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    7 days ago

    Thats a good sign actually.

    People have been sharing things in storage drives for decades. Fmhy has a list of some big ones, usually for books.

    Traditionally i believe these were not advertised and more underground, a way to easily share with friends.

    You didn’t really want them easily found and traceable to you though but that is what changed.

    Piracy has become so normalised that people take it for granted that there are no legal risks involved. Normalising piracy is the first step for the ideals of software freedom to flourish.

    After all what is a digital file if not a bunch of writing that instructs the computer to draw pixels on your screen. You wouldn’t copyright the words to ask a human to make a drawing about a copyrighted something, so why do it for a computer?

    • moody@lemmings.world
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      6 days ago

      After all what is a digital file if not a bunch of writing that instructs the computer to draw pixels on your screen.

      A digital file is just a number, potentially a very big number, but that’s all it is.

      • tatterdemalion@programming.dev
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        5 days ago

        Oh come on. What’s next?

        “Child pornography is just a really big number, after all.”

        “I didn’t murder anyone, I just rearranged some atoms. We’re all just really big collections of atoms after all.”

        If you remove enough semantic layers, you can make anything sound benign.

        I’m not anti-piracy, I just think these lines of argumentation are so flimsy as to be entirely worthless for the cause.

    • m4a@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      6 days ago

      Funny thing is, if the instructions are written down I’m pretty sure they are copyrightable

      • webghost0101@sopuli.xyz
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        6 days ago

        Thats what copyleft licensing is for and why physical things are increasingly using gpl and other open software licenses.

    • baka@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      7 days ago

      Nothing inefficient about adding another avenue for pirating Decentralization makes us stronger

    • Sonalder@lemmy.ml
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      7 days ago

      It’s less resilient, honestly with today speeds it is not that less efficient I would say.

      • d-RLY?@lemmy.ml
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        6 days ago

        More efficient if the file is less popular or super niche with few seeders with tiny upload speeds or no seeds (due to age of the torrent or the before mentioned). Torrents for sure are more resilient as far as being harder to just shutdown a site. It is still nice to constantly have all options possible to make getting files easy. Though I will say that torrents are more efficient the larger the file. 4k media being a very good example.

  • 0_o7@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    6 days ago

    Since xitter is only for whiny right wing little bitches and moderation is mostly gone and only applies to political content ego-baby doesn’t like, so I guess this flies under the radar, maybe?

  • Gust@piefed.social
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    7 days ago

    Reminds me of the undergrad experience of someone who is not me, lol. They had “the dropbox”, spoken about only in hushed tones and never openly acknowledged, which may have contained a pdf copy of every single text required by the curriculum of that person’s major.

  • Programmer Belch@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 days ago

    I feel like a torrent is safer because uploading a file to a cloud storage can be done by anyone, meanwhile creating a torrent and a botnet to simulate an active torrent takes much more time and effort

  • Egonallanon@feddit.uk
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    7 days ago

    Yeah for reasons beyond my knowing torrenting seems to have really dropped off over recent years.

    • LumpyPancakes@piefed.social
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      7 days ago

      I think it’s in part because of NAT. Less and less people have a real IP address, so they can’t share the torrents to others, and most VPNs don’t provide an upload port either.

      The tracker websites are also increasingly hostile with malicious ads, so those with ineffective ad blockers can’t use them.

      • hayvan@piefed.world
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        6 days ago

        Qbittorrent works with my double-nat set up (don’t ask why, my isp sucks) without any set up. I feel like it’s more of a tech literacy issue.

        • richmondez@lemdro.id
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          6 days ago

          Torrent clients can cope behind NAT but can only upload/download from other peers that have a port open so they are more limited in the pool of peers they can make use of.