• null@piefed.nullspace.lol
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      2 hours ago

      Can you link me to the part of that article that says that somehow once you put a torrent file on your server, you can never remove it from your server?

      Or were you just trying to do a gotcha without understanding what I said?

      • frightful_hobgoblin@lemmy.mlOP
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        2 hours ago

        Once you put a torrent out, you don’t have control of it. The uploader does not have a kill-switch. Torrents are peer-to-peer without a central server.

          • frightful_hobgoblin@lemmy.mlOP
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            2 hours ago

            You’ve raised –

            • Anna’s Archive bearing the server-load (“slurp up their bandwidth”, “the traffic costs will inflate dramatically”)

            • Lawyers demanding a centralised takedown

            Both of these are based on the idea of a client-server model. Torrents don’t have that model at all. It’s a peer-to-peer model as opposed to a client-server model

            Can you link me to the part of that article that says that somehow once you put a torrent file on your server, you can never remove it from your server?

            “the lack of a central server that could limit bandwidth”… “The BitTorrent protocol can be used to reduce the server and network impact of distributing large files. Rather than downloading a file from a single source server, the BitTorrent protocol allows users to join a “swarm” of hosts to upload and download from each other simultaneously”… “there is no single point of failure as in one way server-client transfers”… “publishers that value BitTorrent as a cheap alternative to a client-server approach”… “to increase availability and to reduce load on their own servers, especially when dealing with larger files”

            Happy to explain this more if you’re still confused.