Hello everyone,

I recently came across an article on TorrentFreak about the BitTorrent protocol and found myself wondering if it has remained relevant in today’s digital landscape. Given the rapid advancements in technology, I was curious to know if BitTorrent has been surpassed by a more efficient protocol, or if it continues to hold its ground (like I2P?).

Thank you for your insights!

  • pedroapero@lemmy.ml
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    19 days ago

    It is not anonymous and suffers network fragmentation. Yet the force of Bittorrent is its large community and mature performant tooling (compared to IPFS).

  • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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    19 days ago

    It’s more relevant then ever.

    With the media companies ndoing what large media companies do, aarrr think that torrents are very important indeed, matey

  • JCPhoenix@beehaw.org
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    19 days ago

    When I want to pirate, torrenting is my go to. I don’t do it very often, so I’m not really up-to-date on more modern methods. For some movies, I know there are those websites like 123movies or whatever. And I’ve used those. But Idek what additional methods there are anymore.

    That said, I’ve tried torrenting over I2P, but it’s just slow. Not necessarily super slow, but obviously slower than doing it over the clearweb with a commercial VPN. Additionally it seems like there’s less available content with torrenting over I2P. At least in the little experience I’ve had with it.

  • ComradeMiao@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    20 days ago

    Also your article just says streaming and cloud services are more popular with the masses. Where does it say torrenting is replaced by another piracy method

  • kratoz29@lemm.ee
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    20 days ago

    I use Torrent daily, I basically never stop seeding what I download to my Plex Server and I also use a Real Debrid account, which essentially caches the torrents to their servers for us to stream through different methods (like Kodi, Stremio, or more recently for me Plex thanks to Riven/Zurg).

  • Kissaki@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    18 days ago

    The article you linked answers most of your questions.

    1. Relative global upstream traffic went down, but not due to other file-sharing protocols but entirely different applications
    2. I2P is not mentioned anywhere in the article, nor any other sharing alternative
    3. VPN is mentioned as a potential reason for not being able to identify torrent traffic; VPN has become much more prevalent and promoted in the scene
    4. The article says, in piracy, streaming websites are much more popular now

    It has not been surpassed by another protocol. The relative numbers don’t say much about absolute numbers or usage.

    And 10 % of global internet upload is certainly no irrelevancy.

  • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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    20 days ago

    Torrenting is a decentralized approach and the corpo parasite hates because there is nothing they can do about it, short of shutting down the internet lol

    Get fuck Disney

  • ComradeMiao@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    20 days ago

    Most piracy is either two ancient methods that work perfectly of Usenet or BitTorrent. There is nothing wrong with these methods.

    • finley@lemm.ee
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      20 days ago

      Considering that USENET goes back to the 70s, and bittorrent was invented in 2001, one of these things is clearly ancient and the other isn’t.

    • Որբունի@jlai.lu
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      19 days ago

      Usenet has many things wrong with it, NNTP is not at all designed for distributing large files, it’s for propagating messages across servers. File integrity checks have to be tacked on for instance, and the few servers still serving binaries are commercial services that are vulnerable to copyright trolls.