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SaP

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  1. Tracker Name : Greece-Forever.biz Signup Link : http://www.greece-forever.biz/signup.php Genre : General Closing Date : N/A Additional Information : greek private tracker with classic movies
  2. hi norma,i apply for quorks,thanx
  3. This week's most exciting news in technology was undoubtedly that Tesla Cars declares that all their patent monopolies are free for anyone to use. What does it mean? Let's compare to BitTorrent. When Bram Cohen created the BitTorrent protocol, he had the legal option of filing for a patent monopoly on any computer program that used this protocol. (The mere existence of such an option is a very bad thing, but we’ll be returning to that.) Mr. Cohen chose to not monopolize the BitTorrent protocol in that way. Let’s examine what implications that would have had for the technology. If the BitTorrent technology would have been protected by patent monopolies, it would have been effectively limited to Mr. Cohen’s original BitTorrent client. Have you used that client? Do you know anybody who has used it? Didn’t think so, and neither do I. Instead, there is an enormous plethora of clients and servers that use the protocol today, and Mr. Cohen’s BitTorrent Inc. is valued at eight-digit dollars. Not to mention the fact that BitTorrent Inc. was subsequently able to buy one of the most prolific BitTorrent clients out there, µTorrent, which would not have existed had the technology been monopolized in the first place. I think most of us have used µTorrent – I know I have. This shows exactly why it makes so much sense for Tesla Cars to release all of their patent monopolies into the wild, and why the patent monopoly system as such is enormously harmful (the only industry to make a net profit from it is the pharma industry, and that’s because they’re heavily subsidized with taxpayer money). Tesla Cars relinquishing their monopolies means they see this mechanism, and that they realize they need an ecosystem to flourish around their technology – the electric car technology – in order to remain viable themselves. Put another way, it’s not about the size of the pie slice: monopolies are preventing the pie itself from growing exponentially, as they do with any new technology poised to disrupt the old ways. Just like BitTorrent. Patent monopolies are far worse than the copyright monopolies we deal with (and all break) on a daily basis. Imagine for a moment if copyright monopoly vultures didn’t care if you had made an actual copy, that you would be just as guilty of infringement even if you had never seen or heard of the original? That’s how patent monopolies work, and that’s the key difference between patent monopolies and copyright monopolies: the latter protect a specific expression against copying, the former protect an idea or a form from being utilized anywhere, even independently. It’s also why patent monopolies are much, much more harmful than copyright monopolies (and that’s saying a lot). But as the Tesla example shows, patent monopolies don’t stop at not making sense as a whole. They also don’t make sense to a single company in isolation, as they prevent an ecosystem taking shape. It’s one of the worst cancers in the economy, as investors describe them today. It’s easy to argue that patent monopolies don’t hit ordinary families in the same way that copyright monopolies, that patent monopolies have not sued families out of their homes merely for taking part in society’s culture. But that’s about to change with 3D printing, where rapid fabrication becomes available to the masses. It is – unfortunately – a safe prediction that people will soon be sued out of their homes merely for manufacturing their own pair of slippers, because it violated a design patent monopoly somewhere. Such a notion may seem ridiculous today. Then again, so did everything else we’ve seen with the copyright monopoly so far, and patent monopolies are guarded far more harshly. The BitTorrent legacy doesn’t just show us how to break the copyright monopoly in a specific case. It gives us a blueprint for how to disrupt old ways in general by ditching legal monopolies, a blueprint that Tesla Cars is now choosing to follow. The patent monopoly wars are coming, right on the heels of the copyright monopoly wars, as were they merely a logical extension. That’s why it’s so encouraging to see our tip-of-the-spear entrepreneurs denouncing and releasing their own monopolies right ahead of these battles with corporate lawyers. As a final note, it’s noteworthy that Tesla Cars isn’t the only company that Elon Musk is running. He’s also at the helm of SpaceX. Space technology has been ridiculously proprietary up until now, nothing cooperating with anything else and everything being custom-built single-use. That’s why it makes me enormously excited to see an entrepreneur who understands the damages of monopolies at the forefront of space technology today. It holds a promise of standardized, interoperable space technology. As in, “for all of us”. Like BitTorrent. http://torrentfreak.com/tesla-cars-space-technology-bittorrent-monopolies-suck-140616/
  4. SaP

    Mystical

    Tracker Name : Mystikal Signup Link : http://mystical.pw/signup.php Genre : movies/general Closing Date : N/A Additional Information : -
  5. The top 10 most downloaded movies on BitTorrent are in again. '300: Rise Of An Empire‘ tops the chart this week, followed by ‘X-Men: Days of Future Past.' 'The Grand Budapest Hotel' completes the top three. This week we have three newcomers in our chart. 300: Rise Of An Empire is the most downloaded movie for the second week in a row. The data for our weekly download chart is estimated by TorrentFreak, and is for informational and educational reference only. All the movies in the list are BD/DVDrips unless stated otherwise. RSS feed for the weekly movie download chart. Ranking (last week) Movie IMDb Rating / Trailer 1 (1) 300: Rise Of An Empire 6.6 / trailer 2 (3) X-Men: Days of Future Past 8.5 / trailer 3 (4) The Grand Budapest Hotel 8.3 / trailer 4 (2) Street Fighter: Assassin’s Fist 8.5 / trailer 5 (…) Edge of Tomorrow (TS/Cam) 8.2 / trailer 6 (10) Rio 2 6.7 / trailer 7 (…) A Million Ways to Die in the West 6.4 / trailer 8 (6) The Lego Movie 8.2 / trailer 9 (5) Non-Stop 7.2 / trailer 10 (…) Sleeping Beauty 3.1 / trailer http://torrentfreak.com/top-10-pirated-movies-week-140616/
  6. A key motivation for people to illegally download is the long gap between a movie's theatrical release and its debut through other channels. To tackle this problem in Australia the exclusive theatrical release window will soon begin to narrow from 120 to 90 days. While its popularity has waned in recent years, the issue of camcorder piracy is often spoken about in crisis terms by the major movie studios. Part of the reason camming occurs, however, is down to the exclusivity enjoyed by the world’s theater chains, meaning that while a mainstream movie is being shown in a cinema, it is not available anywhere else. It will not be available on Netflix nor will it be available for purchase on Blu-ray or DVD. This creates a convenient opening for the black market. Of course, pretty much the whole time a movie is showing in theaters it will be available both online and on DVD, because someone, somewhere, will have recorded it illegally. True exclusivity only exists in the minds of the theaters and distributors. Just lately it’s been extremely popular for Australians to be criticized for their piracy habits, an activity sometimes justified by films not being made available quickly enough Down Under. This morning it’s been revealed that the group representing the Australian film and TV home entertainment industry intend to do something about that. Speaking with Fairfax Media, Australian Home Entertainment Distributors Association chief executive officer Simon Bush said that the current theatrical window will be narrowed in an effort to reduce piracy. “This 120 days is not the hard and fast rule anymore and there will be some studios this year that will be coming in around the 90 days,” Bush said. “[The studios] don’t like the fact that they are losing out a lot of money to piracy.” It’s hoped that the shortening of the delay will go someway towards reducing illegal movie downloads in Australia by providing content in alternative formats in a more timely fashion. That being said, AHEDA still wish to preserve the big screen’s exclusivity in the market and its position as the premier location for early viewing. “It continues to ensure that the theatrical window retains its rightful prominence in the market as the premium movie experience, but also allows the consumer to increasingly access the film earlier digitally and on DVD and Blu-ray and thus reduce what some refer to as the ‘piracy window’,” Bush said of the narrowing window. While improved availability is key to reducing piracy, theaters will undoubtedly balk at the further erosion of their exclusive window of opportunity. However, according to comments made by DreamWorks Animation chief Jeffrey Katzenberg, release windows could collapse almost entirely in the next ten years. “I think the model will change and you won’t pay for the window of availability. A movie will come out and you will have 17 days, that’s exactly three weekends, which is 95% of the revenue for 98% of movies,” Katzenberg told the Milken Global Conference in Beverly Hills earlier this year. “On the 18th day, these movies will be available everywhere ubiquitously and you will pay for the size. A movie screen will be $15. A 75” TV will be $4.00. A smartphone will be $1.99. That enterprise that will exist throughout the world, when that happens, and it will happen, it will reinvent the enterprise of movies,” he said. In the meantime, the Australian government will try to legislate its way out of the piracy problem, by imposing “three strikes” style schemes on its citizens and pressuring ISPs to take responsibility for the actions of their subscribers. http://torrentfreak.com/movie-piracy-combated-by-narrowing-theatrical-release-window-140616/
  7. Tracker Name : btmaniac.org Signup Link : http://btmaniac.org/signup.php Genre : General Closing Date : N/A Additional Information : Greek private tracker with movies,tv show
  8. Tracker Name : animeclipse.com Signup Link : http://www.animeclipse.com/phpbb2/profile.php?mode=register&agreed=true Genre : anime Closing Date : N/A Additional Information : Greek private tracker with anime
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  11. Tracker Name : ArcheCtypo Anime Fansub Signup Link : http://giorgatzelos.cwahi.net/phpBB3/ucp.php?mode=register Genre : anime Closing Date : N/A Additional Information : Greek tracker with anime
  12. Tracker Name : peeratiko.org Signup Link : http://peeratiko.org/signup.php Genre : General Closing Date : N/A Additional Information : Greek private tracker with movies,tv show,application
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  14. Tracker Name : xseires.tv Signup Link : http://xseires.tv/index.php?page=signup Genre : tv Closing Date : N/A Additional Information : Greek private tracker with tv series
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  16. Tracker Name : crystal-tracker.net Signup Link : https://crystal-tracker.net/sbg_login_classic.php Genre : General Closing Date : N/A Additional Information : Greek private tracker with movies,music,tv show,application,e.t.c
  17. Tracker Name : ntelogo.org Signup Link : http://ntelogo.org/user.php?op=register Genre : General Closing Date : N/A Additional Information : Greek tracker with movies,tv show,music,application,xxx
  18. Advocates of “network neutrality” have trouble conveying the real world implications of an arcane-sounding technical issue. Two items in the news help illustrate why it’s an issue to fight about. “Network neutrality” is the underlying principle of the Internet as we know it – generally, the idea that all bits of data are treated equally, unaffected by the various companies involved in carrying the traffic from one place or another. There is a long-term effort by communications companies to squeeze revenue from consumers and web providers by charging more for priority access to the available bandwidth – and the likelihood that other web sites and services will be slowed down or disabled if they don’t pay up.Here’s some background information about the “net neutrality” fight. All the examples cited by net neutrality defenders have been theoretical until now, leaving cable/telco executives free to piously pretend they have no intention of doing anything that would interfere with their customers, all of whom are equally loved. Comcast has now been caught deliberately and indiscriminately interfering with BitTorrent traffic. There had been prior evidence of Comcast’s blockage but this article presented widely publicized proof. It’s not a shakedown for money yet, but it’s easy to imagine that Comcast can introduce a new “torrent-friendly” subscription package – for just a little more money each month. The entertainment industry would like you to believe that BitTorrent is only used to trade copyrighted material, but it is also a widely used legitimate tool for quickly disseminating legal content. Comcast has been blocking my BitTorrent traffic for a couple of months now. (Specifically: Comcast is running software that prevents outgoing traffic for completed torrents. Seeding a torrent after finishing a download is a crucial part of BitTorrent etiquette as well as a requirement for participating in some of the sites I visit for non-copyrighted music and concerts.) But if you’re still not convinced that this might affect you, let’s try a metaphor that you’ll understand right away. United Airlines Chief Executive Glenn Tilton is seeking to wring some extra money out of passengers, so he just floated the idea ofmaking economy passengers pay an extra fee to get their luggage off the plane – or stand around waiting until the last of the luggage is unloaded if they don’t pay the fee . Here’s the interview. You felt a chill when you read that, didn’t you? Yup, the principle of “baggage neutrality” is under attack. Well, your Internet experience can be shaped by exactly the same demonic forces, the same rich white men in suits who see you as an open wallet. Fight for laws protecting network neutrality! http://www.brucebnews.com/2007/10/bittorrent-baggage-neutrality/
  19. BitTorrent’s Jaehee Lee offers insight into the development of BitTorrent’s new chat application, focused on how we are addressing the various needs of privacy. We’ve just released an internal Alpha and wanted to share some of the key learnings from our development process. When our product and engineering teams sat down for our initial brainstorming of the most important features for our upcoming chat application, we all agreed on one thing: The central focus would be around privacy. So we’ve been doing a lot of serious thinking and research on the issue, particularly as it applies to communicating. What is apparent, as many of you may already know, is that “privacy” in a chat application can mean different things to different people. To some, what counts most is what’s under the hood. What differentiates the application to ensure that metadata and content remain private? To others, privacy means having social autonomy, private time with the person or people they are talking to; the application should just work. The privacy scenarios include: Journalists communicating with sources without exposing their identity or content being shared Members of the diplomatic corps sharing private dispatches Keeping business communications confidential, safe from leaks, and safe from industrial espionage Keeping your conversations private amongst friends The list can go on. But privacy is, ultimately, the ability to express oneself freely with autonomy and to feel safe doing so. To not worry that the wrong friend will see a message that wasn’t intended for them. Engineering For Privacy We realized that there would never be a single message delivery method that was ideally private to all users in all situations. This led us to ask new questions that explored how we could create a chat app that solves different problems for different people, and is transparent in signalling the level of privacy in every use case. From an engineering perspective, there are specific solutions to address each scenario. For communication between two trusted parties, peer-to-peer (or device-to-device) is optimal. But there are scenarios where your identity or metadata may need to be obscured from the person with whom you are communicating. The journalist communicating with a source who may be under threat of danger, for instance. For these instances there will be a way to communicate without any need for personal or identifiable information. There will be an additional setting for routing communiques via a relay server to obscure metadata. It will function much like a VPN: the IP address will touch the relay server, but no metadata will be collected or stored. The content is encrypted from end-to-end and never exposed to a third party. Regardless of how the content of the messages are sent, our chat app will always use our distributed network for users to find one another on the network. This minimizes, and in many cases eliminates, the metadata that is created by other cloud based and centralized approaches to chat apps. We deliberated further. What if we created a way to inform users of how their messages were being routed and so they could decide for themselves if they feel comfortable chatting through that connection? What if we allowed them to choose a specific type of connection? Privacy And Convenience To start, users will be able to choose how they use our chat app. If you are porting in contact lists, you have the convenience of signing up with email or with a phone number. You will also have the option to sign up in Incognito mode, using no such information at all. What we are building for the Alpha will also address users communicating with a trusted source who prefer their communication to be device-to-device (decentralized). This means no hops through any 3rd party servers, and no chance of anything being intercepted. For users who may prefer to have their metadata obscured, messages will be indirect and routed through a third node. It is all a matter of preference. We think these considerations are important, and we’re coming up with what we believe to be some great ways to give people control over their conversations. Future posts will discuss more details of our chat app. For now, the team here is putting the internal release through it’s paces. The private alpha launch is right around the corner, and it represents just the beginning of what our vision is for a privacy-centered chat application. We can’t wait to share it with you. To be invited as an Alpha tester, sign up here: http://blog.bittorrent.com/2014/06/11/bittorrent-chat-the-want-for-privacy/
  20. Is data about peer-to-peer (P2P) file-sharing a huge treasure trove waiting to be tapped for customer intelligence? A Connecticut startup thinks so. Stamford-based Tru Optik has been collecting and analyzing data about BitTorrent downloads. This week, it released its most completeinfographic on the subject [Resources section] — plus a public beta of its first product, an API for tapping into the data. “More people will download TV shows [through BitTorrent] in 2014 than will tweet about them,” co-founder and CEO Andrew Swanston told VentureBeat. The company’s stats show that there are more P2P downloads each month of TV shows and films, for example, than downloads of that content on iTunes, Google Play and Amazon combined. P2P data, he added, provides “the largest untapped source of consumer intelligence available, and the metadata is absurd [in its breadth], with tags, comments, locations,” and more. The Tru Optik API, which previously has been in private beta, is the company’s tool for acquiring and analyzing real-time and historical data from P2P. Although some may think P2P has been declining, Tru Optik’s data, which it says is more accurate that other sources because it taps directly at the peer level, shows there were nearly 32 million P2P users in the U.S. in March, compared to 28 million for the entire year of 2010. Tru Optik, the recipient of a seed round of $225,000 from a group led by Connecticut Innovation, has its sights set on tapping P2P behavior. “What no one’s been able to do is cross-category [customer analysis]” at the kind of scale that P2P data can provide, Swanston told VentureBeat. “If you watch this TV show and listen to this music and use this app, [what else might you like?]“ P2P use is impacted in different ways by different kinds of content suppliers, he told us. “Spotify impacts P2P,” Swanston said, “but Netflix does not,” which Tru Optik believes is because Spotify’s selection size is so much larger and its release window is so much more immediate than Netflix’s. “People want the wider selection,” he said, “and they want it right away.” This is one of the reasons that Tru Optik also sees P2P as a “leading indicator of audience size and demand,” forecasting what content is not being provided by the marketplace. Of course, P2P – virtually always using the BitTorrent protocol – is synonymous with illegal downloads. Tru Optik’s data indicates that legal BitTorrent bundles increased more than 200 percent in the period from May to December of last year — Madonna, among others, have used this kind of distribution — but the company says it cannot yet tell if BitTorrent is trending more legal overall. But it can tell if downloads are being driven largely by users who can’t afford to buy the entertainment. Mostly, they’re not. In the U.S., the data shows that nearly 70 percent of downloads occurred in neighborhoods having an average household income of $50,000 to $90,000 per year, and another 18 percent were in neighborhoods with average incomes over $90,000. http://venturebeat.com/2014/05/28/more-people-pirate-tv-shows-than-tweet-about-them/
  21. Are you longing to chat in private — not just “off the record” but off the grid? BitTorrent today released an internal alpha of its server-less chat app, making your dreams of truly private chats a near-reality. BitTorrent realized the word “privacy” means different things to different people and wants this new app to account for everyone’s needs, BitTorrent senior product manager Jaehee Lee explained in a blog post today. That doesn’t just mean encrypting messages, like other messaging apps have done, but also keeping your metadata “decentralized.” Instead of messages passing through a central server, where they are unencrypted and vulnerable to data sweeps, BitTorrent’s chat app will enable you to communicate device-to-device, without a server. BitTorrent will have many iterations of the chat app, said Lee, who is full of feature ideas. It will be device-to-device. It will offer VPN for those times when you need to remain anonymous even to the person you’re talking to. Maybe it will even be a completely transparent service. “What if we created a way to inform users of how their messages were being routed and so they could decide for themselves if they feel comfortable chatting through that connection? What if we allowed them to choose a specific type of connection?” wrote Lee. For now, it sounds like BitTorrent has a lot of ideas to contend with before it unveils the ultimate privacy chat app. Nevertheless, Lee insists a private alpha launch is “just around the corner.” Stay tuned. More about the companies and people from this article: BitTorrent BitTorrent, Inc. is one of the world's leading peer-based technology companies. We maintain a globally recognized ecosystem of technology protocols, consumer software, and consumer electronics devices that help people find, share and m... read more » Powered by VBProfiles http://venturebeat.com/2014/06/11/bittorrent-experiments-with-decentralized-private-chat-service/
  22. Bitcoin is entering higher education. Reuters It is very much apparent that Silk Road Anonymous Market, a popular online drug marketplace, has been shut down to the public. Silk Road Bitcoin is entering higher education. Reuters It is very much apparent that Silk Road Anonymous Market, a popular online drug marketplace, has been shut down to the public. Silk Road The United States government is planning to sell one of the biggest caches of bitcoins, a hoard that's part of the bitcoin cache seized in October from the Silk Road marketplace, which was used for buying and selling drugs, Bloomberg reported Later in June, an auction for 29,656 bitcoins will take place. The U.S. Marshals Service posted an announcement of the auction on Thursday, according to USA Today. About 144,341 bitcoins, worth about $86 million at current prices, were transferred from the FBI to the Marshal Service, authorities said. Bitcoins are an unregulated online currency that aren't backed by gold, silver or other commodities. They do not generally exist in the real world, so what's being auctioned are actually sets of numbers entered in a public ledger online. The U.S. government seized the bitcoins when Silk Road operator Ross William Ulbricht was arrested for conspiracy to commit computer hacking and conspiracy to launder money. On Thursday, the value of bitcoins declined 7.3 percent to $582 apiece, according to the CoinDesk Bitcoin Price Index. The Silk Road marketplace website, described by the U.S. as a “sprawling black-market bazaar,” was used by drug dealers and other vendors to distribute hundreds of kilograms of illicit drugs and launder hundreds of millions of dollars, the U.S. said. The auction will reportedly begin at 6 a.m. on June 27. Bidders will have to register in advance, show proof of identity and deposit $200,000 in cash with the U.S. Department of Justice, Bloomberg reported. The winner or winners will be announced on June 30. The remainder of the the bitcoins may be sold at a later date. “Those other bitcoins are in a wallet controlled by the Marshals,” said Linzey Donahue, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Marshals. “They are subject to an interlocutory sale order and may be sold pursuant to a court order at a later date.” The United States seized about 173,991 bitcoins during the investigation, Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said. The bitcoins recovered Jan. 15 from Silk Road servers were ordered forfeited in a civil action filed by the U.S. that seeks all of Silk Road’s assets. Ulbricht has filed a claim asserting ownership of the bitcoins and contesting their forfeiture. http://www.ibtimes.com/bitcoins-seized-silk-road-marketplace-be-auctioned-1600178
  23. Burnt vehicles belonging to Iraqi security forces are pictured at a checkpoint in east Mosul, one day after radical Sunni Muslim insurgents seized control of the city, on June 11, 2014. Reuters Reports are surfacing of an Internet blackout in Iraq as the situation deteriorates. Islamic State of Iraq and Syria militants have been steadily expanding their positions in a push toward Baghdad. Tech blogs such as Mashable and the news organization Al Arabiya report the Iraqi Ministry of Communications imposed a blackout of social media sites and mobile-messaging services, and news reporters say e-mail also appears to be down, CBS reported. A Facebook spokesman told CBS the social media platform is investigating reports of limited Internet access in Iraq, calling it "a matter of concern for the global community." Twitter also reported access issues. "We're investigating their reports and we hope service will be restored quickly," Twitter said in a statement. The disruption appears similar to those instituted in 2011 during Arab Spring uprisings in Egypt and last March when Turkey blocked Twitter because of recordings that implicated officials in corruption. The Washington Post reported the majority of the disruptions were in the Baghdad area while access appeared little affected in the semi-autonomous Kurdish region and elsewhere, where satellite links and fiber-optic lines from Turkey, Iran and Jordan are more common. http://www.ibtimes.com/iraq-reported-blocking-internet-access-1601532
  24. 2xHDAccess.net invite=pap80-ntinos2011 be an active member here 1 ratio proof + speedtest add rep + thanks leave positive feedback when you get the invite good luck all :rolleyes:
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