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Sha007's Content - Page 5 - InviteHawk - Your Only Source for Free Torrent Invites

Buy, Sell, Trade or Find Free Torrent Invites for Private Torrent Trackers Such As redacted, blutopia, losslessclub, femdomcult, filelist, Chdbits, Uhdbits, empornium, iptorrents, hdbits, gazellegames, animebytes, privatehd, myspleen, torrentleech, morethantv, bibliotik, alpharatio, blady, passthepopcorn, brokenstones, pornbay, cgpeers, cinemageddon, broadcasthenet, learnbits, torrentseeds, beyondhd, cinemaz, u2.dmhy, Karagarga, PTerclub, Nyaa.si, Polishtracker etc.

Sha007

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Everything posted by Sha007

  1. Guys, we are experiencing tracker/server (Fake Leechers/Seeders) issues so we kindly ask you to bear with us while we get it fixed. Sorry for any inconvenience this may have caused you.Thank You
  2. Happy Holidays! With the Holidays rapidly approaching the staff here at TtN would like to take the opportunity to thank everyone who's supported us throughout 2015. As a little thank you present we have given everyone 10 freeleech tokens. // So say we all
  3. Lately e-mails from jpopsuki stopped reaching users with Microsoft mailboxes (@hotmail.com, @ outlook.com, @ live.com). If you plan on forgetting your password, please make sure you have a non-Microsoft email in your profile (for example,@ gmail.com). Also, have this in mind when inviting people to jpopsuk.
  4. Tracker's Name: CZTeam Genre: General Sign-up Link: http://torrents.czteam.ro/signup.php Additional information: CZTeam is a ROMANIAN Private Torrent Tracker, for MOVIES / TV / GENERAL CZTeam is the internal tracker for the release group CzT
  5. Five men are facing the prospect of many years behind bars when they stand off against Hollywood in court tomorrow. TorrentFreak has learned that an aggressive private prosecution by the Federation Against Copyright Theft will allege that the men's actions placed more than £52,000,000 in studio revenues "at risk". On February 1 2013, the UK’s Federation Against Copyright Theft revealed they had joined police officers from the Economic Crime Unit to carry out raids at several addresses in central England. As Hollywood’s enforcement arm in the UK, FACT were searching for five individuals believed to be behind several prolific and interrelated movie release groups. After a three year investigation, they finally had their men. Graeme Reid, 40, from Chesterfield, Scott Hemming, 25, and Reece Baker, 22, both from Birmingham, Sahil Rafiq, 24, of Wolverhampton and Ben Cooper, 33, of Willenhall, were all arrested and questioned at length. By January 2015 all had broadly pleaded guilty to charges of Conspiracy to Defraud. However, the extent of the infringement claimed by FACT in their private criminal prosecution was far in excess of that accepted by the accused. As a result a so-called ‘Newton hearing’ will take place in a West Midlands court tomorrow, during which both sides will present their evidence to a judge who will try to work out which side is more credible. Information obtained by TorrentFreak reveals that the stakes could hardly be higher. The numbers behind the prosecution In order to come to a figure on losses, FACT appear to be relying on data presented publicly by ExtraTorrent, one of the world’s leading torrent sites. According to FACT the defendants were jointly responsible for around 4.2 million illegal downloads on ExtraTorrent alone. The anti-piracy group will then take the average price of attending a cinema in the UK or buying a DVD or Blu-ray disc. Arriving at a figure convenient for all options, FACT will presume that the defendants’ actions “put at risk” at least £52,000,000 in studio revenues on ExtraTorrent alone. However, taking into consideration that not every download is a lost sale, FACT is expected to disregard infringement carried out on all other torrent sites and settle on an overall “actual loss” of £4,200,000. Let’s see how this affects each defendant. Graeme Reid FACT will allege that Reid was the founder and leader of ‘RemixHD’, a release group that specialized in DVD and Blu-ray rips. The anti-piracy group will also state that Reid had connections with another famous group known as ‘UNiQUE’. FACT will accuse Reid of causing more than 1.1 million illegal downloads, although the anti-piracy group insists this is just the tip of the iceberg. Value of property “put at risk” – £11m Actual loss claimed – £1.1m Reece Baker FACT will allege that Baker used several online identities and was initially a member of a release group known as DTRG. Baker left DTRG to found a new group called HOPE which was later named to RESISTANCE. FACT claim that Baker also operated DEYA and was involved in sourcing, encoding and uploading movies. It is understood that Baker will be accused of causing more than 226,000 illegal downloads on ExtraTorrent but was also involved in distributing other content alleged to be worth £15m. Value of property “put at risk” – £17m Actual loss claimed – £1.7m Sahil Rafiq According to FACT, Rafiq was also a member of DTRG who went on to become the brains behind release group 26K. He stands accused of collaborating with the other defendants in sourcing, encoding and uploading movies to torrent sites. Our information suggests that Rafiq is being accused of infringement to the tune of 1.5 million illegal downloads. Value of property “put at risk” – £15m Actual loss claimed – £1.5m Ben Cooper It is believed that FACT will allege that Cooper founded two release groups known as ANALOG and TCM. It’s also claimed that he participated in HOPE alongside Reece Baker. FACT will allege that Cooper is to blame for more than 150,500 illegal downloads. Value of property “put at risk” – £1.5m Actual loss claimed – £150,000 Scott Hemming TorrentFreak has been unable to ascertain which groups Hemming belonged to. However, he is being accused of torrenting around 800 movies which together were downloaded a minimum of 2.6 million times. Value of property “put at risk” – £26m Actual loss claimed – £2.6m The implications As the figures above suggest, the stakes are extremely high for these five men. To find out just how high we have to turn to the sentencing guidelines for Conspiracy to Defraud which detail the sentences that can be applied given the amount defrauded. – Less than £17,500 – up to 21 months imprisonment – £17,500 to £100,000 – 2-3 years imprisonment – £100,000 to £250,000 – 3-4 years imprisonment – £250,000 to £1 million – 5-9 years imprisonment – £1 million or more – 10 years + imprisonment If the court accepts FACT’s version of events, all but one could be looking at a sentence of more than 10 years. To put that into perspective, firearm offenses, poisoning and cruelty to children carry the same maximum punishment. That being said, the defendants are believed to have entered early guilty pleas which normally have the potential to reduce their sentences. However, TorrentFreak understands that since some defendants have taken their case to the Newton hearing (where evidence is disputed), it may mean that ‘credits’ for an early guilty plea may not be fully applied. To view the defendants’ predicament from another angle, what they did online could easily be categorized as copyright infringement. However, punishment for online copyright infringement maxes out at just two years in the UK, which is why FACT rejected infringement charges in favor of Conspiracy to Defraud. Only making matters worse is that FACT is expected to admit that none of the defendants made a penny from their actions. It is not yet clear when the court will be in a position to carry out sentencing but the early indications suggest that after one of the most aggressive private prosecutions FACT has ever carried out, there’s a real possibility of the toughest punishments Internet pirates have ever seen.
  6. can i get this seedbox i am also beactive on this forum
  7. Hi everyone, we're pimping our annual VIP promotion again as we do every year. Any donations made starting today until the end of December, will give you the below rewards: ** THESE PRICES ARE ONLY AVAILABLE IF PURCHASED IN THE MONTH OF DECEMBER ** $25 VIP Donation: - 2 Months VIP access - 3 Invites - All 3 invites are given to your account within 2-3 days. $50 VIP Donation: - 6 Months VIP access (this is 2 FREE MONTHS compared to regular $50 donation) - 6 Invites (this is 2 FREE INVITES compared to our regular $50 donation) - All 6 invites are given to your account within 2-3 days. $100 VIP Donation: *NEW* - ONE FULL YEAR of VIP access - 14 Invites (more than twice the $50 donation) - All 14 invites are given to your account within 2-3 days. Other Perks of being VIP: - Unlimited leeching. No limits of any kind. - YOUR UPLOAD RATIO STILL INCREASES FOR ANYTHING YOU SEED. Your download however, is frozen. - Upon cancellation of your VIP, your ratio will be reset to 1:1 if it is below this. If you have actually seeded enough to go past the 1:1 ratio, it will not be touched, and you will leave VIP with this positive ratio. - Your account will not be banned. You can remain inactive for as long as you have an active VIP status. - You can request a name change. Want to help and make a donation?!
  8. People selling unwanted eBooks online have been warned that their activities could result in six months imprisonment. However, anti-piracy group BREIN, the alleged sender of the threats, says it is not responsible. Nevertheless, given a legal case to be heard next week, the timing is certainly curious. When one legitimately acquires property, whether a car, a house or even a toy plane, it’s generally accepted that the item can be transferred, for money, to an interested third party. In the digital domain, however, there are those who feel that things should be different. For example, IFPI believes that people should not be able to sell their unwanted MP3s, because unlike physical media they don’t deteriorate in quality or require a trip to the record store. And in 2014, the MPAA argued that allowing people to sell their used videos online would kill innovation, increase consumer prices, and decrease the availability of online film. With this kind of opposition in mind it was no surprise that yesterday several media outlets began reporting that sellers of used eBooks in the Netherlands had received legal threats from aggressive copyright holders. In an email titled “Illegal dissemination of digital books”, sellers of pre-owned eBooks were warned, apparently by Dutch anti-piracy outfit BREIN, that their activities were illegal. “The Brein Foundation acts against piracy of music, film, interactive software and digital books on behalf of rights and stakeholders such as authors, performers, publishers, producers and distributors,” the email begins. “We’ve detected that you are distributing digital books without permission being granted by the copyright holders. This practice is unlawful towards the rights-holders and if you infringe you are liable for the damage they suffer as a result.” Worryingly the email then goes off at the deep end, warning of extreme punishments if the sale of used eBooks continues. “Intentional infringement is punishable as a criminal offense with 6 months imprisonment or a 19,500 euro ($21,200) fine.” The email signs off in the name of Jan van Voorn, BREIN’s legal counsel, adding an air of authenticity to the claims. However, according to BREIN chief Tim Kuik the emails are nothing to do with his organization. “We are concerned,” Kuik told nos.nl. “Someone is stirring up weird stuff.” While BREIN are hardly supporters of people selling used product, the anti-piracy group says it only usually targets those attempting to sell large quantities of illegitimate products online. Indeed, after striking a deal with publishers in 2010, BREIN is now actively chasing down book pirates using Google’s services. So who then is to blame for the threats? According to Kuik it’s possible that rival used-book sellers are trying to scare away their competitors. While that does indeed sound plausible, whoever is sending these threats clearly has an understanding of the market, BREIN’s involvement in copyright enforcement, and how to construct a credible threat. Furthermore, the Dutch publishing group that BREIN represents also wishes to ban the sale of used eBooks. Overall then, the timing of these ‘legal’ threats are coincidental if not curious. Next week an important case involving the sale of used eBooks via local online marketplace ‘Tom Cabinet’ will head back to court in the Netherlands. Last year the Amsterdam Court dismissed complaints from book publishers, concluding that selling used eBooks sits in a legal gray area. This time around the publishers will be looking for a more favorable result. Source torrentfreak.com
  9. Gfxpeers.net back on online site and tracker both are up now
  10. Tracker's Name: HDClub Genre: HD Sign-up Link: http://hdclub.org/signup.php Closing date: Soon Additional information: HDClub is a russian HD tracker. Most of the content is russian dubbed but they keep the english track also. The content is amazing, they are known to have very good pretimes at releasing Web-dl movies. *Leave the invite code box blank.
  11. Tracker's Name: Bombed Away Genre: Other Sign-up Link: http://scene.bombed-away.xyz/signup.php Closing date: 30th Jan 2016 Additional information: We are new and would love for you to join. We are looking for staff & suppliers ( uploaders ) , We are under development still but would love for you to join our new adventure. we would like to be part of the scene but we accept all uploads currently till we sort out some of the kinks in our code base.
  12. Password Expiration Today, we rolled out the long-anticipated password expiration. After a set amount of time, accounts with expired passwords will be locked. The threshold for locking an account is currently set to 7 years, and will be slowly moved up to 2 years. This is to reduce the load on both users and staff. However, an account with an expired password will not be locked without warning. Warnings will come in the following ways: 1 month before expiration, a warning PM will be sent. 7 days before expiration, a warning email will be sent urging the user to change their password. If, despite those warnings, you don't change your password before it expires, your account will be placed in a locked state. Upon login, you will see this page, and will be unable to browse the site normally. Click here to view the original image of 926x294px. This page will only allow you to do 2 things: You will be able to request a password reset email to the address registered in your account, which will contain a link that you can click to change your password. If you cannot access that email account, the link at the bottom will allow you to get help from the staff via the Staff Inbox. More information regarding locked accounts and password expiration can be found here. Any questions/comments/concerns regarding the new system can be directed to the Staff Inbox. We hope that you can help us in making What.CD a more secure place for everybody.
  13. Two Dutch men busted by local anti-piracy group BREIN for uploading to The Pirate Bay and KickassTorrents are asking the public to help cover their 'fines'. BREIN is not happy with the crowdfunding campaigns and suggests that it may take further action in response. Two Dutch men busted by local anti-piracy group BREIN for uploading to The Pirate Bay and KickassTorrents are asking the public to help cover their 'fines'. BREIN is not happy with the crowdfunding campaigns and suggests that it may take further action in response. Dutch anti-piracy outfit BREIN has been very active recently, targeting several prolific KickassTorrents and Pirate Bay uploaders. Most recently it tracked down two members of the DMT (Dutch Movie Theater) group, who shared thousands of torrents on these popular torrent sites. BREIN settled out of court with both men and said it took their personal circumstances into account while calculating the appropriate ‘damages’. The final amount was not disclosed by the anti-piracy group. However, both users have now started a crowdfunding campaign to cover the costs, revealing how much they owed. The crowdfunding campaigns were announced by a fellow KAT user, who is encouraging people to chip in. According to the campaign pages the 20-year old DisasterZany has to pay €1,750, while ipod020 owes BREIN €2,000 in total. “Since €1,750 is an amount that I can’t really miss as a student, I want to ask you for a small contribution. Any amount is welcome and will be very very appreciated,” DisasterZany writes, sharing part of the settlement agreement. https://torrentfreak.com/images/zanysett.png BREIN is not pleased with crowdfunding efforts, Tweakers reports. According to BREIN chief Tim Kuik this changes the personal circumstances on which the settlement amount was based. Kuik suggests that BREIN may take further action, but according to Dutch ICT lawyer Arnoud Engelfriet it’s unlikely that anything will change unless crowdfunding was specifically prohibited in the settlement agreement. For BREIN it’s important send a strong message and deter others from sharing copyrighted files online. If both uploaders can easily cover their ‘fines’ through a crowdfunding campaign, this hurts their efforts. At the time of writing both uploaders still have some ground to cover before their costs are fully paid. DisasterZany has raised €105 thus far, while ipod020’s campaign is at €485. https://torrentfreak.com/busted-kick...-fines-151207/
  14. People who download stuff from torrents and other cracked software providing websites have a very bad news because a user recently downloaded a pirated copy of one of the newly launched games “Fallout 4” and lost about 5 bitcoins through a malware-packed in the setup files of the game. A user of Reddit “Op arkanoah” posted in bitcoin subreddit that 4.88 bitcoins (nearly 2000 USD) have been stolen from his wallet. Members of the community asked Op arkanoah whether he downloaded a pirated copy of the game “Fallout”? When he replied in positive it was clear the game had malware inside and provided access to the attackers inside the arkanoah’s system. Hackers then copied the bitcoin wallet file to an external machine and used brute force attack to crack the password and stole the bitcoins. But, didn’t his anti-virus alert him? Or he ignored the warning and continued the installation? Answer to this was provided by a user who wrote: “Tell me something, kemosabe. if I custom write a virus, right now, do you think your antivirus program will catch it? why or why not?” Arkhanoah believes probably this was due to heuristic analysis, but the member didn’t agree his theory. While searching on traces for hackers the stolen bitcoins were first transferred to a bitcoin wallet where they mixed were already kept bitcoins and then transferred to more wallets which made it nearly impossible to track down the hackers. Cracked games and software are one of the best ways for the hackers to attract the users for installing malware in the systems as there is always hunger to have hands on latest stuff, but users don’t realize how big the price they have to pay for this. Even buying games and software sometimes is cheaper than the damage a malware can pose to the user. Like, in this case, the Reddit user could have bought the game for a far cheaper price than what he has lost from installing pirated version. So, all the users who love downloading cracked stuff, be careful of these threats and with attacks getting sophisticated each day must try to keep your bitcoins wallets secured. Lastly, keep your bitcoins in secured wallets rather than self-managed. https://www.hackread.com/fallout-4-p...bitcoin-theft/
  15. Mail problems! Lately e-mails from jpopsuki stopped reaching users with Microsoft mailboxes (@hotmail.com, @ outlook.com, @live.com). If you plan on forgetting your password, please make sure you have a non-Microsoft email in your profile (for example, @ gmail.com). Also, have this in mind when inviting people to jpopsuki.
  16. YOU can choose your own style for PTF ! simply choose the styles option & make your own theme, You can also share your theme by submitting it for all to see & use. Have fun.
  17. Denmark's largest torrent site and one of the country's largest overall says it has shut down in order to protect tens of thousands of users. NextGen had been in operation for more than four years, offering a broad range of content including the latest movies and TV shows. But the heat got to the site and as usual, controversy is not far away. While sites such as The Pirate Bay and KickassTorrents are viewed as the public face of large-scale file-sharing, hidden away behind passworded fronts lies the private tracker community. Many hundreds – possibly thousands – of so-called ‘private trackers’ exist on the Internet today, each serving their own unique blend of users and often focusing on specialist mix of content. Since these are closed-door communities, few make the headlines. But despite their growth being artificially restricted by strict rules on who can enter, some swell to a significant size. The Denmark-based tracker ‘NextGen‘ is one such site and is currently the country’s 225 most-visited site overall. Those successes, however, are now in the past. For reasons best known to its operators the site (NG) has now closed its doors, but the notice handed out to more than 40,000 users suggests that all is not well. “Due to much attention on NG and therefore its users recently, we have decided to shut down the tracker. This is done solely and exclusively for your safety, as during the last few weeks NG has attracted much extra attention,” the site’s operators said in a statement. “This means not only a greater risk for the staff but also you as users. That is why we have decided that we will no longer take the risk that we or you must end up in a situation that none of us would like. We would like to thank you for the time we have had together, with the hope of a reunion soon.” While it is fairly common for sites to shut down without giving much of an explanation, in the informational vacuum that follows rumors begin to fly. For instance, in some quarters much is being made of Pirate Bay founder Gottfrid Svartholm’s alleged connections to the site. As seen in the image below, his name is indeed present in the site’s domain listings. But this fact alone is almost certainly not a sign of his direct involvement. In the past, NextGen had dealings with PRQ, a company historically owned by Gottfrid. Over the years countless dozens of sites opted to have PRQ and the Pirate Bay founder’s name as contact details on their domain instead of their own. That being said, for a successful site to close down so quickly it’s likely that pressure from the authorities had been mounting for some time. As far back as 2011, Danish police arrested then 19-year-old law student Halfdan Timm, accusing him of spreading illegal information on a blog and suggesting he was the NextGen operator. “At first, they tried to figure out whether I was leading the tracker, searching for hidden equipment in the apartment, but when they realized that wasn’t the case, they tried to get as much information as possible about the actual owners,” he told TF at he time. For an earlier article, Timm had indeed interviewed an operator of NextGen in-depth, which led the police to believe there had been a connection. However, several years later potentially more damaging information began appearing online about the operators of NextGen and their alleged activities. After it was alleged they were making upwards of $200,000 a year from the NextGen, two men were publicly linked to the site by anonymous critics. A document purporting to detail how NextGen accepted Bitcoin through a ‘front’ web-hosting company is now doing the rounds. If accurate (and it’s hard to say either way), that ‘doxxing’ certainly won’t have helped the security of the site – or its operators. https://torrentfreak.com/denmarks-la...-users-151207/
  18. Welcome to We would like to begin by saying welcome to all the new users, and to apologize for the problems that have helped speed the last few days. It is not since usually work. Therefore, our administrators have worked hard to get done since more stable. They have already come a long way, which results in that critical error has now been resolved and we are so small can start working to solve some of the other small problems. The server's status is continually monitored and our skilled administrators are ready to turn some buttons if the new problems occur. Our current server is obviously under a lot of pressure, and we can tell that we are already doing, to free up additional capacity for the benefit of all users. Once again, welcome, we hope you will find yourselves organized here. // SysOps and Staff.
  19. Pirate Bay's original .org domain was suspended by EuroDNS a few hours ago, after the registrant failed to verify the contact details. Even though it's no longer the main domain name for the site, the bookmark was still in use by many people as a redirect to Pirate Bay's latest home base. The Pirate Bay’s original .org domain name has stopped working due to an administrative problem. Many people still used the .org as a redirect to one of the latest Pirate Bay domains, but for the past few hours they’ve been greeted by a message from its registrar EuroDNS instead. The person managing the domain name has failed to verify the contact details and until this is done the domain name will stop functioning. “This domain name is pending ICANN verification and has been suspended. If you are the owner of this domain you can reactivate this domain by logging into your EuroDNS account,” reads the notice that appears. For the site’s users the issue doesn’t cause any problems. The Pirate Bay site is still reachable via the .se domain name, which redirects visitors to several other official TPB domain names. Pirate Bay’s .org domain still has plenty nostalgic value though. It was unofficially retired in 2012 when TPB’s operator switched to a .se domain, fearing that the U.S. government could seize the .org.TorrentFreak reached out to The Pirate Bay team but we have yet to hear back. It’s expected that the issues will be swiftly resolved once the contact details are verified. The .org domain name is currently registered to Pirate Bay co-founder Fredrik Neij, who’s also the official contact person for many other Pirate Bay related domains. A few days before the EuroDNS message first appeared the .org domain was already unreachable. Whether this had anything to do with the pending ICANN verification is unknown.
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