I’ve read on reddit I think that if you are torrenting using a private tracker you’re gonna be fine even without VPN. The question is: isn’t the tracker is just a server that leads my torrent client to the pieces of the file on the seeders? And the connection between me and the seeders is p2p, isn’t that type of connection is what makes your ISP snitch you? So what is different about private trackers? And where to find them?

  • meseek #2982@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Torrents are registered. Only people who can access the private website get access to the torrent. It’s much harder for the bottom barrel legal teams that just sit on them recording IPs, like they do on public ones.

    They can certainly get into a private tracker but will be found before long. This also depends on how the private tracker is run and by whom.

    Use a VPN when doing illegal shit. Don’t leave to a shady website.

    • Shihab@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      So p2p connection is not illegal unless it’s transmitting pirated content, which they can only know it by finding my ip on the list of peers, yeah?

      • quirzle@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        This is accurate.

        Just downloading/consuming isn’t the illegal part. It’s why you hear about torrent users getting ISP notices, but not people who download from usenet or watch pirate sports streams.

        • Shihab@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 year ago

          Why not? Because ISP don’t snitch on you in case of illegal streaming? The owner of the content must catch you in order to make legal procedures, right? And what about usenet, I’ve read about it but I didn’t get it? Can you brief it out? How it similar to torrents and how it’s different?

          • quirzle@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            Why not? Because ISP don’t snitch on you in case of illegal streaming?

            Correct. ISPs aren’t monitoring for this stuff. They’re responding to complaints they get from copyright owners. With torrents, anyone in downloading the file can see IPs for everyone they’re downloading from. That’s how companies get IPs to follow up on, and why VPNs protect you (they’d just the IP of a VPN server). They then compile lists of these IPs, send to ISPs, who are then compelled by the courts to send letters and eventually disconnect you if you get caught again.

            With streaming sites, the only one seeing your IP is the host of the site. Of course they’re not going to snitch, since you’re just watching the illegal stream they’ve made available. They’re the ones breaking the law in that case, you’re just watching a public stream. Obviously, you’re not expected to know whether every video on youtube was uploaded by the copyright owner. Instead, the onus for that falls on the uploader and host.

            And what about usenet, I’ve read about it but I didn’t get it? Can you brief it out? How it similar to torrents and how it’s different?

            Super high level: there’s two external parts, an indexer and a usenet provider. The indexer indexes .nzb files that serve as references to file locations on the usernet provider. Practically speaking, it maps pretty closely to .torrent files and the actual content you’re grabbing from peers, respectively. The important difference here is that the usenet providers host the content, rather than a bunch of random people (which can include corporate attorneys looking to contact your ISP).

            Locally, you still use a client piece of software to download. You can send it a .nzb, and assuming it’s configured correctly with your usenet provider(s), will download the content.

            Other important differences: 1. usenet indexers and providers are going to cost money, unlike torrenting. They tend to be pretty reasonable if you’re downloading a lot though. 2. Because the providers are more centralized than torrents, there’s some quirks. Retention is a factor, and generally the older something is, the harder it’ll be to find (or more expensive plan you’ll need with your provider), and not all providers have everything (so heavier users may need multiple providers to cover all their needs). A single good provider covers like 99% of what I need though.

      • meseek #2982@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        No protocol is illegal in and of itself. BitTorrent wasn’t created solely to aid in piracy. Most Linux distros have their OS seeded. Same goes for lots of the internet archive. I used to transfer work files all the time using it.

    • JohnDClay
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      1 year ago

      But torrenting on a vpn costs money, which is why some people are torrenting to begin with.

      • quirzle@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Having your own internet connection costs money too. If being absolutely free is a requirement, go without a VPN on the McD’s free wifi.

        • JohnDClay
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          1 year ago

          You could also just do the pirate streaming options with a free tier VPN like proton.

        • JohnDClay
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          1 year ago

          I don’t think you can get fined for streaming over a VPN, especially since you’re not distributing.

          • Kalash@feddit.ch
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            1 year ago

            Depends on the country. Anyway, this thread is about torrenting without a vpn, not streaming with one. With torrents you are distributing.

  • Doctor xNo@r.nf
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    1 year ago

    Just a fun FYI: If you want to know what can be seen torrenting from your current IP, visit https://iknowwhatyoudownload.com

    It wil show you anything publicly trackable and occasionally assign tags according to your habits. You can also check anybody else’s IP you know of too, and look at what your IP-neighbors have on their name,…

    Tags I’ve seen assigned are mostly ‘Porn’ if you torrent at least 1 known xxx and I even encountered a highlighted differently-colored tag twice in neigboring IP’s that clearly state it’s questionable content of subjects that did not go through the accepted minimum amount of birthdays yet.

    Always an interesting tool to check when connected to a friend’s wifi or a public shared one… 😅

    • Dr Cog@mander.xyz
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      1 year ago

      The site lists 4 torrents and none of them are mine. I assume this is because my ISP assigned a dynamic IP address

      • Doctor xNo@r.nf
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, I have a 4G CGNAT router, so I’m not only constantly hopping IP’s, I’m even sharing outside IPs with others simultaneously. I rarely see other torrents than mine, though it does happen. I honestly also had the bad content flag once for a file I certainly wouldn’t download. 😅

  • safesyrup@feddit.ch
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    1 year ago

    Firms that sue you because you download copyrighted material don‘t sue you because they sniff your internet traffic contents, but because you appear on the tracker peer list. Ony public trackers this is easily visible, on private trackers it‘s not since you need access to the tracker in the first place.

    • Shihab@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      So it’s not about p2p connection? And ISPs don’t snitch? The owner of the material catches my ip address.

      Your house’s ip address is static? Or they can get you even it’s changing?

      • Nollij@sopuli.xyz
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        1 year ago

        They have the public IP and a timestamp, which lines up with the ISP DHCP logs.

        That said, at least for several major carriers in the US, your public IP changes very rarely. Like months or years with the same IP.

  • Red@reddthat.com
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    1 year ago

    DMCA only come from trackers that are open to the world. ISPs don’t snitch on you. They only do what is required of them by law, usually. (Forwarding DMCA complaints).
    The copyright companies, connect to these trackers and perform regular torrent client requests, such as “hey, who is seeding this torrent”. And the tracker responds. They take note of the IPs and do whatever they do.

    Deep Packet Inspection (DPI) can only find out that you are doing a P2P connection and possibly torrenting. Which in of itself is not illegal.

    With private torrents you are blocked from the DMCA copyright companies because they cannot find out what torrents are on the trackers because you need the metadata of a torrent & the password to get the peer list.

    A VPN only solves the problem where the ISP is hostile to you, the consumer and obfuscates who you are connecting too. With DPI and packet analysis (which is slightly expensive) they could figure out you are torrenting via a VPN with a high degree of certainty. Butt at the end of the day, all they would see is encrypted packets. This data is no different than telling your torrent client to Force Encryption, which everyone should do and I get annoyed all the time when people don’t have it on.

    Tldr,

    • VPN only blocks ISP from seeing unencrypted P2P traffic and makes it harder to identify.
    • DMCA companies can only access public trackers peer lists where it gets its information from
    • Morgikan@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I think the OP’s question is better worded on the second point as “What is preventing a copyright holder from joining a private tracker?” The answer to that is nothing. In theory, invites would only be handed out to trusted individuals, but the reality is you can just ask for invites and people will give you them.

  • GlitzyArmrest@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Unless you have a seedbox, I’d still use a VPN on private trackers. You don’t want to expose your actual home IP address - anyone can see it when you’re torrenting (in the peers tab). You are correct that most companies that DMCA aren’t following private trackers and therefore it’s unlikely that you’d get a “love letter” but again I’d use a VPN for your home ISP.

    As for getting into private trackers, there’s an OpenSignups community here. Otherwise, you have to usually know someone with invites to get in.

  • CaptainBasculin@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Private Trackers are solid options if you’re looking for some data in a specific niche that public trackers don’t offer quite well. Their signups are controlled by admins which makes harder for media companies to go in and send cease letters to torrenters. This does not mean they can’t however.

    On a public tracker, anyone can be part of the seeding chain without any authentication; meaning they can monitor who’s torrenting what pretty easily. However for each private tracker, there has to be a seperate infiltration. Combining limited signups and being invite only makes hunting for them difficult.

    To find them, you’re gonna either look at tracker forums’ open signup threads as a beginner; or if you know people that could have access to these trackers ask them for invite. Most private trackers have strict seeding rules, so seed them according to their rules.