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  2. BTDigg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BTDigg

    BTDigg was founded by Nina Evseenko in January 2011. The site is also available via the I2P network and Tor.In March–April 2011, several new features were introduced, among them web plugin to search with one click, qBittorrent plugin, showing torrent info-hash as QR code picture, torrent fakes and duplicates detection, and charts of the popular torrents in soft real-time.

  3. 1337x - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1337x

    1337x is an online website that provides a directory of torrent files and magnet links used for peer-to-peer file sharing through the BitTorrent protocol. [1] According to the TorrentFreak news blog, 1337x is the second-most popular torrent website as of 2024. [2]

  4. qBittorrent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QBittorrent

    Integrated torrent search engine (simultaneous search in many torrent search sites and category-specific search requests, such as books, music and software) Remote control through a secure web user interface; Sequential downloading (download in order). Enables "streaming" media files; Super-seeding option; Torrent creation tool

  5. Transmission (BitTorrent client) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmission_(BitTorrent...

    Transmission allows the assigning of priorities to torrents and to files within torrents, thus potentially influencing which files download first. It supports the Magnet URI scheme [9] and encrypted connections. It allows torrent-file creation and peer exchange compatible with Vuze and μTorrent.

  6. BitTorrent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BitTorrent

    Users find a torrent of interest on a torrent index site or by using a search engine built into the client, download it, and open it with a BitTorrent client. The client connects to the tracker(s) or seeds specified in the torrent file, from which it receives a list of seeds and peers currently transferring pieces of the file(s).

  7. Magnet URI scheme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnet_URI_scheme

    Magnet is a URI scheme that defines the format of magnet links, a de facto standard for identifying files by their content, via cryptographic hash value rather than by their location.

  8. WebTorrent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebTorrent

    Rather than using a middleman upload site to share a large private file with another person, with WebTorrent you may directly connect without leaving traces somewhere or potentially being archived on some upload site. You simply drag and drop your file to create a magnet link that you can share with your friend.

  9. Torrent file - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torrent_file

    The "btmh" magnet link would contain the full 32-byte hash, while communication with trackers and on the DHT uses the 20-byte truncated version to fit into the old message structure. [2] It is possible to construct a torrent file with only updated new fields for a "v2" torrent, or with both the old and new fields for a "hybrid" format.