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  2. Glossary of BitTorrent terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_BitTorrent_terms

    This includes any peer possessing 100% of the data or a web seed. When a downloader starts uploading content, the peer becomes a seed. [citation needed] Seeding refers to leaving a peer's BitTorrent client open and available for additional individuals to download from. Normally, a peer should seed more data than download.

  3. BitTorrent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BitTorrent

    Whenever two peers using BitComet (with Torrent Exchange enabled) connect to each other they exchange lists of all the torrents (name and info-hash) they have in the Torrent Share storage (torrent files which were previously downloaded and for which the user chose to enable sharing by Torrent Exchange).

  4. Mainline DHT - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mainline_DHT

    Mainline DHT is the name given to the Kademlia-based distributed hash table (DHT) used by BitTorrent clients to find peers via the BitTorrent protocol. The idea of using a DHT for distributed tracking in BitTorrent was first implemented [1] [2] in Azureus 2.3.0.0 (now known as Vuze) in May 2005, from which it gained significant popularity.

  5. BitTorrent tracker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BitTorrent_tracker

    A BitTorrent tracker is a special type of server that assists in the communication between peers using the BitTorrent protocol.. In peer-to-peer file sharing, a software client on an end-user PC requests a file, and portions of the requested file residing on peer machines are sent to the client, and then reassembled into a full copy of the requested file.

  6. Peer-to-peer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer-to-peer

    Torrent file connect peers. Dat is a distributed version-controlled publishing platform. I2P, is an overlay network used to browse the Internet anonymously. Unlike the related I2P, the Tor network is not itself peer-to-peer [dubious – discuss]; however, it can enable peer-to-peer applications to be built on top of it via onion services.

  7. Peer exchange - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer_exchange

    To make initial contact with a swarm, each peer must either connect to a tracker using a ".torrent" file, or else use a router computer called a bootstrap node to find a distributed hash table (DHT) which describes a swarm's list of peers. For most BitTorrent users, DHT and PEX will start to work automatically after the user launches a ...

  8. BitTorrent (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BitTorrent_(software)

    BitTorrent DNA is different from traditional BitTorrent in that it relies on publisher HTTP servers in order to provide publishers with guaranteed minimum data delivery rate, as well as give publishers control over content delivery (peers must connect to the origin server before they can reach other peers), and collect information about content ...

  9. Tracker scrape - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tracker_scrape

    A scrape, or tracker scrape, is a request sent by a BitTorrent client to a tracker. A request is sent, connection to the tracker is established, information is exchanged, then the connection is closed. The request does something like a "wipe" or a "pass" over the tracker, and then the tracker sends information back to the client. [1] [2]