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  2. Comparison of BitTorrent sites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_BitTorrent_sites

    BitTorrent sites may operate a BitTorrent tracker and are often referred to as such. Operating a tracker should not be confused with hosting content. A directory allows users to browse the content available on a website based on various categories. A directory is also a site where users can find other websites.

  3. Nyaa Torrents - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyaa_Torrents

    Nyaa Torrents (named for the Japanese onomatopoeia for a cat's meow) is a BitTorrent website focused on East Asian (Japanese, Chinese, and Korean) media. It is one of the largest public anime -dedicated torrent indexes .

  4. BitTorrent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BitTorrent

    The BitTorrent specification is free to use and many clients are open source, so BitTorrent clients have been created for all common operating systems using a variety of programming languages. The official BitTorrent client, μTorrent , qBittorrent , Transmission , Vuze , and BitComet are some of the most popular clients.

  5. Legal issues with BitTorrent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_issues_with_BitTorrent

    BitTorrent files and links can be accessed in different geographic locations and legal jurisdictions. Thus, it is possible to host a BitTorrent file in geographic jurisdictions where it is legal and others where it is illegal. A single link, file or data or download action may be actionable in some places, but not in others.

  6. Odex's actions against file-sharing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odex's_actions_against_file...

    BayTSP singled out the website AnimeSuki as a major source of the downloads and tracked many of its BitTorrent users. [2] From early 2007 to January 2008, court orders for Pre-Action Discovery with evidence of illegal download activity were issued to various ISPs to request for their subscriber's details. [3]

  7. File sharing in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_sharing_in_Japan

    In 2020, the National Diet passed a law expanding the penalties to the download of manga, academic texts, and magazines, as well as banning "leech websites" that provide users hyperlinks to download torrent files of pirated materials, pasting hyperlinks of illegal websites on an anonymous message board, or providing "leech apps" for similar ...

  8. AnimeSuki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AnimeSuki

    AnimeSuki (from Japanese anime and suki (好き, "like" or "love")) is a website and once considered "... the largest database of BitTorrent anime shows" [1] that focused on providing unlicensed anime fansubs using the BitTorrent peer-to-peer system. The website was created by GHDpro on December 26, 2002. [2]

  9. qBittorrent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QBittorrent

    qBittorrent is a cross-platform free and open-source BitTorrent client written in native C++. It relies on Boost , OpenSSL , zlib , Qt 6 toolkit and the libtorrent -rasterbar library (for the torrent back-end), with an optional search engine written in Python .