Windows Office 2007 Torrent Tpb Pirate

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Windows Office 2007 Torrent Tpb Pirate

BitTorrent pirate site The Pirate Bay has begun shifting away from torrent files to another format, dubbed 'magnets,' which is a more modern way of sharing data that may help it go further underground.

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The Pirate Bay announced on its blog on Thursday that it would make the magnet link the default option for downloading files. Links to torrent files will still remain on the site, but will be de-emphasized and phased out in a month, TorrentFreak reported.

'We've just changed places on the links,' The Pirate Bay said. 'Magnet is now default, Download torrent is now where the magnet links used to be. The reason is the same as always: Magnets are now good enough to use, and it's not as easy to block as .torrent files. Also it saves us a huge amount of bandwidth!'

Office 2007 Torrent Pirate Bay

As the name suggests, TPB hosts thousands of torrents pointing to copyrighted files of all sorts, and has served as either one of the last bastions of freedom on the Internet, or a hive of scum and villainy—depending on one's perspective. A Dutch court this week ordered two ISPs in the Netherlands to block customers from accessing The Pirate Bay.

In 2010, a Swedish appeals court ruled against The Pirate Bay's creators—Peter Sunde, Gottfrid Svartholm Warg, Fredrik Neij, and Carl Lundstrom—upholding convictions handed down in 2009 for illegal file sharing.

Office 2010 Torrent Pirate Bay

Microsoft

What's a 'magnet'?
The BitTorrent protocol breaks down a file into a number of different pieces, which are shared back and forth between different clients. When a client has all of the pieces, the file is assembled, and he becomes another 'seed' to distribute pieces to whichever client needs them.

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Each file shared to the decentralized BitTorrent network requires one centralized command point, however: the tracker. Although any computer the tracker, it also becomes a focus point for law enforcement activity. After The Pirate Bay shut down in Dec. 2009, it also terminated its tracker in favor of decentralized links like magnets. Until Thursday, however, the site never quite formally delivered on its promise.

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As noted by Wikipedia, a magnet is simply a name for a cryptographic hash of the file, rather than a location of where it might be found.

A peer-to-peer client like BitTorrent or one of its derivatives still needs to query an IP for the file and its sources. But that IP can be better hidden via proxy—putting the file at arms length from whomever began distributing it, and providing additional legal protection.

Microsoft Office Torrent Pirate Bay

The problem, as noted by some commenters to the BitTorrent post, is that some Web clients don't support magnets, while others don't use them as efficiently as torrents.

'I've tested magnet links several times,' 'newtown8573' wrote. 'I have encountered more than once that magnet links will just sit and do nothing (waiting for basic torrent info). When i downloaded the torrent file instead it started to download as usual. So magnet links do not function as good as torrent files!'

Pirates also have other options, such as private trackers and DirectConnect+, which allows users to connect to 'hubs' and share files.

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