![]() |
|
|
#1 |
|
"Jason Goatcher"
Mar 2005
3·7·167 Posts |
I'm not sure if this topic is allowed on here, and I'd definitely encourage people to NOT talk about illegal downloads.
But the question I have is is there a torrent client that's reasonably easy to use and can resist leeching with the right settings? I'm not afraid of command line or manuals, but I'm hoping for something that can be used immediately and maybe tweaked later. My main interest is resisting leechers, by not uploading to them. I've heard of a program, I forget the last name but it had tyrant in the title. I looked it up, but the main page had an update date of 2006 and might have been discontinued. It's the only program I could find that obviously resisted leechers. Lastly, it would be nice if I could transfer my settings over and have the new program be aware of the torrents I already have. Thanks in advance. |
|
|
|
|
|
#2 |
|
"/X\(‘-‘)/X\"
Jan 2013
55628 Posts |
My strategy is to upload as much as possible, to leech or not, especially if the swarm doesn't have many seeds. By using my bandwidth to saturate a leech's download bandwidth, that leech is taking less from the seeds, allowing the seeds to send more to other hopefully more cooperative nodes. This strategy applies regardless of upload bandwidth, though it's pretty rare for me to join a swarm that can saturate my upload bandwidth.
If you are the initial seeder, your BitTorrent client can watch the swarm to see which chunks start appearing elsewhere and know that the clients those chunks were initially sent to are cooperative. This strategy is called super seeding. Many (most?) clients support this. |
|
|
|
|
|
#3 |
|
Romulan Interpreter
Jun 2011
Thailand
100101110000002 Posts |
+1
Additionally, this will help surviving of good torrents, especially if you limit the uploading band "selective". I don't limit my uploading bandwidth for good torrents, but limit it for others (I know this is subjective). Some of my friends won't agree, or will do viceversa ("fill the bad guys with crap!", and honestly, there is a lot if it) but I am a bit selfish and think to myself in the future, I will want to find those good torrents still there, if I look for them after 10 or 20 years.
|
|
|
|
|
|
#4 | |
|
"Jason Goatcher"
Mar 2005
350710 Posts |
Quote:
Admittedly, I don't pay for my own bandwidth, my dad does. But, philosophically, I hate leeching. If you have limited bandwidth on mobile, I guess that's okay, I have no way to tell. But, ultimately, people need to balance things out in some way. |
|
|
|
|
![]() |
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| GUI-less client for V5? | ahmerali | PrimeNet | 4 | 2008-11-11 01:46 |
| LLR Mac client | drakkar67 | Prime Sierpinski Project | 5 | 2008-07-10 12:37 |
| New Version of Client available | Jeff Gilchrist | NFSNET Discussion | 7 | 2004-02-19 17:41 |
| Client Thoughts | Complex33 | Software | 8 | 2004-02-04 10:46 |
| Client monitoring? | pizzaking | Lounge | 25 | 2003-06-10 08:34 |