BitTorrent Addiction: The Thrill of the Chase

Written by enigmax on October 05, 2007 

It’s great to have access to a huge library of media via your torrent client, no one can deny that, but for many users BitTorrent is more than just a functional tool. It’s become an addictive hobby, with puzzles to solve and treasures to find.

Bram Cohen, the creator of BitTorrent, loves puzzles - although he insists he’s not an addict. However, many users of the BitTorrent system he created can’t say they feel the same way about their new hobby.

After a brief introduction, many BitTorrent users find themselves really interested by this great system and how it all fits together. Sure, the free media BitTorrent provides is a great attraction and a positive reinforcement for continuing, but for many, the real attraction lies elsewhere.

For some hardcore torrenters, the media acquired is secondary. Enjoyable, yes - but in a post-coital cigarette-type way - the icing on the cake if you like. Sure, many torrenters just grab a torrent and come back to the PC when it’s finished but they’re blissfully unaware of where the real action is to be found. For the serious torrenters, it’s all about the thrill of the chase.

At first, the BitTorrent novice doesn’t know there are forces of evil lurking around every corner, dedicated to ensuring that his downloading experience is as difficult as possible. He (or she) is unaware that super-powerful corporations with friends in government are intent on sabotage.

He has no idea that this new hobby has such high stakes. It could potentially land him in prison or cause him to end up with a massive 6-digit fine. When the novice starts to build his knowledge of such things, it can be little bit scary - but the adrenaline flows a little and the excitement builds. The hobby becomes more intense.

With this new found energy and a little research, things become clearer for the BitTorrent student. Moving away from simply downloading, a strategy forms as he learns that for most attacks on his sharing experience, there is an effective counter-measure. So for example, any attempt to say, set up fake torrents, can be dealt with effectively by employing various counter techniques. Torrent sites start to be chosen through intelligence, not just at random.

As more experience is gathered, the BitTorrent fan will probably start to understand that organizations such as the MPAA like to deal in propaganda, and that the big headlines of being fined huge amounts or being sent to jail are not the norm. In reality, he’ll learn that the chances of coming to grief in these ways are tiny and over time, will probably come to disregard these risks.

For the more nervous torrenter, the file-sharing world can be an unforgiving place. As he learns of the many threats and people looking to profit from things like malware, he may start to put up more defenses. Terrified of getting into trouble, he may turn to services such as those offered by Peer Guardian or an anonymous VPN solution such as that offered by Relakks.

Most hobbies involve getting into the minutia and in this respect, BitTorrent is an absolute dream. On many forums, there is talk of squeezing every last little bit of performance from a BitTorrent setup - many fans are, well - fanatical about the details. Most users agree, the best way, is as fast as possible!

There are lots of things that aim to interfere with the torrent experience but thankfully, the informed BitTorrent user will pick up lots of tips and tricks along the way to help restore torrent harmony, ensuring that this hobby stays fun.

Whatever the strategy, many BitTorrent hobbyists have as much fun during the chase as they do when experiencing the media they’ve successfully snared. Although nice to have, the media isn’t always the number one importance. For some it’s just great to hoard but it’s the road to finding and obtaining the stuff that increasingly provides the pull for the torrent hardcore. The whole BitTorrent experience can be quite captivating with its technical elements, all wrapped up in a stealthy cloak-and-dagger social layer, plenty of intrigue, many new friends and lots of fun.

For some of the 21st century’s digital treasure hunters, it’s great to ‘get’ - but the journey getting there (making friends and sharing the fun with others along the way) can be better still.

Previously: Mininova.org Servers and Traffic: 2006 vs 2007

Next: TorrentSpy Traffic Plunges After US Ban

112 Responses (Add yours or TrackBack)

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26 Oct 06, 2007 at 15:22 by English Father

Wow, your post is filled with on-site links. What is this, a recap or index article; the new sitemap?

27 Oct 06, 2007 at 17:28 by Otm Shank

Bit Torrent made evident to me that most of the media being produced is not worth consuming. There is certainly more available these days, but about the same amount of worthwhile content as there ever was. The same goes for software.

Also I think that it is an exercise in perceived value. Somebody somewhere is charging money for that album by a new artist and now you can download it without paying. Better hoard as much as possible, this stuff costs money afterall! If it were free music by some new artist would you still want it? If it is free it probably sucks, like the itunes free single of the week. But, Bit Torrent makes everything free, how do you distinguish value? Number of seeders? How new it is/How fresh is the torrent ? What prestige does the tracker/release group hold?

Torrent’s also create virtual clutter. Like a person that can’t seem to tackle that messy garage, unsure of whether to pitch that old stack of newspapers, only to curl up in a ball on the couch overwhelmed. Now we have folders full of data that MIGHT be valuable and we can’t bear to part with it.

28 Oct 06, 2007 at 17:40 by Jason

It’s still stealing stuff, but so is listening to the radio or watching TV. I just get to watch what I want, not wait for when it’s on. Let the companies seed their own archives and put ads in and “illegal” downloading will die.

29 Oct 06, 2007 at 20:51 by Anonymous

[quote comment="181761"][quote comment="181567"]Well been a torrent tracker administrator there is a lot more then what this article has said to torrents![/quote]
I totally agree!

I already cut the post down from 4 pages to a longer-than-usual length - it is indeed a complex subject.

I considered including many other elements, such as the fun monitoring for new releases and the psychology of the big sharers/releasers but you know, sometimes you have to end the article and go eat ;)

@h33t - if I had a hammer i’d certainly share it with you :D

After the good feedback I’ll certainly try to do more stuff like this. Thanks for the kind comments everyone, they keep us going![/quote]
Yeah it is a good article i had fun reading it! but like you said there is a lot of fun watching for new releases from some of the top groups! if there is a big name movies that is coming out you can always have fun thinking who is going to come out with it first but every time there are the groups that will win hands down!

You should think about making any article from when you started till when you have finished IE: to this day! i dont think i will ever finish file sharing! may be one day when torrents are old news and some new tech for downloading comes along!

30 Oct 06, 2007 at 21:43 by Hi

Wait until you discover RapidShare…

Maxing out your connection on every download, not having to worry about private sites, ratios, uploads, slow downloads, trackers, seeds…

When you can download films in a couple minutes this addiction gets to a whole new level. I’m done with BitTorrent, it’s too slow and the fact that upload = download is stupid.

31 Oct 06, 2007 at 22:35 by Anonymous

[quote comment="182102"]Wait until you discover RapidShare…

Maxing out your connection on every download, not having to worry about private sites, ratios, uploads, slow downloads, trackers, seeds…

When you can download films in a couple minutes this addiction gets to a whole new level. I’m done with BitTorrent, it’s too slow and the fact that upload = download is stupid.[/quote]
No im sorry m8! rapidshare was good but i find that there is to much bull shit to deal with when it come to it! plus with torrent s is you have a 100mbit connection you can max it out but with rapidshare there are some times that you cant!

Its all about the tracker you download from!

32 Oct 06, 2007 at 22:57 by Hi

Yeah sure, good lucking finding peers that upload just for you with 100mbit. 99% of all internet connections are asymmetrical, which goes after everything BitTorrent is about.

Plus the fact the upload download ratio system is a failure (guess why Ponzi scheme never works). Try downloading new heroes from Mininova and you can see why BitTorrent is a failure (I can grab that in 2minutes from Rapidshare).

What “bull shit to deal with” when it comes to Rapidshare? You click a link and the download starts you don’t even need any additional software. You care about the couple euros it costs per year? Oh lad, the power you’ll save from being able to turn off your computer when you’re not on it makes up for it.

If you want to run your computer all day long seeding files to people you don’t even care about, have fun with that, I’ll enjoy my super fast downloads without any hassle.

33 Oct 07, 2007 at 03:05 by zerk00

wow this is so true , man ive spent many of night watching the media download ,then watching the media ive downloaded, ne way.

ive spent more time keeping up with the torrent community ,software updates and every tweak in the playbook to get to that magical number of KBps. then exceed it 500 by whatever means possible.

Including calling my ISP and ordering the the Fat Pipe service, and arguing with verizon guy about why Verizon wont put fios in the ghetto.( Q why cant i get fios .VG A Verizon has spent enough money “here” u better move to Boston).

Well wuteva i just want to see 1500 kBs download,
Ive just made a list of some things

Being a leech and not sharing.

Getting the magical 1.1 ratio

Leaving the first post , or trying too, on a popular torrent

seeing a commercial and trying to find the torrent

checking ur fav torrent site first,
then checking the rest

knowing the top 5 uploaders/ or team at anytime

healing virus , from some bottom of barrel torrents that usually promises something o_O

99% downloaded then stops

knowing its a fake ,virus , porn , wutever before u waste bandwidth downloading it …. priceless

…. >:P …

btw a popular torrents will download faster then Rapidshare some of the more popular tv and anime series are ridiculously fast …..and u said u didnt watch tv.

34 Oct 07, 2007 at 14:37 by Pocoloco

Great article, I can relate to some of it.

35 Oct 07, 2007 at 16:41 by mgraz12345

Great article! Never thought I had an addictive personality, but OMG the graph window on BitComet is mesmerizing! Better than anything on TV. Guess I need to get a life.

36 Oct 07, 2007 at 16:51 by Tprice

[quote comment="182132"]Yeah sure, good lucking finding peers that upload just for you with 100mbit. 99% of all internet connections are asymmetrical, which goes after everything BitTorrent is about.

Plus the fact the upload download ratio system is a failure (guess why Ponzi scheme never works). Try downloading new heroes from Mininova and you can see why BitTorrent is a failure (I can grab that in 2minutes from Rapidshare).

What “bull shit to deal with” when it comes to Rapidshare? You click a link and the download starts you don’t even need any additional software. You care about the couple euros it costs per year? Oh lad, the power you’ll save from being able to turn off your computer when you’re not on it makes up for it.

If you want to run your computer all day long seeding files to people you don’t even care about, have fun with that, I’ll enjoy my super fast downloads without any hassle.[/quote]
Well i mean m8! im talking about private trackers! you must be dumb to use that kind of speed on a pubic tracker!

37 Oct 07, 2007 at 18:15 by dcl

reading this article gets me even more pumped up to find torrents. i want nothing more than to support this cause
and to keep the bit torrent community alive.

38 Oct 07, 2007 at 23:34 by an0n

newservers anyone? 0day files, max speeds (if you’re isp is charitable or you subscribe), and better anonymity.

39 Oct 08, 2007 at 05:50 by Smedly Godglove

Two words for you TorrentFreaks out there (just 2):

Swarmcast Patent

(read it and weep)…

40 Oct 08, 2007 at 05:50 by PhiPhi99

Totally agree!

After tweaking and patching, now the thrill is watching the download data and competing with peers on the speed… I must say I am a freak!

I have downloaded so much stuff that I don’t even have time to watch. So now instead of downloading popular stuff, I would hunt for some classic cults. It’s so much fun and worth the wait.

To Zerk00, yes and I don’t watch TV anymore… ahaha.. cheers for that…

41 Oct 08, 2007 at 06:58 by Eric :-)

“For some of the 21st century’s digital treasure hunters, it’s great to ‘get’ - but the journey getting there (making friends and sharing the fun with others along the way) can be better still.” this touched me

42 Oct 09, 2007 at 08:30 by Kito

Great article, and too true. I consider myself still new to the torrent world, but I’m obsessed with gathering more and more files. If not for the thrill of the chase, just being able to say that I have gone through so much bandwidth (much to the frustration of my ISP, I’m sure) and have a good share ratio. It’s the one area of my life where I run some kind of risk, so there is some thrill in knowing that every day I keep my machine up there is more risk of being caught.

It’s also fun, because I’ve gotten better and better and searching for torrents and other p2p sharing on the internet, so often I will have family or friends come to me, asking to find some obscure torrent for them (or get it quickly, in the case of large files).

All my family has an addiction of some kind, and when most of them are alcohol or other harmful things, I don’t think a BitTorrent addiction looks too bad :P

43 Oct 10, 2007 at 01:24 by none

nice post! if there was no file shareing i wouldnt even bother with the internet, p2p is deffantly addictive an like you say not just for the free goods but the whole thing of searching an hunting out the best stuff while avoiding them mpaa knob jockeys

44 Oct 10, 2007 at 20:52 by xumusu

yes. good job

45 Oct 11, 2007 at 10:03 by Anonymous

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47 Oct 19, 2007 at 19:21 by Saibien

Yep, i completely agree. I almost have more fun finding and downloading something, than actually playing, watching, listening, or whatever’ing it. good article.

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