BitTorrent Survival: The Way of the Hydra

Written by enigmax on June 28, 2007 

As more and more people hear about BitTorrent, each day the major sites get bigger, with more and more visitors, members, seeds and peers. Mainstream awareness of P2P is driving this new surge but with copyright and law enforcement agencies clamping down hard, some are considering tactics for survival.

Hydra

The BitTorrent community is growing at an almost alarming rate, its popularity is surging and more people than ever before are discovering its wonders. The mighty Suprnova captured the imagination of millions around the world, giving huge momentum to this file-sharing phenomenon, collecting millions of daily hits before its demise.

Today, sites like Mininova and The Pirate Bay are enjoying unprecedented levels of interest. Mininova served up 1 billion torrents in their first 2 years of operations, then stormed to 2 billion in just a further 6 months whilst capturing almost double the daily traffic of Suprnova in its prime.

The Pirate Bay almost needs no introduction, such is its size and comparable infamy. A jaw-dropping BitTorrent behemoth, gathering thousands of visitors each day who between them download 4 million torrents. Its vistors make 86 searches per second, its servers handle 1150 requests in the same timeframe and it tracks 50% of the world’s torrents.

That’s 50% of ALL public torrents. That is a dangerously high number of eggs in a basket that’s frequently coming under an attack of one form or another.

With the authorities always looking to take the biggest scalps to grab the headlines, sites such as LokiTorrent and EliteTorrents stood no chance, especially considering the huge financial implications of residing in the USA. Major BitTorrent site admins realized this and mainly moved their operations to the Netherlands, a location which is now looking less of a safe haven. The Dutch situation is of particular concern - there are dozens of strategically important torrent sites hosted there.

So what is the solution? brokep of The Pirate Bay has some thoughts that I happen to completely agree with.

“There are too few sites and trackers right now” he said, “things have been to concentrated to the big sites and that really sucks!”

Although it’s great initially for the mainstream to have visible big ‘brands’ such as The Pirate Bay, Mininova and TorrentSpy, it’s a precarious situation to have such a top heavy structure to the BitTorrent community. It’s great having a ‘multi-headed hydra’ but not so great when just one of those heads carries half of all the public torrents. This situation must be addressed. Resources need to be spread around in a manner which ensures that a few ‘big bombs’ are unable to dismantle major parts of the infrastructure.

There is a solution, as brokep says, “I really love the small specialized sites, I hope to see more of them. I would love to help out with starting up more, but it’s also important that we who already run sites do not start more of them.”

He’s right. The more sites like The Pirate Bay provide what the BitTorrent community want, the less likely it is that people will venture out on their own to create their own sites. In the current environment, the hydra needs thousands of heads which are resource-hungry to target, not just a dozen juicy fat ones which stay nice and still, with the authorities just waiting for a subtle change in, or interpretation of, the law. A change which is inevitable, in both Sweden and the Netherlands.

TorrentFreak asked the admin of a US-based tracker how they manage to stay alive, despite having 20,000 members. “People are too hung up on MPAA and RIAA content. There’s an enormous library of material out there which you can track and no-one bothers you. We’ve got over 4000 torrents and we’ve had just two or three informal takedown requests in the last couple of years. If people want to start a tracker, indexing non-RIAA/MPAA content and specializing in something else is a great way to start building a community, even when you’re hosted in the States”

brokep gets the last words. Very wise words;

“So public message to people - start up your own torrent sites, make the internet the hydra it is and needs to be. If there’s hundreds of sites, they can’t all be shut down. And well, if they shut down the few that are today, there will be hundreds of sites, I’m sure, but let’s start them before so we can spread the word of them easier.”

Previously: Anti-Piracy Organization Tries to Shut Down Demonoid

Next: Pirate Parties Prepare for the 2009 European Elections

47 Responses

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26 Oct 27, 2007 at 03:49 by wack

shouldn’t you be busy trying to change the world’s political balance instead of stealing video games?

The real problem you’re talking about in your post is the unjust inequality between rich and poor countries in the world.

Getting the latest PSP game is not going to fix that…

I agree with you though, but I think you missing the more important bigger picture.

27 Oct 28, 2007 at 05:29 by d

just use emule and everybody happy :)

http://www.emule-project.net

28 Oct 29, 2007 at 20:50 by Anonymous

oink.be

29 Oct 30, 2007 at 04:34 by Anonymous

Emule,
The Defenders Are within you.

http://mediadefender-defenders.com/threads.html#00001%20==%20fun!

30 Oct 31, 2007 at 04:28 by Ceta

Re:Quantum

You’re an overly self-entitled idiot. Video games are a luxury, not a right, as are movies, songs, and other electronic entertainment. Stop being such a whiner. “I deserve this, I deserve that” — you deserve a kick in the ass for thinking you deserve anything. There are lots of poorer people in the world who are grateful just for the fact that they have food to eat, and much more who are grateful for even less… and here you are, complaining that you’re not allowed to steal copyrighted material anymore. Get a life! I’m grateful for the fact that torrents have existed this long, but I am fully aware that most of the material is pirated. I know our days are numbered, and I really can’t blame the artists who author this material for wanting some kind of money for their effort.

31 Nov 07, 2007 at 10:16 by uNoWhO

just an idea but if we had a site like piratebay or something close but not have any trackers/torrents on that site but use that as a torrent google meaning theres maybe 1000-2000 or even more servers all over the world attached to the 1 site all serving torrents and all getting a share of the donations of the big site to cover there expenses and the rest of the money being put into a numbered account and if anyone trys to sue/take down the site theres the money in the bank to fight it and keep everything running

that way there would be abit of muscle to fight back and make it ALOT harder for them to work out what server is serving up what torrents and whos done what on what server and if they do take down a server theres still hundreds to pick up the slack and keep the site going (i doubt they would have the muscle or be smart enough to organize a 1000-2000 server take down in multiple countrys within 24-48 hrs of eachother which would be needed to totally close the site and take down the tracker)

anyway as i said just an idea lemme know what u guys think

32 Nov 11, 2007 at 04:08 by Unnamed

re: uNoWhO
I think that’s just about right or maybe a large site like TPB and say 1-2000 torrents are hosted on individual servers and each server would have a tracker script on it or something (do i even know what I’m talking about??) or maybe google should add a search torrent service :D if only…

33 Jan 17, 2008 at 12:26 by dan356

what about the little guy who is barely making a living online–yet his stuff is still stolen and put on these p2p and pirate sites…it is fair that his original work is stolen? Sometimes this work takes many hours to produce and it is the only income–no concerts or other means of making money

34 Mar 31, 2008 at 10:31 by BrainaicX

This is why multi tracker support/using it is so important.

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