If you want to be really safe, get yourself a dedicated server and download to that and then ftp to your home (or use it as a proxy to d/l). If you want to be really safe, use Peer Guardian and a private tracker (smaller ones are safer still). If you want to be safe, use Peer Guardian - it's better than nothing. However, most of those are still centred on Kazaa, eDonkey, Ares, etc. RIAA tend to be a bit different, and may end up trying to pursue cases against you. And that's "interested" as in "may go after them personally in a court" rather than "send nasty letter to ISP". And even then, the movie studios or record company are only ever really interested in the people who make the very first copy of the very first leak of their brand new content. But not everyone creates torrents and ups them. Yes, everyone uploads, even if they don't have the complete file. When people say 'uploader' with BT, what they generally mean is the person that makes the torrent file in the first place and is the original seed of the content. That will increasingly be the case as time goes on and ISPs increasingly try and work out content deals with studios, tv networks, music companies, etc. Get too many of those and your ISP might cut you off. That’s why we’d advise all of our readers to be careful while torrenting we do not condone piracy. "This IP address was downloading file X". Torrenting is not illegal in and of itself, but getting your hands on copyrighted content that you don’t pay for (as is the case with most torrents) is against the law in most countries. What you are at risk of doing this is complaints from copyright owners to your ISP. Many of them don't keep much in the way of logs, though don't believe site admins who tell you they don't maintain any logs because most have something that records an IP address somewhere, if only to stop duplicate accounts. Both of them will open, accept the torrent, but then i just stay at 0. If you just use them to grab and seed stuff, you'll probably be ok. 11.1 and was trying to download two different peerguardian like programs. It is capable of blocking incoming and outgoing connections based on IP blacklists. The private trackers, like Oink or TorrentLeech or, are generally going to be ok unless you're an original uploader. PeerGuardian is a free and open source program developed by Phoenix Labs. They might get closed down, but you aren't gonna get sued for it. The big public sites (TorrentSpy, Mininova) will be continually targetted by legal action. Torrents are a big target for hackers who can infect files with malware and viruses to steal your data directly from your device.
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