I'll grab whatever I can get, but at this point, it's likely to be better to simply make new torrents and upload them, as I do have a "substantial" library.Īh, I should have thought of that-a scrape of KAT wouldn't get the.
Not a single one would allow me to download a physical torrent, at least one of them wanted me to register a free account (ummmm.thanks, but nope. (Jul 22, 2016, 14:58 pm)wolfenspiel Wrote: Well, I figured I'd start, and got about 9 magnet links, from a combo of 1 or 2 of those links. or otherwise talk about whatever it is that DAZ 3D enthusiasts talk about.ĮDIT: (in addition to a few inline changes I've just made) and also appear to be similar sites: static partial mirrors, safe to use at this point. There are over 3000 torrents so you guys might want to use this thread to split the work up amongst yourselves, discuss priorities, etc. We don't have any rules against "dumping" as KAT calls it (but it's decent to give credit to the original uploaders in the torrent description), and you don't have to worry about trackers (TPB discards all trackers in uploaded torrents, and only hosts the magnet links).ĭoing so won't do any harm to the torrents (or the community) if KAT returns-on the contrary, it will inject new life into the swarms and provide a reliable back up for if KAT (or TPB) goes down again. Anyone downloading them from TPB will join (and contribute to) the existing swarms. Remember that if they're being seeded you don't need to seed them-leave that to the existing swarms while you focus on your rescue efforts. In any case, if they're not seeded now it's not as likely that they will be useful. If the torrents have no seeders it's possible (not certain, but possible) that they are not the original torrents. If the swarms are established it's fairly safe to assume they originated on KAT and are therefore uncompromised. I'd recommend only downloading torrents with established swarms (double check in your torrent client). You can download the torrent files from there, and copy the torrent descriptions, and upload them to TPB. The torrents are available, at least for a while, from here:
That message may be part of the torrent file itself, as a text file, but the Maelstrom client would need a function to understand it.
code or secret for obvious reasons, one could update a torrent by forcing the Maelstrom clients' reaction to a header or message of that would point it to the newer or newest infohash. There could be a solution to the updating-of-static-files issue, but it would need Maelstrom to incorporate a reaction feature of some kind. And, at that point, Maelstrom might as well be a different type of mesh network. Somewhere and somehow, an interpreter would be needed to process those dynamic files/requests whether it be by the local machine or sending the request to another client in the swarm. as an ace up his/her sleeve, that's not possible. I definitely know eval-ing code is not recommended if avoidable.īut, you're talking about dynamic PHP, ASP, or some other server-side language, no? At this point, unless some dev. Of course, you could have the JavaScript made to request more code/data from a centralized host and process it that way. That'd be the life of client-side updates to JavaScript, CSS, and HTML. I've been wondering this same thing, but using the current BitTorrent protocol one would have to make a new torrent for every change as it would modify the infohash.