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It is no secret that the MPAA and other anti-piracy organizations track down alleged pirates by uploading fake torrents. Up until now it was always unclear where those files came from, and how to identify them.
AS MOST OF you interweb-savvy thieving pirates will be well aware, mighty industry bullies such as the MPAA are well suspected for sticking up fake torrents onto torrent indexers to catch out would-be downloaders. Well, a btjunkie admin has cleverly found out a way to identify trackers that host the fake files making them easy to nuke off indexer sites, catching the MPAA well and truely In The Act, Red Handed. Fake files are even listed in such a way that regular torrent downloaders would be used to, with names such as "Battlestar Galactica S03E07 REPACK DSR XviD-ORENJi". Torrentfreak reports that almost all of these legally dodgy servers are located in Southern California and Las Vegas. The tricksy servers are easy to track for those in the know thanks to certain patterns, says torrentfreak, such as the content of the trackers and the amount of torrent seeds on the files. A btjunkie admin says that the industry bigwigs alter the trackers to make sure that the downloaded content either stalls at near-completion, for example at 90 per cent, or the file will just be a big old blank mess. It's certainly professional work, says the anonymous btjunkie admin: "That's a lot of servers to set up and it takes some expertise to set up in the manner that they did it." The admin goes on to say, suspiciously, that "I don't think I really need to say who would spend money on something like this." Some servers to be on the look out for, should you be one of those downloading sorts, are hostnames such as 101tracker.dhcp.biz, aplustorrents.qhigh.com, bitnova.squirly.info, bittorment.ocry.com and pirate-trakkrz.leet.la , warns torrentfreak. These hostnames can all be traced back to the very same IP ranges, says the site. It's reckoned by one torrentfreak reader that the IP ranges belong to Media Defender which is a company hired by copyright owners to keep track of piratey IP addresses. The reader supposedly worked for the company until recently, and said that some of the mentioned torrents are, yes, on the MPAA's blacklist. Story source: theinquirer.net. More over at: torrentfreak.com. |
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